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1 January 2019 Erratics and Other Evidence of Late Wisconsin Missoula Outburst Floods in Lower Wenatchee and Adjacent Columbia Valleys, Washington
Richard B. Waitt, William A. Long, Kelsay M. Stanton
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Abstract

The Pleistocene Missoula floods through eastern and central Washington are by peak fl ow rate (discharge) the greatest freshwater cataclysms known on Earth. Newly explored features along the Wenatchee reach of Columbia valley give new evidence and revise earlier interpretations of size, frequency, and routing of megafloods.

Crystalline-rock erratics derived far northeast lie scattered about the sandstone hills of lower Wenatchee valley and adjacent Columbia valley up to 495 m altitude, 320 m above Columbia River. They can only have been ice-rafted by flood(s) running down the Columbia. Before the late Wisconsin Okanogan lobe of Cordilleran ice blocked the Columbia, at least one monstrous Missoula flood poured down the valley past Wenatchee and backflooded Wenatchee valley.

Rhythmically bedded sandy silt in Columbia valley between Trinidad and Wenatchee records repeated silt-rich backfloods up the Columbia from Quincy basin—after Okanogan-lobe ice had blocked the Columbia upvalley. Rhythmically graded silt beds in Wenatchee valley at Dryden containing Columbia-derived dropstones record ten Missoula backfloods up the valley.

Thick silt farther up Wenatchee valley between Peshastin and Leavenworth had been thought deposits of a long-lived lake, dammed supposedly by the Malaga landslide. But the heights and distribution of provable lake beds now make Moses Coulee bar the only viable dam—and only up to altitude 275 m. The silt above Dryden lying at 315–385 m altitude must also have been laid by Missoula floods.

Richard B. Waitt, William A. Long, and Kelsay M. Stanton "Erratics and Other Evidence of Late Wisconsin Missoula Outburst Floods in Lower Wenatchee and Adjacent Columbia Valleys, Washington," Northwest Science 92(sp5), 318-337, (1 January 2019). https://doi.org/10.3955/046.092.0503
Received: 16 February 2018; Accepted: 3 December 2018; Published: 1 January 2019
KEYWORDS
Columbia valley
erratics
megaflood
Missoula floods
Wenatchee valley
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