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Indian Heaven

Indian Heaven is a volcanic field in Skamania County in the state of Washington, in the United States.[2] Midway between Mount St. Helens and Mount Adams, the field dates from the Pleistocene to the early Holocene epoch. It trends north to south and is dominated by six small shield volcanoes; these shields are topped by small spatter and cinder cones, and the field includes a number of subglacial volcanoes and tuyas. The northernmost peak in the field is Sawtooth Mountain and the southernmost is Red Mountain; its highest point is Lemei Rock at an elevation of 5,925 feet (1,806 m).

Indian Heaven
Lemei Rock in the Indian Heaven volcanic field
Highest point
Elevation5,925 ft (1,806 m)[1]
Coordinates45°56′00″N 121°49′00″W / 45.93333°N 121.81667°W / 45.93333; -121.81667[1]
Geography
Parent rangeCascade Range
Geology
Age of rockPleistocene and Holocene
Mountain typevolcanic field
Volcanic arcCascade Volcanic Arc
Last eruption6250 BCE[1]
Climbing
Easiest routeLemei Trail, Indian Heaven Trail, with rock scrambling

Indian Heaven features both polygenetic and monogenetic volcanic activity; many of its volcanoes have only erupted once before coming extinct, while others have erupted several times. Approximately 50 eruptive centers lie within the Indian Heaven field, which also has approximately 40 lava flows. The field's eruptive output totals 14 to 19 cubic miles (58 to 79 km3), with sporadic activity taking place for the past 700,000 years. The last volcanic activity in the field produced a large cinder cone, Big Lava Bed, as well as a voluminous lava and scoria flows about 9,000 years ago. Future activity is possible, though the Volcano Hazards Program directed by the United States Geological Survey considers Indian Heaven's volcanic threat level to be low.

The volcanic field is surrounded by the Indian Heaven Wilderness, a protected wilderness area within the Gifford Pinchot National Forest, supporting diverse flora and fauna. The local area has been inhabited by Native American populations for about 10,000 years, and the name Indian Heaven derives from the indigenous name for the vicinity. A popular recreation destination, the wilderness offers a number of trails, as well as more than 150 lakes for fishing, swimming, and boating.

Geography edit

 
Indian Heaven volcanic field and Mount Adams shown in a relief map

Located in Skamania County in the state of Washington,[3] Indian Heaven volcanic field is part of the High Cascades,[4] an eastern segment of the Cascade Range, which trends north–south.[5] Formed towards the end of the Pleistocene Epoch, these mountains are underlain by more ancient volcanoes that subsided due to parallel north–south faulting in the surrounding region.[6] The Indian Heaven field lies 40 miles (64 km) east of Vancouver, Washington and 14 miles (23 km) to the north of the Columbia River.[7]

The Indian Heaven volcanic field lies between Mount St. Helens and Mount Adams,[1] about 19 miles (30 km) southwest of the latter.[8] The Simcoe Mountains volcanic field is located to the east.[9] To the southwest lies a diffuse volcanic belt of at least 22 volcanic centers, 25 miles (40 km) in length, that runs in a southeast-trending direction and includes Marble Mountain, Bare Mountain, West Crater, and Trout Creek Hill.[10] The field has a diameter of 20 miles (32 km),[11] with a total area of 175 square miles (450 km2).[8] The tallest point within the field is the Lemei Rock shield volcano, which reaches an elevation of 5,925 feet (1,806 m).[1]

Wilderness edit

The Indian Heaven Wilderness, which encompasses an area of 20,784 acres (84.11 km2),[b] lies within a forested high plateau region. It includes subalpine meadows, the volcanic field and a number of other volcanic features,[12] more than 150 lakes, and forests.[13] Created in 1984 by the Washington Wilderness Bill, it sits between Mount Adams and the Columbia River Gorge, a canyon of the Columbia River.[12] Part of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest, the wilderness area includes 16.4 miles (26.4 km) of the Pacific Crest Trail, which traverses it from north to south, as well as seven other tributary trails,[13] that form a 42-mile (68 km) network of trails.[12] The area is relatively inaccessible, as roads are covered by snow until June annually[13] though snow melts by mid-July in most years, permitting visitors in the fall season.[12]

Ecology edit

The plateau that contains the Indian Heaven Wilderness features forests, which are predominantly made up of Pacific silver fir, noble fir, and subalpine fir trees,[13] though there are also Western red cedars,[14] mountain hemlock,[15] grand firs, and Engelmann spruce.[16] Other flora found in the vicinity include an understory of huckleberry plants and beargrass,[17][14] in addition to colorful wildflowers;[18] vine maples;[19] flowering plants such as blueberry, heather,[15] vanilla leaf, and false hellebore;[16] and aromatic wintergreen.[17] Many of the area's lakes get stocked with trout species like cutthroat,[17] rainbow, and brook trout.[13] Amphibians such as frogs can be found in the wilderness,[15] while terrestrial animals in the area include deer, elk, and American black bears.[13] Because of the abundance of mosquitoes within the vicinity, Indian Heaven is sometimes informally referred to as Insect Heaven.[20]

Human history edit

 
The Indian Racetrack within the Heaven Wilderness.

