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Great Falls (Missouri River)

The Great Falls of the Missouri River are a series of waterfalls on the upper Missouri River in north-central Montana in the United States. From upstream to downstream, the five falls along a 10-mile (16 km) segment of the river[2] are:

Great Falls of the Missouri River
Black Eagle Falls and Dam in 2014
LocationCascade County,
Montana, U.S.
Coordinates47°34′12″N 111°07′23″W / 47.57000°N 111.12306°W / 47.57000; -111.12306
Total height187 feet (57 m)
Number of drops5
Longest drop87 feet (27 m)
WatercourseMissouri River
Average
flow rate
7,539 cu ft/s (213.5 m3/s)[1]

The Missouri River drops a total of 612 feet (187 m) from the first of the falls to the last, which includes a combined 187 feet (57 m) of vertical plunges and 425 feet (130 m) of riverbed descent.[3] The Great Falls have been described as "spectacular",[4] one of the "scenic wonders of America",[5] and "a major geographic discovery".[6] When the Lewis and Clark Expedition became the first white men to see the falls in 1805, Meriwether Lewis said they were the grandest sight he had beheld thus far in the journey.[7]

The Great Falls of the Missouri River were depicted on the territorial seal of the Montana Territory, and later on the state seal of Montana in 1893.[8]

Names of the falls edit

The Mandan Indians knew of cataracts and called them by a descriptive (but not formal) name: Minni-Soze-Tanka-Kun-Ya,[9] or "the great falls."[10][11] The South Piegan Blackfeet, however, had a formal name for Rainbow Falls and called it "Napa's Snarling."[12][13] No record exists of a Native American name for any of the other four waterfalls.

Four of the five waterfalls were given names in 1805 by American explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark.[2][14] Both Lewis and Clark named Crooked Falls in their journals.[2] Clark named three of the remaining waterfalls on his map: "Great Falls" (which retains its name to this day),[15] "Beautiful Cascade" (now called Rainbow Falls), and "Upper Pitch" (now known as Black Eagle Falls).[2][10] "Beautiful Cascade" was renamed "Rainbow Falls" in 1872 by Thomas B. Rogers, an engineer with the Great Northern Railway.[2][10] Colter Falls received its name from Paris Gibson, in honor of John Colter (a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition).[2][10] Black Eagle Falls is named for the black eagle which built a nest in a cottonwood tree on an island in the middle of the falls.[10][12][16] It is not clear when the falls lost their original name of "Upper Pitch," but they had acquired their modern name by at least 1877.[17]

Geological history edit

 
Map of Montana showing Glacial Lake Great Falls

The Missouri River lies atop the Great Falls Tectonic Zone, an intracontinental shear zone between two geologic provinces of basement rock of the Archean period which form part of the North American continent, the Hearne province and Wyoming province.[18] Approximately 1.5 million years ago, the Missouri River, Yellowstone River and Musselshell River all flowed northward into a terminal lake.[19][20] During the last glacial period, the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets pushed these lakes and rivers southward.[19][21] Between 15,000 and 11,000 BCE, the Laurentide Ice Sheet blocked the Missouri River and created Glacial Lake Great Falls.[21][22][23] About 13,000 BCE, as the glacier retreated, Glacial Lake Great Falls emptied catastrophically in a glacial lake outburst flood.[23] The current course of the Missouri River essentially marks the southern boundary of the Laurentide Ice Sheet.[24] The Missouri, Yellowstone and Musselshell rivers flowed eastward around the glacial mass, eventually settling into their present courses.[19] As the ice retreated, meltwater poured through the Highwood Mountains and eroded the mile-long, 500-foot-deep (150 m) Shonkin Sag—one of the most famous prehistoric meltwater channels in the world.[25]

The Great Falls themselves formed on a fall line unconformity in the Great Falls Tectonic Zone.[26] The Missouri River settled into a bedrock canyon which lay beneath the clay laid down by Glacial Lake Great Falls.[27][28] The course of the Missouri in and around the Great Falls has changed very little since then, in comparison to lower regions of the river on the ground moraine that forms much of the upper Great Plains.[29]

The Great Falls of the Missouri River formed because the Missouri is flowing over and through the Kootenai Formation, a mostly nonmarine sandstone laid down by rivers, glaciers, and lakes in the past.[27][30] Some of the Kootenai Formation is marine, however, laid down by shallow seas.[31] The river is eating away at the softer nonmarine sandstone, with the harder rock forming the falls themselves. Until relatively recently (in geologic time) the Missouri River in the area had a much wider channel,[32] but it has now settled into its current course, where it will continue to cut more deeply into the sandstone.

Discovery edit

Early inhabitants edit

The first human beings to see the Great Falls were Paleo-Indians who migrated into the area between 9,500 and 8,270 BCE.[23][33] The earliest inhabitants of North America entered Montana east of the Continental Divide between the Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets.[34] The area remained only sparsely inhabited, however.[35] Salish Indians would often hunt bison in the area on a seasonal basis, but no permanent settlements existed near the Great Falls for much of prehistory.[35] Around 1600, Piegan Blackfoot Indians, migrating west, entered the area, pushing the Salish back into the Rocky Mountains and claiming the area as their own.[35] The Great Falls of the Missouri remained in the tribal territory of the Blackfeet until Americans claimed the region in 1803.[12][36]

Although the discovery of the Great Falls by Native Americans is not recorded, the South Piegan Blackfeet were well-acquainted with the Great Falls by the late 18th century,[12] and news of the cataracts had spread among native peoples as far east as central North Dakota.[9]

Lewis and Clark edit

 
Meriwether Lewis

The United States purchased the area around the Great Falls of the Missouri from France (which claimed the area despite Native American habitation) in 1803, as part of the Louisiana Purchase.[36] Thomas Jefferson, then President of the United States, had long desired to send an expedition into the area.[37] Jefferson sought and won permission and funding for an expedition from Congress in January 1803.[37] On May 14, 1804, the Lewis and Clark Expedition departed St. Louis, Missouri to map the course of the Missouri River; establish whether a river route to the Pacific Ocean existed; study the Indian tribes, botany, geology, terrain and wildlife in the region; and evaluate whether British and French Canadian hunters and trappers in the area posed a challenge to American control over the region.[37] Expedition leaders Meriwether Lewis and William Clark first learned of the "great falls" from the Mandan Indians while wintering at Fort Mandan from November 2, 1804, until April 7, 1805.[37]

The Lewis and Clark Expedition reached the Great Falls on June 13, 1805.[37] Meriwether Lewis was the first White person to see the falls.[7] Lewis described the encounter in a now-famous passage of his expedition diary:[38]

...my ears were saluted with the agreeable sound of a fall of water and advancing a little further I saw the spray arrise above the plain like a column of smoke which would frequently dispear again in an instant caused I presume by the wind which blew pretty hard from the S. W. I did not however loose my direction to this point which soon began to make a roaring too tremendious to be mistaken for any cause short of the great falls of the Missouri. ... I hurryed down the hill which was about 200 feet high and difficult of access, to gaze on this sublimely grand spectacle. ... immediately at the cascade the river is about 300 yds. wide; about ninety or a hundred yards of this next the Lard. bluff is a smooth even sheet of water falling over a precipice of at least eighty feet, the remaining part of about 200 yards on my right formes the grandest sight I ever beheld, the height of the fall is the same of the other but the irregular and somewhat projecting rocks below receives the water in its passage down and brakes it into a perfect white foam which assumes a thousand forms in a moment sometimes flying up in jets of sparkling foam to the height of fifteen or twenty feet and are scarcely formed before large roling bodies of the same beaten and foaming water is thrown over and conceals them. in short the rocks seem to be most happily fixed to present a sheet of the whitest beaten froath for 200 yards in length and about 80 feet perpendicular. the water after descending strikes against the butment before mentioned or that on which I stand and seems to reverberate and being met by the more impetuous courant they role and swell into half formed billows of great height which rise and again disappear in an instant. this butment of rock defends a handsom little bottom of about three acres which is diversified and agreeably shaded with some cottonwood trees; in the lower extremity of the bottom there is a very thick grove of the same kind of trees which are small, in this wood there are several Indian lodges formed of sticks. ... from the reflection of the sun on the spray or mist which arrises from these falls there is a beatifull rainbow produced which adds not a little to the beauty of this majestically grand senery. after wrighting this imperfect discription I again viewed the falls and was so much disgusted with the imperfect idea which it conveyed of the scene that I determined to draw my pen across it and begin agin, but then reflected that I could not perhaps succeed better than pening the first impressions of the mind; I wished for the pencil of Salvator Rosa or the pen of Thompson, that I might be enabled to give to the enlightened world some just idea of this truly magnificent and sublimely grand object, which has from the commencement of time been concealed from the view of civilized man; but this was fruitless and vain. I most sincerely regretted that I had not brought a crimee obscura with me by the assistance of which even I could have hoped to have done better but alas this was also out of my reach; I therefore with the assistance of my pen only indeavoured to traces some of the stronger features of this seen by the assistance of which and my recollection aided by some able pencil I hope still to give to the world some faint idea of an object which at this moment fills me with such pleasure and astonishment, and which of its kind I will venture to ascert is second to but one in the known world. ...[39]
 
