SOME LOCAL NORTHERN IDAHO ICE AGE FLOODS and GLACIAL FEATURES

Clouds fill Purcell Trench like an ice sheet (Photo: Tony Lewis)

Purcell Trench – This structurally formed valley became the passageway for the Purcell Ice Lobe that divided into five glacial sub-lobes.  The east moving sub-lobe blocked the Clark Fork River forming Glacial Lake Missoula, the source of the Ice Age Flood waters.  Other sub-lobes modified and deepened the basin now occupied by Lake Pend Oreille or helped define several important N-S transportation routes. The Purcell Trench is visible from City Beach in Sandpoint and Schweitzer Mountain Rd.  Hwy 95 follows the Purcell Trench from Sandpoint to beyond Bonners Ferry.

Cabinet Gorge Dam – not an ice dam anymore (Photo: Gary Ford)

Cabinet Gorge – Contact of Pleistocene Ice and Glacial Lake Missoula Water – Although the contact of the Pleistocene Ice and the lapping waters of Glacial Lake Missoula was in flux as the glacier advanced and retreated, the Cabinet Gorge is considered by many to be a likely location of the terminus of the Clark Fork sub-lobe that blocked the drainage of the Clark Fork River.   Evidence of glacial erosion and till deposits indicate glaciation; however, flood deposits on the south side of the river attest to Ice Age flooding.  Cores taken during the construction of the Cabinet Gorge Dam suggest multiple stages and events of ice damming. An AVISTA maintained viewpoint at the Cabinet Gorge Dam with Ice Age Floods signage provides an excellent location to ponder the formation and disintegration of the ice plug blocking the Clark Fork River. 

Glacial Striations beside Hwy200 (Photo: Tony Lewis)

Glacial Striations – Striations can be viewed along Hwy 200 east of Hope and on the south side of Castle Rock east of Clark Fork.

Glacial/Flood Related Erratics – Large and small erratics cover the glacial and flood modified landscape.  Large erratics can be seen along Hwy 200 east of Clark Fork, in Sandpoint’s City Beach and in Farragut State Park.  A large pile of erratics excavated from flood deposits are visible on the west-side of Hwy 95 south of the Hoodoo Channel.  A giant ice-rafted flood related erratic weighing over 1,600 tons is located on the east-side of Hwy 41 near Twin Lakes. 

Lake Pend Oreille – Cross-section morphology, depth, and sediments – This is where it all started! Lake Pend Oreille is the largest lake in Idaho and the deepest lake in the Pacific Northwest and the 5th deepest in the US. The lake level is 2062 ft above sea level with depths over 1,000 feet and an additional layer of over 1,500 feet of glacial-fluvial deposits going to bedrock, with the surrounding terrain as high as 6002 ft. The glacially modified U-shaped bedrock valley, cut to approximately 600 feet below sea level, was formed by the Pend Oreille glacial sub-lobe. This glacial sub-lobe was up to 4,000+ ft. thick and 30+ miles wide. It was the ice plug responsible for blocking the Clark Fork River. It collapsed catastrophically as often as about every 10-60 years, releasing 40-100 Ice Age Floods. 

The location of the lake is probably related to an old river valley controlled by faults. The Lake Pend Oreille basin was carved by the repeated advances of Pleistocene ice and scoured by ice age floods. With the waning of ice age flood waters, the basin was, and continues to be, filled with glacial outwash and flood deposits. The lake is dammed at the south end by thick glacial and flood deposits the mark the beginning of the “Outburst Deposits”. There is a pullout on Hwy 200 approximately one mile west of Hope with signage already established that provides a great view looking south across Lake Pend Oreille to the Green Monarch Mts. Another view of the former ice plug location along Hwy 200 is the mouth of the Clark Fork River at the Clark Fork Drift Yard.

