Glaciation
Other important geological events started about a
million years ago. As the climate of the world became colder a great ice
sheet formed to the north and moved down across Canada into the United
States. There were periods when the climate warmed and the ice
retreated. It advanced again when temperatures lowered during tens of
thousands of years. The sheet moved southward at least four times during
the last million years.
At the same time, valley glaciers flowed out of the
mountains of British Columbia, joined forces, and formed a piedmont
glacier that moved southward into Puget Sound and against the eastern
edge of the Olympic Mountains. A lobe of this glacier branched off and
flowed westward through Juan de Fuca Strait. This piedmont glacier, at
least 3,000 feet thick, rubbed the northern edge of the Olympic
Mountains and sent ice fingers up the valleys. It brought granite
boulders from the north and dropped them along the way when it melted.
Some of these granite boulders have been found near Camp Wilder, 25
miles up the Elwa River Valley, and as high as 3,000 feet on the side of
Klahhane Ridge.
As the ice moved west along the northern border of
the mountains, it plowed and scraped the deepened and ancient valley
that filled with water when the ice melted. This valley contains Lakes
Crescent and Sutherland. These and numerous other telltale marks attest
to the work of a thick ice sheet.
Approximately 11,000 years have elapsed since the
retreat of the last northern ice sheet from Washington.
With the onset of colder climate, valley glaciers
also formed in the Olympic Mountains. They flowed from high mountain
cirques down the valleys, probably filling the valleys during times of
greatest ice volume and becoming thinner and shorter during times of
warmer climate. Like the larger ice sheets from the north, the valley
glaciers of the mountains must have advanced and retreated periodically.
The greatest advance was as much as 25 to 40 miles in the Hoh, Queets,
and Quinault Valleys. A terminal moraine left by a glacier dams Quinault
Valley and holds the lake behind it.
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