Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 8, No.1, July 1935
Some Waterfalls in Crater Lake
National Park
By John Eliot Allen, Ranger-Naturalist
Early in the season, when the
snowdrifts still feed the innumerable small streams that at that time
flow down the crater wall and the outer slopes of the mountain and
augment the larger permanent streams, waterfalls of varying degrees of
volume, height and loveliness may be seen at hundreds of places within
the Park. A few of the most accessible and noteworthy of these were
visited during the first two weeks in July, and the following discussion
is designed to give the reader an idea of their characteristics,
peculiar beauties, and origin.
Vidae Falls, perhaps the loveliest and
most accessible within the Park, may be seen from the east entrance road
near the point where it crosses Sun Creek, about three miles from
Government Headquarters. An easy trail also zigzags up the hill to a
nearer viewpoint overlooking them. The two-hundred-foot cascade, cradled
in a notch out in the grey cliff of lava, is edged with the brilliant
green of the ever-moist vegetation, and overlooks a meadow and swale
thronged with dog-tooth lily (Erythronium) and forget-me-not (Lappula
florabunda)
The cliff itself is covered with a variety of wildflowers, the bleeding
hearts (Dicentra formosa), huckleberry bells (Vaccinium
caespitosum), false solomon seal (Smilosina amplexicaulus),
columbine (Aquilegia formosa), rock penstemon (Penstemon
rupicola), service blooms (Amerlanchier florida), sulphur
flower (Eriogonum umbellatum), and paint brush (Castelleja
appelgatei), all being prominently displayed. For a hundred feet
above the top of the main falls the stream flows steeply down in a
narrow chute bordered with a thick mat of various mosses, still further
above the valley levels and flattens out as a bench on the west side of
the main Sun Valley. This upper valley is of interest in considering the
origin of the falls. The stream therein originally must have joined Sun
Creek at its own level (I) and Sun glacier, filling the valley (II) cut
the cliff that resulted in the falls, (III). Since Sun Glacier must in
order to cut the valley that is now present, at some time have covered
the site of the falls with five hundred feet of ice, this must either
have been during a very low stage of the ice stream, perhaps the last
stage, or it is also possible that a more resistant ledge of lava may
have been in part or wholly responsible for the level area and the
falls.

Two other falls in Sun Creek itself may
be seen further down the valley. Scarcely a quarter of a mile below the
road, the stream, which is at this time of the year a sizable torrent,
drops over a mossy ledge for perhaps twenty feet, the angular blocky
face of the rock breaking into a hundred jets. Half a mile further down
there is another steep drop in the stream bed, and in two hundred yards
the creek falls over three hundred foot in a series of cascades.
A forty foot cascade may be found half
a mile up the creek from the west end of the Government Camp mess hall.
Immediately above these falls the southward-flowing stream is nearly
choked with peaty sod, and for a hundred yards it repeatedly disappears
below this springy mat and then boils up again a few feet further on. A
few minutes inspection shows that the stream above the falls is bounded
on the west by the wall of Munson Valley, which here is a high lava
cliff, and on the east by a lower bouldery ridge parallel to the valley
wall, which comes to an end at the falls and which is interpreted as an
upper lateral moraine of Munson glacier. The water cascade over a minor
lava ledge perhaps fifty feet high which juts out upstream from the lava
cliff at an acute angle, the outer and being covered by the glacial
deposit, thus effectually damming the stream and causing the level area
above the falls. Below the falls the stream turns eastward around the
end of the upper moraine over the surface of a lower and probably older
deposit of a similar nature.

These falls are interesting in
comparison to Vidae Falls, since they are both on the west side of south
trending glacial valleys, but are of different origin.
Dewie Falls, at the head of Godfrey's
Glen, may be easily reached by the road that turns off at the east end
of the bridge, just a mile above the Annie Spring junction. These
cascades drop over a hundred feet into the glen, after flowing for a
quarter of a mile through a narrow twenty-foot gorge, cut fifty feet
down into the agglomerate rock of the area. The falls are thus
unapproachable from above, and only with difficulty may they be closely
approached by climbing up from the Glen, but a short trail has been
built which leads down from the road to a viewpoint high above them.
Dewie Falls are unique in their setting, lying deep in a gorge with
walls made up of giant columns of agglomerate, and though their greatest
single drop is perhaps only twenty feet, they fall a total of over five
times that far. They are the result of varying resistance to wear of the
rock layers, as the stream cuts its way down through the volcanic
material.
A small falls, probably intermittent,
but nevertheless noteworthy, is located two hundred yards north of a
bend in the east entrance road just one mile from Government
Headquarters. It is of particular interest in that it slides down over a
smooth dipping surface of a peculiarly platy lava (andesite). The water
cascades over this slope for twenty-five feet before taking a
fifteen-foot final drop.
Water falls within the rim of the lake
are of comparatively small volume, and with only a few exceptions are
intermittent in nature, depending upon small snow-fields for their
supply. They exceed all other falls in the Park in height, however, and
the delicate filaments of a few of them as seen from the lake present a
lovely sight. Those noted during the first week of July are listed as
follows:
1. 1/4 mile northeast of Llao.
A thin 60 foot cataract with a 30 foot vertical drop, over 200 feet
above lake level. Probably intermittent.
2-4. 1/2 to 3/4 mile north of
Sentinel Rock. Three gullies in the steep cliff are occupied by
small temporary cascades dropping perhaps 200 feet down the wall to
the crater.
5-7. 1/2 mile southeast of
Sentinel Rock. At the base of the massive lava flow, 200 feet
above the water, two small possibly permanent streams flow out to
fall in several 20 foot drops before cascading to the water's edge.
Around the point to the southeast comes another small cascade, of
such location as to suggest falls hidden above.
8. North Side of Dutton Cliff.
Here, another slight stream issues at the base of a massive flow,
400 feet or so above the water, and drops 150 feet then cascades to
the water's edge.
9-12. 1/2 mile Southeast of
Eagle Point. Four cascades, fed by waters from snow on the
shaded slopes of Garfield and Applegate are of considerable size
although probably temporary, and fall 200 feet with 20 foot to 40
foot falls near the water's edge.