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==Geography== [[File:WASR10 YakimaRiver.jpg|left|thumb|The Yakima River canyon near the town of Thorp.]] Thorp is located in central Kittitas County at {{coord|47|4|5|N|120|40|22|W|type:city}} (47.068006, -120.672687).<ref name="GR1">{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/geographies/reference-files/time-series/geo/gazetteer-files.html|publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]|accessdate=2011-04-23|date=2011-02-12|title=US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990}}</ref> According to the [[United States Census Bureau]], the CDP has a total area of {{convert|3.2|sqkm|order=flip}}, all of it land.<ref name="Census 2010">{{cite web| url=http://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_SF1/G001/1600000US5371225| archive-url=https://archive.today/20200213045628/http://factfinder.census.gov/bkmk/table/1.0/en/DEC/10_SF1/G001/1600000US5371225| url-status=dead| archive-date=February 13, 2020| title=Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Census Summary File 1 (G001), Thorp CDP, Washington| publisher=U.S. Census Bureau| work=American FactFinder| accessdate=July 8, 2019}}</ref> The town site of Thorp is above the [[flood plain]] of the upper [[Yakima River]] at an elevation of {{convert|1637|ft}}.<ref>[http://irapl.altervista.org/geografia/usa/index.php?recn=25623 United States Geography, Altervista.]</ref> It is situated near the river's west bank directly opposite the Hayward Hill [[landslide|slide area]] and Clark Flats, near the southeastern approach to the Yakima River canyon at the foot of Thorp Prairie. To the west of the town is Taneum Canyon, and to the northwest are Elk Heights, Morrison Canyon and the Sunlight Waters private residential [[subdivision (land)|subdivision]]. Ellensburg, the [[county seat]], is southeast of Thorp. Northwest of Thorp at the junction of [[Washington State Route 10|SR 10]] and Thorp Highway, the Yakima River emerges from a [[canyon]] parallel to a [[basalt]] flow, the uppermost layers of which have been dated to 10.5 million years. The Thorp Prairie sits atop the basalt flows and ends at a deep canyon of [[Miocene]] [[columnar basalt]] structures carved by Swauk Creek whose headwaters are at [[Blewett Pass]] along [[US 97]] to the north. The Thorp Prairie deposits were also delivered by the Thorp Glacial episode.<ref name="jones"/> ===Topography=== North and northeast of the town of Thorp along the Yakima River channel is the gradual upward lift of the Thorp Drift, marked by an elevation change due to the incline onto the terminal [[moraine]] that marks the furthest advance of the Thorp [[glacier|Glacial]] stage. Here the Thorp [[Gravel]]s, which are named for the town of Thorp and the Thorp Glacial episode, are exposed along the ancient river channel in what is known as the "Slide Area". The gravels were formed at the terminus of the Thorp Glacial advance approximately 600,000 years ago.<ref name="waitt">Richard B. Waitt, Jr., ''Late Cenozoic Deposits, Landforms, Stratigraphy, and Techtonism in the Kittitas Valley, Washington'', U.S. Geological Survey, Professional Paper 1127, Washington DC: Government Printing Office (1979) pp. 9.</ref><ref>Eric S. Cheney, ''Regional Tertiary Sequence Stratigraphy and Regional Structure on the Eastern Flank of the Central Cascade Range, Washington'', Vol. 4, Geological Society of America, (GSA Field Guides, 2003) pp. 177-199.</ref> The Thorp Gravels themselves are believed to be between 3 and 4 million years old. The whole structure is composed of individually layered belts of gravel and [[sand]] which are not well consolidated, continually weather, and are prone to continuing [[erosion]] and [[landslides]] averaging 30 degrees. The area is rich with wildlife, including [[bald eagle]]s and [[osprey]] who hunt for prey along the river. It is also a crossing point for [[deer]] and [[elk]] who often can be seen at dawn and dusk heading to the river for water.<ref name="jones">Jana Jones Mabry, ''Field Trip Guidebook to the Natural History of Kittitas County'', Ellensburg, Washington: Central Washington University, pp. 44.</ref><ref name="waitt"/> About {{convert|7|mi|0}} west of Thorp, the first glimpses of the [[Columbia River]] Plateau are seen where the Yakima River has cut into the westernmost edge of the basalt [[plateau]]. The [[Columbia Plateau]] basalt formed when [[lava]] poured out of [[fissure vents|fissures]] in the ground across [[eastern Washington]] during the Miocene era, 17 to 20 million years ago, erupting intermittently for over 10 million years. Many layers of basalt successively flowed over one another, back when the area was still flat.