
Origins 1(2):101-103 (1974).
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Along the western edge of the Columbia River Plateau, next to the
Cascade Mountains, a unique state park has been created. The Ginkgo Petrified Forest State
Park, located in the State of Washington, is found in a panorama of hills and plains
gashed by dry canyons and watercourses. The dark basalt that underlies the whole area
shows up starkly in the cliffs along the many abandoned water channels. Although the water
that rushed through long ago is mostly gone now, the story told by the remains is a
fantastic one that speaks of major flooding and erosion by broken glacial dams and swollen
rivers draining from the margins of the continental glacier.
Before we describe the Park in greater detail, an explanation of the
name is needed. Ginkgo is an unusual type of tree, sometimes called the Maidenhair tree.
Its leaves, which resemble a partly opened Chinese folding fan, are completely diagnostic.
Fossil Ginkgo leaves have been found in several places in the world;
the wood itself is rare. Many different species and varieties lived in the past, but only
one representative still remains truly a living fossil! Since botanists discovered
live Ginkgo trees in China, the trees have been planted in many parts of the world.
Because petrified wood of the Ginkgo tree has been found near the area of the State Park,
it seemed appropriate to name the Park after this tree. Some pieces of cut-and-polished
Ginkgo wood can be seen in the Park museum. But the country around the Park is a treasure
house of petrified wood. Collectors have been combing the hills for many years, and wood
is still being found in the gulleys and gulches of these barren slopes.
The Park encompasses several hundred acres where no collecting is
permitted. Its annex several miles west of the main park area has walking trails along the
hillside to a number of petrified trees buried in the basalt but showing no appearance of
being burned. How can this be? No one knows for sure; perhaps the explanation is that the
trees were submerged in water. The basalt cooled so rapidly that the wood did not burn.
The most remarkable feature of this Park, however, is the great variety
of trees and plants represented. Nowhere else in the world are so many kinds of petrified
wood found in so small an area. An examination of the approximately 200 species reveals
another unusual fact: these trees and plants are not those expected from one climatic
zone. They range all the way from tropical jungle trees to trees found today in the
northern plains of Canada and Alaska. Some of the tropical trees are teak, breadfruit,
cinnamon, and gum. Others more common to temperate zones and cold climates are redwood,
fir, cottonwood, and spruce. Note these interesting plants: Chinese walnut, magnolia,
madrona, sassafras, mahogany, yew, and witch hazel. Further, this great variety of plants
is not all found growing in one part of the world today, but is scattered on different
continents.
The explanation presented in the Park museum is that these trees grew
in a broad altitudinal range. According to the present interpretation, the trees from high
mountains, those from intermediate hills, and those from tropical lowlands all were washed
together into low swamps and lakes by streams and rivers. Thus trees of great variety were
mixed together in the basalt beds of Ginkgo Petrified Forest State Park.
The region now varies in elevation from about 1000 feet to 3000 feet
above sea level. A number of miles to the west, the Cascade Mountains rise several
thousand feet higher. Presently the area experiences cold winters and hot summers.
Rainfall is light. The number of indigenous tree species is somewhat limited. If all these
many kinds of fossil trees lived together originally in this area, the range in elevation
must previously have been much greater than it is now, and the lower areas must have
experienced tropical growing conditions.
This interpretation is not entirely satisfactory. There is no place in
the world today where so great a variety of tree species grows in such close proximity.
The length and diameter of the petrified logs would require more than small streams to
move such trees down to the lowlands. Several streams currently flow from the Cascade
Mountains into the Columbia. Two of them, the Yakima and the Wenatchee, are of moderate
size, but are not able to transport large trees many miles. Especially in the upper
reaches, the streams are too small to float such trees. There are no evidences in the
basalt beds of large ancient river courses, nor are there extensive deposits of
sedimentary material which should accompany a broad river. Petrified driftwood is often
found; occasionally an upright petrified tree is seen. These are interpreted as having
floated in a lake until they sank to the bottom and were eventually buried by lava.
The great variety of trees from widely varying climatic conditions
buried in ash, cinders, and basalt is strongly suggestive of catastrophic conditions as
described in the book of Genesis in the Bible. Apparently trees from extensive
geographical and climatic areas floated together and were trapped and buried by the
volcanic materials. The absence of burning of the wood might indicate rapid cooling by
water. The volcanic material is often in the form of pillow basalts which are understood
to be produced when volcanic matter flows under water.
Although much has yet to be learned about this amazing petrified
forest, a flood interpretation appears to be as scientifically reasonable as that now
portrayed by the museum. In these dry coulees and semi-deserts of eastern Washington, a
glimpse of the preflood forests and the dynamic processes that buried them has been
exposed. It tells a story more of catastrophism than of uniformity.
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Geoscience Research Institute. All rights reserved.
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