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PGJ/F-012(82) National Uranium Resource Evaluation AZTEC QUADRANGLE NEW MEXICO AND COLORADO U.S. Geological Survey Golden, Colorado Issue Date September 1982 PREPARED FOR THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Energy Grand Junction Area Office, Colorado Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed in this report, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference therein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States Government or any agency thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof. This report is a result of work performed by the U.S. Geological Survey, through an interagency agreement with the U.S. Department of Energy, as part of the National Uranium Resource Evaluation. NURE was a program of the U.S. Department of Energy's Grand Junction, Colorado, Office to acquire and compile geologic and other information with which to assess the magnitude and distribution of uranium resources and to determine areas favorable for the occurrence of uranium in the United States. Available from: Technical Library Bendix Field Engineering Corporation P.O. Box 1569 Grand Junction, CO 81502-1569 Telephone: (303) 242-8621, Ext. 278 Price per Microfiche Copy: $8.00 PGJ/F-012(82) NATIONAL RESOURCE EVALUATION AZTEC QUADRANGLE NEW MEXICO AND COLORADO URJU~IUM Morris W. Green, Principal Investigator Virginia P. Byers Steven M. Condon A. Curtis Huffman, Jr. Russell F. Dubiel Allan R. Kirk Robert D. Lupe Charles T. Pierson Jennie 1. Ridgley Jacques F. Robert son Keith Robinson Pamela G. L. Sikkink J:.Iark R. Stanton Robert E. Thaden Robert S. Zech September 1982 PREPARED FOR THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY GRAND JUNCTION AREA OFFICE UNDER CONTRACT NO. DE-All3-78GJ01686 This report has not been edited for conformance with U.S. Geological Survey stratigraphic nomenclature or resource classification. This is the final version of the subject-quadrangle evaluation report to be placed on open file. This report has not been edited. In some instances, reductions in the size of favorable areas on Plate 1 are not reflected in the text. ii CONTENTS Abstract • • • 1 Introduction • 1 Purpose and scope (by M. W. Green). 1 Acknowledgments • 2 Procedures (by P.G.L. Sikkink, M. W. Green, and Keith Robinson) • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2 Geologic setting. (by J. L. Ridgley, M. W. Green, and P.G.L. Sikkink) • • • • • • •••••••• 4 ........... Paleozoic age . .... ........... Mesozoic age. . • .... .......... Cenozoic age. .... Quaternary age. . .... Rocks of Precambrian age Rocks of Rocks of Rocks of Rocks of . 6 10 10 12 13 Definition of favorability and criteria used for evaluation •• 13 Environments favorable for uranium deposits. 15 Area favorable for uranium deposits in the Burro Canyon(?) Formation (by J. L. Ridgley) • • • • • . . • • • . • • • • • 15 Stratigraphy and environments of deposition. 16 Uranium mineralization and host rock characteristics • 18 Favorable area • 20 Summary. • • • 21 Area favorable for uranium deposits in the Ojo Alamo Sandstone (by J. L. Ridgley) • • • • • • • • • • • • 21 Stratigraphy and environments of deposition. 22 Uranium mineralization and host rock characteristics . 23 Favorable area • 24 Summary. • • • • 25 iii CONTENTS (Continued) Area favorable for uranium deposits in the Morrison Formation (by M. W. Green). • • • • • • 25 Stratigraphy, structure, and lithology • 25 Environments of deposition • 27 Uranium mineralization and area favorable •• 28 Summary. • • • 30 Environments unfavorable for uranium deposits. 31 Precambrian igneous rocks (by P.G.L. Sikkink) 31 Pennsylvanian formations (by J. L. Ridgley) • 31 Permian formations (by J. L. Ridgley) 32 32 Cutler Formation • • Triassic formations (by R. E. Thaden) • 35 Jurassic formations (by M. W. Green). 36 Cretaceous formations (by R. S. Zech) • 37 Dakota Sands tone (by M. i>l. Green). • Tertiary formations (by V. P. Byers and P.G.L. Sikkink) 39 40 Nacimiento Formation (by J. L. Ridgley) •• 41 San Jose Formation (by J. L. Ridgley) • • • 42 Quaternary volcanic rocks (by P.G.L. Sikkink) •• 45 Unevaluated environments (by M. W. Green) • • • • . 45 Aerial radiometric data (by P.G.L. Sikkink) •• 45 Interpretation of hydrogeochemical and stream sediment reconnaissance data (by Keith Robinson, R. F. Dubiel, M. R. Stanton, and P.G.L. Sikkink) • • • • • • • • • • 46 Interpretation of U.S. Geological Survey streamsediment and data • • • Geochemistry of stream sediments • iv 51 52 CONTENTS (Continued) Geochemistry of ground and surface waters. 55 Interpretation of results •• 57 Geochemical data (by M. W. Green) •• 59 Recommendations to ·improve evaluations (by M. W. Green and J. L. Ridgley) . • • . • • • • • •••• 59 Selected bibliography (compiled by J. F. Robertson and others) •• 61 Appendix A. Uranium occurrence table of the Aztec Quadrangle (compiled by A. C. Huffman, Jr., A. R. Kirk, W. Aubrey, and P.G.L. Sikkink) • • In pocket Appendix Bl. Table of chemical analysis • . Appendix B2. USGS field data and chemical analysis of streamsediment samples (compiled by Keith Robinson, J. J. Irwin, and Deborah Archelger). • • • • • • In pocket Appendix B3. USGS field data and chemical analysis of water samples (compiled by Keith Robinson, J. J. Irwin, and Debora Archelger). • • • • • • • . • • • Appendix B4. • • In pocket • • In pocket USGS statistical summary of geochemical data from stream-sediment, ground- and surface-water samples (compiled by Keith Robinson and C. Adkisson) • • In pocket . In pocket Appendix C. Uranium-occurrence reports Appendix D. Partial list of test wells which penetrate the Morrison Formation (compiled by P.G.L. Sikkink) . • • • In pocket Appendix E. Partial list of measured stratigraphic sections (compiled by S. M. Condon) • • • • . • • • • • • • • • In pocket ILLUSTRATIONS Figure 1. Location of Aztec Quadrangle • • • • • • 5 2. Generalized stratigraphic column (upper part) of the Aztec l 0 x 2° Quadrangle • . . • • • . • 7 Generalized stratigraphic column (middle part) of the Aztec 1° x 2° Quadrangle • • • • • . • • • • • 8 2a. v ILLUSTRATIONS (Continued) 2b. 3. Table 1. la. 2. 3. Plate Generalized stratigraphic column (lower part) of the Aztec 1° x 2 ° Quadrangle. • • • • • • • • • 9 Index map of the San Juan Basin, Grants mineral belt, the Aztec l 0 x 2° Quadrangle, and adjacent areas 29 Summary of HSSR data (sediment samples) 47 Summary of HSSR data (water samples) • • • 49 Summary of element concentrations in less-than 170 mesh (88-micron) stream sediment samples collected from outcrop areas of Tertiary sedimentary units, Aztec Quadrangle • • • • • • • • • • • • • 53 Summary of chemical analyses and physical parameters in ground- and surface-water samples, Aztec Quadrangle. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 56 1. Areas favorable for uranium deposits in the Burro Canyon Formation, Ojo Alamo Sandstone, and the Brushy Basin and Westwater Canyon Members of the Morrison Formation 2. Uranium occurrence map 3. Interpretative map of aerial radiometric uranium anomalies 4. Summary of anomalous sediment and water samples, hydrogeochemical and stream-sediment reconnaissance 4a. Uranium/conductivity in water samples 4b. Distribution and concentration of uranium (ppm) in streamsediment samples 4c. Distribution and concentration of uranium (ppb) in ground- and surface-water samples 4d. Distribution and concentration of uranium (ppb) x 1000/ conductivity in ground- and surface-water samples 4e. Interpretive map of USGS hydrogeochemical and stream-sediment data 5. Sa. Rock sample locality map Location map of oil and gas test wells and measured stratigraphic sections including the Morrison Formation vi ILLUSTIL~TIONS (Continued) 5b. Location of stream-sediment samples (partial) 5c. Location of stream-sediment samples (partial) 5d. Location map of Ground- and Surface- water samples 6. Drainage map 7. NONE 8. North-south stratigraphic sections in the San Juan Basin area 8a. 9. 10. East-west stratigraphic sections in the San Juan Basin area Index map to location of stratigraphic sections in the Aztec and some adjoining NURE quadrangles Preliminary geologic map of the Aztec 1° x 2° Quadrangle, northwestern New Mexico * lOa. Major structural and tectonic features lOb. Schematic distribution of Precambrian rocks in northwestern New Mexico, northeastern Arizona, southwestern Colorado, and southeastern Utah lOc. Schematic distribution of Tertiary igneous rocks in northwestern New Mexico, northeastern Arizona, southwestern Colorado, and southeastern Utah 11. Geologic-map index 12. Generalized land status map 13. Culture map Plates in accompanying packet * This map is available as U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 78-466 and may be obtained from the Open-File Services Section, Branch of Distribution, U.S. Geological Survey, Box 25425 Federal Center, Denver, co 80225. vii ABSTRACT Areas and formations within the Aztec 1°x2° Quadrangle, New Mexico and Colorado considered favorable for uranium endowment of specified minimum grade and tonnage include, in decreasing order of favorability: (1) the Early Cretaceous Burro Canyon(?) Formation in the southeastern part of the Chama Basin; (2) the Tertiary Ojo Alamo Sandstone in the east-central part of the San Juan Basin; and (3) the Jurassic Westwater Canyon and Brushy Basin Members of the Morrison Formation in the southwestern part of the quadrangle. Favorability of the Burro Canyon(?) is based on the presence of favorable host-rock facies, carbonaceous material and pyrite to act as a reductant for uranium, and the presence of mineralized ground in the subsurface of the Chama Basin. The Ojo Alamo Sandstone is considered favorable because of favorable host-rock facies, the presence of carbonaceous material and pyrite to act as a reductant for uranium, and the presence of a relatively large subsurface area in which low-grade mineralization has been encountered in exploration activity. The Morrison Formation, located within the San Juan Basin adjacent to the northern edge of the Grants ~ineral belt, is considered favorable because of mineralization in several drill holes at depths near 1500 m (5000 ft) and because of favorable facies relationships extending into the Aztec Quadrangle from the Grants mineral belt which lies in the adjacent Albuquerque and Gallup _Quadrangles. Formations considered unfavorable for uranium deposits of specified tonnage and grade include the remainder of sedimentary and igneous formations ranging from Precambrian to Quaternary in age. Included under the unfavorable category are the Cutler Formation of Permian age, and Dakota Sandstone of Late Cretaceous age, and the Nacimiento and San Jose Formations of Tertiary age. The Nacimiento and San Jose Formations contain isolated uranium occurrences and locally favorable facies characteristics, but no evidence of specified minimum grade and tonnage is present to indicate a favorable classification for these formations. Other formations, particularly those which were deposited in marine and arid eolian depositional environments, do not show favorable facies, radioactiviby, or geochemical characteristics. INTRODUCTION PURPOSE AND SCOPE The purpose of the National Uranium Resource Evaluation (NURE) program of the u.s. Department of Energy (DOE) is to identify and delineate areas and environments within the Aztec 1°X2° Quadrangle, New Mexico and Colorado, that exhibit characteristics favorable for the occurrence of uranium deposits that have the potential to contain at least 100 metric tons U303 total endowment with a minimum grade of 100 ppm (0.01 percent) u3o8 • Evaluation is based on geochemical, mineralogic, hydrologic, aerial radiometric, sedimentologic, and general geologic characteristics of the formations in the quadrangle. 1 Formations of both volcanic and sedimentary or~g~n have been evaluated by surface investigations and subsurface data analysis to a depth of 1500 m (5000 ft). The evaluation involved a comprehensive review and synthesis of the geologic literature, knowledge of on-going research, fieldwork, and the work of several geologists with uranium-related experience and knowledge of the rocks in the quadrangle. The NURE program was conducted from January, 1978, to March, 1980, by geologists and support personnel of the USGS (USGS). This study was managed by the Grand Junction Office of the DOE, and quadrangle evaluation has involved approximately 4.5 man-years of literature search, fieldwork, laboratory work, data evaluation and final report writing by USGS personnel. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Evaluation of the Aztec Quadrangle has required the support of many other professional and technical personnel in the USGS. Compilation of the landstatus map was coordinated by Phil Mudgett, computer support was made available by Cheryl Adkisson and Ron Wahl, and tables and cross sections were compiled, in part, by D. P. Bauer and W.M. Aubrey, all of the USGS. We also gratefully acknowledge the clerical support within the USGS provided by M. L. Frisken and staff, and the drafting support provided by Mary Durrett. We owe special thanks to Glenn R. Scott, Kim Manley, and Reinhard Wobus of the USGS for providing the geoloic map (Pl. 10) of the Aztec Quadrangle. Rock, water, and sediment samples were analyzed by personnel of the USGS analytical laboratories in both Menlo Park, California, and Denver, Colorado. Discussion of geology and resource assessment with Fritz Loomis of Bendix Field Engineering Corporation (BFEC) and H. K. Holen of the Albuquerque office of the DOE have also contributed significantly to the evaluation of the Aztec Quadrangle. We gratefully acknowledge the release of data on mineralization in the Ojo Alamo Sandstone by the Triple S Development Company. Permission granted by the Tennessee Valley Authority {TVA) for USGS geologists to examine logs of uranium mineralization in the Burro Canyon is also acknowledged. (M. w. G.) PROCEDURES In the Aztec Quadrangle, a representative number of the uranium occurrences listed in Appendix A and shown on Plate 2 were visited, except where access was either prohibited by terrain or denied by landowner. It was impossible to fielu check all occurrences due to the time constraints of the NURE program. The locations of these uranium occurrences were determined from Preliminary Reconnaissance Reports of the u.s. Atomic Energy Commission and from published literature. Of the occurrences visited, only those considered significant were described using the uranium occurrence reports supplied by BFEC. An 2 "anomalous occurrence" was arbitrarily defined as one containing a minimum of two times the background radioactivity at each location. Information on general geology, lithology, mineralogy, structure, m~n~ng activity, and radiometric values was recorded at each occurrence on the uranium occurrence forms (App. C). Rock samples were also collected at most of the anomalous areas (Pl. 5). All rock samples were grab samples from the mineralized zone and not systematically collected from the geologic unit(s) at each occurrence. The rock samples were analyzed at USGS laboratories in Menlo Park, California, and Denver, Colorado. Samples were analyzed by delayed-neutron activation for uranium and thorium content; and by semiquantitative emission spectrometry for 45 other elements. Results of these analyses are shown in Appendix B1. Raw data for the Aztec Quadrangle from the National Hydrogeochemical Stream and Sediment Reconnaissance (HSSR) program conducted by Los Alamos Scientific Laboratories (Bolivar, 1978) were analyzed by USGS personnel to determine areas anomalous in uranium concentration. The interpretation of the HSSR data involved: (1) dividing the quadrangle into areas by distinct drainage systems; (2) dividing the drainage areas on the basis of geologic units of similar age~ the presence of igneous and metamorphic rocks; and (3) performing a statistical analysis on the raw data for each of these areas. For each area sho\vn in Plate 4, the uranium concentration of both water and stream-sediment samples was analyzed for mean, standard deviation, and variance. Extremely high uranium concentrations were normally left out of the statistical calculations but are plotted on the interpretation map (Pl. 4). Anomalous values are defined as values greater than two standard deviations above the mean. Results of the statistical analysis on these areas and samples are shown in Tables 1 and 1A. Raw data from water samples were also standardized using the uranium-to-conductivity ratio rather than the uranium concentration. Results of these calculations are plotted in Plate 4A. A total of 338 water and 1744 stream-sediment samples were analyzed according to the previously mentioned procedures. A total of 1003 stream-sediment and 186 water samples were collected in the Aztec Quadrangle by USGS personnel under a program directed by Keith Robinson in a followup study to the National HSSR program. Sampling was confined to selected areas of Paleocene and Eocene sediments in the western half of the quadrangle and to a small area of Miocene and Pliocene sediments in the southeast corner of the quadrangle. The USGS followup HSSR program in terrain underlain by Tertiary rock units within the quadrangle was designed to enhance information on resource potential and add information concerning the potential of Tertiary volcanic rocks as a possible source of uranium contained in adjacent sedimentary sequences. Sample sites were located to afford optimum density coverage, access, and integrity of the resultant geochemical data. Replicate or duplicate stream-sediment and water samples were collected at several localities in order to test the variance of analytical results and sampling error. The sediments were obtained from both dry and actively flowing stream beds. Approximately 10 pounds (4.5 kg) of sediment was collected at each site. The samples are composites of material collected at 3 several points along the active drainage channel. All the stream-sediment samples were oven dried at a temperature of less than 100°F and sieved to obtain a less-than-170-mesh (88 micron) fraction. The less-than-170-mesh fraction was then routinely analyzed, without further preparation, for 34 elements, based on a 6-step, DC-arc, semiquantitative emission spectrographic method. Uranium was determined by a modified extraction fluorimetry method, described by the American Society of Testing Materials (ASTM), in the Annual Book of ASTM Standards (1975). A weighed subsample of the fine fraction was also ignited at 550°C for 10 minutes and the loss of weight, in percent, reported. The water samples were collected from wells, springs, streams, and ponds. At each site three unique water samples were obtained. A 1000-mL sample was collected, filtered through a 0.45-mm membrane filter into an acid rinsed polyethylene bottle and then acidified with an ultrex-grade concentrated nitric acid to a pH of <2. This sample was analyzed for uranium by an extraction fluorimetry method. An untreated and unfiltered 250-mL water sample was obtained for analysis of the degree of alkalinity and a 125-mL filtered but untreated sample was collected for sulfate, phosphate, and nitrate analysis. The latter sample was kept at a near-freezing temperature at all times. In addition, at each site, water temperature, specific conductance, pH, and dissolved oxygen were also measured using untreated water. Subsurface analysis of Jurassic through Cretaceous rocks included a systematic study by R. D. Lupe, D. P. Bauer, and others of more than 300 oil and gas well logs located throughout the San Juan Basin area. Using virtually all usable well logs of holes that penetrate the entire Jurassic section (App. D), outcrop stratigraphy was projected into the subsurface, gamma-ray anomalies were located and noted, and some knowledge of the distribution of potential uranium host rocks in the subsurface was gained. Surface control was maintained using measured sections from outcrops in the area (Pl. SA and App. E). The location of selected borehole logs used in the final analysis and the cross-section diagrams are shown in Plates 8 and 8A, and indexed in Plate 9. (P. G. L. S., M. W. G., and K. R.) GEOLOGIC SETTING The Aztec Quadrangle is located between latitude 36° N and 37° N and longitude 106° Wand 108° W (Fig. 1). The western two-thirds of the Aztec Quadrangle includes the San Juan Basin and the Chama Basin of the southeastern part of the Colorado Plateau physiographic province. The Colorado Plateau portion of the quadrangle is underlain by generally flat-lying sedimentary rocks of continental and marine origin which range in age from Paleozoic through Cenozoic, and by Precambrian rocks of intrusive and metasedimentary origin. The sedimentary rocks reach a maximum total thickness in the San Juan Basin of approximately 3600 m (11,880 ft) and are intruded locally by volcanic rocks of Tertiary and Late Cretaceous age. As is characteristic of other 4 - - 100" 102" I~ 1os• I 10" 48° 't__ NORTH DAKOTA 47° '\ ""-, MONTANA ( ;> ~.., \ -· \ \.. \...