The Great Falls, or "Big Falls", and Ryan Dam in 1995

The falls which Lewis had seen were the lowest of the five falls, the Great Falls.[2][40] Exploring the following day, Lewis discovered Crooked Falls, Rainbow Falls, Colter Falls, and Black Eagle Falls.[2][40] At the final waterfalls, Lewis saw an amazing sight:[38]

I arrived at another cataract of 26 feet. ... below this fall at a little distance a beatifull little Island well timbered is situated about the middle of the river. in this Island on a Cottonwood tree an Eagle has placed her nest; a more inaccessible spot I believe she could not have found; for neither man nor beast dare pass those gulphs which separate her little domain from the shores. the water is also broken in such manner as it descends over this pitch that the mist or sprey rises to a considerable height. this fall is certainly much the greatest I ever behald except those two which I have mentioned below. it is incomparably a greater cataract and a more noble interesting object than the celebrated falls of Potomac or Soolkiln &c.[41]

Mounting a hill near Black Eagle Falls (probably where the town of Black Eagle is today), Lewis saw that the cataracts ended and that another large river joined the Missouri about two and a half miles further upstream.[37] Although it was very late in the afternoon, Lewis rushed forward to see this river and was attacked by a grizzly bear.[37] He ran more than 80 yards and launched himself into the Missouri River, and luckily the bear did not follow.[2][37] The Lewis and Clark Expedition was forced to portage around the Great Falls, an arduous task that took nearly a month.[37]

York, an African American slave owned by William Clark and who had participated in the Expedition, was the first black American to see the Great Falls.[42]

 
Westslope cutthroat trout, a fish written about by the Lewis and Clark Expedition at the Great Falls of the Missouri on June 13, 1805.

The Lewis and Clark Expedition made a number of discoveries near the Great Falls. On June 13, Silas Goodrich[43] caught numerous Westslope cutthroat trout at the falls, the first time anyone in the expedition had seen these fish, and several samples were preserved which constituted the type specimens for the fish.[44][45] The trout was subsequently given the scientific name Oncorhynchus clarki lewisi in honor of the expedition leaders.[43][44][45] The Westslope cutthroat is now the "official state fish" of Montana.[45] The explorers also collected the first samples of the gumbo evening primrose[46] and western meadowlark at the Great Falls.[47]

On June 18, while reconnoitering the series of falls on the south side of the Missouri River with a group of five others, William Clark discovered Giant Springs, which he correctly judged to be the largest spring in the world.[26][48][49] He was the first white person to see the springs, and the first white person to see the falls from the south side of the Missouri.[2]

Meriwether Lewis revisited the Great Falls on July 11, 1806, as the Corps of Discovery returned east. Lewis and nine men stopped at the Great Falls with the intention of exploring the Marias River and discovering its source. But during the night, Indians stole half the party's 17 horses, forcing three of the men to stay behind.[48]

Settlement of the area edit

 
Great Seal of the State of Montana, depicting the Great Falls of the Missouri

Following the return passage of Lewis and Clark in 1805/06 there is no record of any white man visiting the Great Falls of the Missouri until explorer and trapper Jim Bridger reached them in 1822.[12] White people next visited the Great Falls when Bridger and Major Andrew Henry led a fur-trading expedition there in April 1823 (and were attacked by Blackfeet Indians while camping at the site).[50] British explorer Alexander Ross trapped around the Great Falls in 1824.[51] In 1838, a mapping expedition sent by the U.S. federal government and guided by Bridger spent four years in the area.[12] Margaret Harkness Woodman became first white woman to see the Great Falls in 1862.[52]

The first permanent settlement near the Great Falls was Fort Benton, established in 1846 about 40 miles (64 km) downstream from the Great Falls.[53] The Great Falls marked the limit of the navigable section of the Missouri River,[54] and the first steamboat arrived at the falls in 1859.[53] In 1860, the Mullan Road linked Fort Benton with Fort Walla Walla in the Washington Territory.[12][55]

Politically, the Great Falls of the Missouri River passed through numerous hands in the 19th century. It was part of the unincorporated frontier until May 30, 1854, when Congress established the Nebraska Territory.[56] Indian attacks on white explorers and settlers dropped significantly after Isaac Stevens negotiated the Treaty of Hellgate in 1855, and white settlement in the area began to occur.[12] On March 2, 1861, it became part of the Dakota Territory.[57] The Great Falls were incorporated into the Idaho Territory on March 4, 1863,[58] and then into the Montana Territory on May 28, 1864.[35] It became part of the state of Montana upon that territory's admission to statehood on November 8, 1889.[35]

The Great Falls of the Missouri River became the site of a permanent settlement in 1883. Businessman Paris Gibson visited the Great Falls in 1880, and was deeply impressed by the possibilities for building a major industrial city near the falls with power provided by hydroelectricity.[59][60][61][62] He returned in 1883 with surveyors and platted a city (to be named Great Falls) on the south side of the river.[12][59][60] The city's first citizen, Silas Beachley, arrived later that year.[12] With investments from railroad owner James J. Hill and Helena businessman C. A. Broadwater, houses, a store, and a flour mill were established in 1884.[12][59][60][61][62] A planing mill, lumber yard, bank, school, and newspaper were established in 1885.[59][62] By 1887 the town had 1,200 citizens, and in October of that year the Great Northern Railway arrived in the city.[59][61][62] Great Falls, Montana, was incorporated on November 28, 1888, Black Eagle Dam was built in 1890, and by 1912 Rainbow Dam and Volta Dam (now Ryan Dam) were all operating.[12][59][62]

The city of Great Falls, Montana, derives its name from the waterfalls.[63] The small town of Black Eagle, Montana, derives its name from Black Eagle Falls,[12] and Cascade County (in which both are located) is named for the cataracts and rapids which make up the falls.[64]

Dams edit

 
Rainbow Falls and dam in 2000.

Only one of the waterfalls that comprise the Great Falls of the Missouri River, Crooked Falls, exists in its natural state today. Dams built on the falls beginning in the 1880s have significantly altered and even submerged the five waterfalls. Black Eagle Dam was built in 1890, and half of Black Eagle Falls are now submerged in the reservoir behind the dam.[12] This structure was the first hydroelectric dam built in the state.[65]

Rainbow Falls was dammed in 1910 when Rainbow Dam was built.[12][48][65] The reservoir behind the dam submerged Colter Falls.[12][48]

Volta Dam was built on top of the Great Falls in 1915, and later renamed Ryan Dam in 1940 in honor of John D. Ryan, the president and founder of the Montana Power Company.[12][66]

Historic district and interpretive centers edit

The Great Falls Portage, a National Historic Landmark District designated in 1966, commemorates the route by which Lewis and Clark bypassed the falls. The landmarked areas, including the expedition camps at either end of the portage, are located well above and below the series falls.[67][68] The Great Falls are also part of the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail, established by Congress in 1978.[69]

The Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail Interpretive Center was built in 1998 on a cliff overlooking the Missouri River near Crooked Falls. It provides an extensive look into Lewis and Clark's discovery of the Great Falls and their portage around them, as well as exhibits on native peoples of the area.[70]

In 1989, the City of Great Falls, the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, and other public and private bodies established the River's Edge Trail, a 30-mile (48 km) series of paved and unpaved trails that follow the Great Falls as well as the Lewis and Clark Expedition portage route (along with other scenic and historic area of the City of Great Falls and town of Black Eagle).[69][71]

In art edit

The first known drawing of the Great Falls was entered by Meriwether Lewis in his diary.[2] In 1807, Lewis commissioned the Irish engraver John James Barrelet to make drawings of the Great Falls.[2] After Lewis's death in 1810, William Clark visited his home and found the drawings, but they have since disappeared.[2]

