With the passage of time Missoula's floods, human beings, breathing and movement, rapidly changing and growing with the passage of time are growing. As with human growth, the topography also changes over the years. Over the centuries geologists have thought that the landscape is formed through a long-term process called homogeneity, a "slow" process that transforms landscapes into the environment. Evidence of multiple catastrophes - The "speed" process of the terrain has been developed over the years, especially during the J period.
The knowledge of the Missoula flood helped other geologists to identify similar landscapes in Asia, Europe, Alaska, the Midwestern United States and Mars. Now there is convincing evidence that many huge ancient floods, glacier ice dams failed over and over again. Flood In Siberia, the river flooded the drainage area and changed its route. The fate of Britain as an island was eroded by the flood of glaciers engraved in the English Channel. These are not targeted worldwide flooding explained by Noah's Genesis story, but a more targeted devastating flood that occurred all over the world. They inspired stories like Noah in many cultures and seem to have inherited for generations.
Austin supported his claim with catastrophic floods, using examples of damaging dams. His most famous examples are the Missoula floods in Western Montana, Idaho and Eastern Washington. Lake Missoula is a large lake in the western part of Montana State and is blocked by a glacier dam. When the dam broke, the flood cut off the deep valley, leaving a scar in the majority of the eastern part of Washington. Austin quoted the Puros Canyon formed by the flood to prove that such events might have formed the Grand Canyon (Austin 1994: 95-97). The picture of the canyon shows some similarities with the Grand Canyon.
Oregon's diverse landscape provides an ideal environment for various agriculture. The land of Willamette Valley is due to the flood of Missouri depositing sediments from the Missoula Lake to the bottom of the Montana western glacier lake. In 2016, more than 100 million pounds (45 carats) of blueberries were produced in Willamette Valley. Oregon is also one of the four largest scorpion growing areas in the world and produces 95% of scorpion in the United States. The history of wine production in the state of Oregon goes back to the drinking prohibition law, but it became an important industry in the 1970s. In 2005, the state of Oregon ranked third in the US states with 303 wineries. Due to the regional similarity of the climate and the soil, the grapes grown in Oregon are usually the same as the grapes in the Alsace region and Burgundy region in France. In 2014, the state opened 71 wineries. The current total is 676, an increase of 12% compared with 2013.