Puneet Varma (Editor)

Red Rock Pass

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Elevation
  
1,458 m

Traversed by
  
U.S. Route 91

Range
  
Rocky Mountains

Red Rock Pass httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Bannock County, Idaho, United States

Similar
  
Grays Lake National Wildlife R, Massacre Rocks State Park, Harriman State Park, Rush Lake, Rocky Mountains

Red Rock Pass is a low mountain pass in eastern Idaho, south of Downey in southern Bannock County. It is geologically significant as the spillway of ancient Lake Bonneville. It is located along highway US-91 at an elevation of 4785 feet (1458 m) above sea level, bounded by two mountain ranges; the Portneuf to the east and the Bannock to the west.

Contents

Map of Red Rock Pass, Idaho 83234, USA

The pass was cut through resistant Paleozoic shale, limestone, and dolomite, and forms a narrow gap two miles (3 km) in length. At one time the pass was 300 feet (100 m) higher, where the shoreline of Pleistocene Lake Bonneville stood.

Red Rock Pass has a surface deposit of calcareous silty alluvium with topsoil of dark grayish brown silt loam.

The Bonneville floodEdit

It is believed that during the last ice age lava flows in the vicinity of Pocatello began to divert the Bear River through Lake Thatcher and then into Lake Bonneville. This sudden influx caused Bonneville to overflow at Red Rock about 14,500 years ago. This overflow caused a sudden erosion of unconsolidated material on the northern shoreline near Red Rock Pass. As the material gave way, Marsh Creek Valley, immediately downstream, was flooded from wall to wall, and the rapid discharge eroded the pass to its present level. The flood then flowed into the Snake River Plain, generally following the path of the present-day Snake River to its outlet in the Pacific Northwest.

The Bonneville Flood, as it is known, was a catastrophic event. The maximum discharge was about 15 million cubic feet per second (420,000 m³/s), or about three times the average flow of the Amazon River, the world's largest river. The speed of flow was approximately 16 mph (7 m/s), and though peak flow lasted only a few days, voluminous discharges may have continued for at least a year.

References

Red Rock Pass Wikipedia