The Great Falls have been depicted in well-known paintings over the years. The waterfalls may be seen in the background of John Mix Stanley's large painting "Barter for a Bride" (originally titled "A Family Group"), which was painted some time between 1854 and 1863 and now hangs in the Diplomatic Reception Room in the United States Department of State in Washington, D.C.[72] The noted Western painter O. C. Seltzer depicted the cataracts in his 1927 work, "Lewis and Clark With Sacajawea at the Great Falls of the Missouri, 1804."[73]

The first known photograph of the Great Falls was taken by noted Western photographer James D. Hutton about 1859 or 1860.[74]

References edit

  1. ^ Mineral and Water Resources of Montana. Stermitz, Frank; Hanly, T. F.; and Lane, C. W. Special Publication No. 28. Helena, Mont.: Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology, May 1963.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Cutright, Paul Russell, and Johnsgard, Paul A. Lewis and Clark: Pioneering Naturalists. 2d ed. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8032-6434-8
  3. ^ "Great Falls of the Missouri River." Encyclopedia Americana. New York: Americana Corp., 1954.
  4. ^ Malone, Michael P. Montana Century: 100 Years in Pictures and Words. Guilford, Conn.: Globe Pequot, 1999. ISBN 1-56044-827-X
  5. ^ Montana Department of Agriculture. The Resources and Opportunities of Montana. Helena, Mont.: Montana Department of Agriculture, 1912.
  6. ^ Johnsgard, Paul A. Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains: A Natural History. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8032-7618-4
  7. ^ a b Pritchett, Michael. The Melancholy Fate of Capt. Lewis. Columbia, Mo.: Unbridled Books, 2007. ISBN 1-932961-41-0
  8. ^ Shearer, Barbara Smith. State Names, Seals, Flags, and Symbols: A Historical Guide. 3rd rev. ed. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002. ISBN 0-313-31534-5
  9. ^ a b McEneaney, Terry. The Birder's Guide to Montana. Guilford, Conn.: Falcon Press, 1993. ISBN 1-56044-189-5
  10. ^ a b c d e Howard, Ela Mae. Lewis & Clark – Exploration of Central Montana. Rev. ed. Guilford, Conn.: Globe Pequot, 2000. ISBN 1-883844-03-7[page needed]
  11. ^ Robbins, Chuck. Great Places: Montana: A Recreational Guide to Montana's Public Lands and Historic Places for Birding, Hiking, Photography, Fishing, Hunting, and Camping. Belgrade, Mont.: Wilderness Adventures Press, 2008. ISBN 1-932098-59-3[page needed]
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Federal Writers' Project. Montana: A State Guide Book. Washington, D.C.: Federal Works Agency, Work Projects Administration, 1939. ISBN 1-60354-025-3[page needed]
  13. ^ Napa or "Old Man" (spelling variants include Naapi, Napi, Nape, Napiw, and Napioa) is a benevolent trickster spirit in the Blackfoot religion. Napa is also depicted as foolish or a troublemaker. The Creator gave him the task of shaping the world, and he continues to help people, according to various Blackfoot legends. See Clark, Cora and Williams, Texa Bowen. Pomo Indian Myths and Some of Their Sacred Meanings. New York: Vantage Press, 1954; Linderman, Frank Bird. Indian "Why Stories": Sparks From War Eagle's Lodge-Fire. New York: C. Scribner's Sons, 1915; Plenty-Coups and Linderman, Frank Bird. Plenty-Coups, Chief of the Crows. Reprinted. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8032-8018-1 (orig. pub. 1930)
  14. ^ Judson, Katharine Berry. Montana: "The Land of Shining Mountains". 5th ed. Chicago: A.C. McClurg, 1909.[page needed]
  15. ^ Lewis and Clark had been told by the Mandan Indians that there were "great falls" on the Missouri River. Clark adopted this name for the largest set of waterfalls the expedition discovered. See: Howard, Lewis & Clark – Exploration of Central Montana, 2000.
  16. ^ Vaughn, Robert. Then and Now, or, Thirty-Six Years in the Rockies: Personal Reminiscences of Some of the First Pioneers of the State of Montana, Indians and Indian Wars, and the Past and Present of the Rocky Mountain Country: 1864–1900. Chicago: Tribune Printing Company, 1900. [page needed]
  17. ^ Strahorn, Carrie Adell. Fifteen Thousand Miles By Stage: A Woman's Unique Experience During Thirty Years of Path Finding and Pioneering From the Missouri to the Pacific and From Alaska to Mexico. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1911. [page needed]
  18. ^ Boerner, D. E.; Craven, J. A.; Kurtz, R. D.; Ross, G. M.; and Jones, F. W. "The Great Falls Tectonic Zone: Suture or Intracontinental Shear Zone?" Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 35:2 (1998); O'Neill, J. Michael and Lo, David A. "Character and Regional Significance of Great Falls Tectonic Zone, East-Central Idaho, and West-Central Montana." AAPG Bulletin. 69 (1985); Mueller, Paul A.; Heatherington, Ann L.; Kelly, Dawn M.; Wooden, Joseph L.; and Mogk, David W. "Paleoproterozoic Crust Within the Great Falls Tectonic Zone: Implications for the Assembly of Southern Laurentia." Geology. 30:2 (February 2002); Harms, Tekla A.; Brady, John B.; Burger, H. Robert; and Cheney, John T. "Advances in the Geology of the Tobacco Root Mountains, Montana, and Their Implications for the History of the Northern Wyoming Province." Precambrian geology of the Tobacco Root Mountains, Montana. Special Papers, Volume 377. John B. Brady, H. Robert Burger, John T. Cheney, and Tekla A. Harms, eds. Boulder, Colo.: Geological Society of America, 2004. ISBN 0-8137-2377-9
  19. ^ a b c Clawson, Roger and Shandera, Katherine A. Billings: The City and the People. Helena, Mont.: Farcountry Press, 1998. ISBN 1-56037-037-8
  20. ^ McRae, W.C. and Jewell, Judy. Moon Montana. 7th ed. Cambridge, Mass.: PublicAffairs, 2009. ISBN 1-59880-014-0
  21. ^ a b Montagne J.L. "Quaternary System, Wisconsin Glaciation." Geologic Atlas of the Rocky Mountain Region. Denver: Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, 1972.
  22. ^ Hill, Christopher L., and Valppu, Seppo H. "Geomorphic Relationships and Paleoenvironmental Context of Glaciers, Fluvial Deposits, and Glacial Lake Great Falls, Montana." Current Research in the Pleistocene. 14 (1997); Hill, Christopher L. "Pleistocene Lakes Along the Southwest Margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet." Current Research in the Pleistocene. 17 (2000); Hill, Christopher L., and Feathers, James K. "Glacial Lake Great Falls and the Late-Wisconsin-Episode Laurentide Ice Margin." Current Research in the Pleistocene. 19 (2002); Reynolds, Mitchell W. and Brandt, Theodore R. Geologic Map of the Canyon Ferry Dam 30' x 60' Quadrangle, West-Central Montana: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map 2860, scale 1:100,000. Scientific Investigations Map 2860. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Geologic Survey, 2005.
  23. ^ a b c "Luminescence Dating of Glacial Lake Great Falls, Montana, U.S.A." 2014-11-29 at the Wayback Machine Feathers, James K., and Hill, Christopher L. XVI International Quaternary Association Congress. Stratigraphy and Geochronology Session. International Quaternary Association, Reno, 2003.
  24. ^ "Agriculture." In Encyclopedia of the Great Plains. David J. Wishart, ed. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2004. ISBN 0-8032-4787-7
