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Columbia
River Gorge
The
Columbia River Gorge is a spectacular river canyon cutting the only
sea-level route through the Cascade Mountain Range. It's 80 miles
long and up to 4,000 feet deep with the north canyon walls in
Washington State and the south canyon walls in Oregon State.
The Columbia River Plateau was created by a series of basalt flows.
Six to seventeen million years ago, the flows covered 164,000 square
kilometers -- portions of northeast Oregon, southwest Washington and
western Idaho. |
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For over
31,000 years, the Columbia River Gorge has supported flourishing
civilizations. Evidence of the Folsom and Marmes people, who
crossed the Great Continental Divide from Asia, were found in
archaeological digs. Excavations at Five Mile Rapids, a few
miles east of The Dalles, show humans have occupied this ideal
salmon fishing site for more than 10,000 years. Through
millenniums of geologic events, waterfalls have found their home
in the Columbia River Gorge. A visit to the area is not complete
without a visit to its breathtaking waterfalls. |
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The Columbia
Gorge is home to the Multnomah Falls is the second highest
year-round waterfall in the United States. Though Multnomah
Falls is grand and popular, all of the falls in the Gorge are
special and breathtaking.
Hiking, mountain biking, windsurfing, camping, fishing,
boating, wildlife watching, birding, wildflower watching,
photography, picnicking, rock climbing. You can do all this
and more in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area. |
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There are two ways to get to the
falls: Interstate 84 east, and the Columbia River Gorge Scenic
Highway. To get to the Historic Columbia River Scenic Highway
simply head through historic downtown Troutdale. |
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Nearby Lodging areas
Troutdale, Hood River, Welches, Mosier - Oregon
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Copyright
Oregon Reservations
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