<ref>Charles D. Lenfesty and Thomas F. Reedy, ''Soil Survey of Yakima County Area, Washington'', Soil Conservation Service (1985).</ref> Subsequent to the Miocene lava flows, the [[volcanoes]] of the [[Cascade Mountains]] actively [[volcanic eruption|erupted]], depositing [[volcanic ash|ash]], cinders, [[pumice]] and [[lahar|mudflows]] that eventually inter-fingered with the alternating basalt layers throughout the region.<ref>Mac McCulloch, ''Gateway to Time: Mile by Mile Guide to the Yakima Canyon'', Yakima, Washington: Shields Printing (1990).</ref> {{climate chart | Thorp, Washington<ref>[http://climate.fizber.com/washington-city-thorp-climate.html Fizber, Thorp Climate] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120329134649/http://climate.fizber.com/washington-city-thorp-climate.html |date=2012-03-29 }} (Retrieved 2011-10-06)</ref> |16.5|34.3|7.94 |25.2|37.8|6.40 |26.5|42.2|5.41 |31.1|48.9|0.97 |37.8|61.6|1.24 |44.2|65.4|1.35 |51.8|77.2|0.07 |48.3|72.2|0.11 |43.6|67.2|0.44 |34.4|52.6|4.64 |28.5|42.5|5.31 |25.5|35.9|9.06 |units = imperial |float = left |clear = both }} Interstate 90 drops through the Thorp Drift, which marks the oldest and furthest reaching known glacial moraine in the Kittitas Valley. Changes in the types of [[vegetation]] become more evident in this area. The changes are the result of a drop in elevation of about 1,400 feet from the summit of [[Snoqualmie Pass]] to Thorp, and a significant drop in [[precipitation (meteorology)|precipitation]] of about 107 inches average a year at the [[summit (topography)|summit]] of Snoqualmie Pass, to 42.94 inches average a year at Thorp.<ref name="jones"/><ref>Stephen P. Reidel, Vernon G. Johnson and Frank A. Spane, ''Natural Gas Storage in Basalt Aquifers of the Columbia Basin: A Guide to Site Characterization'', Richland, Washington: Pacific Northwest Laboratory (2002) pp. 44.</ref> At the bottom of the Thorp Drift moraine the view opens up into the Kittitas Valley which is deeply buried in river gravel deposited by the [[ancient]] Yakima River. This valley is a [[syncline]] that creates the Ellensburg Basin located between [[Mission Ridge Ski Area|Mission Ridge]] to the north and [[Manastash Ridge]] to the south. The Ellensburg Basin, more formally called the Ellensburg [[geological formation|Formation]], holds nearly 4,000 feet of rock, sand, and gravel that accumulated over a period of 2 to 10 million years during the Miocene and lower [[Pliocene]] age.<ref name="jones"/><ref>Richard B. Waitt, Jr., ''Shorter Contributions to Stratigraphy and Structural Geology'', U.S. Geological Survey, Professional Paper 1126-A-J, Washington DC: Government Printing Office (1979), pp. H-54.</ref> ===Climate=== The [[climate]] at Thorp is hot during [[summer]] when [[temperature]]s tend to be in the 80s, and very cold during [[winter]] when temperatures tend to be in the 20s. The warmest month of the year at Thorp is July, with an average high of 77.2 °F and an average low of 51.8 °F. The coldest month of the year is January, with an average low of 16.5 °F and an average high of 34.3 °F. Temperature variations between [[night]] and [[day]] tend to be relatively large during summer with a difference that can reach 30 °F, and fairly limited during winter with temperatures hovering at or below [[freezing point|freezing]] for most of the day, and often dipping below zero at night. Temperatures generally drop significantly in October, while [[rain]]fall rises from less than half an [[inch]] to nearly 5 inches average per month. This trend continues through late [[autumn]] and [[winter]], with a marked drop in [[precipitation (meteorology)|precipitation]] beginning in April which coincides with a gradual rise in temperature into late [[spring (season)|spring]] and summer. There is significant variation in rainfall throughout the year, with December and January receiving a mix of rainfall and [[snow]], averaging 9.06 and 7.94 inches respectively. Rainfall during summer is, on average, less than half an inch each month with July receiving the lowest monthly average precipitation of the year at .07 inches. ===Surrounding area=== {{Geographic location |North = [[Yakima River]] |Northeast = |Northwest = <br /><small>[[Roslyn, Washington|Roslyn]]</small> [[Cle Elum, Washington|Cle Elum]]<br /><small>[[South Cle Elum, Washington|South Cle Elum]]</small> |West = <small>Sunlight Waters</small><br /><small>Thorp Prairie</small> |Center = ''<span style="font-size:100%;">Thorp</span>'' |South = |Southwest = <small>Taneum Canyon</small><br /><small>Taneum Creek</small> |Southeast = [[Ellensburg, Washington|<span style="font-size:125%;">Ellensburg</span>]]<br /><small>[[Kittitas, Washington|Kittitas]]</small> |East = |}}
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