2003 Seattle Annual Meeting (November 2–5, 2003)

Paper No. 7
Presentation Time: 9:30 AM

QUATERNARY STRATIGRAPHIC FRAMEWORK FOR HYDROGEOLOGIC ANALYSIS OF THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY, OREGON


O'CONNOR, Jim1, SARNA-WOJCICKI, Andrei M.2, WOZNIAK, Karl C.3, GANNETT, Marshall W.1 and CONLON, Terrence D.4, (1)US Geol Survey, 10615 SE Cherry Blossom Drive, Portland, OR 97216, (2)U.S. Geol Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd, Menlo Park, CA 94025, (3)Oregon Water Resources Dept, 158 12th St. NE, Salem, OR 97310, (4)U.S. Geol Survey, 10615 SE Cherry Blossom Drive, Portland, OR 97216, oconnor@usgs.gov

To support regional groundwater flow modeling, we have developed a Quaternary stratigraphic framework for the central and southern parts of the Willamette Valley, Oregon, based on geologic mapping, examination of stratigraphic exposures and well logs, and new radiometric ages and tephrochronology. This framework consists of six episodes of distinct depositional environments: (1) Since at least 400 ka, large and thick (locally greater than 120 m) gravel fans have formed where major Cascade Range tributaries to the Willamette River enter the valley and have forced the northward-flowing mainstem Willamette to the western margin of the valley. (2) Fan deposition culminated between about 30 and 22 ka (radiocarbon yr), when widespread sand and gravel transport by braided river systems resulted in 5-20 m of sand and gravel deposition on the fans and across much of the valley bottom. (3) A period of local surface stability and soil formation occurred between about 22 and 15 ka (radiocarbon yr) which ended when (4) much of the Willamette Valley was repeatedly backflooded by cataclysmic releases of ice-dammed Glacial Lake Missoula into the Columbia River drainage between 15 and 12.5 ka (radiocarbon yr). These floods left up to 35 m of silt and clay (and minor sand and gravel) that are locally mappable to an altitude of 105 m (5) Subsequent to deposition of Missoula Flood sediment in the valley, but prior to about 10 ka (radiocarbon yr), there was renewed aggradation along the major Cascade Range tributaries, resulting in several-kilometer-wide swaths of 3-to-15 m thick gravel deposits within locally incised Missoula flood deposits. (6) The Willamette River and its major tributaries have subsequently incised into these gravels, forming multilevel Holocene floodplains composed of gravel, sand, and silt.