; its outflow breached the U-shaped Big Stone Moraine at
Traverse Gap and became the source of River Warren. At the extreme right, the northernmost
oxbow loop is the
Mississippi at downtown
Saint Paul. Just to its west and almost invisible is the valley of the
Mississippi above its confluence with River Warren at
Fort Snelling. . The wide channel of River Warren enters the image from the southwest. The Mississippi enters from the north near the left side and the St. Croix enters from the north at the right. The present rivers are grossly
underfit for their valleys; the widening of the Mississippi to the southeast is the
slackwater pool from
Lock and Dam No. 2. at
Redwood Falls, Minnesota. The Minnesota River occupies only a small portion of the wide valley carved by the Glacial River Warren. Lake Agassiz was formed from the meltwaters of the
Laurentide Ice Sheet during the
Wisconsin glaciation of the last
ice age. Agassiz was an enormous body of water, up to deep, and at various times covering areas totaling over . Blocked by an ice sheet to the north, the lake water rose until about 13,500
BP calibrated (11,700 14C uncalibrated) years ago when it overtopped the
Big Stone Moraine, a ridge of glacial drift left by the receding glacier, at the location of
Browns Valley, Minnesota. The lake's outflow was catastrophic, and carved a gorge through the moraine wide and deep, which is now known as the
Traverse Gap. The channel through the moraine, between
Lake Traverse and
Big Stone Lake, is now crossed by the divide between the watersheds of the
Gulf of Mexico and
Hudson Bay. Its significance was recognized by designation as a
National Natural Landmark under the
Historic Sites Act. From Traverse Gap issued Glacial River Warren. From its inception until final abandonment of Agassiz' southern outlet, this stream drained the meltwater of that lake to the Mississippi valley. The drainage was not continuous, as Lake Agassiz periodically had other outlets. The Laurentide Ice Sheet retreated and advanced with climatic variations and these changes in ice cover contributed to
isostatic adjustments in the level of the land over which the watercourses ran. These changes in turn uncovered or blocked the lake's other outlets to the sea. ==Course==