8A • COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL • DECEMBER 26, 2018 Off beat Oregon: Biggest mud puddles are once-and-future inland seas By Finn J.D. John For The Sentinel First Publish January 2016 W estward bound on the old Ap- plegate Trail in the early 1850s, the party of settlers halted in confusion at the shore of a vast, plac- id lake. Its waters stretched nearly all the way to the horizon, with just a thin rim of dimly glimpsed ridges be- yond to indicate that they had not reached some sort of preternaturally calm ocean. Th e settlers, by now, had passed a few of these alka- li lakes as the trail brought them westward. Th is one was the biggest they’d seen. Its size wasn’t what was startling about it, though. What confused them were the wagon ruts — the well established Applegate Trail was marked by a deep set of wagon-wheel grooves that carved a path across the high Southeastern Oregon pla- teau over which they jour- neyed. And those ruts led straight into the lake. Of course they tried to fol- low them into the lake for a few hundred yards, but it quickly became clear that its water, in addition to being miles wide, was also deep — deep enough, at least, to stop a wagon train. But the western sky lay on the other side of the big wa- ter, and there was nothing for them to do but to travel around it. Th ey toiled their way north, and then west, and then south again, fol- lowing the rim of the vast lake to its opposite shore, a journey of something like 100 miles. Sure enough, when they got there, they found the heavy wheel ruts of the Ap- plegate Trail climbing non- chalantly out of the waters of the lake and continuing on their way westward toward Eugene City. Upon their arrival, the emigrants learned that no- body else knew anything about the vast lake they’d had to detour around. Th ey wondered where it might have come from. It remained a mystery un- til, several years later, there was another season of dry weather — and the lake dried up once again. T oday, the disappearing lake is known as Goose Lake. It’s a vast shallow basin, shaped like an arrowhead, right on the Oregon-Cali- fornia border just south of Lakeview. And right now it’s as dry as it’s ever been … but that will probably change when this winter’s snows melt. Several springs drain into Goose Lake; but Goose Lake drains nowhere. It merely collects rainwater and snow- melt during wetter years, and lies there baking in the high-desert sun, quietly evaporating away, until it’s either replenished by anoth- er year’s rainfall or dried up into a powdery moonscape. Th e year 1846 must have been a dry one, because that’s the year the Oregon Territorial Legislature com- missioned brothers Jesse and Lindsay Applegate, with eight other early Orego- nians, to fi nd a safer alterna- tive to the Oregon Trail. For Jesse and Lindsay, the quest was personal. On their own journey several years before, they had lost two Ap- plegate children, drowned beneath the roaring cata- racts of the then-untamed Columbia as the party struggled to cross it in their caulked wagons. Th e trail the brothers’ party blazed diverged from the main Oregon Trail path at Fort Hall in Idaho, and dove down into northern Nevada and California be- fore dipping back up into southern Oregon, crossing the Cascades, and then turn- ing north along roughly the same path taken by Inter- state 5 today, en route to the southern Willamette Valley. But apparently the late 1840s were pretty dry, and they unwittingly left a big, miles-wide obstacle squarely in their path. T he lakes of Lake County, including Goose Lake, are sort of unusu-al. Th ey are, essentially, vast mud puddles, and their shores ex- pand and contract according to climactic conditions. During the last Ice Age, those mud puddles were more like a network of small inland seas, many hundreds of feet deep and covering hundreds of thousands of acres, surrounded by lush vegetation and home to a wide variety of animals as well as human communities. One such lake, which covered the future townsite of Fort Rock under several dozen feet of water, was the home of a community of people 14,000 years ago, who left behind a small trove of woven sagebark sandals and coprolites (very old dried- out or fossilized excrement) that form the oldest evi- dence of human habitation in the Americas. And you can still see where the shores of those old inland seas used to be, in wave-worn features in the surrounding rimrock. With the changing cli- mate, though, those seas literally dried up. Year over year, the water in them evap- orated away. And thus, the dissolved salts and impuri- ties of an entire small ocean wound up concentrated in the waters of a cluster of little lakes and ponds — many of them quite large in surface area, but relatively shal-low. Some of these dried sea- beds can be quite dangerous when conditions are bad; if one ingests enough alkali salts, either by drinking the water or by breathing the blowing dust, it can change the body’s acid-base balance in disastrous ways. It’s thought that the dusty bottom of one alkali lake, near the town of Jordan Valley close to the Idaho border, sickened and killed Jean-Baptiste “Pompey” Charbonneau, the frontier mountain man who had been the baby born to Sa- cagawea on the Lewis and Clark expedition in 1905. Lake Abert in particular is very salty; it and Summer Lake are the remnant of an ancient inland sea called Lake Chewaucan. Abert’s waters are fi lled with a dense population of brine shrimp, which are an important food source for the migrating wa- terfowl that blacken the Lake County sky in the spring; but like Goose Lake, it, too, is drying up. But a winter’s heavy snow- falls suggest that help, in the form of plenty of snowmelt to fi ll the lake and relieve the stressed brine shrimp, may be on the way. And when the Earth enters its next ice age, those ancient basins will be ready and able to resume their old role as the containers of Oregon’s own network of high-eleva- tion inland seas. (Sources: Gulick, Bill. Roadside History of Oregon. Missoula, MT: Mountain, 1991; Orr, Elizabeth and William. Oregon Geography (6th Ed.). Corvallis: Oregon State University Press, 2012) Finn J.D. John teaches at Oregon State University and writes about odd tidbits of Oregon history. For details, see http://fi nnjohn.com. To contact him or suggest a topic: fi nn2@offb eatoregon. com or 541-357-2222.