Marmes Man Exhibit

The Ice Age Floods and Channeled Scablands

The broad rocky expanse that follows the course of Highway 395 from Pasco and Franklin County to Spokane follows one of the principal lobes of the Northwest’s legendary Channeled Scablands. In some places, the terrain resembles an alien landscape with evidence of unimaginable cataclysm that evokes visions of continental wrath. The region contains some of the Western Hemisphere’s oldest evidence of human habitation including the remains of Marmes Man (c. 11,500 years ago) in eastern Franklin County, and Kennewick Man (c. 9,500 y. a.), and has been extensively studied by scientists investigating origins of similar features on the surface of Mars.

But the term “scabland” is an unkind name obscuring this land’s zephyred melodies and mysteries. The grassy slopes and rocky canyons are alive with biological diversity in spite of gargantuan prehistoric assaults. This unique terrain was formed after the recurrent build-up and failure of massive ice dams near the mouth of the Clark Fork River in northern Idaho that had created enormous glacial Lake Missoula over many thousands of years. The lake grew to cover as much as 3,000 square miles across western Montana and contained approximately six hundred cubic miles of water—larger than Lake Erie!

Prehistoric Lake Lewis

When pressure and melting due to a warming trend caused the ice dam to break, the lake surged into an explosive flood, termed a “joekulhaup,” that may have drained the lake in forty-eight hours releasing a volume of water larger than in any similar event indicated on the planet. Unable to contain such volume in the Columbia’s ancient canyon course, the onslaught of Ice Age flooding tore across the soft rolling grasslands, which were violently “scabbed” or cut to bedrock, and formed three major drainages across the Columbia Plateau.

As the unimpeded waves sought declivities for escape, a peripheral branch of the eastern flow engorged what was likely an insequent streambed to form a torrential trench carving grandiose pavilioned walls, and churned out the lower Palouse River canyon. The ancestral Palouse River ran through Washtucna and Esquatzel Coulees to present Connell. The torrid waters sped at seventy-five miles an hour to engorge the lower Columbia River at present Pasco and were temporarily impounded behind Wallula Gap. Here the waters backfilled the Pasco Basin to form 3,000 square miles, Lake Lewis, to a height of 900 feet so only the highest points of Badger Mountain and Rattlesnake Mountain (Lalíik: DzHigh Placedz) were above water. According to ancient tribal lore, people living here at that time found refuge in these places.


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Museum Location

305 N 4th Ave.
Pasco, WA 99301

Hours

Thurs. – Fri.: 12:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Sat.: 9:30 AM – 2:30 PM
Closed State & Federal Holidays

 


Phone Number

509.547.3714

Trains, Tribes, and Towns

Northern Pacific Railroad Construction, 1870-2020 A Franklin County Museum Sesquicentennial Exhibit William Mackay, Railroad Parade (1940 New York World’s Fair Poster) Franklin County Historical Museum Collection The steam locomotive Minnetonka shown above was the original NPRR engine sent to construct the historic line across the Pacific Northwest. After completion of the route in the 1880s…


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Snake River-Palouse Indian Exhibit

For the Snake River-Palouse Indians and other native peoples of the Northwest’s Columbia Plateau, foundational beliefs have long characterized a common life throughout a vast region of geographic diversity and cultural complexity. Such prominent nineteenth century Plateau spiritual leaders as Thomash among the Snake River-Palouse, Kotaiaqan among the…


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Prehistoric Camel Exhibit

Camels are associated only with the deserts of Asia and Africa, leaving their true North America origin unknown until recent research. According to scientists, camels originated in North America and most prehistoric species developed here. Camelops hesternus, the Giant Western Camel, was extremely abundant in the western…


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