108

Tsunami - Newport

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Tsunami hazard sign near the Umpqua River Lighthouse Museum - 2018
Photo:
Rick Obst
Devastating waves called ‘tsunamis’ can strike the Oregon coast at any time. These waves are caused by great undersea earthquakes that occur along the Cascadia Subduction Zone, one of the largest active faults in North America.Tsunamis are dangerous and destructive. They have struck the Oregon coast at 200 to 600 year intervals. For example, about AD 1700, a tsunami caused by an earthquake on the Cascadia Subduction Zone flooded marshes landward of Yaquina Bay and other Oregon bays.

Geologists know tsunamis have affected large areas in the past because tsunami-deposited sand has been found here and in other coastal lowlands in Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, and northernmost California.

Caption: The earth’s surface consists of a series of “plates”. These plates are constantly shifting and sliding over, under, or past each other. When a sudden movement occurs between two plates, we experience an earthquake.

Caption: A tsunami can deposit a layer of sea sand in its path. Core samples have been collected along Yaquina Bay and the surrounding lowlands for evidence of past tsunamis. Dots show where buried tsunami sands were found.

Caption: The Juan de Fuca Plate is moving away from the Juan de Fuca Ridge and is being forced under the overriding North American Plate; this geologic process is called subduction. 

WHAT TO DO
If there is an earthquake on the Cascadia Subduction Zone, Newport could be hit by a tsunami within minutes of the ground shaking. To escape a tsunami, you must respond immediately after feeling an earthquake – go to high ground and inland away from beaches, tidal channels, and other coastal lowlands. Remember, most tsunamis are not solitary giant waves; instead, many large waves may strike shore over the course of several hours. Do not return to the beach after the first tsunami wave. Wait for official word from authorities.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Newport
Lincoln COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
44.61767,-124.05147

OTIC TOPIC:
Geology, Natural Disasters

Sponsored by:
Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Studies

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

published online:
september 25, 2011
109

Tygh Valley

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Photo: U.S. Forest Service- Pacific Northwest Region
Mt Hood National Forest, Tygh Valley farm Land - 1995
"After descending a long, steep, rocky and very tedious hill, we have campt in a valley on the bank of Indian (Tygh) Creek, near some Frenchmen who have a trading post. There are also a good many Indians encamped around us."
 --Amelia Stewart Knight
Emigrant of 1853
 
Tygh Valley's name is inherited from this area's original residents, the Tygh Indians, who camped and traded with the early emigrants here.
1845 Oregon Trail pioneers followed a wagon road here from the Dalles. Their route crossed Tygh Ridge and tumbled down to the valley floor just across from today's Wasco County Fairgrounds.

By 1850, some Oregon Trail travelers used a shortcut from the John Day River. It came across the Deschutes River and west to Tygh Valley. In doing so, the emigrants bypassed The Dalles and avoided many miles.

When leaving the valley on the new Barlow Road, travelers used many of the draws to the West especially the one near the fairground.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Tygh Valley
Wasco COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
44.61767,-124.05147

OTIC TOPIC:
Oregon Trail
(PART OF OREGON TRAIL)

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

published online:
october 11, 2011
110

Umatilla County

BEAVER BOARD INFORMATION

Photo:Gary Halvorson, Oregon State Archives
UMATILLA RIVER 2010
Weary emigrants traveling westward on the Oregon Trail favored a campsite on the near bank of the Umatilla River at this point. On leaving they climbed the same hill the highway now traverses, then recrossed the Umatilla River at Echo 20 hot, dusty miles westerly.

In the years 1863-64 at this site a settlement composed of 3 buildings called Middleton, the first County and Circuit Court Sessions were held in Swift and Martins Store. Discovery of gold in the Blue Mts. Area boomed Umatilla Landing on the Columbia River, and the County Seat was moved there. In 1868 the County Seat was relocated in Pendleton.

FACT BLOCK

LOCATION:
Pendleton
Umatilla COUNTY

GPS COORDINATES:
45.24055393196085, 
-121.18673006366828

OTIC TOPIC:
Historic Routes
(PART OF OREGON TRAIL)

Sponsored by: Pendleton Commandary No. 7 K.T. of Oregon

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

published online:
SEPTEMBER 25, 2011