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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Antarctica
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Antarctic ice sheet (1)
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Canada
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Eastern Canada
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Ontario
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Oak Ridges Moraine (1)
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Western Canada
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Alberta (1)
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British Columbia (2)
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Cascade Range (1)
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Channeled Scabland (23)
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Columbia River (8)
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Columbia River basin (2)
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Europe
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Western Europe
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France
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Alpes-Maritimes France
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Nice France (1)
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Iceland (1)
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North America
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Okanagan Valley (2)
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Pacific Ocean
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East Pacific
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Northeast Pacific
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Escanaba Trough (1)
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North Pacific
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Northeast Pacific
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Escanaba Trough (1)
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Northwest Pacific (1)
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West Pacific
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Pasco Basin (3)
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United States
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Arizona
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Coconino County Arizona
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Meteor Crater (1)
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California
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Northern California (1)
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Columbia Plateau (9)
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Idaho (2)
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Klamath Mountains (1)
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Montana (1)
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New York
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Finger Lakes (1)
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Oregon
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Coos County Oregon
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Mount Hood (1)
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Washington
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Benton County Washington (1)
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Grant County Washington (1)
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Okanogan County Washington (1)
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Spokane County Washington
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Spokane Washington (1)
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Walla Walla County Washington (1)
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Yakima County Washington (2)
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Western U.S. (1)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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C-14 (2)
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halogens
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chlorine
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Cl-36 (1)
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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C-14 (2)
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Cl-36 (1)
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fossils
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Invertebrata
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Protista
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Foraminifera (2)
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microfossils (1)
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Plantae
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algae
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diatoms (1)
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geochronology methods
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exposure age (1)
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Th/U (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Cordilleran ice sheet (6)
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Pleistocene
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Lake Missoula (15)
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lower Pleistocene
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Olduvai Subchron (1)
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Matuyama Chron (1)
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middle Pleistocene (1)
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upper Pleistocene
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Wisconsinan
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upper Wisconsinan (6)
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Miocene
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Columbia River Basalt Group (3)
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Pliocene (1)
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Ringold Formation (1)
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Paleogene
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middle Eocene
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Tyee Formation (1)
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upper Cenozoic (1)
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Mesozoic
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MIS 2 (1)
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MIS 6 (1)
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Paleozoic
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Ordovician
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Ellenburger Group (1)
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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volcanic rocks
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basalts
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flood basalts (4)
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metamorphic rocks
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turbidite (1)
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Primary terms
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absolute age (3)
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Antarctica
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Antarctic ice sheet (1)
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Canada
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Eastern Canada
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Ontario
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Oak Ridges Moraine (1)
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Western Canada
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Alberta (1)
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British Columbia (2)
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carbon
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C-14 (2)
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Cordilleran ice sheet (6)
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Pleistocene
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Lake Missoula (15)
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lower Pleistocene
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Olduvai Subchron (1)
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Matuyama Chron (1)
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middle Pleistocene (1)
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upper Pleistocene
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Wisconsinan
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upper Wisconsinan (6)
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Miocene
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Columbia River Basalt Group (3)
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Pliocene (1)
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Ringold Formation (1)
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Paleogene
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Eocene
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middle Eocene
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Tyee Formation (1)
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upper Cenozoic (1)
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continental slope (1)
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dams (3)
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data processing (1)
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Europe
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Western Europe
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France
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Alpes-Maritimes France
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Nice France (1)
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Iceland (1)
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faults (1)
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fractures (1)
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geochronology (1)
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geomorphology (4)
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geophysical methods (3)
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glacial geology (4)
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igneous rocks
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volcanic rocks