  25. ^ Axline, Jon, and Bradshaw, Glenda Clay. Montana's Historical Highway Markers. Rev. ed. Helena, Mont.: Montana Historical Society, 2008. ISBN 0-9759196-4-4; Bowman, Isaiah. "Forest Physiography: Physiography of the United States and Principles of Soils in Relation to Forestry." American Environmental Studies. Reprint ed. Charles Gregg, ed. New York: Arno Press, 1970. ISBN 0-405-02659-5
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  27. ^ a b Fisher, Cassius A. "Geology of the Great Falls Coal Field, Montana." Bulletin - United States Geological Survey. Issue 356. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Geological Survey, 1909.
  28. ^ Newberry, J. S. "Surface Geology of the Country Bordering the Northern Pacific Railroad." American Journal of Science. July–December 1885.
  29. ^ Maschner, Herbert D. G., and Chippindale, Christopher. Handbook of Archaeological Methods. Vol. 1. New York: Rowman Altamira, 2005. ISBN 0-7591-0078-0
  30. ^ DeCelles, Peter G. "Sedimentation in a Tectonically Partitioned, Nonmarine Foreland Basin: The Lower Cretaceous Kootenai Formation, Southwestern Montana." Geological Society of America Bulletin. 97:8 (August 1986).
  31. ^ Haney, M. and Schwartz, R. K. Estuarine Member of the Lower Cretaceous Kootenai Formation, Missouri River Gorge, Great Falls, MT. Paper No. 38-15. Northeastern Section, 38th Annual Meeting. Geological Society of America. March 27–29, 2003; Farshori, M. Zahoor, and Hopkins, John C. "Sedimentology and Petroleum Geology of Fluvial and Shoreline Deposits of the Lower Cretaceous Sunburst Sandstone Member, Mannville Group, Southern Alberta." Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology. 37:4 (December 1989).
  32. ^ Geologic Map of the Great Falls North 30' x 60' Quadrangle, Central Montana. Vuke, Susan M.; Colton, Roger B.; and Fullerton, David S. Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology Open File 459. Helena, Mont.: Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology, 2002.
  33. ^ Davis, L. B., Hill, Christopher L.; and Fisher Jr., Jack W. "Radiocarbon Dates for Paleoindian Components (Folsom, Scottsbluff) at the MacHaffie Site, West-Central Montana Rockies." Current Research in the Pleistocene. 19 (2002); Hill, Christopher L. "Middle and Late Wisconsin (Late Pleistocene) Paleoenvironmental Records from the Rocky Mountains: Lithostratigraphy and Geochronology of Blacktail Cave, Montana, U.S.A." Current Research in the Pleistocene. 18 (2001); Marsters, B.; Spiker, E.; and Rubin, M. "U.S. Geological Survey Radiocarbon Dates X." Radiocarbon. 11 (1969); Harrington, C.R. Annotated Bibliography of Quaternary Vertebrates of Northern North America: With Radiocarbon Dates. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8020-4817-X
  34. ^ Strohmaier, David Jon. Drift Smoke: Loss and Renewal in a Land of Fire. Las Vegas, Nev.: University of Nevada Press, 2005. ISBN 0-87417-621-2
  35. ^ a b c d e Malone, Michael P.; Roeder, Richard B.; and Lang, William L. Montana: A History of Two Centuries. 2d rev. ed. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2003. ISBN 0-295-97129-0
  36. ^ a b Fleming, Thomas J. The Louisiana Purchase. Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley and Sons, 2003. ISBN 0-471-26738-4
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ambrose, Stephen. Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996. ISBN 0-684-82697-6; Gilman, Carolyn. Lewis and Clark: Across the Divide. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Books, 2003. ISBN 1-58834-099-6; Lavender, David. The Way to the Western Sea: Lewis and Clark Across the Continent. New York: Harpercollins, 1988. ISBN 0-06-015982-0
  38. ^ a b Spelling and grammar are as Meriwether Lewis made them, and remain uncorrected here.
  39. ^ Lewis, Meriwether, and Clark, William. The Journals of Lewis and Clark. Whitefish, Mont.: Kessinger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1-4191-6799-5 pp. 129–132.
  40. ^ a b Lewis, Meriwether, and Clark, William. The Lewis and Clark Journals: An American Epic of Discovery: The Abridgment of the Definitive Nebraska Edition. Abridged ed. Gary E. Moulton, ed. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8032-2950-X
  41. ^ Lewis, Meriwether, and Clark, William. The Journals of Lewis and Clark. Whitefish, Mont.: Kessinger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1-4191-6799-5 pp. 134–135. Punctuation and spelling as given here. See Google Books preview.
  42. ^ Betts, Robert B. In Search of York: The Slave Who Went to the Pacific With Lewis and Clark. Boulder, Colo.: Colorado Associated University Press, 1985. ISBN 0-87081-714-0; Hancock, Sibyl. Famous Firsts of Black Americans. Gretna, La.: Pelican Publishing Company, 1983. ISBN 0-88289-240-1; Doig, Ivan. English Creek. New York: Atheneum, 1984. ISBN 0-689-11478-8
  43. ^ a b Trotter, Pat. Cutthroat: Native Trout of the West. Boulder, Colo.: Colorado Associated University Press, 1987. ISBN 0-520-25458-9
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  47. ^ Grossman, Elizabeth. Adventuring Along the Lewis and Clark Trail: Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, Washington. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 2003. ISBN 1-57805-067-7
  48. ^ a b c d Saindon, Robert A. Explorations Into the World of Lewis and Clark. Vol. 3. Scituate, Mass.: Digital Scanning Inc, 2003. ISBN 1-58218-766-5
  49. ^ Schullery, Paul. Lewis and Clark Among the Grizzlies: Legend and Legacy in the American West. Guilford, Conn.: Globe Pequot, 2002. ISBN 0-7627-2524-9
  50. ^ O'Neal, Bill. Fighting Men of the Indian Wars: A Biographical Encyclopedia of the Mountain Men, Soldiers, Cowboys, and Pioneers Who Took Up Arms During America's Westward Expansion. Stillwater, Okla.: Barbed Wire Press, 1991. ISBN 0-935269-07-X
  51. ^ Allen, John Logan. North American Exploration: A Continent Comprehended. Vol. 3. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8032-1043-4
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  57. ^ Lamar, Howard Roberts. Dakota Territory, 1861–1889: A Study of Frontier Politics. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1956; History of Southeastern Dakota. Sioux City, Iowa: Western Publishing Company, 1881.
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  64. ^ The Montana Almanac. Bozeman, Mont.: Montana State University, 1958.
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  67. ^ . National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2007-10-24.
  68. ^ Blanche Higgins Schroer; Roy E. Appleman; Nancy Witherell (August 1984). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Great Falls Portage National Historic Landmark" (pdf). National Park Service. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) and Accompanying 17 photos, undated. (1.92 MB)
  69. ^ a b Fanselow, Julie. Traveling the Lewis and Clark Trail. 4th ed. Guilford, Conn.: Globe Pequot, 2007. ISBN 0-7627-4437-5
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  73. ^ Clarke, Charles G., and Duncan, Dayton. The Men of the Lewis and Clark Expedition: A Biographical Roster of the Fifty-One Members and a Composite Diary of Their Activities From All Known Sources. Reprint ed. Lincoln, Neb.: University of Nebraska Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8032-6419-4; Ainsworth, Ed. The Cowboy in Art. Tulsa: World Publishing Co., 1968.
  74. ^ Palmquist, Peter E., and Kailbourn, Thomas R. Pioneer Photographers of the Far West: A Biographical Dictionary, 1840-1865. Palo Alto, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-8047-3883-1

