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37.4: Bretz floats his hypothesis

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    22828
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    In 1923, Bretz finally put his audacious ideas into print. Like any careful scientist, he considered potential objections and attempted to disarm them before they could be deployed. He knew what he had to say was going to be controversial, because a giant flood was anathema to the uniformitarian paradigm that governed professional geoscience. If “the present is the key to the past,” Bretz had a big issue: A flood of the size he was proposing had never been seen in human history. He was venturing into catastrophist terrain! But what choice did he have? He couldn’t account for the singular collection of landforms in the Scablands any way except for the big flood hypothesis.

    It should probably be noted here that Bretz’s proposed flood was very much a regional (not global) affair. It would be a big mistake to leap from the conclusion that there was a big flood in the Channeled Scablands during the Pleistocene to anything on the continental or planetary scale. Bretz’s flood was big, but it wasn’t that big.

    In January 1927, Bretz formally presented his idea that the Channeled Scablands were best explained by an enormous flood. He spoke at the Geological Society of Washington (that’s D.C. this time, not the state), and it was a legendary case of scientific ambush. The professionals there chewed him up and spit him out, especially those who were older and professionally established, teaming up to vocally attack his ‘flood’ interpretation. But sitting quietly in the room was J.T. Pardee, a young and thus relatively vulnerable new recruit at the USGS. Pardee didn’t want to run the risk of irritating his new colleagues and superiors by speaking out. But he knew that something no one else did – just to the east was a glacial lake that could have provided sufficient water to supply Bretz’s flood: Glacial Lake Missoula.


    This page titled 37.4: Bretz floats his hypothesis is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Callan Bentley, Karen Layou, Russ Kohrs, Shelley Jaye, Matt Affolter, and Brian Ricketts (VIVA, the Virginia Library Consortium) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.