I thought when Lewis & Clark were looking for a route to the Pacific Ocean they wanted to go down the Salmon River but the local Native American Indians said no, that is the River Of No Return, you can float down but you will never get back up, so they continued up over the steep mountain thru the Lost Trail Pass and the Bitterroot Valley to the Lolo Pass, then turned west towards the Pacific Ocean. So I'm guessing it was named a long time ago by the Native Americans ! ! ! But hey … what do I know I'm from Pennsylvania ! Lol
1:50 - No, those steep valleys were carved out at the end of the Flood of Noah, as the submerged continents started to raise when God enlarged the Earth, and the water started running off of the land surface. They were carved out 4,500 years ago, not a hundred million years ago.
I thought when Lewis & Clark were looking for a route to the Pacific Ocean they wanted to go down the Salmon River but the local Native American Indians said no, that is the River Of No Return, you can float down but you will never get back up, so they continued up over the steep mountain thru the Lost Trail Pass and the Bitterroot Valley to the Lolo Pass, then turned west towards the Pacific Ocean. So I'm guessing it was named a long time ago by the Native Americans ! ! ! But hey … what do I know I'm from Pennsylvania ! Lol
Sounds better then hid explanation 😅
1:50 - No, those steep valleys were carved out at the end of the Flood of Noah, as the submerged continents started to raise when God enlarged the Earth, and the water started running off of the land surface. They were carved out 4,500 years ago, not a hundred million years ago.