52

FOURMILE CANYON

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Fourmile Canyon witnessed the westward passage of wagons across the Columbia Plateau during the late summer and early fall. By this time on their journey, the emigrants had alternately been exposed to blazing heat, bitter cold and blustery winds. In an effort to avoid the late summer heat, some emigrants traveled in the relative cool evening, often by moonlight. 

Traveling west beyond the Umatilla River the weary travelers faced a long three day trek before reaching the crossing of the John Day River, twenty miles from this point. Fourmile Canyon was passed on the second day as most wagons moved between the established camps of Willow Creek and Cedar Spring along the trail.
 
Sabbath day, we remained in camp (Willow Creek) until three o'clock when we filled our water casks and started on over the bluffs, and encamped at noon PM, having traveled about seven miles. The dust was so dense that traveling in the night was rather dangerous as the ground was full of chuck holes which in the dust and darkness we could not see. We found no good grass and but little of any description.
-- Abigail Scott, September 12, 1847

Continued our tedious journey ... sixteen miles this day encamped on the hills wood plenty a little dry grass but no water ice nearly an inch thick this morning Mount Hood a peak of the Cascades loomed in the sky covered with snow Henry and myself are just able to move and that is all
-- Lydia A. Rudd, September 23, 1852
 
Tuesday Started at 2 o'clock this afternoon. Have a 15 mile drive to make for water. Will make part of it this evening. Leaving the creek (Willow Creek) ascended the bluff dividing the Blue and Cascade mountains. These bluffs are very high. The first hill we ascended was two miles long. We had a toiling drive until after dark, when we were compelled to camp without grass, as we could not go on farther. Our cattle were to tired and faded, but there was nothing for them to eat or drink!
-- Esther Belle McMillan Harris, August (?), 1852

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Arlington
Gilliam COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES: 45.645218,-120.081103

OTIC TOPIC:
Oregon Trail
(PART OF OREGON TRAIL)
 
SPONSORED BY:
BLM

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
NO MULTICULTURAL
INFORMATION

published online:
october 11, 2012
53

fremont memorial

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

A MEMORIAL TO THE PERSONNEL OF THE SECOND FREMONT EXPLORING EXPEDITION TO OREGON AND NORTH CALIFORNIA.

The reports of this expedition directed the migration of the Western Settlement toward the Oregon Country which hitherto had been merely a rendezvous for trappers. On December 16th, 1843 the expedition while enroute from The Dalles of the Columbia to Sutters Fort on the Sacramento, struggled from the snowy heights of ‘Winter Ridge’ to the temperate shores of Summer Lake via the canyon directly west of this spot and bestowed those names which serve as a permanent reminder of their escape from the snow-bound plateau.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Summer Lake
Lake COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES: 42.97198,-120.77835

OTIC topic:
Historic Routes

beaver board text CODED AS:
NO WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
no MULTICULTURAL
information

published online:
september 19, 2011
54

Glacial Erratics

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

The 90-ton glacial erratic rock at the top of this 1/4 mile-long trail is a stranger from a distant location- it was transported here thousands of years ago on an iceberg in the wake of a cataclysmic flood.

During the last Ice Age, 13,000-15,500 years ago, a giant glacier dammed the Clark Fork River in what is today southwest Montana and created a huge lake- Glacial Lake Missoula. At 3,000 square miles, the lake held nearly 500 cubic miles of water. Rising waters collapsed the ice dam several times, releasing tremendous torrents of water across eastern Washington and down the Columbia River toward the Pacific Ocean.

Floodwaters nearly 1,000 feet deep surged through the Columbia River Gorge and flooded the Willamette Valley. Flowing with 10 times the combined annual volume of all the Earth’s rivers, floodwaters raged at 60 miles per hour, stripping away up to 200 feet of topsoil and ripping huge boulders from the underlying bedrock. The floods also carried boulder-laden icebergs- as the ice melted and the floodwaters recede, boulders, called ‘glacial erratics,’ remained stranded in fields and prairies. The boulder at the top of this trail is the largest known glacial erratic among the hundreds found in the Willamette Valley.

Caption 1: This large glacial erratic, composed of a metamorphic rock called argillite, was once much larger! Geologists estimate that the boulder originally weighed about 160 tons- visitors have removed over 70 tons. Please respect this vestige of Oregon’s remarkable geologic history- take photos only!

Caption 2: Along with icebergs, the Missoula Floods carried vast amounts of gravel, sand , silt, and clay, which helped make the Willamette Valley one of the nation’s most fertile agricultural regions. The trail to the rock provides an excellent view of the surrounding vineyards. Enologists (wine scientists) credit soils created in the wake of the Missoula Floods with the success of Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, and Pinot Gris wine grapes in this region. Some 40,000 acres of these grapes thrive in the Willamette Valley and are used to produce highly-prized wines produced in the French Burgundy style.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Bellevue
Yamhill COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES: 45.137339,-123.294426

OTIC topic:
Geology

beaver board text CODED AS:
No WHITE SUPREMACY ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
no MULTICULTURAL
information

published online:
september 19, 2011