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The
90-ton glacial erratic rock at the top of this 1/4 mile-long trail
is a stranger from a distant location- it was transported here thousands
of years ago on an iceberg in the wake of a cataclysmic flood.
During
the last Ice Age, 13,000-15,500 years ago, a giant glacier dammed
the Clark Fork River in what is today southwest Montana and created
a huge lake- Glacial Lake Missoula. At 3,000 square miles, the lake
held nearly 500 cubic miles of water.
Rising
waters collapsed the ice dam several times, releasing tremendous
torrents of water across eastern Washington and down the Columbia
River toward the Pacific Ocean. Floodwaters nearly 1,000 feet deep
surged through the Columbia River Gorge and flooded the Willamette
Valley.
Flowing
with 10 times the combined annual volume of all the Earth's rivers,
floodwaters raged at 60 miles per hour, stripping away up to 200
feet of topsoil and ripping huge boulders from the underlying bedrock.
The floods also carried boulder-laden icebergs- as the ice melted
and the floodwaters recede, boulders, called "glacial erratics,"
remained stranded in fields and prairies.
The
boulder at the top of this trail is the largest known glacial erratic
among the hundreds found in the Willamette Valley.Caption 1This
large glacial erratic, composed of a metamorphic rock called argillite,
was once much larger! Geologists estimate that the boulder originally
weighed about 160 tons- visitors have removed over 70 tons. Please
respect this vestige of Oregon's remarkable geologic history- take
photos only!Caption 2Along with icebergs, the Missoula Floods carried
vast amounts of gravel, sand , silt, and clay, which helped make
the Willamette Valley one of the nation's most fertile agricultural
regions. The trail to the rock provides an excellent view of the
surrounding vineyards.
Enologists
(wine scientists) credit soils created in the wake of the Missoula
Floods with the success of Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, and Pinot Gris
wine grapes in this region. Some 40,000 acres of these grapes thrive
in the Willamette Valley and are used to produce highly-prized wines
produced in the French Burgundy stlye.
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