-...r- ...,.~'\~! - - 46" - 45° soUTH OAKOT A I 44° - j IDAHO . I - WYOMING I i 43° l I I N{BRASKA- I -42° I I i 4(• ! I i I I SALT LAKE CITY I i i I NE VAOAi I I I I i i i I i UTAH l I f j I I KANSAS 3 SHIPROCK I i I I GALLVP i ! lilt \ ARIZONA ,J ' ) SANTA FE I I TEXAS I I \ i I I i Figure l. OKLAHOMA 1 I i I I I I t-··--- ----- -I NEW MIEXICO I CA.! TRINIDAD ALBUOUEROUE I T '! RATON 3 i 'I. l DURANGO I i ' 39 I I '' ' COLORADO CORTEZ I I ,...... 40° I Location of the Aztec Quadrangle 5 - - parts of the Colorado Plateau, folding and faulting of the sedimentary sequence in the Aztec Quadrangle is subtle and restricted to the marginal areas of broad uplifts such as the Nacimiento Uplift, the Brazos Uplift, and the Archuleta Anticlinorium (Pl. lOA). The dip of formations along these uplifts may be moderate to steep; however, the dip of formations in the Chama and San Juan Basins, in areas away from these marginal uplifts, is generally low (1° to 5°). The eastern one-third of the Aztec Quadrangle is located within the southern part of the Rocky Mountain physiographic province. It is characterized by generally north-south-trending anticlinal structures separated from each other by intermontane down-folded and down-faulted basins. The basins are floored by Tertiary sedimentary and volcanic rocks several hundred meters thick. Erosion of anticlinal mountains has exposed cores of Precambrian granite and metamorphic rocks in the northern part of the Nacimiento and Tusas Mountains. A preliminary geologic map of the Aztec Quadrangle was compiled by Kim Manley and others in 1978 (Pl. 10) using smaller geologic maps indexed in Plate 11 and doing extensive fieldwork. The present stratigraphic nomenclature and generalized lithologic descriptions of the area are summarized in Figures 2 through 2b. Major structural and tectonic elements are compiled on Plate lOA. Plate lOA includes the important faults, anticlines, synclines, and monoclines within each major tectonic division of this quadrangle. Rocks of Precambrian Age In the northern part of the Nacimiento Mountains Woodard and others (1977) have recognized 14 Precambrian rock units of metasedimentary, metavolcanic, and plutonic igneous origin. The metasedimentary rocks include meta-quartz wacke, meta-arkose, metaquartzite, metagraywacke, and silty argillite. The metavolcanic rocks consist predominantly of metaquartz latite. The rocks were derived by regional metamorphism of siliceous volcanics and were later locally metasomatized near the contacts with a tonalite intrusion (Woodard and others, 1977). Amphibolite derived from basic igneous rocks also is locally present. The plutonic igneous rocks include ultramafic rocks, gabbro, diorite, tonalite, leucogranodiorite, quartz monzonite, muscovite-biotite granite, biotite granite, leucogranite, and mafic dikes. In the Tusas Mountains, Bingler (1974) noted the occurrence of quartzite, quartz-muscovite-biotite schist, hornblende-chlorite schist, leptite, granitic gneiss, quartz diorite gneiss, and granite porphyry. Bingler (1965) summarized the major Precambrian events in this area. Plate lOB shows the distribution of Precambrian rocks in the Aztec and adjacent quadrangles. 6 Santa Fe Group ' ~ ~! : !l.ll !~ 0:: f-' -------------:-"":"-':~-:-':"'--ln_t_r_u_si_v_e_ro_c_k_•_ _ __,i,_,·"":..:.·,...:_,·_:,·_:,_·_ ·. "'1- 1 I 1 : V··:.· .... ~ f-j _ _ _ _ Los Piiios Formation 2 l~ril ------------------~~:_-:~:~.~-:~·>7>~>~'1 Abiquiu Tuff 3 . I ~ A A A A ! >c:: f' A A A A A k yAy AyAy A y;; :vvvvv. 4 Tr~::asure Mountain Tuff" Conejos Formation ~·-~ ·:.: ~··· :· R itit.O Conglomerates ... '.. ' ... .. .' • •• •, ~ • • • • I El R:to Format10n ~ "u0 uJ San Josfi Formation • .:Favorable for uran1um deoos1ts based primar·!y on tne presence of uranium occurrences. Uran1um Deoostts · Sources: Manley, Kim, and Scott. GR .. 1978, Barker, F, 1958; and Smnh, H.T., 1938. 7 Rests disconformably on Treasure Mountam Tuff m north. Further soutr the basal contact ts graoattonal or intenonguing With the Rmto Conglomerate. l Of Smi.th (19381; overlies E! Rno Formation unconformably. Uoper part orobably equivalent to upper part of Los Pu1os Formanon. Present m east-centra~ oart of the mao. 4 D1sConformabiy overl1es R:tno Cong1cmerate or ConeJOS Format1on. 'Of Barker (1958); oresent onlv 10 eastern part of map. Rests disconformably on El Rita Formation; locally contact between the two is gradational. 5 1 Present from Colorado-New Mexico border north of Chamas southward to Chaves Creek near Brazos. Of Smith (1938); present only in eastern parts of map. Rests unconformably on rocks of Precambrian to Early Cretaceous age . ......_....-unconformity Figure 2. Generalized stratigraphic column (upper part) of the Aztec 10 x 2° Quadrangle (compiled by P. G. L. Sikkink) 7 ....w "'a:w "'>- w "' "' )o a: <( t= a: w 1- STRATIGRAPHIC UNIT GENERALIZED ROCK DESCRIPTION' Nacimiento Formation "c: ~ ~ Ojo Alamo Sandstone • • 6 i Animas Formation Picture Cliffs Sandstone 19 Lewts Shale La Ventana "' 0 Tongue 20 :J 22. SdtHL.-'>tone, tan and brown; some ,;r...1y .:;h:J.le; tl5- u.J u 21 ....< u.J a: u 13. Shale, gray co olive gray, and minor interbedded sandstone; as much as 1900 ft 14. Sandstone, brown, crossbedded; conglomerate near base; contains minor lenses of gray shale; abundant petrified wood; 50-200 ft 15. Conglomerate, sandstone, and shale, greenish gray and tan, andesitic; unconformably overlies I Fruitland Fonnation or Lewis shale in north-central part of mapped area; grades southward into the 1 ::laci;nic:nto Fm.; lJ00-3300.±. fc 16. Shale, greenish gray with int~rb~dded yellowishbrown, crossbedded sandstone: 0-lUOU! it 17. Dark shale and yellowish-brown crossbedded ~and stone; coal; 50-150! ft 18. Sandstone, yellowish gray to grayish orange; interbedded with brown sandstone and gray shale; 0-250+ ft 19. Sandy-shale, olive gray (upper part); shaly sandstone, gradational (lower part); 300-2100:!: ft 20. Sandstone, tan, fin~-to medium-grain~d, ~ith some interbedded thin gray shale; 50-lJSOj: ft 21. Sandstone, tan and brown; gray and bra·~ shale and coal; layers of large ironstone and limestone concretions; 350-2300:!: ft Po1nt lookout Sanastone 22 215 f t 23. Shdlt:, gr:1y and dark olive gr:.:1/, ...:~l'i_,:,lr~u~ . ..; 1n,j sandy shale; some limestone cor.t.:r':'.'tLvns in up;_Jt->r pdrt 24. Sl1ala, hard to soft, calcareou~; ~ome llilrd ~r3y li:ne~tone oeds 25. Shale, dark, r..;ith he~s of platy, _;;and'! li!!1t-'...,tOne and septarian concr~tions 26. Li::::12~conc, 27 calcar2ous ~ilAL0 3halt:, gray ~~J jlack, evenly Mancos unit; ljQrJ-2550± ft lL~ht -sr..:1y, jensa, .Jnd ·i.-trk:er gr3.y 2S. Sandstone, gr2y to 3rayish massive to 29. cros~b~dded, ; oran~0, locally ~!lCire ~ell cem~nted, con~Lomeratic; dark-gray carbonaceous shale and coal; 70-250:!: ft Sand~tone and conglomeratic sandstone, ~hite to buff JO. ~r~eni~h ~ray and orange, int2rheJded with olive-tan to rusty-tan, fine- to ~o~r52~udsc0ne, ~rain2d u v; "'a: <( .., :J ~Jnd~:o~e and cLl::st·)r>,•..!, interbe,J:..!-_·:i, l:;:-:c to dark reddish-~rc~n. very fine-to fin~-~rqin~d; toc1l ~or!':"i~vn '!Dit .:lbout 900 ft 32. Limes tone, gray, :ned itim-gralned; lvc:.1lly ,5r.1des upward into very pure gypsum; some platy shale; 11. S:ln~._L;tone 0-lOO ft 33. Sandstone, white and reddish medium-~rain~d, well sorted, 100-350:!: ft oran~e, massiv~, fine-to cro~~b~dd~d; •Favorable for uranium deposits based pnmarily on the presence of uranium occurrences. ••uranium deposits -....rtJnconformity 1 Source>: Manley, Kim, and Scott, G.R .. 1978; Barker, F., 1958; and Smith, H.T., 1938. • Unconformity between Ojo Alamo Formation and Kirtland Shale. Also unconformable on lower part of Animas Formation in the northwestern part of map area. 1 Upper conglomeratic sequence is possibly equivalent to Burro Canyon (7) Formation of Early Crf!taceous aqe. Figure 2a. Generalized stratigraphic column (middle part) of the Aztec 1° x 2° Quadrangle (compiled by P. G. L. Sikkink) 8 ~ ii: ai 1- :~ STRATIGRAPHIC UNIT w LITHOLOGY' GENERALIZED ROCK DESCRIPTION I~~~:=~----~~~~----------------------------------------------------~ ' · ' Uppershale f-=--::::::.-_-_-_-=:;34 34. Shale, red, green, and maroon, interbedded with 1 u il "';:;:; !J. Chinle Formation•• 5 1 ~ 1- member r~:::=-::::j___ Poleo Sandstone r-,·· . ,-;:-:;::J Lentil• ~_:-=i 3 ) Salitral Shale ;-_-..=-_-_-:_-: , Member f=-:::=-:::=-:;:-.::::-::::: 3 0 Aqua Zarca Sand-L.. 1 ~ 31 stone Member 1 ! ~~ ~~ d: z! ~ w ::; ;; 1~ 0 ~II ~ I I 1 • Cutler Formation z • • ;,&: 1 38 =~~~ ~~~· I~ Z<: I~> i ~~ F~/k Madera Formation !~·., ' '' · .~• '' =-----------=; 39 lenticular sandstone and siltstone; 500-650± ft 35. Sandstone, micaceous, conglomeratic, fine-to coarse-grained; some subordinate green and maroon shale; as much as 17 5 f t 36. Shale, maroon and minor green; 0-115 ft 37. Sandstone and conglomerate, white to buff, fineto coarse-grained, quartzose; 0-132 ft 38 • Sandstone and siltstone, crossbedded, arkosic; also purple-orange mudstone; 1650+ ft 39. Limestone, light gray, fossiliferO"us; also gray to buff orthoquartzite, pink arkose, minor reddish and light gray shale, and arkosic limestone. ~~:::~ ''· illil:~;~i;l;::;~;;;;i;:;~;iiii;;;;;::iii;;i:,::, south-central areas; thickness varies *Favorable for uranium deposits based primarily on the presence of uranium occurrences. ••uranium Deposits. ~Unconformity ' Sources: Manley, Kim, and Scott, G.R., 1978; Barker. Figure 2b. F.; 1958; and Smith, H.T., 1938. Generalized stratigraphic column (lower part) of the Aztec 1° x 2° Quadrangle (compiled by P. G. L. Sikkink) 9 Rocks of Paleozoic Age By the close of the Precambrian, the surface in the Aztec area was eroded to a peneplain (Hilpert, 1969). Throughout most of the Paleozoic era this area remained a stable shelf. A warm, humid to subtropical climate prevailed and seas invaded the area numerous times. Cambrian through Mississippian age rocks are absent in the quadrangle, although this is probably due to uplift and erosion of the marine sediments rather than to nondeposition (Ridgley and others, 1978). Evidence of Cambrian, Devonian, and Mississippian seas is present, but only in the subsurface to the west and south of the Aztec Quadrangle. During early and mid-Pennsylvanian time the relative crustal stability of the area ended. Several structural highs formed that affected later Pennsylvanian and Permian sedimentation. The highs included the southern Colorado Uncompaghre Uplift, Zuni-Defiance Platform, Sierra Grande Uplift, Pedernal Uplift, and Penasco Uplift in New Mexico and Arizona. The birth of the Ancestral Rocky Mountains also began at this time in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. Concurrent with development of these structural highs a large trough formed between the Zuni-Defiance Platform and the Uncompaghre Uplift. This trough extended from southeast Utah to northwest New Mexico. Shallow seas transgressed the area depositing sediment into the trough in a sequence of interbedded fossiliferous limestone, arkosic limestone, arkosic sandstone, and shale which is known as the Madera Limestone in the Aztec Quadrangle. The basal part of the Madera Limestone is absent owing to nondeposition in the vicinity of the Penasco Uplift (Ridgley and others, 1978). Yne Pennsylvanian period was a time of extensive erosion as well as vigorous mountain building. Structural highs during this time were continually being eroded, adding vast quantities of sediment to the system. In the Aztec area, only the Madera Limestone was deposited. By the end of Pennsylvanian time, only the Uncompaghre Uplift remained as an important structural high and source of sediments during the Permian. During the Permian Period continental deposition resumed. Coarse fluvial sediments from the Uncompaghre Uplift make up the Cutler Formation in the Aztec area. The sediments were transported primarily by a system of streams which flowed south-southwest from uplifted areas toward the sea which lay to the southwest of the Aztec area. The shoreline fluctuated widely, leaving shoreline and shallow-marine sandstones intertongued with continental red beds. By mid-Permian time, the structural highs were diminished and clastic sediment was greatly reduced. By the close of the Permian Period, erosion of Permian rocks resulted in a widespread unconformity between Permian and Triassic strata. Rocks of Mesozoic Age During Triassic time, the maximum extent of the paleo-San Juan Basin was attained. The southern rim of the basin, known as the Mogollon area, was 10 uplifted and sediments were deposited on a vast floodplain that was tilted to the west and northwest. According to Colbert (1950), this floodplain was a vast lowland traversed by streams and dotted with scattered forests and lakes. Facies coarsen generally southward toward the Mogollon region. At the same time, volcanism occurred south of the Aztec Quadrangle area, and the Uncompaghre Uplift was rejuvenated to form the northern boundary of the basin. The slightly positive Zuni and Defiance Uplifts of Arizona and New Mexico, and the Uncompaghre Uplift, Colorado, served as important sediment sources for the Triassic Chinle Formation (Ridgley and others, 1978). In the Aztec Quadrangle, the Chinle Formation consists of sandstone, siltstone, and mudstone of fluvial and lacustrine origin. Relatively stable conditions marked the change from Triassic to Jurassic time. An erosional period is evidenced in the area by a widespread unconformity between Triassic and Upper Jurassic rocks. The erosion surface was covered by the vast dune fields of the Entrada Sandstone. After eolian and sabkha deposition of the Entrada Sandstone, the area was covered by a large lake. In this lake was deposited the limestone and gypsum facies of the Todilto Limestone and the equivalent units such as the Pony Express Limestone. Uplift to the southwest, in the Mogollon region (Craig and others, 1955), preceded deposition of the Jurassic Morrison Formation and is believed to be the source for much of the sediment in the Morrison Formation. The various members of the Morrison Formation were deposi~ed on a vast plain in a variety of fluvial and lacustrine environments. Deposition was also accompanied by volcanic activity and much of the Morrison contains volcanic debris (Ridgley and others, 1978). During deposition of Jurassic sediments the basin sank and land masses to the west and south rose. These tectonic movements caused folding and flexing in the basin, especially around the southern margin. The presence of folds and flexures probably influenced the course of sedimentation in the basin. Although the folds and flexures developed at this time may not be directly related to all uranium deposits, their influence on sedimentation patterns may have permitted accumulation of sediments favorable as sites for subsequent uranium deposition (Ridgley and others, 1978). Sediments of the transitional period from Jurassic to Cretaceous time are absent over most of the area because of pre-Cretaceous erosion. Sometime in Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous time the southern part of the basin was uplifted and beveled. It was a time dominated by the Sevier Orogeny to the west, and intense overthrust faulting and mountain building in the Cordilleran geosyncline. Only in the northern part of the San Juan Basin and in the Chama Basin are rocks of Early Cretaceous age preserved. Here rocks of the Cretaceous Burro Canyon(?) Formation reflect deposition under fluvial and local lacustrine conditions. The basin uplift and beveling of sediments resulted in the subsequently deposited Cretaceous Dakota Sandstone resting on progressively older rocks from north to south within the basin and basin margin. 11 The Aztec area, in Late Cretaceous time, was a broad, subsiding plain (Hilpert, 1969). It was traversed by streams and dotted with swamps in which carbonaceous siltstones and coals accumulated. As subsidence continued the area was covered by marine waters entering from the north. Numerous transgressions and regressions followed (Peterson and Kirk, 1977), depositing intertonguing sequences of shale and sandstone and lesser amounts of limestone and coal. These sediments were deposited in marine, nearshore marine, beach, paludal, and fluvial environments and compose the stratigraphic sequence from the upper part of the Dakota Sandstone through the Pictured Cliffs Sandstone. The Pictured Gliffs Sandstone was deposited as shallow marine and beach sands during the final regression of the sea from the area (Ridgley and others, 1978). As the sea withdrew, the area was once again dominated by terrestrial sedimentation. The area was a vast alluvial plain traversed by streams and dotted with swamps. The Cretaceous Fruitland Formation and Kirtland Shale were deposited in this environment. At the end of the Cretaceous Period or early in the Tertiary Period there was renewed tectonic activity accompanied by a mountain-building pattern which consisted of essentially vertical basement uplifts of the Rocky Mountain geosyncline. These tectonic events are referred to as the Laramide orogeny and they shaped much of the present-day configuration of geology and physiography in the Aztec Quadrangle. During this period, the final emergence of the San Juan, Nacimiento, San Pedro, and Brazos Uplifts occurred around the margins of the area. The San Juan and Chama Basins formed and were separated by the Gallena-Archuleta Arch. Rocks of Cenozoic Age Fluvial conditions persisted into the Tertiary Period in both the San Juan and Chama Basins. However, as a result of their structural separation during the Laramide Orogeny, both basins were the sites of deposition of different, unrelated sediments. In the San Juan Basin, fluvially deposited conglomerate, sandstone, siltstone, and mudstone characterize the Paleocene Animas Formation (also Late Cretaceous in part), Ojo Alamo Sandstone, and Nacimiento Formation. In the Chama Basin, rocks of similar age are absent due to erosion or nondeposition. During the early Tertiary Period, numerous structural features formed, especially along the margins of the San Juan Basin. Deepening of the San Juan Basin occurred, and its margins were beveled. The Eocene San Jose Formation was deposited over the beveled surface of earlier Tertiary rocks in the San Juan Basin. During the same period in the Chama Basin, arkose, sandstone, and conglomerate of the Blanco Basin Formation were deposited on the beveled erosion surface in the northern part of the basin. At about the same time along the east side of the basin, the El Rito Formation was deposited as a fanglomerate derived from highlands to the north and east (Smith, Budding, and others, 1961). 