“…(2) they had relatively high sediment accumulation rates; (3) each basin was characterized as "open" drainages, with west-southwest directed paleoflow crossing each basin (including the linking of the Chumstick and Swauk depositional systems); and (4) these units had broad similarities in sandstone petrofacies [Frizzell, 1979;Hartman, 1973] Finally, it should be observed that there are stratigraphic trends in sandstone compositions, as seen in the Clark Canyon, Tumwater Mountain, and Nahahum Canyon members of the Chumstick Formation [Evans, 1994], in "type !, 2, and 3" petrofacies from the northwestern outcrop belt of the Chuckanut Formation [Johnson, 1984], and in the Coal Mountain, Sperry Peak, and Higgins Mountain units from the southeastern outcrop belt of the Chuckanut Formation [Evans and Ristow, 1994]. Compositional changes in each basin form a stratigraphic trend toward the recycledorogen petrofacies field.…”