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basalts
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flood basalts (4)
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Invertebrata
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Protista
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Foraminifera (2)
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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C-14 (2)
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Cl-36 (1)
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Mesozoic
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Franciscan Complex (1)
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North America
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Okanagan Valley (2)
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Ocean Drilling Program
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Leg 167
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ODP Site 1019 (1)
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Leg 169
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ODP Site 1037 (1)
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ocean floors (1)
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Pacific Ocean
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East Pacific
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Northeast Pacific
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Escanaba Trough (1)
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North Pacific
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Northeast Pacific
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Escanaba Trough (1)
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Northwest Pacific (1)
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West Pacific
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Northwest Pacific (1)
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paleoclimatology (1)
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paleoecology (1)
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paleogeography (2)
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paleomagnetism (3)
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Paleozoic
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Ordovician
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Lower Ordovician
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Ellenburger Group (1)
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Plantae
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algae
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diatoms (1)
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plate tectonics (1)
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remote sensing (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks (1)
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sedimentary structures
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planar bedding structures
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rhythmic bedding (2)
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rhythmite (2)
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varves (1)
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soft sediment deformation
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clastic dikes (1)
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sedimentation (2)
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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erratics (1)
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gravel (1)
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silt (1)
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marine sediments (2)
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stratigraphy (1)
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tectonics (2)
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United States
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Arizona
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Coconino County Arizona
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Meteor Crater (1)
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California
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Northern California (1)
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Columbia Plateau (9)
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Idaho (2)
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Klamath Mountains (1)
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Montana (1)
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New York
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Finger Lakes (1)
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Oregon
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Coos County Oregon
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Coos Bay (1)
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Mount Hood (1)
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Washington
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Benton County Washington (1)
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Grant County Washington (1)
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Okanogan County Washington (1)
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Spokane County Washington
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Spokane Washington (1)
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Walla Walla County Washington (1)
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Yakima County Washington (2)
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Western U.S. (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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calcrete (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks (1)
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turbidite (1)
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sedimentary structures
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channels (2)
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sedimentary structures
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planar bedding structures
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rhythmic bedding (2)
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rhythmite (2)
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varves (1)
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soft sediment deformation
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clastic dikes (1)
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sediments
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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erratics (1)
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gravel (1)
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silt (1)
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marine sediments (2)
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turbidite (1)
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soils
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paleosols (1)
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Channeled Scabland
Rates of bedrock canyon incision by megafloods, Channeled Scabland, eastern Washington, USA
Okanogan lobe tunnel channels and subglacial floods into Moses Coulee, Channeled Scabland, northwestern United States
The eight field trips in this volume, associated with GSA Connects 2021 held in Portland, Oregon, USA, reflect the rich and varied geological legacy of the Pacific Northwest. The western margin of North America has had a complex subduction and transform history throughout the Phanerozoic, building a collage of terranes. The terrain has been modified by Cenozoic sedimentation, magmatism, and faulting related to Cascadia subduction, passage of the Yellowstone hot spot, and north and westward propagation of the Basin and Range province. The youngest flood basalt province on Earth also inundated the landscape, while the mighty Columbia watershed kept pace with arc construction and funneled epic ice-age floods from the craton to the coast. Additional erosive processes such as landslides continue to shape this dynamic geological wonderland.
ABSTRACT In late Wisconsin time, the Purcell Trench lobe of the Cordilleran ice sheet dammed the Clark Fork of the Columbia River in western Montana, creating glacial Lake Missoula. During part of this epoch, the Okanogan lobe also dammed the Columbia River downstream, creating glacial Lake Columbia in northeast Washington. Repeated failure of the Purcell Trench ice dam released glacial Lake Missoula, causing dozens of catastrophic floods in eastern Washington that can be distinguished by the geologic record they left behind. These floods removed tens of meters of pale loess from dark basalt substrate, forming scars along flowpaths visible from space. Different positions of the Okanogan lobe are required for modeled Missoula floods to inundate the diverse channels that show field evidence for flooding, as shown by accurate dam-break flood modeling using a roughly 185 m digital terrain model of existing topography (with control points dynamically varied using automatic mesh refinement). The maximum extent of the Okanogan lobe, which blocked inundation of the upper Grand Coulee and the Columbia River valley, is required to flood all channels in the Telford scablands and to produce highest flood stages in Pasco Basin. Alternatively, the Columbia River valley must have been open and the upper Grand Coulee blocked to nearly match evidence for high water on Pangborn bar near Wenatchee, Washington, and to flood Quincy Basin from the west. Finally, if the Columbia River valley and upper Grand Coulee were both open, Quincy Basin would have flooded from the northeast. In all these scenarios, the discrepancy between modeled flood stages and field evidence for maximum flood stages increases in all channels downstream, from Spokane to Umatilla Basin. The pattern of discrepancies indicates that bulking of floods by loess increased flow volume across the scablands, but this alone does not explain low modeled flow stages along the Columbia River valley near Wenatchee. This latter discrepancy between modeled flood stages and field data requires either additional bulking of flow by sediment along the Columbia reach downstream of glacial Lake Columbia, or coincident dam failures of glacial Lake Columbia and glacial Lake Missoula.
