Salem is located at the confluence
of Mill Creek and the Willamette River. Since its settlement
in the 1840s the city has grown north and east onto the
flat valley floor and expanded south and west into the Salem
and Eola Hills.Twelve thousand years ago horses, camels, mammoths,
bison, deer, bear, panthers, tigers, and lions roamed the valley.
Thousands of birds, including giant condors, hawks, eagles,
geese, and ducks, nested in the area. (Allen, page 86.)
The natural environment of the Salem area changed with the coming
of what is known today as the Bretz Flood or the
"Lake Missoula Floods." Scientists estimate that the
area sustained approximately forty such floods. The source
of the flooding was a river in northern Idaho, blocked by glacial
dams. When the river broke through the dams, it generated a
wall of water estimated to be 200 feet tall. The flood roared
across eastern Washington releasing approximately twice the
energy of the meteorite that destroyed the era of the dinosaurs.
Scientists believe the flood would have been visible from space.
The largest and last of the floods formed the major geologic
features of the Willamette Valley including the rich deposits
of alluvial soils. Today the cities of Eugene, Albany, Woodburn,
and Salem occupy the level valley floor and area farmers prize
the region's rich soil.
It is believed that the last great flood held the equivalent
of eight times the energy released when Mount Mazama (Crater
Lake) exploded. Other comparisons estimate it released 800 times
the energy of the Mount Saint Helens eruption or 375 times the
energy released in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake (Allen,
page 200.)
Evidence of the flood still exists in the Salem area. An erratic
boulder carried into the valley by an iceberg is located near
Sheridan, Oregon. Another of these boulders has been placed
on the campus of Willamette University in Salem.
It is believed that flood waters (in what is now Salem) crested
approximately 400 feet above current sea level. Using today's
landmarks, "lake front property" would have been available
in the vicinity of Hilfiker Lane and Sunridge, Argyle, and Eastlake
Drives in South Salem as well as Sunwood Drive, Burley Road,
Upper Breckenridge Loop, and the grounds of West Salem High
School in West Salem. It is believed that the intersection of
State and Commercial Streets in downtown Salem was under 243
feet of water.
Scientists have studied the great floods for many years. Geologist
Thomas Condon postulated a Willamette Sound in 1871
and J. Harlan Bretz was the first geologist to describe the
Spokane Flood in 1919. Yet another scientist, Ira
S. Allison, identified major features of the flooding throughout
the Willamette Valley, adding to the evidence of this great
geologic event of the recent past. It is also said that the
Kalapuyas' native legends include a description of a "water
beast" which once roamed the valley floor.
Researched and written by Rodney R. Stubbs. Edited by Kyle Jansson..
Bibliography:
Allen, J.E., and Marjorie Burns. Cataclysms on the Columbia.
Portland, Oregon: Timber Press, 1986.
Mellville, Jacobs. Kalapuya Ethnologic Texts, Seattle: University
of Washington, 1945.
Shaded Relief Map. Washington, D.C.: United States Geologic
Service (USGS.)
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