Number and size of last-glacial Missoula floods in the Columbia River valley between the Pasco Basin, Washington, and Portland, Oregon
- 1 May 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Geological Society of America in GSA Bulletin
- Vol. 115 (5) , 624-638
- https://doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(2003)115<0624:nasolm>2.0.co;2
Abstract
Field evidence and radiocarbon age dating, combined with hydraulic flow modeling, provide new information on the magnitude, frequency, and chronology of late Pleistocene Missoula floods in the Columbia River valley between the Pasco Basin, Washington, and Portland, Oregon. More than 25 floods had discharges of >1.0 X 10(6) m(3)/s. At least 15 floods had discharges of >3.0 X 10(6) m(3)/s. At least six or seven had peak discharges of >6.5 X 10(6) m(3)/s, and at least one flood had a peak discharge of similar to10 X 10(6) m(3)/s, a value consistent with earlier results from near Wallula Gap, but better defined because of the strong hydraulic controls imposed by critical flow at constrictions near Crown and Mitchell Points in the Columbia River Gorge. Stratigraphy and geomorphic position, combined with 25 radiocarbon ages and the widespread occurrence of the ca. 13 ka (radiocarbon years) Mount St. Helens set-S tephra, show that most if not all the Missoula flood deposits exposed in the study area were emplaced after 19 ka (radiocarbon years), and many were emplaced after 15 ka. More than 13 floods perhaps postdate ca. 13 ka, including at least two with discharges of >6 X 10(6) m(3)/s. From discharge and stratigraphic relationships upstream, we hypothesize that the largest flood in the study reach resulted from a Missoula flood that predated blockage of the Columbia River valley by the Cordilleran ice sheet. Multiple later floods, probably including the majority of floods recorded by fine- and coarse-grained deposits in the study area, resulted from multiple releases of glacial Lake Missoula that spilled into a blocked and inundated Columbia River valley upstream of the Okanogan lobe and were shunted south across the Channeled Scabland.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Missoula flood dynamics and magnitudes inferred from sedimentology of slack-water deposits on the Columbia Plateau, WashingtonGSA Bulletin, 1993
- The geologic evolution of the central Columbia PlateauPublished by Geological Society of America ,1989
- The Columbia River Basalt Group in western Oregon; Geologic structures and other factors that controlled flow emplacement patternsPublished by Geological Society of America ,1989
- Summary of pre-1980 tephra-fall deposits erupted from Mount St. Helens, Washington State, USABulletin of Volcanology, 1986
- The Lake Missoula Floods and the Channeled ScablandThe Journal of Geology, 1969