TABLE OF CONTENTS The Changing Landscape of 12-60 Million Years Ago Thumbnail Biography of Mount Rainier Landslides and Mudflows Past, Present, and Future ILLUSTRATIONS FIGURES Frontispiece. Eunice Lake, northwest of Mount Rainier 1. Outcrop of sandstone and shale in the Pugest Sound 2. Outcrop of welded tuff in the Stevens Ridge Formation 3. Granodiorite looks like granite 4. Geological cross section of Mount Rainier 5. Columns of andesite at the end of an old lava flow 6. Layers of pumice on the floor of a cirque 7. Breadcrust bomb enclosed in a mudflow depost 8. Generalized distribution of some pumice layers 9. Pumice layer C, which consists of light-brown fragments 10. The recent lava cone lies in a depression 11. Two ice streams meet to form Cowlitz Glacier 12. Glacier-smoothed and grooved rock 13. A lake lies behind an end moraine of Flett Glacier 14. Recessional moraines on the valley floor of Fryingpan Creek 15. Extent of glaciers between 15,000 and 25,000 years ago 16. Lateral moraine at Ricksecker Point 17. Rock-glacier deposit at The Palisades 18. Hummocky end moraine in front of Emmons Glacier 19. Avalanche deposits in the White River Valley 20. The northeast flank of Mount Rainier 21. An old lava flow which forms Rampart Ridge
1 Characteristics, sources, and ages of pumice layers, Mount Rainier National Park 2 Summary of important geologic events in the history of Mount Rainier National Park
bul/1292/contents.htm Last Updated: 01-Mar-2005 |