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Hamilton Mountain, Washington, as seen from North Bonneville.
Image taken October 27, 2004.
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Hamilton Mountain ...
Early Hamilton Mountain ...
Hamilton Mountain, Hamilton Island, and Hamilton Creek were all named for Samuel M. Hamilton of Lower Cascades, who took a Donation Land Claim on the Hamilton Creek in 1850.
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management, General Land Office Records, show a Samuel M. Hamilton being issued a land title on September 20, 1870, parts of T2N R7E Sections 29 and 30, under the 1862 "Homestead Entry Original"
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Columbia River Basalt Group ...
"Flood basalts of the Miocene Columbia River Basalt Gorup (CRBG) are among the most volumninous and far-traveled lava flows on earth. About 10% of the basalt flows that erupted on the Columbia Plateau between 17 and 12 Ma were voluminous enough to pass through the Cascade arc via a wide ancestral Columbia River valley, and some of them eventually reached the Pacific Ocean. Some of the larger flows invaded the marine strata, forming mega-invasive flows on the continental shelf and slope. ...
The basic geologic framework of the Columbia River Gorge has been known for over a century. In the western gorge, the package of Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) flood-basalt flows unconformably overlies volcanogenic rocks of ancestral Cascade volcanic arc. Vigorous and widespread volcanism characterized the arc from its inception 40 Ma until ca. 18 Ma, when activity greatly declines. The arc must have been relatively quiescent during emplacement of the most voluminous CRBG flows, because interflow volcanic sediments are sparse. The larger flows passed through a 50-km-wide ancestral Columbia River valley on their way to the ocean. Owing to late Cenozoic uplift of the Cascade Range and resultant incision by the Columbia River, CRBG flows are now spectacularly exposed in the cliffs and waterfalls of the Columbia River Gorge. The modern gorge roughly follows the northern margin of the broad Miocene valley. Grande Ronde flows clearly abut the northern paleovalley wall formed by early Miocene volcaniclastic rocks of the 19 Ma Eagle Creek Formation.
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The slight southward dip of the Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) section and the underlying Eagle Creek Formation gives the western gorge an asymmetric physiographic cross section. In Washington, failure of weakly lithified Eagle Creek strata that dip toward the river under the load of superincumbent basalt has produced huge landslide complexes composed largely of CRBG debris. In Oregon, where strata dip away from the river, undercutting of the Eagle Creek Formation instead creates towering cliffs. As a result, the CRBG section south of the river consists of continuous cliffs, whereas to the north the CRBG forms scattered peaks (Greenleaf Peak, Table Mountain, Hamilton Mountain, and Archer Mountain) separated by low-lying terrain underlain by the Eagle Creek Formation or landslide debris. Each of these peaks is actually the southern end of a N-S ridge of CRBG, marking sites where basalt flows backfilled south-flowing tributaries of ancestral Columbia River."
Source:
Wells, R.E., Niem, A.R., Evarts, R.C., and Hagstrum, J.T., 2010, "The Columbia River Basalt Group -- From the gorge to the sea", IN: Geologic Society of America Field Guild 15, 2009.
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Views ...
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Hamilton Mountain, Washington, as seen from North Bonneville.
View from Beacon Rock Golf Course, North Bonneville, Washington.
Image taken February 26, 2005.
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Hamilton Mountain, Washington, as seen from Bonneville Dam, Oregon.
Hamilton Island is in the middleground.
Image taken October 25, 2003.
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Hamilton Mountain, Washington, as seen from Hamilton Island.
Image taken October 27, 2004.
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Hamilton Mountain, Washington, as seen from Hamilton Island.
Image taken January 27, 2017.
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Pierce National Wildlife Refuge, Washington.
View includes Beacon Rock (left), Hamilton Mountain, and Aldrich Butte. The wildlife refuge is along the water. Image taken from Beacon Rock boat dock.
Image taken August 1, 2004.
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Beacon Rock and Hamilton Mountain, Washington.
Beacon Rock is a large 840-foot-high basalt plug. The Missoula Floods eroded away the softer outer material
View from Beacon Rock boat dock. Pierce National Wildlife Refuge is at the waters edge.
Image taken October 27, 2004.
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 Click image to enlarge
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Beacon Rock and Hamilton Mountain, Washington.
Beacon Rock is a large 840-foot-high basalt plug. The Missoula Floods eroded away the softer outer material
View from Beacon Rock boat dock. Pierce National Wildlife Refuge is at the waters edge.
Image taken January 31, 2013.
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From the Journals of Lewis and Clark ...
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Clark, October 31, 1805 ...
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