12 At the end of Eocene time the San Juan Basin was tilted to the north. Deposition continued into Oligocene and Miocene time and was accompanied by renewed volcanic activity in the San Juan Mountains, Mogollon Highlands, and Jemez Mountains. Volcanic debris was contributed to fluvial systems, and lava flows of basic composition covered large areas. The Abiquiu Tuff of the Santa Fe Group was deposited during this period in the Chama Basin. During late Miocene or early Pliocene time there was a broad regional uplift, and large areas of the San Juan and Chama Basins were eroded. Large amounts of Tertiary and pre-Tertiary rocks were removed. This period was also accompanied by faulting or rejuvenation of old faults. Mobilization and redeposition of uranium in the Grants mineral belt on the southern edge of the San Juan Basin probably occurred at this time (Ridgley and others, 1978). Structural features that formed during Oligocene-Miocene time include the Nacimiento Uplift and Rio Grande Trough (Pl. lOA). Volcanic activity in the Aztec Quadrangle during Miocene time was centered in the Jemez Volcanic Field and on the Taos Plateau (Pl. lOC). Igneous rocks of pyroclastic and tuffaceous composition and flows of intermediate to silicic composition covered parts of the eastern half of the quadrangle. Widespread basalt flows along with local silicic, alkali rhyolite flows spread out as sheets over erosional surfaces. In the Aztec Quadrangle, these igneous rocks include the Lobato Basalt, the dacite and latite members of the Tschicoma Formation, the basalts and andesites of the Hinsdale Formation, and the tholeiite basalts of the Servilleta Formation. Lamphrophyre dikes and sills were also intruded during this time. Rocks of Quaternary Age Quaternary rocks in the Aztec Quadrangle are primarily surficial deposits of alluvial, landslide, and glacial origin. In the southern part of the quadrangle, Quaternary rocks also include the nonwelded to densely welded rhyolitic tuff of the Pleistocene Bandelier Tuff. Chenoweth (1974b) has speculated that the weakly radioactive Bandelier Tuff may have been the source of uranium for many of the small uranium deposits in the southern part of the Chama Basin and in the northern Nacimiento area. (J. L. R., M. W. G., and P. G. L. S.) DEFINITION OF FAVORABILITY AND CRITERIA USED FOR EVALUATION All rocks to a depth of 1500 m (5000 ft) within the Aztec Quadrangle have been evaluated as either favorable or unfavorable for the occurrence of uranium deposits which could contain at least 100 metric tons of u3o8 with an average grade not less than 100 ppm (0.01 percent) u3o8 • The evaluation has been conducted according to DOE as stated in Mickle and Mathews (1979). Accordingly, rock formations (or environments within formations or rock bodies) can be classified as favorable if (1) there are known uranium 13 occurrences; (2) there are uranium anomalies detectable by hydrogeochemical, ground, or aerial surveys; (3) the potential host rock possesses geologic and geochemical characteristics similar to known uranium-producing, environments; and/or (4) there is evidence, based on the above criteria, for the potential to contain uranium deposits in the formation (or environment) of minimum grade and tonnage as specified above. In this folio, several recognition criteria have been used to delineate and evaluate each formation (or environment) insofar as time and data have allowed. These criteria include the recognition criteria established by BFEC (1979) as well as criteria which, in the experience of the investigators, are pertinent to uranium occurrence in rock units of the quadrangle. These include the following: (a) Lithology of the formation/environment. This includes consideration of mineralogic composition, texture, and diagenetic alteration of potential host rocks. (b) Environment of deposition of the rock. This includes consideration of depositional conditions, climatic factors, tectonic factors affecting depositional patterns and energy levels, and resultant sandstone to-siltstone (shale) ratio and configuration; it also includes any other depositional factors related to and controlling facies distribution and host-rock geometry. (c) Presence of uranium and/or gamma radioactivity. This includes consideration of the relative background radioactivity of the formation (or environment) away from mineralized ground; the size, geometry, quantity, grade, and distribution of mineralized ground; and the possible sources of uranium. (d) Presence of reductants. This includes consideration of the type, quantity, origin, and distribution of organic matter with respect to uranium, as well as, other potential reductants and uranium precipitation. (e) Transmissivity. This includes consideration of porosity, permeability, cementation, and fracturing of potential host rocks and the lateral and vertical continuity of aquifer conduits for the flow of mineralizing and/or oxidizing solutions. (f) Tectonic framework. This includes consideration of local and regional strike and dip, faulting, and folding affecting the rock formation (or environment) and uranium. (g) Preservation conditions. This includes consideration of oxidation history, and the availability of confinement and barrier mechanisms (i.e., caprock, shale, siltstone). It also includes consideration of the relative age of the host rock, its uranium deposits, and the possibility that deposits may have been 14 destroyed with time and adverse geologic and geochemical conditions. Areas designated as favorable are shown on Plate 1. The areas have not been subdivided into areas of relative favorability since subdivisions would, in most areas, be based either on proprietary information or on geologic and geochemical criteria which are speculative or transitional in nature. Boundaries of favorable areas shown by dashed line indicate only the approximate limits of a favorable area or environment as determined geologically or by the 1500 m (5000 ft) overburden contour. Rocks or environments within favorable areas exhibit a majority of the recognition criteria. They also show evidence of the existence of uranium deposits of minimum grade and tonnage as specified. Such evidence includes the presence of known orebodies or high-grade uranium in outcrop occurrences and/or drill holes. Boundaries of the favorable areas are placed to include these mineralized areas and adjacent areas in which geologic and geochemical characteristics are similar. All areas outside of favorable areas are considered unfavorable even though they may· locally contain rocks or environments which exhibit a few favorable recognition criteria. Areas designated as unfavorable commonly contain one or more favorable criteria for uranium mineralization. However, from present data the unfavorable environments show little evidence of containing deposits of the minimum grade and tonnage. Additional information, not presently available for this evaluation, could conceivably change some unfavorable evaluations of rocks or their environments to the favorable category. A few units are considered geologically more favorable but lack sufficient evidence of extensive uranium mineralization. These units include the Permian Cutler Formation, the Cretaceous Dakota Sandstone, and the Tertiary Nacimiento and San Jose Formations. They include scattered uranium occurrences, favorable facies and environments of deposition, but no evidence of large deposits to warrant designating them as favorable. These formations, therefore, are discussed in greater detail in this report than other formations considered unfavorable. ENVIRONMENTS FAVORABLE FOR URJu~IUM DEPOSITS AREA FAVORABLE FOR URANIUM DEPOSITS IN THE BURRO CANYON(?)FORMATION The Burro Canyon(?) Formation is considered favorable for sandstone-type uranium deposits (Class 240, subclass 241) based on the recognition criteria established by Austin and D'Andrea (1978), and Mathews and others (1979). 15 Stratigraphy and environments of deposition The Burro Canyon(?) Formation crops out in the southern part of the Chama Basin (Pl. lOA) and is present in the subsurface in the rest of that basin and in the northeastern part of the San Juan Basin. It is absent south of Cuba, New Mexico, where it wedges out under the pre-Dakota erosion surface, and east of the Chama Basin due to erosion or nondeposition. In the subsurface in the western part of the Aztec Quadrangle, the Burro Canyon(?) is not easily recognized and, thus, is generally lumped with the Dakota Sandstone in surface and subsurface correlations (Pls. 8, 8A). As defined by several workers (Swift, 1956, Ridgley, 1977; Saucier, 1974), the Burro Canyon(?) Formation in the Chama Basin is the conglomeratic sandstone, sandstone, and mudstone interval occurring stratigraphically between the Brushy Basin Member of the Morrison Formation and the Dakota Sandstone (Fig. 2). The exact correlation of this lithologic sequence and the extension of the Burro Canyon nomenclature into the Chama Basin has been the subject of controversy, due primarily to the absence of datable fossils. In the past, some workers (Lookingbill, 1953; Sears, 1953; Woodward and Schumacher, 1973; and Woodward and others, 1976) have included this sequence with the Morrison Formation, whereas others (Grant and Owen, 1974; Muehlberger, 1967; Smith and others, 1961) have included it with the Dakota. The latter workers recognized the possible equivalence of this stratigraphic interval the Burro Canyon Formation in Colorado. Although the determination of age and correlation of this stratigraphic interval may seem purely academic, there are also some economic considerations. Because of the stratigraphic relation of this interval to the Brushy Basin and Dakota Sandstone, there has been a tendency for many geologists to correlate this interval with the Jackpile sandstone (of economic usage). However, based on paleocurrent measurements and facies relationships, Grant and Owen (1974), Owen and Siemers (1977), Ridgley (1977), and Saucier (1974) suggest that this interval is not equivalent to the Jackpile and, at present, should be considered equivalent to the Burro Canyon(?) Formation in Colorado. In the Chama Basin the Burro Canyon(?) may be divided into t\vo distinct lithologic sequences--basal and upper. The basal sequence consists of 18 to 35 m (60-115 ft) of conglomerate, conglomeratic sandstone, and sandstone. The conglomerate and sandstone are generally buff, tan, orange, or white at the outcrop; they are usually gray or yellow gray in the subsurface. The sandstones may be subarkosic, feldspathic, or quartzose and are fine to coarse grained. They consist mainly of subrounded quartz with variable amounts of feldspar, chert, and accessory minerals. Kaolinite is present throughout the sequence. It occurs especially near the top in the southern part of the basin. Sedimentary structures in the basal sequence consist mainly of trough cross-stratification, ripple lamination, and parallel lamination. The ratio of conglomerate to sandstone is low and decreases upward. The basal sequence 16 is also characterized by numerous fining-upward sequences that begin with a conglomerate and end with a medium- to fine-grained parallel- or ripplelaminated sandstone. The contact between the sandstone and overlying conglomerate is commonly sharp and may be gradational or scoured. Clay-gall zones and thin gray-green mudstone seams occur at the scour interfaces in places. Laterally, the basal sequence is very persistent, may form steep cliffs, and has an almost sheet-like geometry. The upper sequence of the Burro Canyon(?) consists of a basal red mudstone interval, a white to pink friable sandstone interval, and an upper pale-red, pale-purple, or pale-green mudstone interval. Proportion of mudstone to sandstone is variable; thickness of this sequence ranges from a few meters to 23m (75ft). In the southern part of the basin much of this interval is absent owing to pre-Dakota erosion. In the subsurface in the eastern part of the basin, electric logs show that sandstone is the dominant lithology of this interval and that the sandstone horizon is somewhat persistent laterally. The sandstone of the upper sequence is fine to medium grained and is composed of subangular to subrounded quartz and minor amounts of feldspar. Kaolinite alteration is abundant at the outcrop, and has also been found in the subsurface where the sandstones are various shades of gray. Mudstones at the outcrop are siliceous and contain kaolinite and illite. The red and green colors found in mudstones at the surface are also present in the subsurface. The Burro Canyon(?) is unconformably overlain by the Dakota Sandstone. The contact is generally sandstone on sandstone but may also be sandstone on mudstone. The Burro Canyon(?) may disconformably overlie the Brushy Basin Member of the Morrison Formation. This contact, where exposed, is generally sandstone on gray-green mudstone but may also be sandstone on sandstone. From outcrop studies by Ridgley, the basal part of the Burro Canyon(?) Formation is interpreted to have been deposited by a series of high-energy braided streams. This interpretation is based on the dominance of trough cross-stratification, on the geometric relation of conglomerate to sandstone intervals that indicate the presence of channel bars and channel-fill deposits, and on the lateral continuity of the sandstone interval, which includes very little of fine-grained overbank deposits. Measurements of crossbeds indicate a NNW to NNE direction of transport, with a probable source area to the south and southwest (Ridgley, 1978). These observations are in agreement with those reported by Grant and Owen (1974), and Saucier (1974). The upper sequence of the Burro Canyon(?) reflects deposition by lower energy, braided to meandering streams. Lower energy conditions are reflected by an increase in proportion of mudstone, the presence of finer grained sandstone, and a decrease in the lateral persistence of the main sandstone interval. 17 Uranium mineralization and host rock characteristics Little has been reported on uranium mineralization in the Burro Canyon(?) Formation. There are no known surface uranium occurrences of any consequence in the Burro Canyon(?), and aerial radiometric and hydrogeochemical studies did not indicate the presence of any uranium anomalies. In the course of mapping in the southern part of the basin, Ridgley located two very small uranium anomalies that were associated with clay galls. Samples contained 6 and 27 ppm u3o8 • In this area the Burro Canyon(?) is extensively oxidized at the outcrop. Uranium occurrences purported to be in the Burro Canyon(?) were examined and were found to occur in the underlying Brushy Basin mudstones or in overlying distributary-channel sandstone of the Dakota Sandstone. Uranium occurrences, however, have been found in the subsurface on the east side of the basin. The following discussion of these occurrences is based in part on the author's interpretations derived from examination of a limited number of electric and lithologic logs provided by the TVA and in part on a report by Saucier (1974). Uranium minerals in the Burro Canyon(?) at this area occur as numerous ore pods that are associated with oxidationreduction interfaces, thus indicating the deposits are roll-type uranium deposits (Saucier, 1974). Uranium occurences have been found at all levels in the Burro Canyon(?), although the largest concentration of uranium occurs in the lower part of the basal sandstone sequence and to a lesser extent in the top of the upper sandstone sequence. Gamma-logs also indica~e that uranium occurs locally in an underlying Brushy Basin sandstone and in overlying Dakota Sandstones. Depths of anomalous uranium range from 60 to 180m (200-600 ft). The variation in depth of uranium mineralization reflects the variation in position of oxidation-reduction interfaces within the thick lower and upper sandstone sequences of the Burro Canyon(?). Variations in permeability within the sandstone have probably affected the rate at which the oxidation front has travelled through any portion of the thick sandstone bodies. Gamma-logs indicate that many of the thinner radioactive intervals are associated with slight breaks in spontaneous potential (SP) and resistivity curves. These breaks do not appear to be associated with discrete mudstone intervals. Corresponding lithologic logs do not show any mudstone breaks within the thick sandstone sequences, but they do indicate periodic changes in grain size. These changes in grain size are probably similar to those observed at the outcrop in the fining-upward sequences, that were previously described. Nothing is known about the uranium mineralogy. Uranium appears to be associated with small amounts of carbonaceous and "humicn material and pyrite. Alteration of the host rock in the subsurface includes the presence of kaolinite and trace amounts of hematite and limonite. At the outcrop the host sandstones are extensively oxidized; the sparse amounts of iron-bearing minerals have been oxidized to hematite and limonite. No sulfides or carbonaceous material have been observed at the outcrop; only local pockets of silicified wood have been found near the base of the formation. 18 According to Saucier (1974) some of the ore pods lie above the water table and are oxidized, while others lie at or below the water table and have not been oxidized. He reported that ore pods in the lower sandstone interval have a south to southwest orientation, suggesting ground-water movement to the northwest, and that those in the upper sandstone interval are related to ground-water movement to the north and northeast. There appears to be a good relationship of the position of the uranium occurrences to regional and local structural features. The regional dip of pre-Tertiary strata in the area is to the north and northwest and is generally less than 5°. Locally dips may be to the northeast and dips in the vicinity of a major fault in the mineralized area are to the southeast (Smith and others, 1961). The relationship of this major fault to uranium occurrences is unknown. It is possible that the fault is post-mineralization as ore pods near it on the upthrown side (northwest side of northeast-trending fault) are oxidized. Structure contours drawn on the base of the Dakota Sandstone in the area indicate the presence of several broad, gentle folds that plunge to the northwest (Smith and others, 1961). These folds are bounded on the east by a homocline that has dips of 10o to 12°. The pattern of mineral occurrences appears to be coincident with ground water moving in the direction of the regional dip, with perhaps local modification of ground-water movement in the vicinity of the shallow folds. The age of mineralization and source of uranium are not known. Mineralization, however, appears to be related in time to basin-margin uplift to the south and possibly east. Uplift of the basin margin as well as other regional and local structural features, previously mentioned, are related to tectonic events of late Cretaceous and early Tertiary times. This period of deformation was followed by extensive erosion, which is recorded in the southeast-dipping unconformity below the El Rito Formation of probable Eocene age. In turn, the El Rito Formation ~v-as eroded prior to deposition of the overlying Miocene Abiquiu Tuff. Chenoweth (1974b) and Saucier (1974) have speculated that the >veakly radioactive Pleistocene Bandelier Tuff was the source for uranium. This would mean that the uranium deposits in the Burro Canyon(?) are no more than 2 m.y. old. As an alternative, Ridgley proposes that the Abiquiu Tuff of Miocene age should also be considered as a possible source of the uranium. The Abiquiu Tuff is composed of light-gray to pale-orange silty tuff, micaceous, tuffaceous sandstone, and conglomerate, and may be as much as 390 m ( 1300 ft) thick. The average uranium content of the tuffaceous portions is unknown. A few scattered uranium anomalies were found in the Abiquiu Tuff by aerial radiometric and hydrogeochemical surveys (Pls. 3, 4). Source areas of the Abiquiu Tuff were in the San Juan Mountain region (Smith and others, 1961). The principal reason for considering the Abiquiu Tuff as the source of 19 the uranium is that along the northern flank of the Jemez Volcanic Field, located in the southern part of the Aztec Quadrangle, the Abiquiu Tuff directly overlies the Dakota Sandstone, and Burro Canyon(?) and Morrison Formations (Pls. 10, lOa). A portion of this area lies to the south and southeast of the mineralized area, on the south side of the Rio Chama. It is speculated that during erosion of the Abiquiu Tuff in late Miocene and early Pliocene time, but prior to deposition of the Bandelier Tuff, which unconformably overlies it, uranium was leached from tuffaceous portions and transported by ground water to the northwest. Access to the Morrison and Burro Canyon(?) Formations, and Dakota Sandstone by the ground water would have been possible as these formations would have been located at or near the surface. The Burro Canyon(?) Formation exhibits many characteristics considered favorable for the presence of uranium. These characteristics are very similar to those found in the host rocks of the Wyoming roll-type uranium deposits (Austin and D'Andrea, 1978). The Burro Canyon(?) is composed of dominantly feldspathic sandstone deposited as channel-bar and channel-fill deposits in braided-stream environments. The sandstone bodies are thick, laterally continuous, and possess excellent permeability. Permeability changes associated with fining-upward sequences within the thick sandstones, mudstone intervals, and overlying and underlying less permeable rocks of the Dakota Sandstone and Brushy Basin serve to confine ground water to various parts of the upper and lower sandstone bodies. The presence of carbonaceous and humic material and pyrite in the subsurface indicates that potential reductants, necessary to reduce and precipitate uranium were available. Alteration of iron-bearing minerals to hematite and limonite and the occurrence of kaolinite are much the same as in Hyoming deposits. The presence of hematitic and limonitic sandstone thus can be used as an exploration guide. The structural setting in which the Burro Canyon(?) uranium deposits occur is similar to that of the 1-lyoming deposits. In both cases, uranium was deposited from uraniferous ground water moving through the host rock, which dipped basinward from the basin margins. Moreover, in both cases, tuffaceous rocks are known to have overlain truncated beds of the host rock in the vicinity of the basin margins. Comparison of the geochemistry and uranium mineralogy of the Burro Canyon(?) deposits to the "Wyoming"-type is not possible as data for the Burro Canyon(?) deposits are not available. Favorable area The Burro Canyon(?) Formation is considered favorable for containing "Wyoming" roll-type uranium deposits, subclass 241 (Austin and D'Andrea (in Mickle and Mathews) 1978). The formation is known from drilling to contain uranium concentratations in excess of the minimum endowment requirement and it also exhibits other characteristics of favorability previously discussed. The area considered favorable for containing uranium deposits is shown in the 20 eastern part of the quadrangle on Plate 1. The outline of this area is based in part on the location of known uranium deposits, as well as on geology based on the theory of origin previously discussed. Scattered drilling in the western half of the favorable area has been relatively unproductive (Saucier, 1974); this suggests that the western half will be less favorable than the eastern half. The favorable area covers approximately 492 km 2 (190 mi 2). The entire Burro Canyon(?) should be considered favorable as mineralization is known to have occurred at all horizons within it. The average thickness of the combined upper and lower sandstone intervals is about 40 m (132 ft). Usi~g this average thickness, the total volume of favorable rock is about 20 km (7.7 mi 3 ). Depths to the Burro Canyon(?) range from about 60 m (200 ft) to as much as 365 m (1200 ft) or more. Land included in the favorable area is sparsely populated. Most of the land lies within the Carson National Forest (Pl. 12). The rest of the land is divided among the u.s. Bureau of Land Management, the State of New Mexico, and private parties. That portion of the Burro Canyon(?) Formation that lies to the north and northwest of the favorable area remains unevaluated due primarily to the lack of drilling. This unevaluated portion of the Burro Canyon(?) is discussed further in a later section on unevaluated environments. The Burro Canyon(?) to the south and southwest of the favorable area is considered unfavorable as it has been highly oxidized. Summarv In summary, using the recognition criteria set forth by Mathews and others (1979) the uranium deposits in the Burro Canyon(?) Formation may be classed as Wyoming roll-type deposits (subclass 241). The recognition criteria used are as follows: (1) the tectonic setting during mineralization was one of a basin with adjacent uplands; (2) the host rock for the deposits is fine-grained to conglomeratic quartzose to feldspathic sandstone, which contains scattered carbonaceous material and pyrite grains; (3) the host rock was deposited as mixed-load and channel-fill deposits by braided to meandering streams; (4) associated mudstones and fine-grained sandstone intervals provide permeability controls to ground-water flow; (5) overlying tuffaceous rocks, along the southern basin margin, may have been the source for the uranium; and (6) alteration of the host sandstone includes oxidation of iron-bearing minerals and kaolinization of feldspar. (J. L. R.) AREA FAVORABLE FOR URANIUM DEPOSITS IN THE OJO ALAMO SANDSTONE The Ojo Alamo Sandstone is considered favorable for sandstone-type uranium deposits (class 240, subclass undetermined) based on the recognition criteria established by Mathews and others (1979). 