External links edit

  • Full online text of the Lewis and Clark journals
  • Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail – United States National Park Service
  • Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail Interpretive Center in Great Falls, Montana
  • River's Edge Trail in Great Falls, Montana
  • Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Montana-Western

great, falls, missouri, river, great, falls, missouri, river, series, waterfalls, upper, missouri, river, north, central, montana, united, states, from, upstream, downstream, five, falls, along, mile, segment, river, black, eagle, falls, feet, inches, meters, . The Great Falls of the Missouri River are a series of waterfalls on the upper Missouri River in north central Montana in the United States From upstream to downstream the five falls along a 10 mile 16 km segment of the river 2 are Black Eagle Falls 26 feet 5 inches or 8 05 meters 2 Colter Falls 6 feet 7 inches or 2 01 meters 2 Rainbow Falls 44 feet 6 inches or 13 56 meters 2 Crooked Falls also known as Horseshoe Falls 19 feet or 5 79 m 2 Big Falls also known as the Great Falls 87 feet or 26 52 m 2 Great Falls of the Missouri RiverBlack Eagle Falls and Dam in 2014Show map of the United StatesShow map of MontanaLocationCascade County Montana U S Coordinates47 34 12 N 111 07 23 W 47 57000 N 111 12306 W 47 57000 111 12306Total height187 feet 57 m Number of drops5Longest drop87 feet 27 m WatercourseMissouri RiverAverageflow rate7 539 cu ft s 213 5 m3 s 1 The Missouri River drops a total of 612 feet 187 m from the first of the falls to the last which includes a combined 187 feet 57 m of vertical plunges and 425 feet 130 m of riverbed descent 3 The Great Falls have been described as spectacular 4 one of the scenic wonders of America 5 and a major geographic discovery 6 When the Lewis and Clark Expedition became the first white men to see the falls in 1805 Meriwether Lewis said they were the grandest sight he had beheld thus far in the journey 7 The Great Falls of the Missouri River were depicted on the territorial seal of the Montana Territory and later on the state seal of Montana in 1893 8 Contents 1 Names of the falls 2 Geological history 3 Discovery 3 1 Early inhabitants 3 2 Lewis and Clark 4 Settlement of the area 4 1 Dams 5 Historic district and interpretive centers 6 In art 7 References 8 External linksNames of the falls editThe Mandan Indians knew of cataracts and called them by a descriptive but not formal name Minni Soze Tanka Kun Ya 9 or the great falls 10 11 The South Piegan Blackfeet however had a formal name for Rainbow Falls and called it Napa s Snarling 12 13 No record exists of a Native American name for any of the other four waterfalls Four of the five waterfalls were given names in 1805 by American explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark 2 14 Both Lewis and Clark named Crooked Falls in their journals 2 Clark named three of the remaining waterfalls on his map Great Falls which retains its name to this day 15 Beautiful Cascade now called Rainbow Falls and Upper Pitch now known as Black Eagle Falls 2 10 Beautiful Cascade was renamed Rainbow Falls in 1872 by Thomas B Rogers an engineer with the Great Northern Railway 2 10 Colter Falls received its name from Paris Gibson in honor of John Colter a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition 2 10 Black Eagle Falls is named for the black eagle which built a nest in a cottonwood tree on an island in the middle of the falls 10 12 16 It is not clear when the falls lost their original name of Upper Pitch but they had acquired their modern name by at least 1877 17 Geological history edit nbsp Map of Montana showing Glacial Lake Great Falls The Missouri River lies atop the Great Falls Tectonic Zone an intracontinental shear zone between two geologic provinces of basement rock of the Archean period which form part of the North American continent the Hearne province and Wyoming province 18 Approximately 1 5 million years ago the Missouri River Yellowstone River and Musselshell River all flowed northward into a terminal lake 19 20 During the last glacial period the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets pushed these lakes and rivers southward 19 21 Between 15 000 and 11 000 BCE the Laurentide Ice Sheet blocked the Missouri River and created Glacial Lake Great Falls 21 22 23 About 13 000 BCE as the glacier retreated Glacial Lake Great Falls emptied catastrophically in a glacial lake outburst flood 23 The current course of the Missouri River essentially marks the southern boundary of the Laurentide Ice Sheet 24 The Missouri Yellowstone and Musselshell rivers flowed eastward around the glacial mass eventually settling into their present courses 19 As the ice retreated meltwater poured through the Highwood Mountains and eroded the mile long 500 foot deep 150 m Shonkin Sag one of the most famous prehistoric meltwater channels in the world 25 The Great Falls themselves formed on a fall line unconformity in the Great Falls Tectonic Zone 26 The Missouri River settled into a bedrock canyon which lay beneath the clay laid down by Glacial Lake Great Falls 27 28 The course of the Missouri in and around the Great Falls has changed very little since then in comparison to lower regions of the river on the ground moraine that forms much of the upper Great Plains 29 The Great Falls of the Missouri River formed because the Missouri is flowing over and through the Kootenai Formation a mostly nonmarine sandstone laid down by rivers glaciers and lakes in the past 27 30 Some of the Kootenai Formation is marine however laid down by shallow seas 31 The river is eating away at the softer nonmarine sandstone with the harder rock forming the falls themselves Until relatively recently in geologic time the Missouri River in the area had a much wider channel 32 but it has now settled into its current course where it will continue to cut more deeply into the sandstone Discovery editEarly inhabitants edit The first human beings to see the Great Falls were Paleo Indians who migrated into the area between 9 500 and 8 270 BCE 23 33 The earliest inhabitants of North America entered Montana east of the Continental Divide between the Cordilleran and Laurentide ice sheets 34 The area remained only sparsely inhabited however 35 Salish Indians would often hunt bison in the area on a seasonal basis but no permanent settlements existed near the Great Falls for much of prehistory 35 Around 1600 Piegan Blackfoot Indians migrating west entered the area pushing the Salish back into the Rocky Mountains and claiming the area as their own 35 The Great Falls of the Missouri remained in the tribal territory of the Blackfeet until Americans claimed the region in 1803 12 36 Although the discovery of the Great Falls by Native Americans is not recorded the South Piegan Blackfeet were well acquainted with the Great Falls by the late 18th century 12 and news of the cataracts had spread among native peoples as far east as central North Dakota 9 Lewis and Clark edit nbsp Meriwether Lewis The United States purchased the area around the Great Falls of the Missouri from France which claimed the area despite Native American habitation in 1803 as part of the Louisiana Purchase 36 Thomas Jefferson then President of the United States had long desired to send an expedition into the area 37 Jefferson sought and won permission and funding for an expedition from Congress in January 1803 37 On May 14 1804 the Lewis and Clark Expedition departed St Louis Missouri to map the course of the Missouri River establish whether a river route to the Pacific Ocean existed study the Indian tribes botany geology terrain and wildlife in the region and evaluate whether British and French Canadian hunters and trappers in the area posed a challenge to American control over the region 37 Expedition leaders Meriwether Lewis and William Clark first learned of the great falls from the Mandan Indians while wintering at Fort Mandan from November 2 1804 until April 7 1805 37 The Lewis and Clark Expedition reached the Great Falls on June 13 1805 37 Meriwether Lewis was the first White person to see the falls 7 Lewis described the encounter in a now famous passage of his expedition diary 38 my ears were saluted with the agreeable sound of a fall of water and advancing a little further I saw the spray arrise above the plain like a column of smoke which would frequently dispear again in an instant caused I presume by the wind which blew pretty hard from the S W I did not however loose my direction to this point which soon began to make a roaring too tremendious to be mistaken for any cause short of the great falls of the Missouri I hurryed down the hill which was about 200 feet high and difficult of access to gaze on this sublimely grand spectacle immediately at the cascade the river is about 300 yds wide about ninety or a hundred yards of this next the Lard bluff is a smooth even sheet of water falling over a precipice of at least eighty feet the remaining part of about 200 yards on my right formes the grandest sight I ever beheld the height of the fall is the same of the other but the irregular and somewhat projecting rocks below receives the water in its passage down and brakes it into a perfect white foam which assumes a thousand forms in a moment sometimes flying up in jets of sparkling foam to the height of fifteen or twenty feet and are scarcely formed before large roling bodies of the same beaten and foaming water is thrown over and conceals them in short