Indian Heaven and the surrounding wilderness area have played an important role in local Native American life for about 10,000 years, and the vicinity was originally called Sahalee Tyee by native peoples,[12] which loosely translates to Indian Heaven.[17] The Sawtooth Berry Fields, known globally for their huckleberries, burned during the late 1890s and again in 1902. Later fires helped maintain the fields by drying their berries. From 1902 to the mid-1920s, local tribes including the Yakama, Klickitat, Wasco-Wishram, and Umatilla, as well as Native American groups from Montana and Wyoming gathered in the Indian Heaven area during the summers for annual huckleberry feasts. During these gatherings, they celebrated, traded, and performed rituals; they also raced horses, played various games, constructed baskets, dried meat, tanned hides, and fished in the local lakes. In 1932, the Yakama Nation and the United States Forest Service agreed to set aside a portion of the Berry Fields for exclusive Indian use; the harvest remains an important local tradition.[12] Today, the marks from the Race Track, a meadow used by Native Americans for horse racing, can be seen about 0.5 miles (0.8 km) off the segment of the Pacific Crest Trail that crosses through the Indian Heaven wilderness. Trees within the area have scars from where their bark was peeled for wood to make baskets.[14] The area is also rich with large game animals and supports a number of roots and tuber plant species.[21]

Geology edit

 
Satellite map showing the volcanoes of the Indian Heaven volcanic field

The area near the Indian Heaven vicinity is composed of Western Cascade rocks from the Eocene to Miocene including andesite, tuffs, mud flows, pyroclastic flow deposits, and other volcaniclastic materials, as well as High Cascade rocks that date from between the Pliocene and Holocene epochs. Strata of rock underlying the area has been deformed to create faults, fractures (separations in geologic formation), volcanic igneous intrusions, and a gradual, dipping syncline that trends north to south. The Indian Heaven field resides within the syncline's trough, and it consists of High Cascade rocks, which are far less altered than the surrounding rock strata.[7] Similar to other Cascade volcanoes, the Indian Heaven volcanoes were fed by magma chambers produced by the subduction of the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate under the western edge of the North American tectonic plate.[22] The field may share a 12–40 km (7.5–24.9 mi) deep magma chamber with Mount St. Helens that seismic imaging showed lying between the two volcanoes below two smaller magma chambers, each located more directly under their respective volcanic area.[23]

Indian Heaven consists of several, overlapping shield volcanoes that run along a line from Sawtooth Mountain at the north to Red Mountain to the south,[1] as well as cinder cones, lava flows,[11] and spatter cones (low, steep-sided hills or mounds that consist of welded lava fragments).[1] With a total magma output of 60 cubic miles (250 km3), the field has about 50 mafic eruptive edifices (rich in magnesium and iron),[24][a] whose activity lasted from the Pleistocene to the early Holocene.[25] Roughly half of these vents mark a mountainous highland, 19 miles (31 km) in length, which runs parallel to the north–south trend of the Cascade Arc in southern Washington state.[8]

Most of the volcanoes that comprise the Indian Heaven field are monogenetic, only erupting once before becoming extinct.[25] The rest are polygenetic shield volcanoes.[7] About 80 percent of the lava erupted by Indian Heaven volcanoes consists of basalt; it represents the most voluminous Quaternary basalt produced by a volcanic field in the Cascade Arc north of Newberry Volcano in Oregon,[8] with an eruptive output volume between 14 and 19 cubic miles (60 and 80 km3).[26] Basalt composition varies from low-potassium high-alumina olivine tholeiite to calc-alkaline, shoshonite, and alkaline intraplate compositions,[26] though olivine-bearing basalt with different amounts of porphyritic plagioclase dominates.[7] Volcanoes within the field have produced smaller amounts of basaltic andesite and andesite with silicon dioxide compositions up to 59 percent, though dacite is not very common among Indian Heaven eruptive products. Unlike Mount St. Helens, the Indian Heaven field has generated large volumes of basalt but has not caused extensive crustal melting.[10] Most of the lava flows produced by the field have been pāhoehoe, featuring smaller percentages of block flows and ʻaʻā flows. They vary in thickness from 1.3 to 78.7 feet (0.4 to 24 m), reaching volumes up to 0.29 cubic miles (1.2 km3); there are about 40 distinct lava flow groups in the field, totaling 45 square miles (116 km2) in area.[7]

Indian Heaven has been significantly altered through glacial erosion, including at least four major periods of glaciation.[7] During the Hayden Creek Glaciation from 190,000 to 130,000 years ago, the Lewis River glacier advanced from Mount Adams to fill the Lewis River canyon, partly overlapping the Indian Heaven volcanic field. An ice cap originating at the northern end of the field also spread during this glacial era.[27] The Lone Butte tuya volcano erupted through this glacier, which had a thickness of 770 feet (230 m).[27]

Eruptive history and potential hazards edit

 
The cinder cone that produced the Big Lava Bed rises above a forest, which covers part of the extensive lava flow it produced.

