Abstract

Recent explanations of widespread rhythmically layered sediments in eastern Washington as the result of repeated great floods from glacial Lake Missoula implicitly suggest a paleomagnetic test for validity. If each conjectural flood layer is separated by years or decades, as hypothesized, a sequence of several such flood beds should record measurable secular variation in geomagnetic field direction. In the Sanpoil River valley where the rhythmite sequences are thought to have been deposited in glacial Lake Columbia, the paleomagnetic test consists of measuring remanent magnetization (RM) directions for thick, upwardly fining beds inferred to be sediments deposited by the influx of flood waters from glacial Lake Missoula into glacial Lake Columbia. Laboratory measurements of samples from three widely spaced sections along the Sanpoil River yield RM vectors with erratic inclinations, apparently affected by varying contributions of inclination error and (or) compaction shallowing, but with declinations that generally differ statistically from one flood to the next and that show the same west-to-east trend at all three locations. The rates of declination change inferred from these data are consistent with modern rates, thus providing the first geophysical evidence supporting the timing in the tens-of-floods theory.

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