Giant Current Dunes or MegaRipple Marks – One of Bretz’ most important pieces of evidence for catastrophic flooding was the “giant current dunes.” These large-scale bedforms appeared as patterns of parallel ridges and swales on many aerial photographs in the flood channels in the scabland of Washington, but had escaped recognition from the ground because of their size. Giant Current Dunes are visible west of Clark Fork near Castle Rock; however, the most prominent and visible Giant Current Dunes are located several miles east of Spirit Lake along Hwy 54 where the highway cuts through the dunes showing their undulating profile. The location of many of the telephone poles on the crest of these dunes accentuates these landforms.

The dunes form transverse to the current direction, and form cusps that are convex upstream, with arms that point downstream. Furthermore, the size of the cusps appears to decrease in the direction of lower velocity. Internally, the dunes consist of gravel and pebble foresets. Giant current dunes exhibit an asymmetrical profile with the downstream (lee) slope steeper than the upstream slope. Crests range from 20 to 200m apart and heights range from 1 to 15m (Baker and Nummedal, 1978) and are among the largest measured throughout the Floods area. The Spirit Lake current dunes can also be easily recognized from the air by their characteristic pattern, accentuated by vegetation. This dune field is immediately in the path of the breakout from Lake Pend Oreille, and experienced some of the highest energy flows.

Glacial Lake Missoula Rhythmites

Rhythmites – Rhythmites are glaciolacustrine sediments associated with flood events and are useful in attempting to determine the number of Ice Age Floods.  A 112-foot cross-section of rhythmites is located at the junction of East Fork Creek and Lightning Creek approximately 6.5 miles northeast of Clark Fork along Lightning Creek Road (NF-419).

Proglacial Deposits – This type of deposit is found associated with most of the drainages on the south side of the Clark Fork Valley and extend from the mouth of the Clark Fork River to nearly Thompson Falls in Montana.  These sediments are glacio-fluvial deposits deposited in contact with the ice and therefore provide evidence of glaciation in the Clark Fork River drainage.  The associated geomorphic features formed by these deposits are referred to as “kame deltas”. The gravel pit associated with Dry Creek (approximately 8 miles west of Clark Fork to Dry Creek Road and then about four miles up Dry Creek drainage) provides an exposure of these glacio-fluvial sediments and stratigraphy of these ancestral deltas.  The location of proglacial deposits is important as they indicate that the Clark Fork sub-lobe advanced further up the Clark Fork River drainage than previously recognized. 

Debris-Dammed Marginal Lakes – There are at least eight prominent debris-damned lakes associated with the Ice Age Floods located along the margins of the Rathdrum Prairie Outburst Plain.  One of the more accessible and easily viewed is Spirit Lake located just west of the town of Spirit Lake on Hwy 41.

Hoodoo Channel – The Hoodoo Channel most likely represents the major outlet for the later Ice Age Floods.  This flood channel cuts into the Rathdrum Prairie beginning at Bayview and crosses Hwy 95 approximately three miles south of Careywood where it is easily seen.

Rathdrum Prairie Outburst Plain/Aquifer – A visit to Farragut State Park is a visit to the Outburst Flood Plain.  The eastern portion of Farragut State Park, including Bayview and Jokulhlaup Point, is essentially the beginning of the Outburst Flood Plain and the Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer that extends beyond Spokane.  The Visitor Center for Farragut State Park is the best spot to begin exploring the Rathdrum Prairie Outburst Plain.

Pendant Bar – The large sharply defined topographic feature of megaflood deposits on the lee side of Round Mountain is a “Pendant Bar.”  The feature is more easily definable by the change in land use from agricultural land to a rougher forest/shrub landscape of erratics of all sizes deposited heterogeneously with sands and gravels in the flood shadow down flow of Round Mountain. This feature is located at the intersection of Hwy 41 and Scarcello Road south of Spirit Lake near Twin Lakes. 

Prepared by Tony Lewis in January 2017 and later revised  based on Field Trip documents prepared by Roy Breckenridge and Dean Garwood along with information from Bruce Bjornstad and Gene Kiver (2012). On the Trail of the Ice Age Floods: The Northern Reaches, Keokee Books, Sandpoint, ID.