Geology and geologic history of the Moscow-Pullman basin, Idaho and Washington, from late Grande Ronde to late Saddle Mountains time
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Published:January 01, 2016
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CiteCitation
John H. Bush, Dean L. Garwood, Pamela Dunlap, 2016. "Geology and geologic history of the Moscow-Pullman basin, Idaho and Washington, from late Grande Ronde to late Saddle Mountains time", Exploring the Geology of the Inland Northwest, Reed S. Lewis, Keegan L. Schmidt
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Abstract
The Moscow-Pullman basin, located on the eastern margin of the Columbia River flood basalt province, consists of a subsurface mosaic of interlayered Miocene sediments and lava flows of the Imnaha, Grande Ronde, Wanapum, and Saddle Mountains Basalts of the Columbia River Basalt Group. This sequence is ~1800 ft (550 m) thick in the east around Moscow, Idaho, and exceeds 2300 ft (700 m) in the west at Pullman, Washington. Most flows entered from the west into a topographic low, partially surrounded by steep mountainous terrain. These flows caused a rapid rise in base level and deposition of immature sediments....
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Contents
Exploring the Geology of the Inland Northwest

Prepared for the 2016 GSA Rocky Mountain Section Meeting, this well-illustrated volume offers guides to the lavas of the Columbia River basalts, megaflood landscapes of the Channeled Scablands, Mesozoic accreted terranes, metamorphic Precambrian Belt and pre-Belt rocks, and other features of this tectonically active region.
GeoRef
- aquifers
- basalts
- Cenozoic
- Columbia River Basalt Group
- field trips
- flood basalts
- Grande Ronde Basalt
- ground water
- hydrostratigraphy
- Idaho
- igneous rocks
- lava flows
- lithostratigraphy
- Miocene
- Neogene
- outcrops
- road log
- Saddle Mountains Basalt
- sedimentary rocks
- stratigraphic units
- Tertiary
- United States
- volcanic rocks
- Washington
- Moscow Idaho
- Pullman Washington
- Moscow-Pullman Basin