One of Indian Heaven's vents produced a large effusive eruption about 9,000 years ago, forming the Big Lava Bed, which consisted of basaltic lava.[9] With an area of 20 square miles (52 km2)[25] and a volume of 0.22 cubic miles (0.9 km3),[1] the Big Lava Bed mostly consists of unvegetated basalt. It moved to the south down the Little White Salmon River drainage, which it filled for 10 miles (16 km) of its length.[25] Ultimately, the flow extended 16 miles (25 km) from its initial source vent, an unnamed cinder cone. It came within 5 miles (8 km) of the Columbia River.[1] Another, more ancient lava flow that was especially fluid encompassed the Trout Lake area and extended several miles south, also nearing the Columbia River. Highly voluminous, it also features lava tubes.[25] These lava tubes can be found at many of the lava flows that comprise the Indian Heaven volcanic field, which range from basaltic to andesitic in composition, and extend as far as 29 miles (46 km) from their source vents.[1] The eruptive units from the field show normal residual magnetism,[28] suggesting that they were all formed less than 780,000 years ago, with the exception of lava within Gifford Peak's eroded core.[26]

The volcanic field also features a number of Pleistocene subglacial volcanoes, many of which formed móbergs,[25] flat-topped peaks generated by subglacial eruptions.[29] These mountains, such as Crazy Hills, formed pillow-like shapes when their lava interacted with ice or meltwater. The field also has tuyas, such as Lone Buttle, which formed as flat and steep volcanic cones created by lava that erupted through glaciers or ice sheets. Lone Butte in particular erupted through a glacier in the Indian Heaven field, building its upper cone above water and generating pyroclastic materials, lava flows, and tephra to reach a height of 3,300 feet (1,000 m) above its base. However, Lone Butte has since undergone significant glacial erosion, losing about half of its original structure.[25]

Activity at the volcanic field has occurred sporadically for the past 700,000 years. Therefore, it remains likely that volcanoes from the field will erupt in the future, generating voluminous lava flows.[25] Nonetheless, the Volcano Hazards Program directed by the United States Geological Survey lists Indian Heaven's volcanic threat level as "Low/Very Low".[8] To assess threats from possible lava flows at Indian Heaven or at nearby Mount Adams, geologists from the United States Geological Survey headed by W. E. Scott determined its mean burial rate in 1995, calculated as the lava volume erupted per unit time divided by the area of the lava field. They found that Indian Heaven's average burial rate was low, but noted that Indian Heaven "has had a large lava flow in the past 10,000 years."[30] Estimating the probability of lava flows from Indian Heaven covering a certain point in the zone surrounding the field, the geologists arrived at a range between one in 100,000 to one in a million.[30]

Major vents edit

The Global Volcanism Program of the Smithsonian Institution lists a number of major vents at Indian Heaven, including the Big Lava Bed pyroclastic cone, produced by the most recent eruption in the field; the Bird Mountain, East Crater, Gifford Peak, Lemei Rock, Red Mountain, and Sawtooth Mountain shield volcanoes; and the Lone Butte tuya volcano. The Big Lava Bed pyroclastic cinder cone has a smooth slope, and produced the Big Lava Bed flow, which represents the newest eruptive activity within the entire Indian Heaven field. Red Mountain, which has an elevation of 4,964 feet (1,513 m), marks the southernmost point of the shield volcanoes in the volcanic field, while Sawtooth Mountain is the northernmost volcano.[1]

Recreation edit

 
A small lake within the Indian Heaven wilderness.

Within the Indian Heaven Wilderness, visitors can fish in lakes and ponds, hike, backpack, ride horses, and view wildlife. A popular trail is the Indian Heaven loop, which runs for 10 miles (16 km) from the Cultus Creek campground. Following the Indian Heaven Trail to Deep Trail and then Lemei Lake Trail, it passes through meadows and lakes to join the Pacific Crest Trail before it returns to the Cultus Creek campground where it starts.[13] After the climb from the final paved road to enter the wilderness area, which lasts about 2 miles (3.2 km), hiking in Indian Heaven is relatively undemanding.[20] However, trails can vary in difficulty for horseback riders and hikers.[12]

The Lake Wapiki trail, 9.6 miles (15.4 km) in length, gains 2,500 feet (760 m) in elevation and provides scenic views of Mount Adams and Mount Rainier.[31] The Blue Lake trail in the Indian Heaven wilderness area runs for 3.25 miles (5.23 km);[32] together with the Lemei Lake Trail, it forms a loop that last 12.3 miles (19.8 km).[18] A moderate hike, it offers views of lakes, ponds, meadows, and forests, as well as access to popular fishing lakes like Dee Lake, Heather Lake, Thomas Lake, and Eunice Lake.[33] These lakes are also popular swimming spots, particularly among hikers with children.[15] Before it merges with the Pacific Crest Trail, the route arrives at the Blue Lake, which has a depth of 46 feet (14 m) and marks the deepest lake within the entire wilderness. Blue Lake was carved by glacial motion.[34]

