The Shape of the Land Today
Knowledge of the geological history of an area
enables us to better understand the shape of the land today. It will be
recalled that earth movements depressed the land on the north, south,
and east, leaving the Olympic Mountains standing alone, isolated from
other mountains. However, they are a segment of that elongated western
fringe of mountains known as the Coast Range. In all that range
the Olympics are the highest; yet, for western mountains they are not
high, dominating Mount Olympus being only 7,965 feet above sea level.
This is not to suggest, however, that the Olympics are small. These
mountains have their base at sea level, or not much above, and viewed from
any lowland position they appear impressive indeed. A mountain climb
will confirm this idea of their size.
The Olympics are not a single range of mountains but
a profusion of peaks and ridges with intervening valleysa mountain
dome 60 miles across from north to south and east to west, cut by
glaciers and numerous streams into rugged peaks and steep-walled
valleys. There are nearly a hundred named peaks in Olympic National
Park.
Mount Olympus occupies a central position on the
Peninsula. To the west the ridges descend gradually and merge with the
coastal plain which varies from a few to 20 miles in width. The eastern
half of the Olympics maintains a high elevation all the way to the
eastern edge. There they drop steeply to Hood Canal, an arm of Puget
Sound, leaving but little lowland on that side of the Peninsula. The
mountains end abruptly on the north side, too, but with some foothills
between them and the shores of Juan de Fuca Strait, some 3 to 6 miles
distant. Except for the western slopes, the ridges have a fairly uniform
elevation of between 5,000 and 6,000 feet, and the peaks rise 1,000 to
2,000 feet higher.
The Olympic high country shows the effects of glacier
scouring everywhere. Numerous lakes lie in basins that were scooped out
by the same glaciers that carved circular hollows at the heads of
valleys. Slopes sweep upward from the basins with increasing steepness
and in many places end in serrated rock ridges and pinnacles.
More than a dozen streams flow out of the Olympic
Mountains, returning rain and melt water to the ocean. They drop down
steeply from the high level basins; after a few swift miles they flatten
out and the water takes a slower pace.
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