Roads less travelled by—Pleistocene piracy in Washington’s northwestern Channeled Scabland
ABSTRACT The Pleistocene Okanogan lobe of Cordilleran ice in north-central Washington State dammed Columbia River to pond glacial Lake Columbia and divert the river south across one or another low spot along a 230-km-long drainage divide. When enormous Missoula floods from the east briefly engulfed the lake, water poured across a few such divide saddles. The grandest such spillway into the Channeled Scabland became upper Grand Coulee. By cutting headward to Columbia valley, upper Grand Coulee’s flood cataract opened a valve that then kept glacial Lake Columbia low and limited later floods into nearby Moses Coulee. Indeed few of the scores of last-glacial Missoula floods managed to reach it. Headward cutting of an inferred smaller cataract (Foster Coulee) had earlier lowered glacial Lake Columbia’s outlet. Such Scabland piracies explain a variety of field evidence assembled here: apparently successive outlets of glacial Lake Columbia, and certain megaflood features downcurrent to Wenatchee and Quincy basin. Ice-rafted erratics and the Pangborn bar of foreset gravel near Wenatchee record late Wisconsin flood(s) down Columbia valley as deep as 320 m. Fancher bar, 45 m higher than Pangborn bar, also has tall foreset beds—but its gravel is partly rotted and capped by thick calcrete, thus pre-Wisconsin age, perhaps greatly so. In western Quincy basin foreset beds of basaltic gravel dip east from Columbia valley into the basin—gravel also partly rotted and capped by thick calcrete, also pre-Wisconsin. Yet evidence of late Wisconsin eastward flow to Quincy basin is sparse. This sequence suggests that upper Grand Coulee had largely opened before down-Columbia megaflood(s) early in late Wisconsin time. A drift-obscured area of the Waterville Plateau near Badger Wells is the inconspicuous divide saddle between Columbia tributary Foster Creek drainage and Moses Coulee drainage. Before flood cataracts had opened upper Grand Coulee or Foster Coulee, and while Okanogan ice blocked the Columbia but not Foster Creek, glacial Lake Columbia (diverted Columbia River) drained over this saddle at about 654 m and down Moses Coulee. When glacial Lake Columbia stood at this high level so far west, Missoula floods swelling the lake could easily and deeply flood Moses Coulee. Once eastern Foster Coulee cataract had been cut through, and especially once upper Grand Coulee’s great cataract receded to Columbia valley, glacial Lake Columbia stood lower, and Moses Coulee became harder to flood. During the late Wisconsin (marine isotope stage [MIS] 2), only when Okanogan-lobe ice blocked the Columbia near Brewster to form a high lake could Missoula floodwater from glacial Lake Missoula rise enough to overflow into Moses Coulee—and then only in a few very largest Missoula floods. Moses Coulee’s main excavation must lie with pre-Wisconsin outburst floods (MIS 6 or much earlier)—before upper Grand Coulee’s cataract had receded to Columbia valley.