21 Stratigraphy and environments of deposition The stratigraphy of the Ojo Alamo Sandstone of Tertiary age has remained controversial for many years. The original stratigravhic sequence defined by Brown (1910) was redefined by Bauer (1917). Bauer's description was later revised by Baltz and others (1966), who restricted the name Ojo Alamo to include only the upper conglomeratic sequence of Bauer (1917). The section originally defined as Ojo Alamo by Brown is now included in the Kirtland Shale. The age of the Ojo Alamo has been considered to be Late Cretaceous (Dane, 1936) or Paleocene (Knowlton, 1924; Anderson, 1960), partially as a result of the disagreement in the location of the formation boundaries. At present, work by Anderson (1960) and R. H. Tschudy (in Fassett and Hinds, 1971) indicate a Paleocene (Tertiary) age for the Ojo Alamo. The Ojo Alamo crops out in an irregular pattern from the vicinity of Cuba, New Mexico, on the east side of the San Juan Basin, to the Farmington area in the northern part of the basin and is present in the subsurface north of this outcrop belt (Pl. 10). Thickness of the Ojo Alamo sandstone ranges from 6 to 120 m (20 to 400 ft). Along the east margin of the San Juan Basin, the Ojo Alamo may be as much as 60 m (200 ft) thick; in the western part of its areal distribution the Ojo Alamo may be as much as 120 m (400 ft) thick. Overburden thickness may range from 0 m in the southern part of the outcrop area to over 1200 m (0 to 4000 ft) in the northern part of the basin. South of the outcrop belt and in the Chama Basin the Ojo Alamo is absent owing to nondeposition or erosion. The Ojo Alamo Sandstone is composed of interbedded buff or rusty-tan sandstone, conglomeratic sandstone, and olive-green and gray shale. The sandstone is arkosic, locally conglomeratic near its base, and contains scattered fragments of fossil carbonized and silicified wood. Trough crossstratification and large-scale channeling at the base of the sandstone units are common. Sand bodies are c,ommonly multilateral, display a discontinuous sheet-like geometry (Fassett and Hinds, 1971). Vertically, individual sandstone sheets often merge with overlying and underlying sandstone sheets as a result of channeling by individual channel sandstones; laterally, individual sandstone sheets wedge out in shale beds. The Ojo Alamo is thinner in the southern part of the outcrop area and thickens to the north. Limited paleocurrent studies of the Ojo Alamo have been done by Baltz (1967). He indicates that the sandstones of the Ojo Alamo in the Farmington area were deposited by streams flowing from areas westnorthwest and northwest of Farmington. Transport was probably toward the southeast. This interpretation is supported by the decrease in the size of pebbles in the conglomerate from west to east across the northern part of the San Juan Basin (Fassett and Hinds, 1971). The Ojo Alamo also shows an increase in grain size from south to north along the east side of the San Juan Basin, which suggests an additional source area to the northeast (Baltz, 22 1967). The contact of the Ojo Alamo Sandstone with the overlying Nacimiento Formation is conformable and intertonguing (Fassett and Hinds, 1971). The contact with the underlying Kirtland Shale is unconformable. The Ojo Alamo rests on progressively older parts of the Kirtland Shale from west to east across the northern part of the San Juan Basin (Fassett and Hinds, 1971). Little work has been done on reconstruction of the environments of deposition of the Ojo Alamo Sandstone. Sedimentary structures within the sandstone channels and the geometric relationship of sandstone channels to shales suggest that much of the Ojo Alamo was deposited by distal braided to meandering fluvial systems. Uranium mineralization and host rock characteristics At present only one area of uranium occurrences in the Ojo Alamo is known. This locality is on Mesa Portales, southwest of Cuba, New Mexico (Green and others, 1980a, Pl. 10). Recent drilling of the Ojo ~~amo at this location has encountered large, low-grade, disseminated concentrations of uranium. The presence of uranium there is also confirmed by the presence of radioactivity anomalies at the outcrop along the southern and eastern rims of the mesa (Green and others, 1980a, App. C); by anomalous stream- and springsediment samples (Green and others, 1980a, Pl. 4), and by a cluster of aerial radiometric anomalies in the southern part of the mesa (Green and others, 1980a, Pl. 3). According to data provided by Dale Carlson of Triple S Development Company (oral commun., 1979), the uranium deposit has a blanket-like geometry and occurs at several sandstone horizons. Although the ~verage concentration of uranium is low (less than 0.01 percent) at least part of the deposit apparently contains sufficient uranium to meet the NURE endowment requirement. At the outcrop, radioactivity is associated with solution iron banding, clay galls, and carbonized fossil plant material in the sandstone and also occurs in the interbedded carbonaceous shales. It is possible that the uranium was adsorbed onto the surface of the iron oxides, clay minerals, or carbonized plant matter. Discrete uranium minerals, either primary or secondary, were not observed. Alteration of the sandstones at the outcrop includes oxidation of iron-bearing minerals, imparting an orange color to the sandstsones, and kaolinization of feldspar. In the subsurface, the uranium is associated with pyrite and carbonaceous material. The association of radioactivity with altered sandstone at the outcrop suggests that the uranium was or is being deposited from uraniferous, oxidizing ground water where suitable reducing environments exist. Some data suggest that the deposit is young and may be in the process of forming. According to Dale Carlson (oral commun.), the distribution of uranium does not fit the roll-type uranium model. However, in gamma logs and core examined by 23 the author, the pattern of radioactivity, as well as the distribution of altered (containing oxidized iron minerals) versus unaltered (containing unaltered iron minerals) sandstone are similar to those found in roll-type deposits, although very diffuse. The lack of a clear pattern of distribution of uranium may be a reflection of a youthful age for the deposit and of the process of mineralization. But until more detailed studies are done, one must also consider the possibility that the deposit represents a remnant of a preexisting deposit that is presently being destroyed by modern ground-water flow. Thus, until more work is done, the uranium deposit in the Ojo Alamo is placed in the sandstone deposit category (class 240) with a subclassification not determined. The determination of the origin and timing of the uranium mineralization will ultimately affect the favorability for the remaining part of the Ojo Alamo in the Aztec Quadrangle. The Ojo Alamo exhibits a number of host-rock characteristics generally considered favorable for the occurrence of uranium deposits. The Ojo Alamo is composed of arkosic sandstone and shale which contain local concentrations of carbonaceous debris. The carbonaceous matter may have provided locally reducing environments which would have been instrumental in the reduction of uranium from oxidizing ground water. The multilateral and multistoried sand bodies possess excellent permeability; their geometry provides excellent access to large volumes of ground water. Interbedded shale beds would provide excellent permeability barriers by reducing ground-water flow in certain directions, allowing deposits to form and be preserved. Structurally, the Ojo Alamo consists of very gently dipping beds, except along the very east margin of the San Juan Basin where the beds dip steeply, or are overturned. According to Baltz (1967), this structural pattern is related partialiy to tectonic events of late Paleocene time and partially to tectonic events of Early Eocene time (post-San Jose Formation deposition). In the vicinity of Mesa Portales, the beds of the Ojo Alamo dip gently northward. The northward tilt of the strata was imparted in post-early Eocene time and influenced the subsequent hydrology of the area. The change in ground-water movement from dominantly southeast in early Paleocene time to northerly in post early Eocene time may ultimately be useful in determining the timing of mineralization and thus, whether the mineralization is related to post-early Eocene-basin margin tilting. Favorable area The determination of the type and timing of uranium mineralization will ultimately determine how much of the Ojo Alamo can be considered most favorable for containing additional uranium deposits. The area of the Ojo Alamo considered favorable for containing uranium of minimum requirements is shown on Plate 1 along the southern border of the quadrangle. This area adjoins the favorable area in Albuquerque quadrangle as shown by Green and others, 1980a, Pl. 1C). The boundaries shown are based on the consideration that the known uranium mineralization is somehow r1lated to basin margin uplift. This projected area covers roughly 474 km (183 mi 2 ) in this 24 quadrangle and an additional 243 km 2 (94 mi 2 ) in the adjacent Albuquerque 1°x2° Quadrangle (Green and others, 1980a, Pl. 1C). Within the favorable area, the Ojo Alamo has an average thickness of about 40 m (130 ft) and may be overlain by as much as 600 m (1950 ft) of younger rock. If one predicts that about 60 percent of the average thickness of the Ojo Alamo consists of suitable host-rock sandstone, then the favorable area contains approximately 11.4 km 3 (7.7 mi 3 ) of favorable rock. Much of the land containing Ojo Alamo strata lie on the Jicarilla Apache Indian Reservation; the rest of the land is privately or publicly owned (Pl. 12). Population throughout the area is sparse; most of the land is used for ranching (Pl. 13). Summary In summary, due to a lack of knowledge as to whether the uranium deposit - in the Ojo Alamo Sandstone represents a primary roll-type deposit or remnants of preexisting peneconcordant deposits undergoing redistribution by later ground-water flow, the uranium deposit in the Ojo Alamo is simply classified under the general category of sandstone-type uranium deposits (Class 240) and no subclassification is made. Although no subclassification is shown, it is the author's opinion that many of the recognition criteria set forth by Mathews and others (1979) for "Wyoming" roll-type deposits, subclass 241, are exhibited by the Ojo Alamo deposit. These recognition criteria include: (1) a tectonic setting of basin with adjacent uplands to the east; (2) the host rock for the deposit is composed of quartzose to feldspathic sandstone that contains carbonaceous material and pyrite; (3) the host rock was deposited as mixed-load sediments by braided to meandering streams that occurred on an alluvial fan; (4) associated mudstone intervals may provide permeability barriers to ground-water flow; (5) younger tuffaceous rocks may have once covered portions of the host rock, although evidence for such is now lacking; and (6) alteration of host rock includes kaolinitization of feldspar and oxidation of iron-bearing minerals. (J. L. R.) AREA FAVORABLE FOR URANIUM DEPOSITS IN THE MORRISON FORMATION The Morrison Formation is considered favorable for sandstone-type uranium deposits (Class 240, subclass 243 and 244) based on recognition criteria established by Austin and D'Andrea (1978), Mathews and others (1979). Stratigraphy, structure and lithology The Morrison Formation (Cross, 1894) of Late Jurassic age is present throughout the extent of the Aztec Quadrangle. It crops out in the eastern half of the quadrangle along the margins of the San Juan and Chama Basins. Structurally, the formation dips gently away from the basin margins toward the basin centers where it is covered by several hundred meters of overlying Cretaceous and Tertiary sedimentary formations (Pl. 10). 25 In general, stratigraphy of the Morrison Formation and its members in the quadrangle is fairly well known. However, distinct problems still exist in (1) determination of stratigraphic boundaries between members of the Morrison; (2) resolution of nomenclature for various members of the formation; and (3) definition of the contact between the Burro Canyon·(?) Formation and the Morrison (Ridgley, 1977). Three members of the Morrison are recognized in the quadrangle. In studies along the east side of the San Juan Basin, Craig (1959) and others have recognized the Recapture Member, Westwater Canyon Member, and Brushy Basin Shale Member. In the adjacent Chama Basin, Ridgley (1977), in order to avoid some of the existing localized nomenclature and correlation problems, has divided the formation into the lower member, middle member, and Brushy Basin Member. Ridgley's divisions, however, correspond closely to those of Craig's. The lower (Recapture) member, according to Ridgley (1977), contains two distinct lithologic sequences: (1) a basal sequence of sandstone, shale, and limestone; and (2) a thicker overlying upper sequence of sandstone and claystone. The lateral and vertical relationships between the lower member and underlying Jurassic units remains somewhat uncertain. However, because the lower member is not considered favorable for uranium deposits, the resolution of these correlation problems is not considered important in this report. For a more detailed description of the lower (or Recapture) member, the reader is referred to reports by Ridgley (1977), Craig and others (1955), and Craig and others (1959). The middle (Westwater Canyon) member, according to Ridgley (1977), is composed of two sandstone beds separated by shale layers. It ranges from 18 to 36 m (5.5-11 ft) thick in outcrops within the Chama Basin. Contact with the lower member is conformable and is marked by a change in mineral composition and grain size. No interfingering of the two members has been observed. The sandstones are dark olive tan to yellowish gray, medium to fine grained, and fairly to moderately well sorted. They are composed of subangular to subrounded quartz grains, microcline, plagioclase, chert fragments, and black accessory minerals. Sedimentary structures are not often observed because of the friable nature of the sandstone. The associated shale layers are reddish brown and greenish gray, and are calcareous and arenaceous. The Brushy Basin Shale Member is an average of 84 m (25 ft) thick in the Chama Basin and is composed of claystone and shale with minor amounts of sandstone and dense siltstone. The siltstone and claystones are pale red orange, greenish gray, red brown, and gray, and are calcareous and arenaceous. They contain minerals of the montmorillonite group. Intervening sandstone beds are light buff to rusty tan, medium to fine grained, and moderately well sorted. They are composed of quartz, feldspar, minor amounts of rock fragment and black accessory minerals. The sandstones are lenticular and discontinuous and contain low-angle wedge, planar, and trough crossstratification. The sandstone beds form ledges between the claystone and shale intervals. Contact with the underlying middle (Westwater Canyon) member 26 is placed at the base of a lower red-orange claystone bed and at the top of the upper sandstone bed of the middle member. The upper contact with the overlying Burro Canyon(?) Formation is frequently covered in the Chama Basin. When observed, however, it is placed where the lower-most basal conglomerate ledge of the Burro Canyon(?) is in contact with sandstone, shale, or claystone beds of the Brushy Basin. In the subsurface of the western half of the quadrangle, the ratio of sandstone to shale and claystone in the Brushy Basin Member increases considerably west southwestward, indicating that the source of sediment in the Brushy Basin probably lay west-southwest of the quadrangle boundary beyond the western and southwestern margins of the San Juan Basin. Correlation of the Morrison and adjacent formations into areas of the San Juan Basin are shown by matching subsurface cross-sections (Pls. 8 and 8A) in the Aztec Quadrangle with those of the adjacent Albuquerque, Gallup, and Shiprock Quadrangles (Green and others, 1980a, 1980b, 1980c, Pls. 8 and 8A). Environments of Deposition The environments of deposition of the Harrison Formation include fluvial (stream channel and flood plain), mixed fluvial-lacustrine, and lacustrine. No marine or marginal-marine influence has been detected. Eolian deposits_ within the formation are minimal and restricted to areas west of the quadrangle. Based upon the mode and medium of deposition, and the nature of vegetal and animal remains in the Morrison, inference is that climatic conditions during this time were-probably humid to subhumid. The presence of montmorillonite minerals as alteration products of volcanic debris, suggests volcanic activity during Morrison time. The depositional energy levels during Harrison time ranged from high (in fluvial-dominated environments) to low (in lacustrine-dominated environments). The middle (Westwater Canyon) member was deposited during the higher-energy, sandstone-dominated interval and represents a mid-fan facies in the formation. It is interpret~d to have been deposited as bedload in meandering- and braided-stream complexes upon coalescing alluvial fans. The fans radiated northeast, east and southeast from sediment source areas. The lower (Recapture) member and Brushy Basin Member, on the other hand, were deposited in low-energy, claystone- and shale-dominated environments and represent a distal-fan facies in the formation. TI1ey were formed by the deposition of suspended load sediment in overbank floodplain areas (interfluves) and in standing bodies of water (lakes) at the toe of the alluvial fans. The boundaries between the lateral and vertical lithofacies in mid-fan and distal-fan sequences contrast sharply. The lateral lithofacies are actually transitional over great distances within the fan system. The vertical lithofacies changes, on the other hand, are quite sharp and distinct and serve as the basis for dividing the formation into its various members. Superposition of the members occurred as a