Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho

Cataclysmic flood features including scabland topography, streamlined hills, a loess scarp, and flood transported boulders were mapped along Box Canyon, lower Big Lost River, eastern Snake River Plain. These features are similar to landforms within the Cheney-Palouse scabland tract, eastern Washingt...

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Main Author: Rathburn, Sara L.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1989
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191351
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1913512015-10-23T04:37:00Z Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho Rathburn, Sara L. Cataclysmic flood features including scabland topography, streamlined hills, a loess scarp, and flood transported boulders were mapped along Box Canyon, lower Big Lost River, eastern Snake River Plain. These features are similar to landforms within the Cheney-Palouse scabland tract, eastern Washington, formed by the great Missoula floods. Step-backwater hydraulic modeling of flow through the 11 km-long Box Canyon gorge indicates that a discharge of 60,000 m^3sec^-1 was required to produce the geologic paleostage evidence. Maximum stream power per unit area of bed locally attained values of 26,000 Wm^-2, which is comparable to the more extensive late Pleistocene Bonneville and Missoula flows. Flood power, estimated to exceed 1000 Wm^-2 , induced plucking of the jointed-basalt channel banks of Box Canyon. Tracts of scabland with networks of anastomosing channels migrated headward, driven by unit stream power values in the 600-1000 Win^-2 range. Deposition of the largest flood boulders occurred above a limiting unit stream power of 1400 Wm^-2. This ceiling on boulder deposition indicates that entrainment of these largest boulders probably took place under maximum unit stream power conditions (26,000 Wm^-2). The irregular volcanic rift topography along Box Canyon was the dominant control on removal and accumulation of flood boulders, however. Paleoflooding along Box Canyon may in part, although probably not solely, be attributed to outbursts from a glacial lake in the headwaters region located in the Pioneer Mountains. 1989 Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191351 213867777 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Cataclysmic flood features including scabland topography, streamlined hills, a loess scarp, and flood transported boulders were mapped along Box Canyon, lower Big Lost River, eastern Snake River Plain. These features are similar to landforms within the Cheney-Palouse scabland tract, eastern Washington, formed by the great Missoula floods. Step-backwater hydraulic modeling of flow through the 11 km-long Box Canyon gorge indicates that a discharge of 60,000 m^3sec^-1 was required to produce the geologic paleostage evidence. Maximum stream power per unit area of bed locally attained values of 26,000 Wm^-2, which is comparable to the more extensive late Pleistocene Bonneville and Missoula flows. Flood power, estimated to exceed 1000 Wm^-2 , induced plucking of the jointed-basalt channel banks of Box Canyon. Tracts of scabland with networks of anastomosing channels migrated headward, driven by unit stream power values in the 600-1000 Win^-2 range. Deposition of the largest flood boulders occurred above a limiting unit stream power of 1400 Wm^-2. This ceiling on boulder deposition indicates that entrainment of these largest boulders probably took place under maximum unit stream power conditions (26,000 Wm^-2). The irregular volcanic rift topography along Box Canyon was the dominant control on removal and accumulation of flood boulders, however. Paleoflooding along Box Canyon may in part, although probably not solely, be attributed to outbursts from a glacial lake in the headwaters region located in the Pioneer Mountains.
author Rathburn, Sara L.
spellingShingle Rathburn, Sara L.
Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho
author_facet Rathburn, Sara L.
author_sort Rathburn, Sara L.
title Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho
title_short Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho
title_full Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho
title_fullStr Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho
title_full_unstemmed Pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the Big Lost River, east-central Idaho
title_sort pleistocene glacial outburst flooding along the big lost river, east-central idaho
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1989
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191351
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