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Matt Leidecker > MONTANA HAZEN PHOTO - Greyhound creek blew out once previously after the 1979 Mortar Creek fire.  Because the creek is so wide and relatively flat when it reaches the Middle Fork (you can see how the slide actually deposited material up the canyon in the bottom right of the photos) it will be interesting to see how many large rocks were carried all the way into the main channel.
Matt Leidecker > MONTANA HAZEN PHOTO - This drainage just below Sheepeater blew out in a series of thunderstorms in 1936.  It was the same event that produced debris flows at Sulphur Slide, Mortar Creek, and Canon Creek Rapids.
MONTANA HAZEN PHOTO - Greyhound creek blew out once previously after the 1979 Mortar Creek fire. Because the creek is so wide and relatively flat when it reaches the Middle Fork (you can see how the slide actually deposited material up the canyon in the bottom right of the photos) it will be interesting to see how many large rocks were carried all the way into the main channel.
Matt Leidecker > MONTANA HAZEN PHOTO - Greyhound creek blew out once previously after the 1979 Mortar Creek fire.  Because the creek is so wide and relatively flat when it reaches the Middle Fork (you can see how the slide actually deposited material up the canyon in the bottom right of the photos) it will be interesting to see how many large rocks were carried all the way into the main channel.
MONTANA HAZEN PHOTO - Greyhound creek blew out once previously after the 1979 Mortar Creek fire. Because the creek is so wide and relatively flat when it reaches the Middle Fork (you can see how the slide actually deposited material up the canyon in the bottom right of the photos) it will be interesting to see how many large rocks were carried all the way into the main channel.
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