USGS/Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, Washington
DESCRIPTION:
Mount Rainier River Drainages
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Mount Rainier River Drainages
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[Map,33K,InlineGIF]
Map, River Drainages surrounding Mount Rainier.
-- Modified from: Scott, et.al., 1992, USGS Open-File Report 90-385
From:
Crandell, 1971,
Postglacial Lahars From Mount Rainier Volcano, Washington:
USGS Professional Paper 677, p.2
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Mount Rainier volcano
dominates the landscape of a large part of western
Washington. It stands nearly 3 miles higher than the lowlands to the west and
1.5 miles higher than the surrounding mountains. The base of the volcano
spreads over an area of about 100 square miles, and lava flows that radiate from
the base of the cone extend to distances of as much as 9 miles.
The flanks of
Mount Rainier are drained by five major rivers and their tributaries. Clockwise
from the northwest the major rivers are the Carbon, White, Cowlitz, Nisqually,
and Puyallup.
Each river flows westerly through the
Cascade Range
and, with the
exception of the Cowlitz, empties into Puget Sound near Tacoma, Washington. The
Cowlitz joins the Columbia River in the southwestern part of the State to flow
to the Pacific Ocean.
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Each major river in
Mount Rainier National Park
occupies a deep canyon whose
floor is 1,000-3,000 feet below the adjacent divides. Valley-floor gradients
are 100-400 feet per mile near the park boundaries and increase markedly
upstream. The valley floors of Tahoma Creek, the North and South Puyallup
Rivers, and the Mowich River have gradients of 700-800 feet per mile in their
upper reaches and are among the steepest in the park. The volcano's summit
towers 9,000-11,000 feet above valley floors only 3-6 miles away. The flanks of
the volcano itself have slopes mostly between 25 degrees and 30 degrees, although
those of Willis Wall on the north side are between 40 degrees and 45 degrees.
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Partly because of its position astride a high, dissected part of the
Cascade Range, Mount Rainier
does not have broad peripheral aprons of laharic and
fluvial deposits like those fringing the base of
Mount Shasta
in northern California and some large stratovolcanoes elsewhere. Instead, large
lahars originating on the volcano
in
Quaternary time
repeatedly flowed far down the
canyons of the Cascade Range, and some came to rest beyond the mountain front in
parts of the adjoining Puget Sound lowland.
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[Mount Rainier River Drainages Menu] ...
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03/03/06, Lyn Topinka