THE STEAMBOAT ROCK SILT: INDIRECT EVIDENCE FOR A MORAINE-DAMMED LAKE IN UPPER GRAND COULEE DURING THE LAST GLACIAL MAXIMUM
Bedding in the Steamboat Rock Silt varies from a few cm to nearly 1 m in thickness, and is remarkably continuous along strike. Lower bedding contacts are erosional, and most beds display normal grading. Cross-stratification is present in coarser beds, with amplitudes ranging from about 5 to about 20 cm. Some beds exhibit soft-sediment deformation. Dropstones are common; most are relatively small (3-10 cm), but near the base of the exposed section, dropstones up to 1.5 m in diameter are present. Dropstone lithologies includes basaltic, granitic, and metamorphic rocks. Trace fossils are evident on some bedding surfaces; trace makers are unknown.
The Steamboat Rock Silt is interpreted to represent cyclic, perhaps seasonal deposition into a temporary impoundment behind the terminal moraine deposited during the last advance of the Okanogan Lobe of the Cordilleran ice sheet. The most likely location for the terminal moraine was at the present location of Dry Falls Dam; here, a bedrock sill is exposed. The moraine was breached and the lake drained prior to or during the late Wisconsinan Missoula Floods. The channel geometry of upper Grand Coulee and Steamboat Rock protected parts of the Steamboat Rock Silt from erosion during the later stages of the Missoula Floods.