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Hike through Ice Age Floods history with geologists

Giant current ripples  southwest of Fairchild Air Force Base  were produced during the catastrophic Ice Age outburst floods when  the ice dam containing Glacial Lake Missoula failed. (Courtesy Kiver / The Spokesman-Review)

HIKING — The Cheney-Spokane Chapter of the Ice Age Floods Institute has several educational programs planned for October, and it’s not too early to sign up for limited spaces on two geologist-led hikes in the upper Grand Coulee area.

Both hikes will be led by geologists-authors Gene Kiver and Bruce Bjornstad. Costs are about $20 per hike. Pre-registration required online at www.iafi.org/Events.

  • Oct. 8 — Hike Northrup Canyon, 7.2 miles, moderately difficult. Youths ages 12-16 must be accompanied by adult.  Hikers will meet at Steamboat Rock State Park’s Northup Canyon trailhead at 9:30 a.m.  A Discover Pass is required on vehicles.
  • Oct. 9 — Hike Candy Point on short but moderately strenuous walk on steep trail constructed by the CCC during the depression years leading through a side canyon near the town of Coulee Dam. Starts at 9:30 a.m.

Lectures are free and open to the public as follows.

  • Oct. 28, “Tracking the Willamette Meteorite”  by Jack Nisbet, Spokane naturalist and historian, 7 p.m. at the Lair Auditorium, Building 6, at Spokane Community College.
  • Nov. 18, “Catastrophic Flooding on Earth and Mars,” by John Buchanan, EWU geology professor, 7 p.m. at the JFK Auditorium, Eastern Washington University in Cheney.

* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Outdoors Blog." Read all stories from this blog