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Sedimentary interbeds preserved between flows of the Columbia River Basalt Group provide a record of the depositional and erosional conditions that characterized the Columbia Plateau between eruptions of basalt. Examination of the sedimentary, stratigraphic, and petrologic character of the Sweetwater Creek interbed from within the Lewiston basin of southeastern Washington and north-central Idaho allows insight into the paleogeographic conditions that existed following eruption of the Priest Rapids Member of the Wanapum Basalt, ca. 14.5 Ma.

The Sweetwater Creek interbed is composed of generally unconsolidated and inter-stratified beds of clay, silt, sand (with local thin gravel stringers), and volcanic ash-rich sediment. Three broadly defined sedimentary facies are identified on the basis of lithology and texture. The spatial distribution of these facies, abundance of clay- and silt-rich sediment, and internal sedimentary structures suggest that deposition of the interbed resulted primarily from fluvial and mixed fluvial-lacustrine sedimentation. Fluvial drainages that headed in the ancestral Clearwater Mountains entered the Lewiston basin on the east and exited to the northwest. Basin streams appear to have been primarily of the meandering, mixed-load type. Channel sands deposited by these streams were concentrated east and north of the basin center, and transported extrabasinal sediments are characterized by plutonic and metamorphic sand- and gravel-sized clasts. Fine-grained silt- and clay-rich flood-plain and associated lacustrine deposits extend across the basin, but are thickest near the basin center.

The Umatilla basalt flow entered the Lewiston basin during deposition of the Sweetwater Creek interbed and locally invaded fine-grained lacustrine sediments. A later flow, the Wilbur Creek basalt, partially buried the interbed. Complete burial of the Sweetwater Creek interbed sediments followed eruption of the Asotin flow.

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