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・ Bridge of Sighs (album)
・ Bridge of Sighs (Cambridge)
・ Bridge of Sighs (disambiguation)
・ Bridge of Sighs (novel)
・ Bridge of Sighs (Oxford)
・ Bridge of Sighs, Chester
・ Bridge of Souls
・ Bridge of Spain
・ Bridge of Spies
・ Bridge of Spies (album)
・ Bridge of Spies (book)
・ Bridge of Spies (film)
・ Bridge of the Americas
・ Bridge of the Americas (El Paso–Ciudad Juárez)
・ Bridge of the Gods
Bridge of the Gods (land bridge)
・ Bridge of the Gods (modern structure)
・ Bridge of the Horns
・ Bridge of the Twenty-Three Camels
・ Bridge of Tilt
・ Bridge of Toledo (Madrid)
・ Bridge of Weir
・ Bridge of Weir Railway
・ Bridge of Weir railway station
・ Bridge on the River Wye
・ Bridge over Fountain Creek
・ Bridge over Fountain Creek (Manitou Avenue)
・ Bridge over Green River
・ Bridge over Institute Street
・ Bridge over North Fork of Roanoke River


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Bridge of the Gods (land bridge) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bridge of the Gods (land bridge)

The Bridge of the Gods was a natural dam created by the Bonneville Slide, a major landslide that dammed the Columbia River near present-day Cascade Locks, Oregon in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. The river eventually breached the bridge and washed much of it away, but the event is remembered in local legends of the Native Americans as the ''Bridge of the Gods''.
The Bridge of the Gods is also the name of a modern manmade bridge, the Bridge of the Gods, across the Columbia River between Oregon and Washington.
== Geologic history ==
Interpretations of the age of the Bonneville landslide have evolved as more investigators have studied it and as more modern dating techniques have become available. Early work based on dendrochronology and radiocarbon dating suggested the landslide occurred between 1060 and 1180 or between 1250 and 1280. The year 1100 A.D. has often been cited as the date of the Bonneville landslide. More recent work using radiocarbon dating and lichenometry has suggested dates between 1500 and 1760 or between 1670 and 1760. These younger radiocarbon ages permitted a possible link to the 1700 Cascadia earthquake. However, more recent investigations using radiocarbon dating and dendrochronology show the landslide occurred around 1450, more than two centuries before the great earthquake.
The Bonneville landslide sent a large amount of debris south from Table Mountain and Greenleaf Peak, covering more than . The debris slid into the Columbia Gorge close to modern-day Cascade Locks, Oregon, blocking the Columbia River with a natural dam approximately high and long. The impounded river formed a lake and drowned a forest of trees for about . Native Americans may have been able to cross the river on the dam or, as their oral histories say, a bridge. Although no one knows how long it took, the Columbia River eventually broke through the dam and washed away most of the debris, forming the Cascades Rapids, themselves submerged in 1938 by the construction of the Bonneville Dam.〔 Geologists have determined that debris from several distinct landslides in the same area overlap, forming what is called the Cascades landslide complex. The Bonneville landslide was the most recent, and perhaps the largest landslide of the complex. Understanding the nature of the landslide complex and mapping the lobes of individual landslide events was done during the 1960s and 1970s. The composite nature of the landslide complex may explain the early discrepancies between date estimates of the Bonneville Landslide.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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