One of the most popular camping spots is the Goose Lake Campground, which is frequented by fishermen, boaters, and swimmers. Operated by the United States Forest Service, the campground remains open from July through October.[35] A designated camp site near Thomas and Blue Lakes within the wilderness was created by wilderness managers for the Gifford Pinchot National Forest,[12] with the hope that it would mitigate resource damage in high use area and focus visitor use impact to smaller, more compact areas.[36]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  • [a] ^ Sources disagree on the exact number of vents; Harris (2005) says there are 48 vents,[25] while Hildreth (2007) claims there are 52.[37]
  • [b] ^ The United States Forest Service lists the acreage for the Indian Heaven Wilderness as both 20,784 acres (84.11 km2),[13] and as 20,600 acres (83 km2).[12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Indian Heaven". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Wood, Charles A.; Kienle, Jűrgen (1993). Volcanoes of North America. Cambridge University Press. pp. 166–167. ISBN 0-521-43811-X.
  3. ^ Schuster et al. 1978, p. 39.
  4. ^ Mitchell et al. 1989, p. 382.
  5. ^ Joslin 2005, p. 30.
  6. ^ Joslin 2005, p. 31.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Mitchell et al. 1989, p. 383.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Indian Heaven Volcanic Field". Cascades Volcano Observatory. United States Geological Survey. February 2, 2015. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  9. ^ a b Harris 2005, p. 244.
  10. ^ a b Hildreth 2007, p. 20.
  11. ^ a b Harris 2005, p. 254.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Indian Heaven Wilderness". United States Forest Service. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h "Wilderness: Indian Heaven". United States Forest Service. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  14. ^ a b c Berger & Smith 2014, p. 246.
  15. ^ a b c d Lorain 2010, p. 90.
  16. ^ a b Lorain 2010, p. 93.
  17. ^ a b c d Bernstein & Jackman 2000, p. 220.
  18. ^ a b Lorain 2010, p. 88.
  19. ^ Lorain 2010, p. 89.
  20. ^ a b Frick-Wright, Peter (August 12, 2011). "Backpacking in Indian Heaven: A small dose of misery just enhances the experience, right?". OregonLive.com. Oregonian Media Group. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  21. ^ Nelson 2007, p. 174.
  22. ^ Mitchell et al. 1989, pp. 382–383.
  23. ^ Hand, Eric (November 4, 2015). "Deep magma chambers seen beneath Mount St. Helens". Science Magazine. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
  24. ^ Hildreth 2007, p. 17.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i Harris 2005, p. 255.
  26. ^ a b c Hildreth 2007, p. 19.
  27. ^ a b Hill 1987, p. 342.
  28. ^ Mitchell et al. 1989, p. 386.
  29. ^ Allaby, Michael, ed. (September 2013). "Reference Entry: moberg". Oxford English Dictionary of Geology and Earth Sciences. Oxford University Press. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  30. ^ a b Scott et al. 1995, p. 7.
  31. ^ Lorain 2010, pp. 93–94.
  32. ^ Bernstein & Jackman 2000, p. 219.
  33. ^ Bernstein & Jackman 2000, pp. 219–220.
  34. ^ Bernstein & Jackman 2000, p. 221.
  35. ^ "Campground: Goose Lake". United States Forest Service. 2017. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  36. ^ "Camping in designated areas". United States Forest Service. Retrieved January 5, 2018.
  37. ^ Hildreth 2007, p. 6.

Sources edit

  • Berger, K.; Smith, D. R. (2014). The Pacific Crest Trail: A Hiker's Companion (2 ed.). The Countryman Press.
  • Bernstein, A.; Jackman, A. (2000). Portland Hikes: Day Hikes in Oregon and Washington Within 100 Miles of Portland. Mountain N' Air Books.
  • Harris, S. L. (2005). "Chapter 16: Mount Adams". Fire Mountains of the West: The Cascade and Mono Lake Volcanoes (Third ed.). Missoula, Montana: Mountain Press Publishing Company. ISBN 0-87842-511-X.
  • Hildreth, W. (2007). Quaternary Magmatism in the Cascades, Geologic Perspectives. United States Geological Survey. Professional Paper 1744. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  • Hill, M. L., ed. (1987). Cordilleran Section of the Geological Society of America: Decade of North American Geology, Centennial Field Guide. Vol. 1. Geological Society of America.
  • Joslin, L. (2005). The Wilderness Concept and the Three Sisters Wilderness: Deschutes and Willamette National Forests, Oregon. Bend, Oregon: Wilderness Associates. ISBN 978-0-9647167-4-2.
  • Lorain, D. (2010). One Night Wilderness: Portland: Quick and Convenient Backcountry Getaways within Three Hours of the City. Wilderness Press.
  • Mitchell, R. J.; Jaeger, D. J.; Diehl, J. F.; Hammond, P. E. (1989). "Palaeomagnetic results from the Indian Heaven volcanic field, south-central Washington". Geophysical Journal International. Oxford University Press. 97 (3): 381–390. Bibcode:1989GeoJI..97..381M. doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.1989.tb00509.x.
  • Nelson, D. (2007). Day Hiking South Cascades: Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Adams, Columbia Gorge. The Mountaineers Books.
  • Schuster, J. E.; Blackwell, D. D.; Hammond, P. E.; Huntting, M. T. (1978). Heat Flow Studies in the Steamboat Mountain-Lemei Rock Area, Skamania County, Washington: Information Circular 62 (PDF). Olympia: Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geology and Earth Resources.
  • Scott, W. E.; Iverson, R. M.; Vallance, J. W.; Hildreth, W. (1995). Volcano Hazards in the Mount Adams Region, Washington: Open-File Report 95-492. United States Geological Survey.

