The Geology of Sunset Highway
The Wenatchee Valley Erratics Chapter of the Ice Age Floods Institute will meet Tuesday, April 9 at 7:00 PM, at the Wenatchee Valley Museum and Cultural Center, 127 S. Mission, Wenatchee. Or via Zoom link https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84520197937 Webinar ID: 845 2019 7937 Dr. Earl F. Cater, Director of the Douglas County Museum in Waterville, will present “The Geology of Sunset Highway.” Topics he will discuss include: Early Euro-American explorations of the Big Bend country; Difficulty in getting to Douglas County because of elevation and size; Barriers to Euro-American settlement: Rocks and no roads, Banks Lake area’s 800-feet high basalt cliffs, Corbaley Canyon’s fractured gneiss and schist, rockslides from basalt layers; Obstacles from glaciation: Yeager Rock and multiple haystack rocks and other glacial features; The first stage in Okanogan, March 1884: The Jack Smith story; 1913 Declaration of the Sunset Highway as the Red Trail; 1926 Declaration of the Sunset Highway as the Yellowstone Trail. The program is free and open to the public. Contact information: Dr. Earl F. Cater Director, Douglas County Museum efcater@gmail.com 515-371-3535 Susan D. Freiberg Erratics Chapter Publicity wenvalerratics@yahoo.com