the rocks seem to be most happily fixed to present a sheet of the whitest beaten froath for 200 yards in length and about 80 feet perpendicular the water after descending strikes against the butment before mentioned or that on which I stand and seems to reverberate and being met by the more impetuous courant they role and swell into half formed billows of great height which rise and again disappear in an instant this butment of rock defends a handsom little bottom of about three acres which is diversified and agreeably shaded with some cottonwood trees in the lower extremity of the bottom there is a very thick grove of the same kind of trees which are small in this wood there are several Indian lodges formed of sticks from the reflection of the sun on the spray or mist which arrises from these falls there is a beatifull rainbow produced which adds not a little to the beauty of this majestically grand senery after wrighting this imperfect discription I again viewed the falls and was so much disgusted with the imperfect idea which it conveyed of the scene that I determined to draw my pen across it and begin agin but then reflected that I could not perhaps succeed better than pening the first impressions of the mind I wished for the pencil of Salvator Rosa or the pen of Thompson that I might be enabled to give to the enlightened world some just idea of this truly magnificent and sublimely grand object which has from the commencement of time been concealed from the view of civilized man but this was fruitless and vain I most sincerely regretted that I had not brought a crimee obscura with me by the assistance of which even I could have hoped to have done better but alas this was also out of my reach I therefore with the assistance of my pen only indeavoured to traces some of the stronger features of this seen by the assistance of which and my recollection aided by some able pencil I hope still to give to the world some faint idea of an object which at this moment fills me with such pleasure and astonishment and which of its kind I will venture to ascert is second to but one in the known world 39 nbsp The Great Falls or Big Falls and Ryan Dam in 1995 The falls which Lewis had seen were the lowest of the five falls the Great Falls 2 40 Exploring the following day Lewis discovered Crooked Falls Rainbow Falls Colter Falls and Black Eagle Falls 2 40 At the final waterfalls Lewis saw an amazing sight 38 I arrived at another cataract of 26 feet below this fall at a little distance a beatifull little Island well timbered is situated about the middle of the river in this Island on a Cottonwood tree an Eagle has placed her nest a more inaccessible spot I believe she could not have found for neither man nor beast dare pass those gulphs which separate her little domain from the shores the water is also broken in such manner as it descends over this pitch that the mist or sprey rises to a considerable height this fall is certainly much the greatest I ever behald except those two which I have mentioned below it is incomparably a greater cataract and a more noble interesting object than the celebrated falls of Potomac or Soolkiln amp c 41 Mounting a hill near Black Eagle Falls probably where the town of Black Eagle is today Lewis saw that the cataracts ended and that another large river joined the Missouri about two and a half miles further upstream 37 Although it was very late in the afternoon Lewis rushed forward to see this river and was attacked by a grizzly bear 37 He ran more than 80 yards and launched himself into the Missouri River and luckily the bear did not follow 2 37 The Lewis and Clark Expedition was forced to portage around the Great Falls an arduous task that took nearly a month 37 York an African American slave owned by William Clark and who had participated in the Expedition was the first black American to see the Great Falls 42 nbsp Westslope cutthroat trout a fish written about by the Lewis and Clark Expedition at the Great Falls of the Missouri on June 13 1805 The Lewis and Clark Expedition made a number of discoveries near the Great Falls On June 13 Silas Goodrich 43 caught numerous Westslope cutthroat trout at the falls the first time anyone in the expedition had seen these fish and several samples were preserved which constituted the type specimens for the fish 44 45 The trout was subsequently given the scientific name Oncorhynchus clarki lewisi in honor of the expedition leaders 43 44 45 The Westslope cutthroat is now the official state fish of Montana 45 The explorers also collected the first samples of the gumbo evening primrose 46 and western meadowlark at the Great Falls 47 On June 18 while reconnoitering the series of falls on the south side of the Missouri River with a group of five others William Clark discovered Giant Springs which he correctly judged to be the largest spring in the world 26 48 49 He was the first white person to see the springs and the first white person to see the falls from the south side of the Missouri 2 Meriwether Lewis revisited the Great Falls on July 11 1806 as the Corps of Discovery returned east Lewis and nine men stopped at the Great Falls with the intention of exploring the Marias River and discovering its source But during the night Indians stole half the party s 17 horses forcing three of the men to stay behind 48 Settlement of the area edit nbsp Great Seal of the State of Montana depicting the Great Falls of the Missouri Following the return passage of Lewis and Clark in 1805 06 there is no record of any white man visiting the Great Falls of the Missouri until explorer and trapper Jim Bridger reached them in 1822 12 White people next visited the Great Falls when Bridger and Major Andrew Henry led a fur trading expedition there in April 1823 and were attacked by Blackfeet Indians while camping at the site 50 British explorer Alexander Ross trapped around the Great Falls in 1824 51 In 1838 a mapping expedition sent by the U S federal government and guided by Bridger spent four years in the area 12 Margaret Harkness Woodman became first white woman to see the Great Falls in 1862 52 The first permanent settlement near the Great Falls was Fort Benton established in 1846 about 40 miles 64 km downstream from the Great Falls 53 The Great Falls marked the limit of the navigable section of the Missouri River 54 and the first steamboat arrived at the falls in 1859 53 In 1860 the Mullan Road linked Fort Benton with Fort Walla Walla in the Washington Territory 12 55 Politically the Great Falls of the Missouri River passed through numerous hands in the 19th century It was part of the unincorporated frontier until May 30 1854 when Congress established the Nebraska Territory 56 Indian attacks on white explorers and settlers dropped significantly after Isaac Stevens negotiated the Treaty of Hellgate in 1855 and white settlement in the area began to occur 12 On March 2 1861 it became part of the Dakota Territory 57 The Great Falls were incorporated into the Idaho Territory on March 4 1863 58 and then into the Montana Territory on May 28 1864 35 It became part of the state of Montana upon that territory s admission to statehood on November 8 1889 35 The Great Falls of the Missouri River became the site of a permanent settlement in 1883 Businessman Paris Gibson visited the Great Falls in 1880 and was deeply impressed by the possibilities for building a major industrial city near the falls with power provided by hydroelectricity 59 60 61 62 He returned in 1883 with surveyors and platted a city to be named Great Falls on the south side of the river 12 59 60 The city s first citizen Silas Beachley arrived later that year 12 With investments from railroad owner James J Hill and Helena businessman C A Broadwater houses a store and a flour mill were established in 1884 12 59 60 61 62 A planing mill lumber yard bank school and newspaper were established in 1885 59 62 By 1887 the town had 1 200 citizens and in October of that year the Great Northern Railway arrived in the city 59 61 62 Great Falls Montana was incorporated on November 28 1888 Black Eagle Dam was built in 1890 and by 1912 Rainbow Dam and Volta Dam now Ryan Dam were all operating 12 59 62 The city of Great Falls Montana derives its name from the waterfalls 63 The small town of Black Eagle Montana derives its name from Black Eagle Falls 12 and Cascade County in which both are located is named for the cataracts and rapids which make up the falls 64 Dams edit nbsp Rainbow Falls and dam in 2000 Only one of the waterfalls that comprise the Great Falls of the Missouri River Crooked Falls exists in its natural state today Dams built on the falls beginning in the 1880s have significantly altered and even submerged the five waterfalls Black Eagle Dam was built in 1890 and half of Black Eagle Falls are now submerged in the reservoir behind the dam 12 This structure was the first hydroelectric dam built in the state 65 Rainbow Falls was dammed in 1910 when Rainbow Dam was built 12 48 65 The reservoir behind the dam submerged Colter Falls 12 48 Volta Dam was built on top of the Great Falls in 1915 and later renamed Ryan Dam in 1940 in honor of John D Ryan the president and founder of the Montana Power Company 12 66 Historic district and interpretive centers editThe Great Falls Portage a National Historic Landmark District designated in 1966 commemorates the route by which Lewis and Clark bypassed the falls The landmarked areas including the expedition camps at either end of the portage are located well above and below the series falls 