indian, heaven, this, article, about, volcanic, field, federally, protected, wilderness, area, wilderness, volcanic, field, skamania, county, state, washington, united, states, midway, between, mount, helens, mount, adams, field, dates, from, pleistocene, earl. This article is about the volcanic field For the federally protected wilderness area see Indian Heaven Wilderness Indian Heaven is a volcanic field in Skamania County in the state of Washington in the United States 2 Midway between Mount St Helens and Mount Adams the field dates from the Pleistocene to the early Holocene epoch It trends north to south and is dominated by six small shield volcanoes these shields are topped by small spatter and cinder cones and the field includes a number of subglacial volcanoes and tuyas The northernmost peak in the field is Sawtooth Mountain and the southernmost is Red Mountain its highest point is Lemei Rock at an elevation of 5 925 feet 1 806 m Indian HeavenLemei Rock in the Indian Heaven volcanic fieldHighest pointElevation5 925 ft 1 806 m 1 Coordinates45 56 00 N 121 49 00 W 45 93333 N 121 81667 W 45 93333 121 81667 1 GeographyIndian HeavenSkamania County Washington U S Parent rangeCascade RangeGeologyAge of rockPleistocene and HoloceneMountain typevolcanic fieldVolcanic arcCascade Volcanic ArcLast eruption6250 BCE 1 ClimbingEasiest routeLemei Trail Indian Heaven Trail with rock scramblingIndian Heaven features both polygenetic and monogenetic volcanic activity many of its volcanoes have only erupted once before coming extinct while others have erupted several times Approximately 50 eruptive centers lie within the Indian Heaven field which also has approximately 40 lava flows The field s eruptive output totals 14 to 19 cubic miles 58 to 79 km3 with sporadic activity taking place for the past 700 000 years The last volcanic activity in the field produced a large cinder cone Big Lava Bed as well as a voluminous lava and scoria flows about 9 000 years ago Future activity is possible though the Volcano Hazards Program directed by the United States Geological Survey considers Indian Heaven s volcanic threat level to be low The volcanic field is surrounded by the Indian Heaven Wilderness a protected wilderness area within the Gifford Pinchot National Forest supporting diverse flora and fauna The local area has been inhabited by Native American populations for about 10 000 years and the name Indian Heaven derives from the indigenous name for the vicinity A popular recreation destination the wilderness offers a number of trails as well as more than 150 lakes for fishing swimming and boating Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Wilderness 2 Ecology 3 Human history 4 Geology 5 Eruptive history and potential hazards 6 Major vents 7 Recreation 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 References 11 SourcesGeography edit nbsp Indian Heaven volcanic field and Mount Adams shown in a relief mapLocated in Skamania County in the state of Washington 3 Indian Heaven volcanic field is part of the High Cascades 4 an eastern segment of the Cascade Range which trends north south 5 Formed towards the end of the Pleistocene Epoch these mountains are underlain by more ancient volcanoes that subsided due to parallel north south faulting in the surrounding region 6 The Indian Heaven field lies 40 miles 64 km east of Vancouver Washington and 14 miles 23 km to the north of the Columbia River 7 The Indian Heaven volcanic field lies between Mount St Helens and Mount Adams 1 about 19 miles 30 km southwest of the latter 8 The Simcoe Mountains volcanic field is located to the east 9 To the southwest lies a diffuse volcanic belt of at least 22 volcanic centers 25 miles 40 km in length that runs in a southeast trending direction and includes Marble Mountain Bare Mountain West Crater and Trout Creek Hill 10 The field has a diameter of 20 miles 32 km 11 with a total area of 175 square miles 450 km2 8 The tallest point within the field is the Lemei Rock shield volcano which reaches an elevation of 5 925 feet 1 806 m 1 Wilderness edit The Indian Heaven Wilderness which encompasses an area of 20 784 acres 84 11 km2 b lies within a forested high plateau region It includes subalpine meadows the volcanic field and a number of other volcanic features 12 more than 150 lakes and forests 13 Created in 1984 by the Washington Wilderness Bill it sits between Mount Adams and the Columbia River Gorge a canyon of the Columbia River 12 Part of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest the wilderness area includes 16 4 miles 26 4 km of the Pacific Crest Trail which traverses it from north to south as well as seven other tributary trails 13 that form a 42 mile 68 km network of trails 12 The area is relatively inaccessible as roads are covered by snow until June annually 13 though snow melts by mid July in most years permitting visitors in the fall season 12 Ecology editThe plateau that contains the Indian Heaven Wilderness features forests which are predominantly made up of Pacific silver fir noble fir and subalpine fir trees 13 though there are also Western red cedars 14 mountain hemlock 15 grand firs and Engelmann spruce 16 Other flora found in the vicinity include an understory of huckleberry plants and beargrass 17 14 in addition to colorful wildflowers 18 vine maples 19 flowering plants such as blueberry heather 15 vanilla leaf and false hellebore 16 and aromatic wintergreen 17 