result of transgression and 27 regression of fan facies over the Morrison depositional area in response to tectonic and climatic fluctuations in Jurassic time. The Morrison depositional system covered an area much greater than the area of the Aztec Quadrangle. The formation and its equivalents are recognized throughout the Colorado Plateau and adjacent regions as far north as the north-central United States. In general, the formation becomes coarser grained to the west and southwest. This suggests that its primary source lay somewhere in the southwestern United States. However, additional study of the facies relationships, sediment transport directions, and composition are needed before a west-southwesterly source can be identified. It has been observed, however, that the coarser-grained proximal and mid-fan facies interfinger north-northeastward with the finer grained distal facies of the formation. The exact location of the interfingering is not known well enough to draw a line between the two facies. The Morrison in the Aztec Quadrangle, however, lies almost entirely within this distal facies. The location of major uranium-producing districts in the Morrison of the Colorado Plateau is probably related to the regional lithofacies relationship. The presence of both the sandstone facies and the claystoneshale facies in the area of the Colorado Plateau is a necessary criterion in terms of regional uranium favorability. The sandstone facies (Westwater Canyon and Saltwash Members) serve as conduits for the migration of both uranium-bearing fluids and mobile reductants. They also serve as host rocks for uranium deposits. The claystone-shale facies (Brushy Basin and locally the Recapture Members) serve as barriers to confine movement of fluids, and as possible sources of reductants and uranium. Uranium mineralization and area favorable The largest sandstone-type uranium deposits in the United States are contained in sandstone host rocks of the Westwater Canyon and Brushy Basin Members of the Morrison Formation within the adjoining Albuquerque and Gallup Quadrangles (Green and others, 1980~ and 1980c). Most of the deposits are tabular and trend generally east west in the Grants mineral belt approximately 40 km (24 mi) southwest of the Aztec Quadrangle boundary (Fig 3). The Westwater Canyon-Brushy Basin interval in the favorable area shown on Plate 1 averages approximately 170 m (550 ft) in thickness as determined from dr~ll-hole 1ogs in the vicinity. The favorable area to§als approxima§ely 670 km (260 mi ), and its volume is estimated to be 114 km (about 27 mi ). Drilling in the southwest corner of the Aztec Quadrangle and northeast corner of the Albuquerque Quadrangle has encountered uranium anomalies in 7 of 15 holes penetrating Westwater Canyon and Brushy Basin rocks. Based on information from these drill holes, this southwest corner of the quadrangle is considered favorable for uranium deposits of minumum grade and tonnage Although favorability lines are drawn on the basis of the 1500-m (5000-ft) depth line in the San Juan Basin, favorability for uranium endowment at depths beyond 1500 m (5000 ft) is probable in deeper parts of the basin. 28 10r Blanding Basin San Juan Mountains s A N J UA N I BA S I N c ·.-I Ul co I:Q co @ ..c: u SHIPROCK GALLUP Defiance Uplift AZTEC ALBUQUERQUE 36. Gallup Sag Rio Grande Trough 0 Figure 3. 30 45 60 miles Index map of the San Juan Basin, Grants mineral belt, the Aztec 1° x 2° Quadrangle, and adjacent areas 29 As near as can be determined without additional information, uranium anomalies in the drill holes occur in sandstone intervals near the contact between the Westwater Canyon and Brushy Basin Members. The nature of occurrence is thought to be similar to that found in the Grants mineral belt where the large uranium deposits occur in sandstone beds in association with humates. Humates occur as concentrations of structureless humic matter derived from the decay of plant remains in the host formation itself (Squyres, 1970); or they may be derived from adjacent formations such as the overlying organic-rich Dakota Sandstone (Granger, 1968). The uranium deposits in the mineral belt associated with concentrations of detrital organic debris contained in the host sandstones are relatively small in size and are considerably higher in average ore grade than the larger humate deposits. The source of uranium in the Harrison is believed to have been from the alteration of uranium-bearing minerals contained in the host rock sediment. Morrison sediments are first-cycle arkosic to subarkosic and were probably derived from a granitic source terrain that was anomalously rich in uranium. Th~ Harrison also contains an appreciable quantity of volcanically derived sediment that could have served as another likely source of uranium. In the northeastern part of the Aztec Quadrangle, the lack of uranium favorability in the Westwater Canyon-Brushy Basin interval is attributed to a change in favorable facies. Lack of good porosity and laterally continuous permeability of sandstone host rocks is characteristic of the sequence. Overall grain size in host sandstones tends to decrease in a northeasterly direction from the mineral belt. Also the sandstone conduit system for transmission of organics and uranium probably were not developed favorably because of lateral facies transition from the mid-fan to the distal-fan facies in a northeasterly direction away from the sediment source areas. Summary Uranium deposits in the Morrison Formation of Late Jurassic age in the Aztec Quadrangle are classed (Austin and D'Andrea, 1978; and Mathews and others, 1979) as sandstone type (Class 240). Both channel-controlled peneconcordant (subclass 243) and non-channel-controlled penecondordant (subclass 244) deposits are believed to be present in the favorable area. The deposits are classified on the basis of the following criteria: (1) Tectonic setting: Harrison rocks were deposited on a stable platform in a large sedimentary basin probably bounded on the south, southwest, and west by highlands of unknown proximity to the favorable area. Subsequent Tertiary epeirogenic tectonic activity formed the present San Juan Basin and locally folded and faulted the Morrison sequence adjacent to marginal uplifts. (2) Host rock: Host rocks are first-cycle arkosic to subarkosic carbonaceous sandstone deposited predominantly in braided streams of the midfacies in a "wet" coalescing alluvial-fan complex. 30 (3) Associated rocks: Siltstone, shale, claystone, and minor thin beds of limestone and chert are associated with host sandstones. (4) Alteration: In that uranium anomalies are known so far only in boreholes in the favorable area, alteration patterns have not been determined. (5) Uranium and uranium-bearing minerals: Primary uranium minerals are uraninite and coffinite. Secondary minerals are carnotite, tyuyamunite, uranophane, autunite, torbernite, and anhydrous species. Primary minerals occur in close spatial relationship to detrital and humic carbonaceous matter in the host rocks. Associated elements include V, Mo, As, Se, Co, Ni, Ti, Yb, and Pb. (M. w. G.) ENVIRONMENTS UNFAVORABLE FOR URANIUM DEPOSITS PRECAMBRIAN IGNEOUS ROCKS Precambrian igneous rocks are present in the Tusas Mountains and in the San Pedro Mountains (Pl. lOB). These include phaneritic to porphyritic, siliceous rocks of granitic, monzonitic, and dioritic composition. Few uranium occurrences are found within the Precambrian igneous rocks. Uranium occurs in the Tres Piedras Granite in veins of quartz and fluorite and in some plutonic intrusions in the granite but the uranium minerals have not yet been identified. Analysis of samples from these rocks show uranium contents of 14.2 ppm (in granite), 54 ppm (in granite with fluorite veins) and 1280 ppm (in granodiorite). The potential for containing uranium deposits of minimum grade and tonnage is considered poor. Some mining has been done in the past; however, it has been for mica, beryl, and fluorite. The majority of uranium occurrences that occur in igneous rocks are found in the pegmatites of the Petaca Schist of late-Precambrian age. Uranium occurrences are found in and around the pegmatite bodies and in associated pegmatite veins. Uranium content varies considerably in the pegw~tite, from 0.6 to 16.9 ppm (sample from dump of mine tailings). Areas of high radioactivity are usually very small. Associated minerals include muscovite, quartz-gel and feldspars. According to field observations by s. M. Condon and D. P. Bauer, mineralization appears to be both hydrothermal and pegmatitic. Radioactivity seems to be more concentrated in the altered zones between the pegmatite and the country rock. However, no large area of mineralization is evident (App. C). (P. G. L. S.) PENNSYLVANIAN FORMATIONS Pennsylvanian rocks in the Aztec Quadrangle are represented by the Madera Limestone in the eastern part of the quadrangle, and by the Molas, Hermosa, and Rico Formations in the western part of the quadrangle. Outcrops of the 31 Madera Limestone are found along the northeast flank of the Nacimiento Mountains and at a few localities along the western and eastern margins of the Chama Basin (Pl. 10). Elsewhere in the quadrangle Pennsylvanian rocks occur entirely in the subsurface. The Madera Limestone is composed of an interbedded sequence of arkosic sandstone, arkosic limestone, fossiliferous limestone, and shale and was deposited in environments ranging from coastal marine to marine. The Molas Formation consists of clastic red beds, limestone, and siltstone. The basal red bed sequence is interpreted as representing a paleosol developed on the eroded surface of the underlying Mississippian limestone. The upper fossiliferous limestone and siltstone sequence contains fossil assemblages indicative of marine environments of deposition (Peterson and Ohlen, 1963). The Hermosa Formation consists of a complex intertonguing sequence of clastics (sandstone, siltstone, and shale), carbonates (limestone and dolomite), and evaporites. The various members of the Hermosa Formation were deposited in a variety of marine environments ranging from shallow shelf to deeper basinal areas. No uranium occurrences are known in the formation. The Rico Formation consists of a lower marine carbonate sequence overlain by a continental clastic sequence. Pennsylvanian rocks in the western part of the quadrangle are considered unevaluated for the occurrence of uranium as they are found at depths greater than the 1500 m (5000 ft) depth limit of evaluation, and there are insufficient subsurface data to make an evaluation at this time. Pennsylvanian rocks in the eastern part of the quadrangle are considered unfavorable for the occurrence of uranium. Although several uranium occurrences have been found in the Madera Limestone (App· A, Pl. 2), it does not appear that the minimum endowment of uranium occurrences totaling at least 100 metric tons at 0.01 percent u3o8 or greater could be attained. This determination is based on the lack of potential reductants in the host rock. At the occurrences visited or reported in the literature, the uranium is associated with small pockets of carbonaceous material. However, an examination of the Madera Limestone indicates that carbonaceous material, occurring in pockets or as disseminations, is sparse to nonexistent. (J. L. R.) PERMIAN FORMATIONS Cutler Formation The Cutler Formation crops out in the southern part of the Chama Basin, located in the southern part of the Aztec Quadrangle (Pl. 10). It is present in the subsurface in the remainder of the quadrangle. Cutler outcrops consist of interbedded sandstone, siltstone, and shale and locally, thin beds of 32 nodular limestone. It is approximately 150 m (500 ft) thick in the southern part of the quadrangle and thickens to about 750 m (2500 ft) in the northern part of the quadrangle. The Cutler thins and grain size decreases from north to south through the quadrangle. South of latitude 36° north the Cutler changes facies and has been divided into the Abo and Yeso Formations. Source area for Cutler sediments is believed to be the ancient Uncompaghre Uplift or San Luis Uplift, located in southern Colorado and northern New Mexico (Baars, 1974; Campbell and Steele-Mallory, 1979). In the southern part of the quadrangle the Cutler is divided into two distinct, but gradational, lithologic sequences (basal and upper parts) which reflect deposition in different sedimentary environments. The basal part of the Cutler is characterized by buff to red-brown arkose, arkosic sandstone, and shale and by lesser amounts of gray-green sandstone, gray-green to black shale, gray-green limestone-pebble conglomerate, and thin nodular limestone beds. Carbonaceous material, as both finely disseminated and larger fragments, is found only in the gray-green sandstone, siltstone, shale, and limestone-pebble conglomerate; it is absent in the red-brown rocks. The sandstones of the basal part are lenticular in shape, commonly forming multilateral bodies which have a sheet-like geometry and a high widthto-thickness ratio (Timmer, 1976). Individual sand bodies vary in thickness from 3 to 13m (10-42 ft). The sandstones are thinly laminated, ripplelaminated, or trough cross-stratified. Soft-sediment deformation features, which include contorted laminae and ripples and incipient to well developed ball and pillow structures, are locally common. These features suggest that deposition took place while the sands were saturated and that sedimentation was probably rapid. Sandstone channels are typically enclosed by finer grained, micaceous sandstone, shales, or siltstone. Mottling of the silty mudstones is common. Locally the siltstones and shales may contain thin coaly horizons. The basal part of the Cutler Formation is believed to have been deposited in a variety of marginal-marine or coastal-plain environments. Ynis interpretation is based on the recognition of distributary-channel systems (which have a dominantly southward direction of transport), crevasse-splay sandstones, and coaly and highly carbonaceous siltstones and shales representing deposition in poorly drained swamps or on levees. In addition, sedimentary structures found in these rocks are consistent with those found in modern marginal marine-fluvial systems. Throughout the area, sedimentation appears to have been continuous from Pennsylvanian to Permian time. The base of the Cutler is arbitrarily placed at the top of the last limestone bed of the Pennsylvanian Madera Limestone that contains datable marine fossils. Thus, it is conceivable that the basal, fine-grained sandstone and shale sequence of the Cutler may, in fact, be of marine origin. At least two upward-coarsening sequences of rocks are present above the last Pennsylvanian marine limestone. These upward-coarsening cycles, which terminate with thick, coarser grained, channel sandstones, are 33 indicative of a prograding sequence with a fluctuating shoreline. The upper part of the Cutler Formation consists of dominantly orange, medium- to coarse-grained sandstone and mudstone. It was deposited by fluvial systems on flood plains which were further inland from marginal marine environments. A large number of uranium occurrences have been found in the Cutler Formation in the southern part of the Aztec Quadrangle (Chenoweth, 1974b; Timmer, 1976; App. A; Pl. 2). The occurrences are concentrated in three clusters: south of Gallina (Brown, 1955);. near Coyote (Baltz, 1955); and near Jarosa (Baltz, 1955; Timmer, 1976). In all occurrences examined, the uranium is in the basal 60 m (200 ft) of the Cutler in a variety of gray-green or black rock types which have been described above. The age and extent of uranium mineralization is unknown. All known uranium occurrences in the Cutler Formation are at the outcrop; the effects of leaching by ground water subsequent to original deposition are unknown. Reconnaissance studies of the basal part of the Cutler Formation indicate that these rocks were originally deposited under reducing conditions~ This interpretation is based on the remnants of reduced-rock sequences which grade laterally and vertically into oxidized equivalents. Post depositional oxidation of the originally reduced sediments by subsequent ground-water flow has decreased in size the areas of more favorable ground within the Cutler. Uranium in the Cutler is. associated with copper minerals, vanadium, hematite, and limonite, and locally silver (Apps. B, C). The uranium was deposited from ground water in reduced rock that contains sparse to abundant amounts of fossil carbonized plant matter. At most localities, the manner in which the uranium occurs is unknown because discreet crystals were not observed. The uranium may be adsorbed onto the surface of the fossil carbonized plant matter, iron oxides or clay minerals or it may occur as individual minerals. At a few localities, yellow to yellow-green, oxidized uranium minerals were visible. Vizcaino and others (1978) reported the presence of carnotite and andersonite at two of the prospects. Using the current criteria of favorability, the Cutler Formation in the Aztec Quadrangle is considered unfavorable for containing the required minimum endowment of uranium occurrences totalling 100 metric tons at 0.01 percent u3o8 or greater. Although many of the occurrences contain the required grade of uranium, it is doubtful that the aggregate tonnage requirement could be met. A few of the occurrences have been mined in the past, with tonnages of mined ore being small (Vizcaino and others, 1978, App. C). Although the Cutler Formation in the Aztec Quadrangle has been considered unfavorable for containing the required amount of uranium, it is probable that additional uranium occurrences are present in the subsurface elsewhere in the quadrangle where similar marginal marine environments are present. This concept is reinforced by the presence of uranium occurrences in marginal marine rocks in the Cutler Formation in the Cortez Quadrangle (Campbell and Steele-Mallory, 1979). Any deposits encountered during subsurface exploration would likely be 34 comparable in size and grade to those found at the surface. It is unlikely that any single or cluster of deposits would contain the required endowment in a minable configuration. (J. L. R.) TRIASSIC FORMATIONS Members of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation present in the Aztec Quadrangle include an upper informal siltstone member, the Petrified Forest Member, the Poleo Sandstone Lentil, the Salitral Shale Tongue, an informal sandstone member, and the Agua Zarca Sandstone Member, at the base. The siltstone member, mostly reddish brown clayey siltstone, is present only in a small area north of the Jemez Mountains. It is as thick as 70 m (230 ft) near Ghost Ranch. It grades southwestward into the Petrified Forest Member. The Petrified Forest Member, with a thickness as great as 215m (710 ft), is the major unit of the Chinle in this quadrangle. It is indistinguishable from the Salitral Tongue where the intervening Poleo Sandstone Lentil is missing, and rests on Permian rocks where the Agua Zarca Sandstone Member and the informal sandstone member are missing. The Petrified Forest Member consists of reddish-brown, green, and purple claystones with a few red to light-gray sandstone lenses. The several sandstone members, at or near the base of the Chinle, individually reach thicknesses of 30-45 m (100-150 ft), but none is present everywhere. They consist of red purple, and light-gray to yellowishgray sandstone which includes beds and lenses of conglomerate, siltstone, and claystone. Deposition was by streams flowing variously to the northeast, to the northwest, and to the southwest from several highland source areas thought to have been in southern Arizona, in southern New Mexico, and in the Uncompaghre Highland in western Colorado. The Chinle crops out over a rather large area in the southern part of the Chama Basin, along the west side of San Pedro Mountain, and in the valleys of Canones and Chavez Creeks (Pl. 10). Although the Chinle thins northeastward onto a highland source area, it is missing in the northeast part of the quadrangle, probably largely as a result of post-Chinle erosion. It thickens in the subsurface in the southwest corner of the quadrangle to over 424 m (1,400 ft). In places where the Chinle is thickest, the lower part contains abundant volcanic material derived from sources to the south. In the Aztec Quadrangle, however, the lowest units are derived from nearby nonvolcanic sources to the north and east, and correlate with beds in the well-developed Chinle section that are nearly at the top of the richly volcanic zone. The high gradient, with lack of ponding, and consequent high flow-through rate for ground water in the Chinle in this quadrangle, oxidized the entire Chinle. This destroyed most of the included organic material and carried any uranium that might have leached from volcanic-rich beds downdip and out of the quadrangle, thus the Chinle is