67 68 The Great Falls are also part of the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail established by Congress in 1978 69 The Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail Interpretive Center was built in 1998 on a cliff overlooking the Missouri River near Crooked Falls It provides an extensive look into Lewis and Clark s discovery of the Great Falls and their portage around them as well as exhibits on native peoples of the area 70 In 1989 the City of Great Falls the Montana Department of Fish Wildlife and Parks and other public and private bodies established the River s Edge Trail a 30 mile 48 km series of paved and unpaved trails that follow the Great Falls as well as the Lewis and Clark Expedition portage route along with other scenic and historic area of the City of Great Falls and town of Black Eagle 69 71 In art editThe first known drawing of the Great Falls was entered by Meriwether Lewis in his diary 2 In 1807 Lewis commissioned the Irish engraver John James Barrelet to make drawings of the Great Falls 2 After Lewis s death in 1810 William Clark visited his home and found the drawings but they have since disappeared 2 The Great Falls have been depicted in well known paintings over the years The waterfalls may be seen in the background of John Mix Stanley s large painting Barter for a Bride originally titled A Family Group which was painted some time between 1854 and 1863 and now hangs in the Diplomatic Reception Room in the United States Department of State in Washington D C 72 The noted Western painter O C Seltzer depicted the cataracts in his 1927 work Lewis and Clark With Sacajawea at the Great Falls of the Missouri 1804 73 The first known photograph of the Great Falls was taken by noted Western photographer James D Hutton about 1859 or 1860 74 References edit Mineral and Water Resources of Montana Stermitz Frank Hanly T F and Lane C W Special Publication No 28 Helena Mont Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology May 1963 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Cutright Paul Russell and Johnsgard Paul A Lewis and Clark Pioneering Naturalists 2d ed Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2003 ISBN 0 8032 6434 8 Great Falls of the Missouri River Encyclopedia Americana New York Americana Corp 1954 Malone Michael P Montana Century 100 Years in Pictures and Words Guilford Conn Globe Pequot 1999 ISBN 1 56044 827 X Montana Department of Agriculture The Resources and Opportunities of Montana Helena Mont Montana Department of Agriculture 1912 Johnsgard Paul A Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2003 ISBN 0 8032 7618 4 a b Pritchett Michael The Melancholy Fate of Capt Lewis Columbia Mo Unbridled Books 2007 ISBN 1 932961 41 0 Shearer Barbara Smith State Names Seals Flags and Symbols A Historical Guide 3rd rev ed Santa Barbara Calif Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 ISBN 0 313 31534 5 a b McEneaney Terry The Birder s Guide to Montana Guilford Conn Falcon Press 1993 ISBN 1 56044 189 5 a b c d e Howard Ela Mae Lewis amp Clark Exploration of Central Montana Rev ed Guilford Conn Globe Pequot 2000 ISBN 1 883844 03 7 page needed Robbins Chuck Great Places Montana A Recreational Guide to Montana s Public Lands and Historic Places for Birding Hiking Photography Fishing Hunting and Camping Belgrade Mont Wilderness Adventures Press 2008 ISBN 1 932098 59 3 page needed a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Federal Writers Project Montana A State Guide Book Washington D C Federal Works Agency Work Projects Administration 1939 ISBN 1 60354 025 3 page needed Napa or Old Man spelling variants include Naapi Napi Nape Napiw and Napioa is a benevolent trickster spirit in the Blackfoot religion Napa is also depicted as foolish or a troublemaker The Creator gave him the task of shaping the world and he continues to help people according to various Blackfoot legends See Clark Cora and Williams Texa Bowen Pomo Indian Myths and Some of Their Sacred Meanings New York Vantage Press 1954 Linderman Frank Bird Indian Why Stories Sparks From War Eagle s Lodge Fire New York C Scribner s Sons 1915 Plenty Coups and Linderman Frank Bird Plenty Coups Chief of the Crows Reprinted Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2002 ISBN 0 8032 8018 1 orig pub 1930 Judson Katharine Berry Montana The Land of Shining Mountains 5th ed Chicago A C McClurg 1909 page needed Lewis and Clark had been told by the Mandan Indians that there were great falls on the Missouri River Clark adopted this name for the largest set of waterfalls the expedition discovered See Howard Lewis amp Clark Exploration of Central Montana 2000 Vaughn Robert Then and Now or Thirty Six Years in the Rockies Personal Reminiscences of Some of the First Pioneers of the State of Montana Indians and Indian Wars and the Past and Present of the Rocky Mountain Country 1864 1900 Chicago Tribune Printing Company 1900 page needed Strahorn Carrie Adell Fifteen Thousand Miles By Stage A Woman s Unique Experience During Thirty Years of Path Finding and Pioneering From the Missouri to the Pacific and From Alaska to Mexico New York G P Putnam s Sons 1911 page needed Boerner D E Craven J A Kurtz R D Ross G M and Jones F W The Great Falls Tectonic Zone Suture or Intracontinental Shear Zone Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 35 2 1998 O Neill J Michael and Lo David A Character and Regional Significance of Great Falls Tectonic Zone East Central Idaho and West Central Montana AAPG Bulletin 69 1985 Mueller Paul A Heatherington Ann L Kelly Dawn M Wooden Joseph L and Mogk David W Paleoproterozoic Crust Within the Great Falls Tectonic Zone Implications for the Assembly of Southern Laurentia Geology 30 2 February 2002 Harms Tekla A Brady John B Burger H Robert and Cheney John T Advances in the Geology of the Tobacco Root Mountains Montana and Their Implications for the History of the Northern Wyoming Province Precambrian geology of the Tobacco Root Mountains Montana Special Papers Volume 377 John B Brady H Robert Burger John T Cheney and Tekla A Harms eds Boulder Colo Geological Society of America 2004 ISBN 0 8137 2377 9 a b c Clawson Roger and Shandera Katherine A Billings The City and the People Helena Mont Farcountry Press 1998 ISBN 1 56037 037 8 McRae W C and Jewell Judy Moon Montana 7th ed Cambridge Mass PublicAffairs 2009 ISBN 1 59880 014 0 a b Montagne J L Quaternary System Wisconsin Glaciation Geologic Atlas of the Rocky Mountain Region Denver Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists 1972 Hill Christopher L and Valppu Seppo H Geomorphic Relationships and Paleoenvironmental Context of Glaciers Fluvial Deposits and Glacial Lake Great Falls Montana Current Research in the Pleistocene 14 1997 Hill Christopher L Pleistocene Lakes Along the Southwest Margin of the Laurentide Ice Sheet Current Research in the Pleistocene 17 2000 Hill Christopher L and Feathers James K Glacial Lake Great Falls and the Late Wisconsin Episode Laurentide Ice Margin Current Research in the Pleistocene 19 2002 Reynolds Mitchell W and Brandt Theodore R Geologic Map of the Canyon Ferry Dam 30 x 60 Quadrangle West Central Montana U S Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map 2860 scale 1 100 000 Scientific Investigations Map 2860 Washington D C U S Geologic Survey 2005 a b c Luminescence Dating of Glacial Lake Great Falls Montana U S A Archived 2014 11 29 at the Wayback Machine Feathers James K and Hill Christopher L XVI International Quaternary Association Congress Stratigraphy and Geochronology Session International Quaternary Association Reno 2003 Agriculture In Encyclopedia of the Great Plains David J Wishart ed Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2004 ISBN 0 8032 4787 7 Axline Jon and Bradshaw Glenda Clay Montana s Historical Highway Markers Rev ed Helena Mont Montana Historical Society 2008 ISBN 0 9759196 4 4 Bowman Isaiah Forest Physiography Physiography of the United States and Principles of Soils in Relation to Forestry American Environmental Studies Reprint ed Charles Gregg ed New York Arno Press 1970 ISBN 0 405 02659 5 a b Botkin Daniel B Beyond the Stony Mountains Nature in the American West from Lewis and Clark to Today New York Oxford University Press 2004 ISBN 0 19 516243 9 a b Fisher Cassius A Geology of the Great Falls Coal Field Montana Bulletin United States Geological Survey Issue 356 Washington D C U S Geological Survey 1909 Newberry J S Surface Geology of the Country Bordering the Northern Pacific Railroad American Journal of Science July December 1885 Maschner Herbert D G and Chippindale Christopher Handbook of Archaeological Methods Vol 1 New York Rowman Altamira 2005 ISBN 0 7591 0078 0 DeCelles Peter G Sedimentation in a Tectonically Partitioned Nonmarine Foreland Basin The Lower Cretaceous Kootenai Formation Southwestern Montana Geological Society of America Bulletin 97 8 August 1986 Haney M and Schwartz R K Estuarine Member of the Lower Cretaceous Kootenai Formation Missouri River Gorge Great Falls MT Paper No 38 15 Northeastern Section 38th Annual Meeting Geological Society of America March 27 29 2003 Farshori M Zahoor and Hopkins John C Sedimentology and Petroleum Geology of Fluvial and Shoreline Deposits of the Lower Cretaceous Sunburst Sandstone Member Mannville Group Southern Alberta Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology 37 4 December 1989 Geologic Map of the Great Falls North 30 x 60 Quadrangle Central Montana Vuke Susan M Colton Roger B and Fullerton David S Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology