Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 8, No. 3, September 1935
Discovery of the Fumaroles
At the Pinnacles, Wheeler Canyon
By Warren D. Smith, Ranger-Naturalist
On August 16th, the writer of this
article, accompanied by David Griggs, geologist of Harvard University
and Fred Hoffsteld, E. C. W. technical assistant, made a study of the
Pinnacles area in Wheeler Canyon, a tributary of Sand Creek, near the
East Entrance to Crater Lake National Park.
Looking upward from the bottom of the
canyon we noted a reddish band some three feet thick near the top of the
west wall just below the pumice filling and at the upper limits of the
gray buff horizon in which the pinnacles occur. This unusual degree of
oxidation called for some special explanation since it is not present in
some other localities where the same valley filling has been cut into by
the stream.
Just as we reached the top of the
canyon wall, Mr. Griggs, who was ahead, pausing for a few minutes to
rest, placed his hand on a small cone-shaped projection of the tuff
which at this point seemed to resemble a mass of re-cemented rubble, and
exclaimed, "Ho, what have we here?" As we looked it over more carefully
we saw at once that we had an old fumarole to deal with. Examining it
critically, we saw that it had a cavity inside resembling a small assay
muffle furnace, though not just the shape of one. Evidences of baking,
incipient fusion, oxidation of the walls, and deposition of a whitish to
yellow encrustation on the interior and even of kaolinization of the
rock fragments, with a small nearly circular opening at the top, proved
conclusively that this was indeed a fumarole whose activity had long
since ceased.
This particular fumarole is about two
feet in diameter in its widest part and of course narrows at the top to
the size of the opening of about six inches. It is about two feet high
and is fed by a tubular opening from below.
Looking about us, we found many more of
these gas and steam vents. They all appeared to be in the upper portion
of the tuff at the red horizon.
Further scrutiny of this locality
revealed the fact that some of the pinnacles were merely the indurated
chimneys or ducts leading up to the vents at the top. In other places
nearby we saw some tubular fumaroles following the shrinkage joint
cracks in the tuff. These various vents varied in size from six inches
to two or three feet in diameter.
The similarity of these to fumaroles in
the great hot sand-flow of Katmai in Alaska was noted by Mr. Griggs, who
had seen them while with his father, Professor Robert Griggs, in the
Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes.
The significance of these extinct
fumaroles in Wheeler Canyon is at once apparent when the impression has
been given, though not directly so stated, by Diller, that glacio-fluvial
material predominated in these valleys radiating from Crater Lake.
Diller, indeed, mentioned briefly the jointed tuffe in Annie Creek
Canyon, but did not note the true character of them and apparently did
not see the old fumaroles.
The finding of so much pyroclastic
material which was in a quite hot condition, whether it feel as showers
of ash or flowed out as a sand-flow, lends additional support to the
explosion theory of the origin of Crater Lake.
This discovery in Wheeler Canyon has
led to the finding of other localities where similar phenomena may be
noted. Ranger Naturalist Carl E. Dutton has found a rather large one,
approximately eight feet in diameter in a tributary gully of Llao's
Hallway in Whitehorse Creek, and a number of once hot spots can be noted
in the road cuts of the Park.
Considering all these recent fumarole
finds and the charred logs and buried trees, some quite carbonized,
reported within the last few years, we have a piling up of interesting
data which will shortly lead to a complete solution, this writer
believes, of the problem which has long kept geologists in controversy.
Judging from the number of these
fumaroles within the limited area studied, the number of them throughout
the entire valley must have compared favorably with those in the Valley
of Ten Thousand Smokes. What a spectacle they must have presented at the
time of their activity! In all likelihood, no human being could have
looked upon this scene as it probably long antedated the appearance of
man in America and furthermore much of this country was mantled by snow
and ice.
Diagrammatic Section of
the West Wall of Wheeler Canyon at the Pinnacles, Crater Lake National
Park