considered unfavorable. (R. E. T.) 35 JURASSIC FORMATIONS Formations of Jurassic age that are considered unfavorable in the Aztec Quadrangle include, in ascending order, the Entrada Sandstone, Todilto Limestone~ and the overlying lower member (Ridgley, 1977) of the Morrison Formation. The general lack of uranium occurrences, radioactivity and unfavorable lithologies and environments of deposition of these formations have excluded them from the favorable category. The Entrada Sandstone (Gilledy and Reeside, 1928) in the Aztec Quadrangle consists of 18-100 m (60-330 ft) high-angle crossbedded, light-reddish-orange, medium-to fine-grained, well-rounded to subrounded, well-sorted, quartzose sandstone and mediu~ to fine-grained, massive to parallel- and ripplelaminated quartzose sandstone. Both facies of the Entrada are interpreted to represent deposition in arid eolian dune and inland interdune sabkha environments. Evidence of fluvial deposition in the Entrada is absent. The composition and texture of the Entrada indicate that its source was preexisting sedimentary rocks (probably the Glen Canyon Group of TriassicJurassic age west of the San Juan Basin). There are a number of reasons why the Entrada is considered unfavorable for uranium deposits. First, climatic condi~ions during the deposition of the Entrada were apparently extremely arid and not conducive to the growth of vegetation to serve as a source of organic precipitants for uranium. Second, the Entrada sediments are multicyclic and contain no volcanic constituents for a good uranium source. Third, no uranium occurrences are known in the Entrada in the Aztec Quadrangle. It is not considered favorable for uranium deposits of any size or grade. The Todilto Limestone (Gregory, 1917) is composed of a lower salinelacustrine limestone facies and an upper gypsum-anhydrite facies that are in conformable contact with the Entrada and overlying lower member of the Morrison Formation. The limestone facies is from 0 to 5 m (0-16 ft) thick and the gypsum-anhydrite facies ranges from 0 to about 30 m (0-100 ft) thick. Only five occurrences of uranium ore are reported in outcrops of the Todilto within the Aztec Quadrangle (App. A). In the Grants mineral belt, where Todilto deposits were first discovered, primary controlling mechanisms for Todilto deposits are believed to be interstitial organic matter, which serves as a uranium precipitant and intraformational folds which serve as depositional sites for uranium in the host rock. In the Aztec Quadrangle, however, this intraformational folding is not evident from present studies. Also, most of the Todilto in this quadrangle lies deeply buried in the subsurface. Exploration is incomplete and data are lacking. For these reasons, the Todilto is considered unfavorable for deposits that meet the minimum grade or tonnage requirements. Future exploration, however, may reveal mineralization in the southwestern part of the Aztec Quadrangle near the Grants mineral belt. The lower member (Ridgley, 1977), or Recapture Member (Craig and others, 36 1959), of the Morrison Formation consists of an alternating sequence of thinly bedded, light-yellow, grayish-white, and reddish-brown quartzose sandstone, gray limestone, and reddish-brown and green shale and claystone. The sandstones are fine to very fine grained, well sorted, and subrounded. They are multicyclic and were primarily deposited with the limestone, shale, and claystone in a medium- to low-energy, fluvial-lacustrine depositional environment. Eolian deposition of some of the sandstone beds is apparent. The lower member neither contains uranium occurrences nor any other evidence of favorability.· Organic matter incorporated in the sequence is rare. Background radioactivity is low. In addition, permeability and porosity conditions are poor, and there is no source for the uranium. Lateral equivalants of this sequence elsewhere in the San Juan Basin and adjacent region are also barren of uranium. Therefore, the lower member of the Morrison (Ridgley, 1977) is considered unfavorable for the occurrence of uranium deposits. (M. w. G.) CRETACEOUS FORMATIONS The Mancos Shale and Lewis Shale represent offshore marine deposition and have similar lithologies. They consist of medium dark-gray to nearly black, calcareous claystone, siltstone, and mudstone with a few thin, silty limestones and bentonic claystones. The Mancos Shale crops out in the Chama Basin and is present in the subsurface in all of the western half of the Aztec Quadrangle (Pl. 10). The Lewis Shale crops out in the southwest corner of the quadrangle and on the margins of the Chama Basin. It is present in the subsurface in the western half of the quadrangle and in the Chama basin. Although both the Mancos and Lewis Shales contain a few thin bentonitic beds that could have been favorable sources for uranium, these units are considered unfavorable for uranium deposits. Aerial radiometric anomalies have been detected in the Mancos but these seem to result from the overall higher radioactivity of the entire formation in relation to the surrounding area (see discussion on aerial radiometric data). The lack of a suitable host-rock lithology and the low porosity and permeability of these rocks inhibit ground-water movement which was required for the concentration of uranium. Rocks of the Mesaverde Group are present throughout the western half of the quadrangle and in the Chama basin. In both areas, the Mesaverde Group contains several rock units: the Point Lookout Sandstone, the Menefee Formation, and the Cliff House Sandstone. These unfavorable environments may be most efficiently discussed by grouping those units with similar lithologies. The coal-bearing rock unit of the Mesaverde Group is the Menefee Formation found in the western third of the quadrangle. The Menefee may be separated into a upper and lower coal-bearing units. The lithologies of these units include lenticular, interbedded sandstone, siltstone, carbonaceous 37 shale, and coal. The noncoal-bearing member of the Menefee is the Allison Member. It is a continental deposit that is similar in lithology to the coal units except for a greater amount of sandstone, less carbonaceous shale., and fewer coal beds. It is present only in the eastern part of the Aztec Quadrangle. Both the coal and the noncoal-bearing units are considered unfavorable for uranium deposits for a number of reasons: (1) their poor porosity and permeability; (2) the discontinous nature of the sandstones, which are isolated from post-burial ground-water circulation; and (3) the abundant supply of reducing material throughout the formation, which prevented the concentration of uranium. In the Aztec Quadrangle, a few reported occurrences of uranium in the Menefee Formation (App. C) actually occur as placer deposits in tongues of the Point Lookout Sandstone within the Menefee (Brookins, 1977). The Point Lookout Sandstone and Cliff House Sandstone of the Mesaverde Group represent regressive coastal-barrier sandstone deposits. Their lithology generally is a fine- to very fine grained, well-sorted, calcareous sandstone. These formations are not considered favorable for uranium deposition for the following reasons: (1) the high percentage of carbonate cement; (2) the general fine-grained nature of the sandstone; (3) the lack of arkosic material; (4) the isolation from ground-water flow after deposition; and (5) the lack of organic concentrations. Uranium does occur, however, in the Point Lookout Sandstone as shoreline heavy-mineral placer deposits. The deposits are very low grade and small. Overlying the Mesaverde Group formations, the Picture Cliffs Sandstone is yellowish-brown, medium- to fine-grained, well-sorted, cross-bedded, regressive marine coastal barrier-sandstone. This unit is not considered as a favorable environment for many of the same reasons as the Point Lookout and Cliff House Sandstones. The minor uranium deposits that are found in the Picture Cliffs are comparable in origin, size and grade to those in the Point Lookout and Cliff House Sandstones. The northeast-dipping Fruitland Formation crops out in the extreme southwest corner of the Aztec Quadrangle and is present in the subsurface throughout the western half of the quadrangle (Pl. 10). The rock unit consists of a few thin limestones and interbedded, medium-grained, well-sorted sandstone, shale, carbonaceous shale, carbonaceous sandstone, siltstone, and coal. The various rock units of this formation were deposited as a regressive coastal swamp, river, and floodplain complex (Fassett and Hinds, 1971). The Fruitland Formation is considered a poor host rock for uranium deposition because of the generally discontinuous nature of the sandstone, the isolation from ground-water circulation and the abundance of disseminated carbonaceous material which would inhibit the concentration of uranium. Past production from the Fruitland reported in the Shiprock Quadrangle (Green and others, 1980c, App. C) has been small; uranium occurs in channel lag at the base of a fluvial channel. However, deposits of this type are generally 38 restricted to thin, small, isolated pods; none is known in the Aztec Quadrangle. The Kirtland Formation is present in the subsurface in the western half of the Aztec Quadrangle; it crops out along the Nacimiento Uplift and in the southwest corner of the quadrangle (Pl. 10). It consists of two main lithologies: (1) upper and lower gray shales with thin interbeds of lenticular fine-grained sandstone; and (2) medium- to fine-grained, poorly sorted, lenticular sandstone with interbedded shale called the Farmington Sandstone Member. The depositional environment of the Kirtland Shale is a coastal-plain sequence with levee, floodplain, and aggrading-stream deposits. Both lithologies in the Kirtand Shale are considered unfavorable environments for uranium deposits. The upper and lower shale units lack the porosity and permeability for ground-water circulation and the interbedded sandstones are too thin and discontinuous to make suitable host rock. The Farmington Sandstone Member contains thicker and more continuous sandstones; however, the transmissivity is greatly reduced by an intergranular clay content of as much as 20 percent (Fassett and Hinds, 1971). In addition, the Farmington Sandstone was blocked from post-burial ground-water movement by the upper and lower shale units. The Animas Formation crops out along the northern part of the western limb of the Archuleta Anticlinorium (Pls. 10, lOA). The majority of the Animas Formation present in the quadrangle is the upper member (Upper Cretaceous? and Tertiary) which consists of fine- to coarse-grained, fluvial, conglomeratic, andesitic sandstone beds; scattered, thin, interbedded shale beds; and thin coal beds. r.~e southern limit of the Animas is uncertain; however, structural and lithologic relationships indicate a lateral gradation and interfingering into the Tertiary Nacimiento Formation, with a gradual compositional change from abundant andesitic material in the north to no andesitic material in the south (Fassett and Hinds, 1971; Baltz and others, 1966). This indicates that the Animas is a less mature deposit of the same fluvial system that deposited the Nacimiento Formation. The predominance of a very permeable conglomeratic coarse grained andesitic lithology in the Animas Formation and the exposure to oxygenated, acidic surface waters make this formation a likely source for mobile uranium but unfavorable for uranium deposition. This is further supported by the lack of occurrences despite the extensive area of outcrop and substantial subsurface drilling. It should be noted that the interfingering finer grained facies of the Nacimiento Formation contains several favorable characteristics for uranium deposition and is discussed separately under Tertiary FormationsNacimiento Formation. (R. S. Z.) Dakota Sandstone. The Dakota Sandstone of Late and Early (?) Cretaceous age in the Aztec Quadrangle crops out marginal to the San Juan and Chama Basins and is 39 comprises three lithologically distinctive units (Ridgley, 1977). The basal unit consists predominantly of conglomerate and sandstone. The middle unit is characterized by sandstone and carbonaceous shales and siltsones. The upper unit is composed of fine-grained sandstone. The Dakota was deposited in three somewhat different but transitional environments. The basal unit was deposited under dominantly fluvial conditions, whereas the middle unit was deposited in mixed fluvial and shallow-marine environments. The upper unit was deposited in a variety of near-shore littoral environments. Two uranium occurrences are present in the basal unit of the Dakota near the contact with the underlying Burro Canyon Formation. In that the Burro Canyon is known to contain uranium deposits, it is likely that the source of uranium for the Dakota occurrences was the Burro Canyon. Thus, these Dakota uranium occurrences may be similar to Dakota uranium deposits in the adjacent Gallup and Albuquerque Quadrangles, which apparently were derived from the underlying uranium-rich Morrison Formation (Pierson and Green, 1977). The Dakota Sandstone is not considered favorable for uranium deposits of minimum grade and tonnage because of the lack of surface and subsurface.evidence for uranium concentrating processes. Geologically, the formation contains a limited degree of favorability in that it is similar to the Dakota discussed in the adjacent Albuquerque and Gallup Quadrangles (Green and others, 1980a, b). (M. w. G.) TERTIARY FORMATIONS Tertiary igneous rocks are found within three distinct volcanic fields, namely the San Juan, Taos Plateau, and Jemez Mountain Volcanic Fields (Pl. 10C). Although all of these volcanic fields have undergone a similar Tertiary history, only the Jemez Volcanic Field contains significant uranium occurrences which are located in the Albuqueruque Quadrangle to the south (Green and others 1980a, App. C). There are no known uranium occurrences in the Tertiary volcanics of the Aztec Quadrangle. However, there are a few hydrogeochemical water and stream-sediment anomalies in samples from drainages of Tertiary volcanics (see areas V, VI, IX and X on Pls. 4, 4A). The most concentrated group of anomalous sediment and water samples includes eight samples along or near Polvadera Creek in the Jemez Volcanic Field. They are found in drainages of the Tschicoma Formation which contains a number of flows and pyroclastics. A few other anomalous samples are also found scattered within the Brazos Uplift area (Pls. 4, 4a). The small uranium concentrations in these samples and the small numbers of anomalous HSSR samples are not enough, however, to consider the Tertiary volcanics favorable for uranium deposits that meet the minimum grade and tonnage requirements. However, these volcanics may have served as a source for uranium in adjacent favorable sedimentary formations and environments. With the exception of the Ojo Alamo Sandstone, which is considered a favorable environment for uranium deposits, and the Nacimiento and San Jose 40 Formations, which are considered to have limited favorability, other Tertiary sedimentary rocks of the quadrangle are considered poor potential host rocks for uranium deposits. These rocks lack significant quantities of organic material to serve as a uranium precipitant. It is postulated that insufficient time had elapsed to yield a sufficiently large uranium deposit. There is a possibility, therefore, that uranium deposits may be forming in some Tertiary units at the present time. (V. P. B. and P. G. L. S.) Nacimiento Formation The Nacimiento Formation crops out in an irregular pattern from near Cuba, New Mex. on the east side of the San Juan Basin, to the Farmington area in the northern part of the basin (Pl. 10). It is absent south of this outcrop belt and in the Chama Basin due either to erosion or nondeposition. In the northern part of the San Juan Basin, the Nacimiento changes facies and grades laterally northward into the Animas Formation. The contact between the Nacimiento and underlying Ojo Alamo Sandstone is gradational and intertonguing. Tne contact between the Nacimiento and overlying San Jose Formation is an angular unconformity. Thickness of the Nacimiento is variable. It ranges from 240-260 m (800850 ft) in the southern part of the outcrop belt to at least 530 m (1750 ft) in the northern part of the San Juan Basin. This southward thinning is a result of depositional thinning and pre-Eocene erosion. Lithologically, the Nacimiento Formation is characterized by two different, but laterally gradational, facies. In the southern part of the outcrop belt, the Nacimiento consists of purple, gray, and olive-green clayey shale and siltstone; lenticular, fine- to coarse-grained sandstone; and locally it contains thin coaly or lignitic beds. Siltstone and clayey shale are more abundant than sandstone. Laterally, individual sandstone beds are wholly enclosed within shale beds; vertically, several fining-upward sequences of sandstone, siltstone, clayey shale, and coal are present (Baltz, 1967, Fig. 10). To the north of the southern outcrop belt, the proportion of sandstone in the formation increases. In this area, the lower part of the formation consists of thick, fine- to coarse-grained sandstone and interbedded gray and olive-green carbonaceous shale. Sandstones in this part of the formation contain coarse angular grains, fine- to medium-grained, well rounded sand, and rounded pebbles. These constituents represent a mixture of first-cycle sediments derived from Precambrian rocks and multi-cycle sediments from Cretaceous and older rocks eroded from the Four Corners Platform and adjacent areas (Baltz, 1967). The middle part of the formation is characterized by gray and olive-green shale and lenticular sandstone. The upper part of the formation contains conglomeratic, coarse-grained, arkosic sandstone interbedded with gray and olive-green shale. It was derived from highlands to the north and northeast of the San Juan Basin (Baltz, 1967). This upper sequence of lithologies is absent farther south as a result of pre-Eocene 41 erosion. The lower part of the Nacimento Formation was deposited in low energy fluvial environments at the distal parts of a large alluvial-fan system. The presence of coal beds indicates that part of the area of deposition was poorly drained or swampy. Fossil fish, aquatic lizards, crocodiles, and turtles indicate the presence of lakes. The upper, coarse-grained facies of the Nacimiento Formation was deposited by somewhat higher energy, fluvial systems of a separate alluvial fan complex. Using DOE's criteria for favorability, the Nacimiento Formation is considered unfavorable in that there is no satisfactory evidence that processes of uranium concentration could be reasonably expected to have produced deposits containing the minimum endowment of uranium occurrences totalling 100 metric tons of at least 0.01 percent U)o 8 • Although the Nacimento Formation is considered unfavorable by DOE s standards, it does in fact, exhibit some criteria considered favorable for the occurrence of uranium. This evaluation is based on the presence of favorable host rock properties and characteristics, the low dip of the beds and the presence of reductants in the form of carbonaceous material, and a generally favorable geologic setting. In addition, there are numerous scattered uranium anomalies present in the southern and western parts of the outcrop area. These anomalies have been delineated by hydrogeochemical studies (Pl. 4) and aerial radiometric studies in this and adjacent quadrangles (Green and others, 1980a, Pl. 3, Green and others, 1980c, Pl. 3). The radioactivity is associated with carbonaceous material in limonitic sandstone (Hilpert, 1969) and the source of the uranium is unknown. The uranium appears to have been deposited from oxidizing, uraniferous ground water. The lack of known large areas of uranium mineralization in the Nacimiento Formation suggests that only small amounts of uranium have been available to the ground-water system. (J. 1. R.) San Jose Formation The San Jose Formation of Eocene age crops out in an irregular pattern from near Cuba, New Mex., to the area northeast of Farmington, New Mex. (Pl. 10). It is absent south of this outcrop belt and in the Chama Basin due to erosion and nondeposition. The San Jose is the surface formation in the north-central part of the San Juan Basin. In this area, the San Jose is divided into four members. In ascending order, they are the Cuba Mesa Member, Regina Member, Llaves Member, and Tapicitos Member. The Cuba Mesa Member crops out in the southern part of the quadrangle and consists primarily of conglomeratic, arkosic sandstone. The sandstones are coarse- to very coarse grained and composed of first-cycle subangular quartz and feldspar grains and chert. Pebbles in the conglomerate range in size from granule to cobble. They are mainly of quartzite and quartz, but may also be of granite, chert, and volcanic