Kamiak Butte Essay

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Kamiak Butte is one of the few areas near Pullman that reflect the many geologic terms learned in class. This area is an example of an area that is extinct to the surrounding landforms. This butte is located in Whitman County, in between the cities of Colfax and Pullman, Washington. With an elevation of 3, 641 feet above sea level, Kamiak Butte has one of the highest elevations in all of Whitman County (1). The county park covers about 298 acres, and consists mainly of woodlands. Once one has climbed to the top of the butte, the sights become endless and breathe taking. To the north is Steptoe Butte, and southeast is Paradise Ridge and Moscow Mountain. Surrounding the top is endless views of loess dunes, and Blue Mountains that can be seen …show more content…

The result of these gaps overtime, lead scientists to make assumptions over what happened. Kamiak Butte is found on the North American Plate, and does not seem to be located near any plate boundaries, other than the Juan de Fuca Plate, which is located near the west coast. This is a reason as why the Palouse has no dominating mountain forms, such as the Cascades, which are a result of oceanic-continental convergent boundaries. Kamiak Butte is located on the Columbia River Basalts, one of the oldest and largest deposits of flood basalts in the entire world (2). This very large igneous batholith covers almost all of Eastern Washington, parts of Oregon and west Idaho. These basalts were the primary creators of the butte. About three billion years ago there was once an ocean where Kamiak Butte is now. The ocean floor was made of sand. Over time the oceans receded and the exposed sand underwent a process that turned it into sandstone, also know as lithification. Years later, the sandstone morphed it into the quartzite that is seen surrounding the butte (4). Rocks that undergo this process are called metamorphic rock, which is the same as the rock seen years ago by dinosaurs and other extinct creatures. The quartzite rocks were formerly seafloor sediment that was forced upwards, and then surrounded by lava basalt flows. Once erupted through fissures and floods through out most of the area, lava flow eventually created enough basalt to form a thickness of about 1.8 kilometers (1). All of this basalt flow eventually led to the covering of most mountains, leaving the buttes uncovered. The igneous lava flows and loess is reasons that the Palouse consists of such sprawling hills, and rich soil for farming (2). In result of the lava flows, the Precambrian rock Quartzite was formed. And lastly covered by the glacial loess, which were

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