Lake Allison

The lake is the main cause of the rich and fertile soil that now characterizes the Willamette Valley.

Willamette Valley fertility, like the Palouse silt,[2] is in large part due to the largest freshwater flood scientifically documented[3] in history.

The narrows at Kalama, Washington, restricted the flow of water, causing it to back up and flood the Willamette Valley to a depth of 300 to 400 feet (91 to 122 m) above sea level as far south as Eugene.

The lake eventually flowed out and drained, leaving 180 to 200 feet (55 to 61 m) of layered sedimentary soils throughout the Tualatin, Yamhill and Willamette valleys.

In the 1930s he had documented hundreds of non-native boulders (also known as glacial erratics) that had been transported by the floods on icebergs and had left a ring around the lower hills surrounding the Willamette Valley.

Figure showing topographic maps of Washington and northern Oregon with the lowlands flooded by the Missoula Floods marked.
Location of the former Lake Allison and former neighboring lakes