rock (Baltz, 1967). Silicified and carbonized logs are common. The sandstones are also cr6ssbedded and form laterally persistent bodies; individual sand bodies have scour bases. Intertonguing 42 with gray, green, and red shale and thin, friable, white sandstone of the Regina Member is common. Where shale and sandstone beds of the Regina Member wedge,out, the Cuba Mesa Member consists of vertically stacked sandbodies which may be as much as 100 m (328 ft) thick. The sandstones of the Cuba Mesa Member are stream-channel deposts formed on a large alluvial fan whose source area was in the Brazos and Sangre de Cristo uplifts to the northeast (Baltz, 1967). The Regina Member consists of a thick sequence of clayey shale and siltstone, friable to indurated sandstone, and local ash beds. Carbonaceous material occurs both as fragments and disseminations and is locally abundant, especially in the finer grained facies. Shaly beds in the basal part of the formation are typically gray, tan, or olive gray, and those in the upper part are pale red to maroon. Sandstones are white, buff, gray or brown in color and are lenticular in shape. The Regina Member was deposited in fluvial and lacustrine environments. Fossil fauna from the lower part of the member indicate the presence of swampy conditions and those from the upper part are indicative of savanna-like conditions. Intertonguing of the Regina Member with the underlying Cuba Mesa Member and with the overlying Llaves Member is common. Along the east side of the San Juan Basin, the Regina Member unconformably overlies the Cuba Mesa Member. This unconformable relation is confined to the basin margin and is related to tectonic events associated with the emergence of the Nacimiento uplift. Much of the Regina Member consists of detritus of Cretaceous and older rocks which were eroded from the Nacimiento uplift (Baltz, 1967). The Llaves Member is composed mainly of massive, arkosic, conglomeratic sandstone and minor amounts of red and variegated shale and sandstone. The sandstones are buff, tan, or gray in color and composed of first-cycle, angular to subangular quartz and feldspar grains. They are crossbedded and lenticular in shape. Individual channels merge laterally, forming persistent sandstone bodies having a sheet-like geometry. Pebbles in the conglomerate are well rounded, and consist of metaquartzite, granite, gneiss, schist, chert, volcanic rock, sandstone, or shale. The Llaves Member consists of fluvial sediments deposited on a large northwest-trending alluvial-fan system whose source area was in the vicinity of the Brazos Uplift (Baltz, 1967). The direction of transport was determined by a decrease in grain size from east to west across the north-central part of the San Juan Basin and by the composition of the granitic pebbles. The composition of these pebbles is similar to that of granites of the Brazos Uplift and unlike that of granites in the Nacimiento Mountains. Along the southern margin of the fan system, coarse clastics of the Llaves Member interfinger with finer sediments of the Regina Member (a partial lateral equivalent), whose source area was in the Nacimiento Uplift, and with the overlying Tapicitos Member. Along the northern margin of the fan, coarse clastics of the Llaves intertongue with finer sediments of the unnamed shale and sandstone sequence, whose source area was most likely the San Juan Dome, located in southwestern Colorado (Baltz, 1967). \~ere the Regina Member wedges out to the north, the Llaves Member conformably overlies the Cuba Mesa 43 Member. In the northern part of the area, the lower part of the Llaves interfingers laterally with an unnamed shale and sandstone sequence that is similar in lithology and stratigraphic position to the Regina Member (Baltz, 1967). The Tapicitos Member is composed of red, maroon, and variegated shale, siltstone, and mudstone, and intercalated beds of friable white and yellow sandstone. The sandstones are coarse grained, locally conglomeratic, crossbedded, and lenticular in shape. Many are similar in composition to sandstones of the Llaves Member. From its outcrop area in the north-central part of the San Juan Basin, the Tapicitos interfingers laterally to the east and north with the upper part of the Llaves Member. The Tapicitos consists of stream-channel and flood-plain deposits formed along the western margin of the same fan system that deposited the coarser facies of the Llaves Member to the east (Baltz, 1967). A small number of uranium anomalies in the San Jose Formation have been delineated by field reconnaissance and hydrogeochemical studies (App. A, Pl. 4). Preliminary results of the aerial radiometric survey also indicate the presence of one radioactivity anomaly in the San Jose Formation along the east side of the San Juan Basin (Pl. 3). At the outcrop, radioactivity is associated with lignite and carbonaceous material and with limonite staining. Alteration of the host rock includes oxidation of iron-bearing minerals and alteration of feldspar to kaolinite. The uranium appears to be locally confined to low-energy fluvial rocks deposited in poorly drained environments, such as those found in swamps or lakes. The association of uranium with carbonaceous material suggests that locally reducing conditions in the vicinity of the carbonaceous trash was sufficient to precipitate uranium from the ground water. Using the DOE's criteria for favorability, the San Jose is not considered favorable. This evaluation is based on the lack of any known large radioactivity anomalies at the surface and in the subsurface. Most of the radioactive anomalies detected were on the order of 2-3 times background. There is no satisfactory evidence that the processes of uranium concentration could be expected to have produced deposits of the minimum required grade and tonnage and no economic deposits are present. In spite of the lack of evidence for mineralizing processes, the San Jose does exhibit many geologic characteristics of a favorable host rock. Some of these characteristics include: (1) the presence of first-cycle sediments deposited above an unconformity; (2) the presence of laterally persistent sandstone beds possessing good permeability; (3) the presence of carbonaceous material to act as a reductant; and (4) a generally favorable geologic setting. The lack of large radioactive anomalies may reflect low concentrations of uranium in the system. The subsurface of the San Jose remains essentially unevaluated for uranium. If uranium deposits do exist in the subsurface, it is speculated that they would be similar in type and origin to those found in the Ojo Alamo. (J. L. R.) 44 QUATERNARY VOLCANIC ROCKS Quaternary volcanic rocks are located in small outcrops within the eastern portion of the Aztec Quadrangle (Pl. 10). They include an old basalt unit, a rhyolite-tuff-rhyolite flow sequence, and a younger basalt unit. There is no evidence to indicate the presence of uranium occurrences that would meet the minimum grade-tonnage specifications. (P.G.L.S.) UNEVALUATED ENVIRONMENTS With the exception of unconsolidated surficial deposits and part of the Burro Canyon(?) Formation, all formations and environments in the Aztec Quadrangle were evaluated to a depth of 1500 m (5000 ft) as specified in the terms of the contract with DOE and insofar as available data and time have allowed. Evaluations were restricted in some areas by the lack of subsurface data and the reluctance of some property owners to have surveys conducted on their lands. In addition, some of the evaluation has been hampered by the late arrival of HSSR and aerial radiometric data. As a result, field checking of parts of these data was not completed. Ho\vever, t~e areal extent of exposure of most of the formations and environments is great enough for a relatively complete evaluation using field geologic methods. Also unevaluated is that portion of the Burro Canyon(?) Formation present in the subsurface in the northern and central parts of t~e Chama Basin. In these areas the Burro Canyon(?) remains essentially unevaluated due primarily to the lack of drilling information. (M. w. G.) AERIAL RADIOMETRIC DATA The airborne gamma-ray spectrometer and magnetometer survey for the Aztec Quadrangle was conducted by Aero Service Division of Western Geophysical Company of America during the winter of 1979. Preliminary flight-line profiles were received by the USGS in January 1980 for preliminary quadrangle evaluation. Plate 3 is a preliminary analysis by USGS personnel. Final copies of company analyses and reports will be released when available. The analysis of aerial radiometric data of the Aztec Quadrangle was made by visual inspection of the raw-data flight-line profiles. No statistical manipulations were performed. Criteria used to place locations of anomalies on flight lines on Plate 3 were: (1) high peaks in the Bi, Bi/Th, and Bi/K profiles; and (2) corresponding low areas in the Th, K, and Th/K profiles. Much of the Aztec Quadrangle had relatively high background radiation levels. High intensity peaks were rare, but there were some peaks that plotted in the Mancos Shale that were broad and covered a relatively large area. Those peaks indicate the presence of anomalous uranium within the sedimentary rocks of the Colorado Plateau geologic province. The results of 45 this preliminary analysis show two general clusters of anomalies (Pl. 3). One is in the Mancos Shale of the Archuleta Arch and Chama Basin regions, and the other is in the Precambrian rocks of the Nacimiento uplift. Only the latter are associated with any known occurrences. Other very scattered anomalies that may also be of interest do occur (Pl. 3). However, the data arrived too late to be field checked and statistically analyzed before the stated completion date of the folio. (P. G. L. S.) INTERPRETATION OF HYDROGEOCHEMICAL AND STREAM-SEDIMENT RECONNAISSANCE DATA Raw data for the Aztec Quadrangle's hydrogeochemical and stream-sediment reconnaissance were obtained from Los Alamos Scientific Laboratories (Bolivar, 1978) and were analyzed by USGS personnel to determine anomalous areas of uranium concentration. The analysis procedure differed significantly from the analysis used by LASL in Bolivar's report. The results of the statistical analysis described in procedures section for each drainage and/or geologic area are shown on Tables 1 and la. Plate 4 is an interpretative map of anomalous values for stream-sediment and water samples based on each statistical and geologic area; Plate 4A also contains anomalous values of water samples based on the uranium to conductivity ratio for the eleven separate areas. ~~ny of the anomalous sediment samples occur in drainages of the Tertiary San Jose Formation within the San Juan Basin. Very few are associated with uranium occurrences, and anomalous values appeared evenly scattered throughout the eastern half of the quadrangle. There are few anomalous stream-sediment samples either associated with known uranium occurrences or located downstream from them. Because the data were received too late to analyze completely before the end of field season, no anomalous samples were field checked. Therefore, more study needs to be done in this area to determine the significance of these anomalies. The water samples were analyzed for uranium to conductivity ratios (Table 1a, Plate 4A). High ratio values occurred in stream water, ground water and lake water. The high values correlated with high values in sediment samples. High uranium to conductivity ratios in stream water were in close proximity to the Precambrian rocks in the San Pedro Mountains and Brazos Peak. Ground-water samples showed high values in the Tertiary sediments of the San Juan Basin and in the volcanic Tertiary units. Two anomalous lake water samples were in Cretaceous sediments of the Mesaverde Group and the Kirtland Shale. Again, none of these anomalies was field checked because the data arrived after the field season was completed. (P. G. L. s.) 46 Table 1. Area No. of Samples Mean (ppm Ur) Summary HSSR Data Standard Deviation lL (Sediment Samples), Aztec 1° x 2° Quadrangle Variance Range (ppm Ur) Drainage or geologic area Anomalous Uranium Concentration Values (>2 Std Dev.) - -- I II 36 128 5.7 4.1 3.09 2.8 9.3 8.0 2.5 - 15.8 1.5- 30.00 +:---.1 III IV 694 347 4.99 3.66 2.31 .83 5.3 .7 .l - 23.2 1.5- 7.0 v 30 4.19 2.15 4.6 2.2 -14.3 VI 128 3.49 .89 .8 1.6- 7.4 Drainage off Nacimiento Fm and San Jose Fm. (Tertiary) into Animas River >11.91 ppm Drainage off Nacimiento Fm and some Kirtland - Fruitland Shale (Cretaceous) into Kimbeto, Betonnie-Tsosie, Escavada and Chaco Washes > 9.7 ppm Drainage off Nacimiento Fm and San Jose Fm into San Juan River > 9.51 ppm Drainage off variety of Cretaceous sediments into Rio Chama > 5.32 ppm Drainage off Tertiary volcanics into Rio Brazos Drainage off Precambrian and Tertiary volcanics into Rio Tusas > 8.49 ppm > 5.3 ppm Table 1. Area No. of Samples He an (ppm Ur) Summary HSSR Data Standard Deviation !L Variance (Sediment Samples) (Continued) Range (ppm Ur) Drainage or geologic area Anomalous Uranium Concentration Values (>2 Std Dev.) ---- VII VIII 20 148 3.53 3.39 .62 1. 53 .4 2.3 2.7 - 5.8 1.4 - ll.O +:- Drainage off San Jose Fm (Tertiary) into Rio Gallina (east of Continental Divide) > 4.77 ppm Drainage off of a variety of sediments from Pennian to Cretaceous in age into the Rio Chama ) 6.45 ppm Drainage off Precambrian and Tertiary volcanics into Rio Chama ) 6.15 ppm Drainage off of San Jose sediments flowing south to to Rio Puerco ) 7.49 ppm co IX X XI !J - 133 46 27 3.25 4.33 4.10 1.45 1.58 1.18 2.1 2.5 1.4 1.4 - 11.8 2.3 - 10.40 2.0- 7.8 Drainage off of Precambrian Tertiary volcanics flowing south to Rio de las Vecas and Raw data from Uranium Hydrogeochemical and Stream Sediment Reconnaissance of the Aztec NTHS Quadrangle, New Hexico: Los Alamos Scientific Labortories LA-7238-HS Table la. Area No. of Samples Summary of HSSR Data 1/ \Hater Samples) Aztec 1° x 2° Quadrangle (Uranium/Conductivity) x 1000 Values Mean Ratio Uranium/ Conductivity X Standard Deviation 1000 --- -- --- ·- - - Variance --·--~------------ Range of ratios Drainage or geologic area ----·---- I 0 II 27 2.24 2.38 4.77 .02 - 21.43* Drainage off Nacimiento Fm and some Kirtland - Fruitland Shale (Cretaceous) into Kimbeto, Betonnie-Tsosie, Escavada and Chaco \<lashes III 138 1.38 1.52 2.32 .01 - 41.9* Drainage off Nacimiento Fm and San Jose Fm into San Juan River IV 16 l. 76 1.28 1.64 .18 - 4.27 Drainage off variety of Cretaceous sediments into Rio Chama v 23 2.37 1.84 3.39 .47 - 32.05* Drainage off Tertiary volcanics into Rio Brazos VI 36 2.21 1.97 3.92 .18 - 13.28* Drainage off Precambrian and Tertiary volcanics into .p'-0 wiped out a line Table la. No. of Samples Area VII 2 VIII 46 IX X \..n 0 XI 18 Summary of HSSR Data ]J_ (Water Samples) (Continued) Mean Ratio Uranium/ Conductivity X 1000 2.3 1.78 Standard Deviation 1.42 1.04 Variance 2.03 1.09 Range of ratios Drainage or geologic area 18.77-44.11 Drainage off San Jose Fm (Tertiary) into Rio Gallina (east of Continental Divide) .28 - 75.80* Drainage off of a variety of .66 - 38.52* Drainage off Precambrian and Tertiary volcanics into Rio Chama 10 2.04 2.05 4.20 .11 - 5.97 Drainage off of San Jose sediments flowing south to Rio Puerco ll 2.7 1.9 3.67 .25 - 15.62* Drainage off of Precambrian and Tertiary volcanics flowing south to Rio de las Vecas and Rio Puerco _/ Raw data from Uranium Hydrogeochemical and Stream Sediment Reconnaissance of the Aztec NTMS Quadrangle, New Mexico: Los Alamos Scientific Laboratories Rept. LA-7238 - MS J:j Statistics performed on Uranium/Conductivity x 1000 Values. Extrem~ly high ratios not figured in statistics INTERPRETATION OF U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY HYDROGEOCHEMICAL DATA STRE&~-SEDIMENT &~ In the winter of 1978 and spring of 1979, a geochemical survey was conducted in selected areas of the Aztec Quadrangle. The primary objective was to identify areas that possibly contain anomalous concentrations of uranium. This study incorporates the results of analyses for uranium from stream sediment, and ground and surface water samples. The samples were collected by members of the USGS and analyzed under contract by GEOCO, Inc., Wheatridge, Colorado. Hydrogeochemical and stream sediment sampling was conducted in the quadrangle by both the USGS and the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory (LASL), under the auspices of the 1fURE Program. Both geochemical surveys were made independently. Stream-sediment and water samples were collected over the entire quadrangle by LASL. These samples were analyzed for uranium by delayed-neutron counting and fluorometry, and the results are contained in a report by Bolivar, (1978). The original intent was that USGS geochemical sampling would be conducted as a followup to the LASL survey and would be confined to areas of apparent uranium anomalies delineated by the LASL data. The LASL data, however, was not available in time to serve as a basis for the USGS sampling. USGS geochemical sampling was confined to selected outcrop areas of Tertiary sedimentary rocks, which include localities of apparent uranium enrichment delineated by the LASL data. Two areas in this quadrangle were sampled by USGS. In the eastern part of the quadrangle, stream-sediment and water samples were obtained following procedures described previously from outcrop areas of the Tertiary Santa Fe Group and the Servilleta Formation. In the western part of the quadrangle, stream-sediment and water samples were obtained from outcrop areas of the. Tertiary San Jose Formation, the Nacimiento Formation, and the Ojo Alamo Sandstone. The areal distribution and relative concentrations of uranium in streamsediment and water samples are shown on Plates 4B, C, and D. Each plate contains an accompanying histogram and cumulative frequency probability plot of the distribution of uranium concentration in the sample media. Uranium values are represented by symbols on the map and have been grouped into specific class intervals based on a logarithmic scale. The symbols and their range of values are annotated on the histogram and cumulative frequency probability plots. A graphical representation of analytical values, categorized into specific class intervals, permits easy observation of large variations in geographically clustered sample analyses and results in a smoothing of the data. 51 For the purpose of statistical evaluation, stream sediment samples have been treated as one group, and are considered to reflect source-rock type and character. The sediment samples were collected from outcrop areas of previously described Tertiary sedimentary rocks. The distribution and relative concentration of uranium, measured in parts per million (ppm), in sediments collected from streams draining areas of the Tertiary sedimentary units is shown on Plate 4B~ Stream-sediment sample numbers and locations are shown on Plates 5B and c. Two separate location maps are necessary because of the large number of samples involved. The sample localities are confined to two areas, one in the southeast corner of the quadrangle, and one in the western part of the quadrangle. The results of analyses, field data, and the coordinate locations of samples collected in these areas are given in Appendix B2. An explanation of the codes used in the columnar entries of Appendix B2 is included. A summary of all elements detected in sieved stream-sediment samples, collected from outcrop areas of the Tertiary sedimentary units, .is given in Table 2. The following elements were also analyzed for, but were either not detected or were detected at a concentration less than the lower limit of detection (in parentheses): As (200 ppm), Au (10 ppm), Bi (10 ppm), Cd (20 ppm), Li (100 ppm), Sb (100 ppm), and W (50 ppm). A complete statistical summary of selected geochemical data from streamsediment samples collected by the USGS is given in Appendix B4. A comparison of the median value for uranium of 1.0 ppm in Table 2, with the arithmetic mean of 1.89 ppm and geometric mean of 1.60 ppm, suggests that the uranium concentration in stream-sediment samples from outcrop areas of Tertiary sedimentary rocks is lognormally distributed. The histogram and cumulative frequency distribution diagrams for uranium concentration in sedments collected from the Aztec Quadrangle (Pl. 4B), suggest a bimodal distribution and the possibility that at least two intermixed sample populations are present •. This conclusion may be more induced than real, because of the large number of samples with uranium concentrations below the lower limit of detection. The lumping of samples with uranium values below the detection limit into one class biases the data. It is probable, however, that the grouping of stream-sediment samples, obtained from relatively diverse lithologic units into one data set also influences the statistical distribution. If the stream-sediment samples are treated as a single population, and ~f the threshold value between anomalous and background values is placed at two geometric deviations above the geometric mean, then streamsediment samples containing more than 4.57 ppm uranium may be significantly anomalous. 