Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Lake Idaho: new perspectives through basalt stratigraphy

Conference · · AAPG (Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol.) Bull.; (United States)
OSTI ID:5696725
Since the earliest geological investigations in Idaho, researchers have speculated on the existence of a large lake in the western Snake River plain. O.C. Marsh, writing in King's 1878 report on the geological exploration of the 40th parallel, suggested, based on fish paleontology, the presence of a large lake covering parts of southern Idaho and Oregon. Recent investigators of sediments and fossils have debated the size of the lake, even suggesting a series of small lakes in a broad river valley. Their mapping of basalt units in the northern Bruneau River canyon suggests that a large, permanent lake indeed existed, and that toward the end of its evolution during the Pliocene may have had a highstand elevation of 3600-3800 ft. Lake margin features are preserved by the individual basalt units that were changed in character as they flowed into the lake. This change from solid basalt to basalt rubble and boulders enclosed within a dark disaggregated matrix is present in successively younger units that flowed northwestward from volcanoes to the south. Stratigraphic evidence of successively younger flows, emplaced at continually higher elevations, suggests that the lake gradually filled and that the lakeshore transgressed southward. The regressive facies of the lake is preserved in the gravel sequences that are present at the mouths of present-day river canyons, whose ancestral drainages debouched into the slowly draining lake. From the undeformed lake-margin features present throughout the region, Lake Idaho apparently occupied the western Snake River plain depression, and was connected to a series of lakes in eastern Oregon. The configuration of these lakes strongly suggests that this lake system, prior to capture by the Snake River through Hells Canyon, may have drained through the present Grand Ronde River system.
Research Organization:
Idaho Geological Survey, Moscow
OSTI ID:
5696725
Report Number(s):
CONF-870915-
Conference Information:
Journal Name: AAPG (Am. Assoc. Pet. Geol.) Bull.; (United States) Journal Volume: 71:8
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

Seismic facies, sedimentology, and significance of a lacustrine delta in Neogene Lake Idaho' deposits: Western Snake River Plain, Idaho and Oregon
Conference · Wed Mar 31 23:00:00 EST 1993 · Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs; (United States) · OSTI ID:5025251

Geothermal resources of southern Idaho
Technical Report · Fri Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 1982 · OSTI ID:6598600

Bruneau Known Geothermal Resource Area: an environmental analysis
Technical Report · Sat Sep 01 00:00:00 EDT 1979 · OSTI ID:5817448