| Dry Falls are the remnants of a great series of waterfalls
and plunge pools that formed from the Spokane Flood, a great flood that
occurred at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch when the moraine dam of a great
glacial lake collapsed. The flood occurred sometime between 18,000 and 12,000
years ago. A great lake that existed in northern Washington and parts of
Canada was probably comparable is size and volume to some of the modern
Great Lakes. The natural dam probably consisted of loosely consolidated
glacial till (rock and soil) that originally accumulated along the advancing
front of a great piedmont glacier. The lake possibly completely drained
in a matter of days or weeks, causing water to spread across the relatively
flat Columbia River plateau before finding passage to the Columbia River.
Erosion along hundreds of channels formed the "Channeled Scab Lands"
- a region criss-crossed by dry channels that are generally barren of soil
and still preserve many small pools and basins where the floodwaters carved
potholes in the stream beds. The Spokane Flood would have dwarfed any known
flood in modern history. Other great glacial break-out floods occurred in
many places around the world at the close of the Pleistocene glacial periods,
but the arid conditions in central Washington have helped to preserve landscape
features from the flood better than in the more humid climates elsewhere.
|