Abstract The Channeled Scabland of east-central Washington comprises a complex of anastomosing fluvial channels that were eroded by Pleistocene megaflooding into the basalt bedrock and overlying sediments of the Columbia Plateau and Columbia Basin regions of eastern Washington State, U.S.A. The cataclysmic flooding produced huge coulees (dry river courses), cataracts, streamlined loess hills, rock basins, butte-and-basin scabland, potholes, inner channels, broad gravel deposits, and immense gravel bars. Giant current ripples (fluvial dunes) developed in the coarse gravel bedload. In the 1920s, J Harlen Bretz established the cataclysmic flooding origin for the Channeled Scabland, and Joseph Thomas Pardee subsequently demonstrated that the megaflooding derived from the margins of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet, notably from ice-dammed glacial Lake Missoula, which had formed in western Montana and northern Idaho. More recent research, to be discussed on this field trip, has revealed the complexity of megaflooding and the details of its history. To understand the scabland one has to throw away textbook treatments of river work. —J. Hoover Mackin, as quoted in Bretz et al. (1956, p. 960)
Simulations of cataclysmic outburst floods from Pleistocene Glacial Lake Missoula
The surface of Mars: An unusual laboratory that preserves a record of catastrophic and unusual events
Catastrophic and unusual events on Earth such as bolide impacts, megafloods, supereruptions, flood volcanism, and subice volcanism may have devastating effects when they occur. Although these processes have unique characteristics and form distinctive features and deposits, we have difficulties identifying them and measuring the magnitude of their effects. Our difficulties with interpreting these processes and identifying their consequences are understandable considering their infrequency on Earth, combined with the low preservation potential of their deposits in the terrestrial rock record. Although we know these events do happen, they are infrequent enough that the deposits are poorly preserved on the geologically active face of the Earth, where erosion, volcanism, and tectonism constantly change the surface. Unlike the Earth, on Mars catastrophic and unusual features are well preserved because of the slow modification of the surface. Significant precipitation has not occurred on Mars for billions of years and there appears to be no discrete crustal plates to have undergone subduction and destruction. Therefore the ancient surface of Mars preserves geologic features and deposits that result from these extraordinary events. Also, unlike the other planets, Mars is the most similar to our own, having an atmosphere, surface ice, volcanism, and evidence of onceflowing water. So although our understanding of precursors, processes, and possible biological effects of catastrophic and unusual processes is limited on Earth, some of these mysteries may be better understood through investigating the surface of Mars.
Pleistocene megafloods in the northeast Pacific
A fresh perspective on the Cordilleran Ice Sheet
ABSTRACT The late Wisconsin Missoula floods are Earth's largest known discharges of fresh water. They carved Washington's Channeled Scabland—made famous by J.H. Bretz's writings in the 1920s to 1950s—and deposited sporadic huge gravel bars in the Scab-lands and Columbia valley. Since the late 1970s the great floods have been shown to number several score and to have been released as gigantic jökulhlaups. This five-day fieldtrip zig-zags broadly along and across the Scablands and down Columbia valley, viewing much geomorphic and stratigraphic evidence of the Missoula floods, at the end washing into Portland and Geological Society of America's 2009 Annual Meeting.
ABSTRACT The Columbia River Basin (CRB) is home to the best studied examples of two of the most spectacular geologic processes on Earth and Mars: flood volcanism and catastrophic water floods. Additionally, features formed by a variety of eolian, glacial, tectonic, and mass-wasting processes can also be seen in the CRB. These terrains provide exceptional terrestrial analogs for the study of similar processes on Mars. This field guide describes four one-day trips out of Moses Lake, Washington, to observe a wide variety of Mars analogs.
Flood basalts and Ice Age floods: Repeated late Cenozoic cataclysms of southeastern Washington
Abstract Like nowhere else on Earth, repeated cataclysmic floods—first of molten lava, then of water from Ice Age floods—decimated southeastern Washington during the late Cenozoic. Beginning ca. 17 Ma, successive outpourings of Columbia River basalt spread for hundreds of kilometers from volcanic vents located in the southern and eastern Columbia Plateau. Up to 300 separate basalt flows have been identified, reaching cumulative thicknesses of 5 km in the Pasco Basin. With the close of basalt volcanism ca. 6 Ma, only a few million years elapsed before the Pacific Northwest succumbed to a new era of flooding. Outburst floods are associated with regular glacial cycles that have occurred periodically over the past 1–2 m.y. from one or more Pleistocene, ice-marginal lakes. During the last glacial cycle (15,000–20,000 calendar yr) alone, as many as 100 separate flood events, mostly from glacial Lake Missoula, are postulated. In the Channeled Scabland, after removing a blanket of loess, differential erosion through hundreds of meters of layered basalt with widely contrasting variations in fracture patterns and structure resulted in a unique assemblage of erosional landforms including multi-tiered cataract canyons, buttes, mesas, and rock basins. A number of depositional features, including huge flood bars blanketed with giant current ripples, as well as ice-rafted erratics and bergmounds, are also prevalent.