Many of the area s lakes get stocked with trout species like cutthroat 17 rainbow and brook trout 13 Amphibians such as frogs can be found in the wilderness 15 while terrestrial animals in the area include deer elk and American black bears 13 Because of the abundance of mosquitoes within the vicinity Indian Heaven is sometimes informally referred to as Insect Heaven 20 Human history edit nbsp The Indian Racetrack within the Heaven Wilderness Indian Heaven and the surrounding wilderness area have played an important role in local Native American life for about 10 000 years and the vicinity was originally called Sahalee Tyee by native peoples 12 which loosely translates to Indian Heaven 17 The Sawtooth Berry Fields known globally for their huckleberries burned during the late 1890s and again in 1902 Later fires helped maintain the fields by drying their berries From 1902 to the mid 1920s local tribes including the Yakama Klickitat Wasco Wishram and Umatilla as well as Native American groups from Montana and Wyoming gathered in the Indian Heaven area during the summers for annual huckleberry feasts During these gatherings they celebrated traded and performed rituals they also raced horses played various games constructed baskets dried meat tanned hides and fished in the local lakes In 1932 the Yakama Nation and the United States Forest Service agreed to set aside a portion of the Berry Fields for exclusive Indian use the harvest remains an important local tradition 12 Today the marks from the Race Track a meadow used by Native Americans for horse racing can be seen about 0 5 miles 0 8 km off the segment of the Pacific Crest Trail that crosses through the Indian Heaven wilderness Trees within the area have scars from where their bark was peeled for wood to make baskets 14 The area is also rich with large game animals and supports a number of roots and tuber plant species 21 Geology edit nbsp Satellite map showing the volcanoes of the Indian Heaven volcanic fieldThe area near the Indian Heaven vicinity is composed of Western Cascade rocks from the Eocene to Miocene including andesite tuffs mud flows pyroclastic flow deposits and other volcaniclastic materials as well as High Cascade rocks that date from between the Pliocene and Holocene epochs Strata of rock underlying the area has been deformed to create faults fractures separations in geologic formation volcanic igneous intrusions and a gradual dipping syncline that trends north to south The Indian Heaven field resides within the syncline s trough and it consists of High Cascade rocks which are far less altered than the surrounding rock strata 7 Similar to other Cascade volcanoes the Indian Heaven volcanoes were fed by magma chambers produced by the subduction of the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate under the western edge of the North American tectonic plate 22 The field may share a 12 40 km 7 5 24 9 mi deep magma chamber with Mount St Helens that seismic imaging showed lying between the two volcanoes below two smaller magma chambers each located more directly under their respective volcanic area 23 Indian Heaven consists of several overlapping shield volcanoes that run along a line from Sawtooth Mountain at the north to Red Mountain to the south 1 as well as cinder cones lava flows 11 and spatter cones low steep sided hills or mounds that consist of welded lava fragments 1 With a total magma output of 60 cubic miles 250 km3 the field has about 50 mafic eruptive edifices rich in magnesium and iron 24 a whose activity lasted from the Pleistocene to the early Holocene 25 Roughly half of these vents mark a mountainous highland 19 miles 31 km in length which runs parallel to the north south trend of the Cascade Arc in southern Washington state 8 Most of the volcanoes that comprise the Indian Heaven field are monogenetic only erupting once before becoming extinct 25 The rest are polygenetic shield volcanoes 7 About 80 percent of the lava erupted by Indian Heaven volcanoes consists of basalt it represents the most voluminous Quaternary basalt produced by a volcanic field in the Cascade Arc north of Newberry Volcano in Oregon 8 with an eruptive output volume between 14 and 19 cubic miles 60 and 80 km3 26 Basalt composition varies from low potassium high alumina olivine tholeiite to calc alkaline shoshonite and alkaline intraplate compositions 26 though olivine bearing basalt with different amounts of porphyritic plagioclase dominates 7 Volcanoes within the field have produced smaller amounts of basaltic andesite and andesite with silicon dioxide compositions up to 59 percent though dacite is not very common among Indian Heaven eruptive products Unlike Mount St Helens the Indian Heaven field has generated large volumes of basalt but has not caused extensive crustal melting 10 Most of the lava flows produced by the field have been pahoehoe featuring smaller percentages of block flows and ʻaʻa flows They vary in thickness from 1 3 to 78 7 feet 0 4 to 24 m reaching volumes up to 0 29 cubic miles 1 2 km3 there are about 40 distinct lava flow groups in the field totaling 45 square miles 116 km2 in area 7 Indian Heaven has been significantly altered through glacial erosion including at least four major periods of glaciation 7 During the Hayden Creek Glaciation from 190 000 to 130 000 years ago the Lewis River glacier advanced from Mount Adams to fill the Lewis River canyon partly overlapping the Indian