Open File 459 Helena Mont Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology 2002 Davis L B Hill Christopher L and Fisher Jr Jack W Radiocarbon Dates for Paleoindian Components Folsom Scottsbluff at the MacHaffie Site West Central Montana Rockies Current Research in the Pleistocene 19 2002 Hill Christopher L Middle and Late Wisconsin Late Pleistocene Paleoenvironmental Records from the Rocky Mountains Lithostratigraphy and Geochronology of Blacktail Cave Montana U S A Current Research in the Pleistocene 18 2001 Marsters B Spiker E and Rubin M U S Geological Survey Radiocarbon Dates X Radiocarbon 11 1969 Harrington C R Annotated Bibliography of Quaternary Vertebrates of Northern North America With Radiocarbon Dates Toronto University of Toronto Press 2003 ISBN 0 8020 4817 X Strohmaier David Jon Drift Smoke Loss and Renewal in a Land of Fire Las Vegas Nev University of Nevada Press 2005 ISBN 0 87417 621 2 a b c d e Malone Michael P Roeder Richard B and Lang William L Montana A History of Two Centuries 2d rev ed Seattle University of Washington Press 2003 ISBN 0 295 97129 0 a b Fleming Thomas J The Louisiana Purchase Hoboken N J John Wiley and Sons 2003 ISBN 0 471 26738 4 a b c d e f g h i Ambrose Stephen Undaunted Courage Meriwether Lewis Thomas Jefferson and the Opening of the American West New York Simon amp Schuster 1996 ISBN 0 684 82697 6 Gilman Carolyn Lewis and Clark Across the Divide Washington D C Smithsonian Books 2003 ISBN 1 58834 099 6 Lavender David The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark Across the Continent New York Harpercollins 1988 ISBN 0 06 015982 0 a b Spelling and grammar are as Meriwether Lewis made them and remain uncorrected here Lewis Meriwether and Clark William The Journals of Lewis and Clark Whitefish Mont Kessinger Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 4191 6799 5 pp 129 132 a b Lewis Meriwether and Clark William The Lewis and Clark Journals An American Epic of Discovery The Abridgment of the Definitive Nebraska Edition Abridged ed Gary E Moulton ed Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2003 ISBN 0 8032 2950 X Lewis Meriwether and Clark William The Journals of Lewis and Clark Whitefish Mont Kessinger Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 4191 6799 5 pp 134 135 Punctuation and spelling as given here See Google Books preview Betts Robert B In Search of York The Slave Who Went to the Pacific With Lewis and Clark Boulder Colo Colorado Associated University Press 1985 ISBN 0 87081 714 0 Hancock Sibyl Famous Firsts of Black Americans Gretna La Pelican Publishing Company 1983 ISBN 0 88289 240 1 Doig Ivan English Creek New York Atheneum 1984 ISBN 0 689 11478 8 a b Trotter Pat Cutthroat Native Trout of the West Boulder Colo Colorado Associated University Press 1987 ISBN 0 520 25458 9 a b Behnke Robert J and Tomelleri Joseph R Trout and Salmon of North America New York Simon and Schuster 2002 ISBN 0 7432 2220 2 a b c Smith Andrew F The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink New York Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 0 19 530796 8 Herbarium of the Lewis amp Clark Expedition Vol 12 Gary E Moulton ed Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 1999 ISBN 0 8032 2931 3 Grossman Elizabeth Adventuring Along the Lewis and Clark Trail Missouri Illinois Iowa Nebraska South Dakota North Dakota Montana Idaho Oregon Washington San Francisco Sierra Club Books 2003 ISBN 1 57805 067 7 a b c d Saindon Robert A Explorations Into the World of Lewis and Clark Vol 3 Scituate Mass Digital Scanning Inc 2003 ISBN 1 58218 766 5 Schullery Paul Lewis and Clark Among the Grizzlies Legend and Legacy in the American West Guilford Conn Globe Pequot 2002 ISBN 0 7627 2524 9 O Neal Bill Fighting Men of the Indian Wars A Biographical Encyclopedia of the Mountain Men Soldiers Cowboys and Pioneers Who Took Up Arms During America s Westward Expansion Stillwater Okla Barbed Wire Press 1991 ISBN 0 935269 07 X Allen John Logan North American Exploration A Continent Comprehended Vol 3 Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 1997 ISBN 0 8032 1043 4 McManus Sheila The Line Which Separates Race Gender and the Making of the Alberta Montana Borderlands Calgary University of Alberta 2005 ISBN 0 88864 434 5 Evans Sterling The Borderlands of the American and Canadian Wests Essays on Regional History of the Forty Ninth Parallel Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2006 ISBN 0 8032 1826 5 a b Cutright Paul Russell and Brodhead Michael J Elliott Coues Naturalist and Frontier Historian Reprint ed Urbana Ill University of Illinois Press 2001 ISBN 0 252 06987 0 Tubbs Stephenie Ambrose and Jenkinson Clay The Lewis and Clark Companion An Encyclopedic Guide to the Voyage of Discovery New York Macmillan 2003 ISBN 0 8050 6726 4 Miller James Knox Polk The Road to Virginia City The Diary of James Knox Polk Miller Stillwater Okla University of Oklahoma 1960 Lavender David Sievert and Smith Duane A The Rockies Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2003 ISBN 0 8032 8019 X Luebke Frederick C Nebraska An Illustrated History 2d ed Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2005 ISBN 0 8032 8042 4 Lamar Howard Roberts Dakota Territory 1861 1889 A Study of Frontier Politics New Haven Conn Yale University Press 1956 History of Southeastern Dakota Sioux City Iowa Western Publishing Company 1881 Rees John E Idaho Chronology Nomenclature Bibliography Chicago W B Conkey Co 1918 a b c d e f Roeder Richard B Paris Gibson and the Building of Great Falls Montana Magazine of Western History 42 4 Autumn 1992 a b c Great Falls Montana In Encyclopedia of the Great Plains David J Wishart ed Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2004 ISBN 0 8032 4787 7 a b c Malone Michael P James J Hill Empire Builder of the Northwest Reprint ed Stillwater Okla University of Oklahoma Press 1996 ISBN 0 8061 2860 7 a b c d e Myers Rex C and Fritz Harry W Montana and the West Essays in Honor of K Ross Toole Boulder Colo Pruett Publishing Co 1984 ISBN 0 87108 229 2 Martin Albro James J Hill and the Opening of the Northwest St Paul Minn Minnesota Historical Society Press 1991 ISBN 0 87351 261 8 McCoy Michael Montana Off the Beaten Path 7th ed Guilford Conn Globe Pequot 2007 ISBN 0 7627 4423 5 The Montana Almanac Bozeman Mont Montana State University 1958 a b Hebgen Max Hydroelectric Development in Montana Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers 1914 National Park Service U S Dept of the Interior The National Survey of Historic Sites and Buildings Vol 13 Washington D C National Park Service 1963 Johnson Carrie Electrical Power Copper and John D Ryan Montana The Magazine of Western History Autumn 1988 Great Falls Portage National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Archived from the original on 2011 06 06 Retrieved 2007 10 24 Blanche Higgins Schroer Roy E Appleman Nancy Witherell August 1984 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Great Falls Portage National Historic Landmark pdf National Park Service a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help and Accompanying 17 photos undated 1 92 MB a b Fanselow Julie Traveling the Lewis and Clark Trail 4th ed Guilford Conn Globe Pequot 2007 ISBN 0 7627 4437 5 Halliday Jan and Chehak Gail Native Peoples of the Northwest A Traveler s Guide to Land Art and Culture 2d ed Seattle Sasquatch Books 2002 ISBN 1 57061 241 2 Garrett James The Strands of Time Transcendent Procession Phenomenon Bloomington Ind iUniverse 2003 ISBN 0 595 29852 4 Florence Mason Gierlich Marisa and Nystrom Andrew Dean Rocky Mountains 3d ed Oakland Calif Lonely Planet 2001 ISBN 1 86450 327 0 United States Department of State Guidebook to Diplomatic Reception Rooms Washington D C United States Department of State 1970 Thacker Robert and Higham C L One West Two Myths II Essays on Comparison Calgary University of Calgary Press 2006 ISBN 1 55238 204 4 Truettner William H and Anderson Nancy K The West as America Reinterpreting Images of the Frontier 1820 1920 Washington D C National Museum of American Art Smithsonian Institution Press 1991 ISBN 1 56098 024 9 Wischmann Lesley Frontier Diplomats Alexander Culbertson and Natoyist Siksina Among the Blackfeet Stillwater Okla University of Oklahoma Press 2004 ISBN 0 8061 3607 3 Clarke Charles G and Duncan Dayton The Men of the Lewis and Clark Expedition A Biographical Roster of the Fifty One Members and a Composite Diary of Their Activities From All Known Sources Reprint ed Lincoln Neb University of Nebraska Press 2002 ISBN 0 8032 6419 4 Ainsworth Ed The Cowboy in Art Tulsa World Publishing Co 1968 Palmquist Peter E and Kailbourn Thomas R Pioneer Photographers of the Far West A Biographical Dictionary 1840 1865 Palo Alto Calif Stanford University Press 2000 ISBN 0 8047 3883 1External links editFull online text of the Lewis and Clark journals Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail United States National Park Service Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail Interpretive Center in Great Falls Montana River s Edge Trail in Great Falls Montana Giant Springs State Park State of Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks Great Falls of the Missouri Geologic Road Signs Lewis amp Clark Trail Montana Department of Environmental Sciences University of Montana Western Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Falls Missouri River amp oldid 1216910206, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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