Montana Governor and First Lady's Math and Science Initiative

Mountains on the Move - The Bitterroot and Sapphire Mountains

Mile Post 13, US Highway 93, near the Sula Store at Lewis & Clark Overlook Site
The spectacular Bitterroot Mountains northwest of
Sula expose granite rocks of the Idaho batholith,
a major geologic feature that consists of a series
of igneous intrusions that pushed their way toward the
surface between about 80 and 53 million years ago. The
molten magma that formed these intrusions forced its
way into older rocks and crystallized more than ten miles
below the surface. As the magma rose upward, it raised
up the overlying rocks, which sloughed off an enormous
block that slid to the east, forming the Sapphire Range on
the east side of the Bitterroot Valley. It took about seven
million years for this block to slowly slide along a surface
that forms the eastern slope of much of the Bitterroot
Range. The granite rock exposed along US Highway 93
in the Sula area are part of this block that was once in
the present Bitterroot Range. About 50 million years
ago, magma again rose up through the crust of the earth
resulting in the eruption of large volumes of volcanic rock
in the southern Bitterroot Range southwest of Sula.
Glaciers capped much of the Bitterroot Range and
carved dramatic U-shaped profiles into side drainages
that flow eastward into the Bitterroot Valley. The last
glaciation ended about 15,000 years ago. Multiple times
during the glacial ages, a glacier dammed the Clark Fork
River near the Idaho/Montana border forming Glacial
Lake Missoula. The highest lake stand reached an altitude
of 4,200 feet above sea level, forming a lakeshore only a few
miles downstream of Sula.
Mountains on the Move - The Bitterroot and Sapphire Mountains