Heaven volcanic field An ice cap originating at the northern end of the field also spread during this glacial era 27 The Lone Butte tuya volcano erupted through this glacier which had a thickness of 770 feet 230 m 27 Eruptive history and potential hazards edit nbsp The cinder cone that produced the Big Lava Bed rises above a forest which covers part of the extensive lava flow it produced One of Indian Heaven s vents produced a large effusive eruption about 9 000 years ago forming the Big Lava Bed which consisted of basaltic lava 9 With an area of 20 square miles 52 km2 25 and a volume of 0 22 cubic miles 0 9 km3 1 the Big Lava Bed mostly consists of unvegetated basalt It moved to the south down the Little White Salmon River drainage which it filled for 10 miles 16 km of its length 25 Ultimately the flow extended 16 miles 25 km from its initial source vent an unnamed cinder cone It came within 5 miles 8 km of the Columbia River 1 Another more ancient lava flow that was especially fluid encompassed the Trout Lake area and extended several miles south also nearing the Columbia River Highly voluminous it also features lava tubes 25 These lava tubes can be found at many of the lava flows that comprise the Indian Heaven volcanic field which range from basaltic to andesitic in composition and extend as far as 29 miles 46 km from their source vents 1 The eruptive units from the field show normal residual magnetism 28 suggesting that they were all formed less than 780 000 years ago with the exception of lava within Gifford Peak s eroded core 26 The volcanic field also features a number of Pleistocene subglacial volcanoes many of which formed mobergs 25 flat topped peaks generated by subglacial eruptions 29 These mountains such as Crazy Hills formed pillow like shapes when their lava interacted with ice or meltwater The field also has tuyas such as Lone Buttle which formed as flat and steep volcanic cones created by lava that erupted through glaciers or ice sheets Lone Butte in particular erupted through a glacier in the Indian Heaven field building its upper cone above water and generating pyroclastic materials lava flows and tephra to reach a height of 3 300 feet 1 000 m above its base However Lone Butte has since undergone significant glacial erosion losing about half of its original structure 25 Activity at the volcanic field has occurred sporadically for the past 700 000 years Therefore it remains likely that volcanoes from the field will erupt in the future generating voluminous lava flows 25 Nonetheless the Volcano Hazards Program directed by the United States Geological Survey lists Indian Heaven s volcanic threat level as Low Very Low 8 To assess threats from possible lava flows at Indian Heaven or at nearby Mount Adams geologists from the United States Geological Survey headed by W E Scott determined its mean burial rate in 1995 calculated as the lava volume erupted per unit time divided by the area of the lava field They found that Indian Heaven s average burial rate was low but noted that Indian Heaven has had a large lava flow in the past 10 000 years 30 Estimating the probability of lava flows from Indian Heaven covering a certain point in the zone surrounding the field the geologists arrived at a range between one in 100 000 to one in a million 30 Major vents editThe Global Volcanism Program of the Smithsonian Institution lists a number of major vents at Indian Heaven including the Big Lava Bed pyroclastic cone produced by the most recent eruption in the field the Bird Mountain East Crater Gifford Peak Lemei Rock Red Mountain and Sawtooth Mountain shield volcanoes and the Lone Butte tuya volcano The Big Lava Bed pyroclastic cinder cone has a smooth slope and produced the Big Lava Bed flow which represents the newest eruptive activity within the entire Indian Heaven field Red Mountain which has an elevation of 4 964 feet 1 513 m marks the southernmost point of the shield volcanoes in the volcanic field while Sawtooth Mountain is the northernmost volcano 1 Name Elevation Locationmeters feet Coordinates 1 Big Lava Bed 2 1 278 6 4 195 45 32 N 121 27 W 45 54 N 121 45 W 45 54 121 45Bird Mountain 2 1 739 5 705 46 12 N 121 28 W 46 2 N 121 47 W 46 2 121 47East Crater 2 1 614 5 295 46 00 N 121 28 W 46 N 121 47 W 46 121 47Lemei Rock 2 1 806 5 925 46 06 N 121 28 W 46 1 N 121 46 W 46 1 121 46Lone Butte 2 1 457 4 780 46 18 N 121 31 W 46 3 N 121 52 W 46 3 121 52Red Mountain 2 1 513 4 964 45 34 N 121 29 W 45 56 N 121 49 W 45 56 121 49Sawtooth Mountain 2 1 632 5 354 46 24 N 121 28 W 46 4 N 121 47 W 46 4 121 47Recreation edit nbsp A small lake within the Indian Heaven wilderness Within the Indian Heaven Wilderness visitors can fish in lakes and ponds hike backpack ride horses and view wildlife A popular trail is the Indian Heaven loop which runs for 10 miles 16 km from the Cultus Creek campground Following the Indian Heaven Trail to Deep Trail and then Lemei Lake Trail it passes through meadows and lakes to join the Pacific Crest Trail before it returns to the Cultus Creek campground where it starts 13 After the climb from the final paved road to enter the wilderness area which lasts about 2 miles 3 2 km hiking in Indian Heaven is relatively undemanding 20 However trails can vary in difficulty for horseback riders and hikers 12 The Lake Wapiki trail 9 6 miles 15 4 km in length gains 2 500 feet 760 m in elevation and provides scenic views of Mount Adams and Mount Rainier 31 The Blue Lake trail in the Indian Heaven wilderness area runs for 3 25 miles 5 23 km 32 together with the Lemei Lake Trail it forms a loop that last 12 3 miles 19 8 km 18 A moderate hike it offers views of lakes ponds meadows and forests as well as access to popular fishing lakes like Dee Lake Heather Lake Thomas Lake and Eunice Lake 33 These lakes are also popular swimming spots particularly among hikers with children 15 Before it merges with the Pacific Crest Trail the route arrives at the Blue Lake which has a depth of 46 feet 14 m and marks the deepest lake within the entire wilderness Blue Lake was carved by glacial motion 34 One of the most popular camping spots is the Goose Lake Campground which is frequented by fishermen boaters and swimmers Operated by the United States Forest Service the campground remains open from July through October 35 A designated camp site near Thomas and Blue Lakes within the wilderness was created by wilderness managers for the Gifford Pinchot National Forest 12 with the hope that it would mitigate resource damage in high use area and focus visitor use impact to smaller more compact areas 36 See also editCascade Volcanoes List of volcanoes in the United States Indian Heaven WildernessFootnotes edit a Sources disagree on the exact number of vents Harris 2005 says there are 48 vents 25 while Hildreth 2007 claims there are 52 37 b The United States Forest Service lists the acreage for the Indian Heaven Wilderness as both 20 784 acres 84 11 km2 13 and as 20 600 acres 83 km2 12 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Indian Heaven Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2020 09 25 a b c d e f g h Wood Charles A Kienle Jurgen 1993 Volcanoes of North America Cambridge University Press pp 166 167 ISBN 0 521 43811 X Schuster et al 1978 p 39 Mitchell et al 1989 p 382 Joslin 2005 p 30 Joslin 2005 p 31 a b c d e f Mitchell et al 1989 p 383 a b c d e Indian Heaven Volcanic Field Cascades Volcano Observatory United States Geological Survey February 2 2015 Retrieved January 5 2018 a b Harris 2005 p 244 a b Hildreth 2007 p 20 a b Harris 2005 p 254 a b c d e f g h i Indian Heaven Wilderness United States Forest Service Retrieved January 5 2018 a b c d e f g h Wilderness Indian Heaven United States Forest Service Retrieved January 5 2018 a b c Berger amp Smith 2014 p 246 a b c d Lorain 2010 p 90 a b Lorain 2010 p 93 a b c d Bernstein amp Jackman 2000 p 220 a b Lorain 2010 p 88 Lorain 2010 p 89 a b Frick Wright Peter August 12 2011 Backpacking in Indian Heaven A small dose of misery just enhances the experience right OregonLive com Oregonian Media Group Retrieved January 5 2018 Nelson 2007 p 174 Mitchell et al 1989 pp 382 383 Hand Eric November 4 2015 Deep magma chambers seen beneath Mount St Helens Science Magazine Retrieved March 2 2023 Hildreth 2007 p 17 a b c d e f g h i Harris 2005 p 255 a b c Hildreth 2007 p 19 a b Hill 1987 p 342 Mitchell et al 1989 p 386 Allaby Michael ed September 2013 Reference Entry moberg Oxford English Dictionary of Geology and Earth Sciences Oxford University Press Retrieved January 5 2018 a b Scott et al 1995 p 7 Lorain 2010 pp 93 94 Bernstein amp Jackman 2000 p 219 Bernstein amp Jackman 2000 pp 219 220 Bernstein amp Jackman 2000 p 221 Campground Goose Lake United States Forest Service 2017 Retrieved January 6 2018 Camping in designated areas United States Forest Service Retrieved January 5 2018 Hildreth 2007 p 6 Sources editBerger K Smith D R 2014 The Pacific Crest Trail A Hiker s Companion 2 ed The Countryman Press Bernstein A Jackman A 2000 Portland Hikes Day Hikes in Oregon and Washington Within 100 Miles of Portland Mountain N Air Books Harris S L 2005 Chapter 16 Mount Adams Fire Mountains of the West The Cascade and Mono Lake Volcanoes Third ed Missoula Montana Mountain Press Publishing Company ISBN 0 87842 511 X Hildreth W 2007 Quaternary Magmatism in the Cascades Geologic Perspectives United States Geological Survey Professional Paper 1744 Retrieved 2017 11 29 Hill M L ed 1987 Cordilleran Section of the Geological Society of America Decade of North American Geology Centennial Field Guide Vol 1 Geological Society of America Joslin L 2005 The Wilderness Concept and the Three Sisters Wilderness Deschutes and Willamette National Forests Oregon Bend Oregon Wilderness Associates ISBN 978 0 9647167 4 2 Lorain D 2010 One Night Wilderness Portland Quick and Convenient Backcountry Getaways within Three Hours of the City Wilderness Press Mitchell R J Jaeger D J Diehl J F Hammond P E 1989 Palaeomagnetic results from the Indian Heaven volcanic field south central Washington Geophysical Journal International Oxford University Press 97 3 381 390 Bibcode 1989GeoJI 97 381M doi 10 1111 j 1365 246X 1989 tb00509 x Nelson D 2007 Day Hiking South Cascades Mt St Helens Mt Adams Columbia Gorge The Mountaineers Books Schuster J E Blackwell D D Hammond P E Huntting M T 1978 Heat Flow Studies in the Steamboat Mountain Lemei Rock Area Skamania County Washington Information Circular 62 PDF Olympia Department of Natural Resources Division of Geology and Earth Resources Scott W E Iverson R M Vallance J W Hildreth W 1995 Volcano Hazards in the Mount Adams Region Washington Open File Report 95 492 United States Geological Survey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian Heaven amp oldid 1176683980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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