52 Table 2.--Summary of element concentrations in <170-mesh (88-micron) stream sediment samples collected from outcrop areas of Tertiary sedimentary units, Aztec Quadrangle Element Minimum Maximum Median Mean Standard Deviation Geometric Mean Geometric Deviation Data in percent Al 3 7 7 6.57 0.69 6.53 1.13 Fe 1 15 2 2.66 1.22 2.46 1.45 Mg 0.1 1.5 0.3 0.43 0.21 0.38 1.58 Ca 0.1 7 0.7 0.82 0.55 o. 72 1.62 Na 0.3 7 1.5 1.66 0.49 1. 59 1.38 0.5 0.46 0.18 0.43 1.46 Ti L(.002) G(l) Data in parts per million u L(l) Mn 100 As N(0.5) 18 2,000 2 50 1.89 1.56 1.60 1.69 470.89 181.48 436.26 1.50 0.75 0.61 0.63 1.76 15 15.28 5.66 14.58 1.33 700 943 .5"'0 381.7 4 881.43 1.44 1.00 500 N(0.5) B N(lO) Ba 100 Be 1 30 3 4.38 4.01 3.35 1.96 Co 5 70 15 12.87 3.69 12.39 1.33 Cr 20 500 70 86.65 43.40 78.39 1.55 Cu 5 150 15 18.46 10.18 16.77 1.52 La 20 500 100 115.26 64.55 102.15 1.62 Mo N(5) 100 N(5) 26.00 41.59 11.34 3.69 Nb N(lO) 100 N(lO) 13.93 7.80 12.68 1.48 Ni N(5) 70 21.50 8.53 19.93 1.49 G(5000) 20 53 Table 2.--Summary of element concentrations in <170-mesh (88-micron) stream sediment samples collected from outcrop areas of Tertiary sedimentary units, Aztec Quadrangle (Continued) Pb 10 70 50 43.84 13.12 41.83 1.37 Sc N(5) 50 15 15.26 5.95 14.20 1.47 Sn N(lO) 50 N(lO) 15.92 8.21 14.45 1.52 Sr L(lOO) 1000 300 290.97 149.29 260.29 1.60 Th N(lOO) 150 N(lOO) 101.82 9.45 101.49 1.08 v 15 700 70 89.92 49.97 78.30 1. 73 y 10 500 70 65.47 41.62 55.49 1.83 233.33 48.80 228.94 1.22 586.55 262.83 516.88 1. 72 Zn Zr N(200) 50 300 G(lOOO) N(200) 700 N--not detected at the lower limit of determination, in parantheses. L--detected, but below the lower limit of determination, in parantheses. G--detected, but at a value greater than the upper limit of determination, in parentheses. 54 Geochemistry of ground and surface waters For the purpose of statistical evaluation, ground and surface water samples collected in the hydrogeochemical sampling program in the Aztec Quadrangle have been treated as one population. The ground and surface waters were combined into one population because of the sparse su~face-water sample coverage, which is directly attributable to the lack of available surface waters throughout the quadrangle. A total of 180 ground-water and 6 surfacewater samples were obtained. Although the uranium data for water samples from ground and surface sources are not strictly comparable, the mixing of the populations does not unduly influence the statistical data. It is possible to detect any surface water samples containing anomalous concentrations of uranium by the normalization of uranium content with conductivity. The distribution and relative concentration of uranium, measured in parts per billion (ppb), in ground and surface waters, is shown on Plate 4C, together with a histogram, a cumulative frequency probability plot, and other statistical parameters. Sample numbers and locations are shown on Plate SD. If available, water samples were collected in the same areas as streamsediment samples. The results of analyses, field data, and the coordinate locations of samples collected in these areas are given in Appendix B-3, under the headings of "Ground Water" and "Surface Water." An explanation of the codes used in the columnar entries of Appendix B3 is included. A summary of the chemical analyses and measured physical parameters of water samples is given in Table 3. Phosphate, (P0 4 ), was also analyzed for by ion chromatography, but >vas generally not detected or \vas detected at levels lower than the lower limit of detection of 1 mg/L. A complete statistical summary of selected geochemical data from water samples is given in Appendix B4. Ground- and surface-water samples were normalized for comparative purposes by multiplying the uranium concentration in ppb times 1000, and dividing by conductivity (micromhos/cm). This procedure has the effect of normalizing the data in samples collected from different sources, and correcting for dilution effects, by giving a measure of the uranium content compared to the total amount of dissolved material in solution. The distribution and relative concentration of uranium in water samples, normalized by conductivity, is shown on Plate 4D, together with a histogram, a cumulative frequency probability plot and other statistical parameters. Those samples whose uranium content was below the lower limit of detection have not been included in the normalized data set. The locations of these samples are indicated on Plate 4D, using the letter L to denote uranium concentrations which are below the lower limit of detection. Sample MBD 530, located near Black Mesa, contains the highest normalized uranium content of all water samples collected in the quadrangle. The sample was obtained from a domestic drinking-water well. Tne conductivity measurement for this sample is abnormally low, which suggests an error in measurement or possibility of a deionization system being present. For these reasons the sample is omitted 55 Table 3.--Summary of chemical analyses and physical parameters in ground and surface water samples, Aztec Quadrangle Minimum u ( g/liter) !1aximum 1(.05) Mean Median Standard Geometric mean deviation Geometric deviation 44.00 4.00 6.60 7.87 3.74 163.80 421.65 769.72 166.86 18.38 19.96 11.08 3.07 S04 (mg/liter) 4.40 L(l) 7,873.70 N03 (mg/liter) 2.94 N(l) 106.20 Alkalinity (mg/liter) 1.88 1(7) 1,040.00 283.00 293.21 148.69 251.25 L(l) Temperature (oC) 1.59 0.50 25.00 13.00 l3 .01 4.11 12.06 pH 5.00 10.60 7.80 7.84 0.88 7.79 64.00 17,500.00 1,100.00 1,499.29 1,584.28 1,118.50 1.12 Conductivity ( mhos/ em) 2.14 Dissolved oxygen (ppm) 1.64 1.20 25.00 5.30 5.98 3.01 5.32 Ux1000/cond 3.05 0.15 93.75 3.33 6.10 8.99 3.32 N--not detected at the lower limit of determination, in parentheses. L--detected, but below the lower limit of determination, in parentheses. G--detected, but at a value greater than the upper limit of determination, in parentheses. Analyses for S04, N03, and P04 by H. C. Day, U.S. Geological Survey. 56 from any further consideration. A comparison of the median value for uranium of 4.00 ppb in Table 3, with the arithmetic mean of 6.60 ppb and the geometric mean of 3.74 ppb, suggests that the uranium concentration in water samples is lognormally distributed. This same conclusion appears true for the uranium concentration normalized by conductivity, the median and geometric means being 3.33 and 3.32 respectively. The semilogarithmic histogram and the cumulative frequency probability plot for uranium in water samples, shown on Plate 4C, strongly suggests a single-sample population. This is substantiated by the close correspondence between median and geometric mean uranium values. If the threshold value between anomalous and background values is placed at two geometric deviations above the geometric mean, then water samples containing more than 35 ppb uranium may be significantly anomalous, and samples containing uranium values in the range 20-35 ppb may be considered marginal or weakly anomalous. The histogram and cumulative frequencey probability plots for uranium concentration in water samples, normalized by conductivity, shown on Plate 4D, substantiate the presence of a single sample population. A clearly defined break in slope occurs at 20 Ux1000/conductivity values, on the cumulative frequency probability plot. If the threshold value between anomalous and background values is placed at two geometric deviations above the geometric mean, then water samples containing more than 31 normalized uranium units may be significantly anomalous, and samples containing normalized uranium values in the range 20 to 31 units may be considered marginal or weakly anomalous. Interuretation of results The LASL and USGS geochemical data show a similar distribution of uranium within geographic localities. A generally close correspondence exists between the analytical results obtained by the USGS and by LASL for water samples from the same areas. There are, however, some differences in the relative concentration of uranium in stream-sediment samples from the same localities. The uranium concentration reported by LASL is generally higher than the uranium values obtained by the USGS. This suggests the delayedneutron counting analytical method employed by LASL detects total uranium, whereas the USGS method of analysis, by extraction fluorometry, detects only partial uranium. The difference may be attributable to the presence of uranium-bearing refractory or resistate type minerals, such as zircon, from which the uranium is not totally extracted in the fluorometric method. The LASL data contain analyses of stream-sediment samples obtained from multiple rock types and assemblages. The data in Bolivar (1978), have been treated as one statistical population on the uranium concentration distribution map. This results in high uranium concentrations contained in refractory minerals in stream-sediment samples from specific areas overwhelming any potentially anomalous concentrations of uranium contained in stream sediments from the other areas. If the LASL data is separated into populations representative of source rock type, statistical treatment will produce information of value in 57 any existing areas of uranium enrichment At the 95-percent confidence level, analyses of sediments collected from streams draining outcrop areas of the Tertiary sedimentary units show a statistically significant correlation of uranium with Fe, Ti, Mn, B, Ba, Cr, La, Nb, Sc, Sn, V, Y, and Zr. This assemblage strongly suggests the close association of uranium with resistate or refractory-type heavy minerals such as zircon, monazite, xenotime, samarskite, and euxinite, in stream sediments from Tertiary sedimentary units in the Aztec Quadrangle. At the 95-percent confidence level, surface- and ground-water samples collected throughout the quadrangle show a statistically significant correlation between uranium and conductivity, alkalinity, sulfate, and nitrate. The correlation between uranium in water and sulfate suggests the oxidation and leaching of uraniumbearing sediments containing disseminated pyrite by oxygenated ground waters. The correlation between uranium and nitrate may be more coincidental than real, and suggests the possibility of the contamination of ground water in the Aztec Quadrangle by the application of agricultural fertilizers. There is no correlation between uranium and phosphate content, the latter being detected in only one water sample. Interpretation of geochemical data resulting from a stream-sediment and hydrogeochemical survey conducted in the Aztec Quadrangle is based on an integration of available statistic? established for all sample media. The interpretation is subjective. Threshold values of uranium between anomalous and background concentrations in both stream-sediment and water samples have been utilized in defining areas of possible uranium enrichment. Within the limitations of the geochemical survey conducted by the USGS in selected areas of Aztec Quadrangle, 17 stream-sediment and 11 ground-water samples appear to contain anomalous or slightly enriched concentrations of uranium. The locations of these samples are shown on Plate 4E. In general, the uranium concentration in stream-sediment samples is relatively low, but is considered to be above the background level established for stream-sediment samples in this area. At each locality, the sample type, sample number, well depth if relevent and available, and the concentration of uranium and/or normalized uranium is given. The stream-sediment and ground-water samples considered to be enriched in uranium are widely scattered throughout the sampling area. No geographic clustering of anomalous values is evident, rather they exist as isolated occurrences. With the exception of samples MBD 447 and MBD 807, the remaining 15 stream-sediment samples enriched in uranium, are also enriched in Zr, Y, La, Nb, Cr, and Ti. Thorium was detected in eight of these samples. This suggests that the uranium in the 15 stream-sediment samples is probably contained in, or associated with, uranium-bearing heavy minerals. Of the 11 ground-water samples considered to be enriched in uranium, only samples MBD 513, 562, 604, and 987 contain significantly anomalous concentrations. In summary, a few isolated and widely scattered stream-sediment and ground-water samples appear to be enriched in uranium. These isolated 58 occurrences may warrant additional investigation. In most instances, the uranium enrichment detected in stream-sediment samples appears to with, and be related to, the presence of resistate or refractory-type minerals. The overall results of the USGS geochemical survey, in the Quadrangle, suggest low favorability for any significant accumulation uranium in Tertiary sedimentary units. (K. R., R. F. D., M. R. S.) however, coincide heavy Aztec of GEOCHEMICAL DATA Rock sample analyses are found in Appendix Bl. Uranium and thorium were analyzed by delayed neutron activation. The remaining elements were analyzed by emission spectrometry. The table is organized into two parts: (1) Basic information about the samples, and (2) the analytical results. Analyses are reported to two significant figures. These results arrived too late, however, to be analyzed by USGS personnel for the folio deadline. (M. w. G.) RECOMMENDATIONS TO IMPROVE EVALUATIONS Potential uranium host rocks in the Aztec Quadrangle are the least adequately explored of any potential host rocks in the San Juan Basin. In order to obtain the data for evaluation, a long-range (3-5 years) scientific research program is necessary. This research must include the geochemistry of uranium, sedimentology and stratigraphy of host rocks, evaluation of probable sources of uranium in the area, and the drilling of these host rock units. Future assessment of uranium potential of the Burro Canyon(?) Formation in the unevaluated portion of the basin should take the form of testing the subsurface along the east part of the basin, adjacent but basinward to the Brazos uplift. If the theory of the origin of mineralization, based on the reltionship of the Abiquiu Tuff to truncated beds of the Dakota Sandstone and Burro Canyon(?) and Morrison Formations, is valid then these may be places where such relationships are duplicated. Places where the Abiquiu Tuff or the partially equivalent Los Pinos Formation come in contact with the DakotaMorrison rocks should be examined closely. Oxidized outcrops of MorrisonDakota rocks should be evaluated for the possibility of '~yoming" roll-type uranium deposits in the subsurface. The presence of the intervening El Rito Formation should be noted and would probably decrease the potential for finding additional roll-type uranium deposits on the east side of the basin. If the Bandelier Tuff was the source for uranium, it is highly unlikely that any additional uranium deposits will be found in the unevaluated part of the basin. This evaluation is based on the premise that the original distribution of the Bandelier Tuff was confined to areas adjacent to the Jemez Volcanic Field, although in reality the 59 original distribution is unknown. Additional studies will be necessary in order to resolve some of the problems of age of mineralization and origin of uranium previously mentioned. Studies are underway to try to date some of the ore pods. Results may be useful in relating mineralization to tectonic history and possible source rocks. 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Manley, Kim, 1976a, Tephrochronology of the Tesuque, Ancha, and Puye Formations of the Santa Fe Group, Espanola Basin, New Mexico: Geol. Soc. America Abs. with Programs, v. 8, no. 5, P• 606-607. ------~1976b, K-Ar age determinations on Pliocene basalts from the Espanola Basin, New Mexico: Isochron/West, no. 16, P• 29-30. ------~1977, Unpublished geologic maps of the Abiquiu, Canones, Chili, Lyden, Medanales, Ojo Caliente and San Juan Pueblo quadrangles, New Mexico: u.s. Geol. Survey, scale 1:24,000. Manley, Kim, Scott, G. R., and Wobus, R. A., 1978, Preliminary geologic map of the Aztec 1°x2° Quadrangle, northwestern New Mexico: u.s. Geological Survey Open-File Report 78-466, scale 1:250,000. Martin, J. P., and Bergquist, L. E., 1977, Study of the applicability of 3He/ 4He ratio for uranium prospecting: u.s. Energy Research and Development Administration Open-File Report GJBX-58(77), 96 P· Mathews, G. w., Jones, C. A., Pilcher, R. c., and D'Andrea, R. F., Jr., 1979, Preliminary recognition criteria for uranium occurrences--A field guide: Bendix Field Engineering Corporation for the u.s. Dept. of Energy Open-File Report GJBX-32(79), 41 P· HcLeroy, D. F., 1970, Genesis of Precambrian banded iron deposits, Rio Arriba county, New Hexico: Econ. Geology, v. 65, P• 195-205. Melvin, James. w., 1976, Systematic distribution of large uranium deposits in the Grants uranium region, New l1exico, in Tectonics and mineral resources of southwestern North America: New Mexico Geol. Soc. Spec. Pub. 6, p. 144-150. Mickle, D. G., and Mathews, G. H., eds., 1978, Geologic characteristics of environments favorable for uranium deposits: Grand Junction, Bendix Field Engineering Corporation Open-File Report GJBX-67(78), 249 p. Hiller, D. s., and Kulp, J. L., 1963, Isotopic evidence on the origin of the Colorado Plateau uranium ores: Geol. Soc. America Bull., v. 74, no. 5, P• 609-630. Molenaar, c. M., 1973, Sedimentary facies and correlation of the Gallup Sandstone and associated formations, northwestern New Mexico: Four Corners Geol. Soc. Guidebook, 18th Field Conf., p. 85-110. 72 Correlation of the Gallup sandstone and associated formations, Upper Cretaceous, eastern San Juan and Acoma Basins, New Mexico: New Mexico Geol. Soc. Guidebook, 25th Field Conf., P• 251-258. ------~1974, ------~1977, Stratigaphy and depositional history of Upper Cretaceous rocks of the San Juan Basin area, New Mexico and Colorado: New Mexico Geol. Soc. Guidebook, 28th Field Conf., P• 159-166. Muehlberger, w. R., 1967, Geology of the Chama quadrangle, New Mexico: Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Bull. 89. 1968, -------Mexico New Geologic map of the Brazos Peak quadrangle (with text): New Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Geol. Map 22, scale 1:48,000. Northrop, s. 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R., 1963, Pennsylvanian shelf carbonates, Paradox Basin, in Shelf carbonates of the Paradox Basin--A symposium: Four Corners Geological Society Guidebook, P• 65-79. Pierson, c. T., and Green, M. w., 1977, Factors controlling localization of uranium deposits in the Dakota Sandstone, Gallup and Ambrosia Lake mining districts, McKinley County, New Mexico: u.s. Geol. Survey Open-File Rept. 77-766, 62 P• Pike, w. s., Jr., 1947, Intertonguing marine and nonmarine Upper Cretaceous deposits of New Mexico, Arizona, and southwestern Colorado: Geol. Soc. America Mem. 24, 103 P• Rawson, R. R., 1976, Sabkha environment: new frontier for uranium exploration: Am. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists Bull., v. 60, no. 8, P• 1406-1407. Read, c. B., and Wanek, A. A., 1961, Stratigraphy of outcropping Permian rocks in parts of northeastern Arizona and adjacent areas: u.s. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 374-H, 10 P• Reeside, J. 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E., 1971, Strippable low sulfur coal resources of the San Juan Basin in New Mexico and Colorado: New Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Mem. 25, 189 P· Siems, P. 1., 1964, Correlation of Tertiary strata in mountain basins, southern Colorado and northern New Mexico: Mountain Geologist, v. 1, no. 3, P• 161-180. Silver, Leon T., 1977, A regional uranium anomaly in the Precambrian basement of the Colorado Plateau [abs.]: Econ. Geology, v. 72, no. 4, p. 740. Simpson, G. G., 1948, The Eocene of the San Juan Basin, New Mexico: Sci., v. 246, no. 5, P• 257-282. Am. Jour. Smith, c. T., Budding, A. J., and Pitrat, c. H., 1961, Geology of the southeastern part of the Chama Basin: New Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Bull. 75. Smith, H. T. U., 1938, Tertiary geology of the Abiquiu quadrangle, New Mexico: Jour. Geology, v. 46, no. 7, P• 933-965. Smith, R. L., Bailey, R. A., and Ross, C. S., 1961, Structural evolution of the Valles Caldera, New Mexico, and its bearing on the emplacement of ring dikes, in Short papers in the geologic and hydrologic sciences: U. s. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 424-D, P• D145-D149. Smith, R. L., Bailey, R. A., and Ross, c. s., 1970, Geologic map of the Jemez Hountains, New Hexico: u.s. Geol. Survey Hisc. Geol. Inv. Hap I-571 scale 1:25,000. Spiegal, Zane, Baldwin, Brewster, and others, 1963, Geology and water resources of the Santa Fe area New Mexico: u. s. Geol. Survey WaterSupply Paper 1525, 258 P• Squyres, J. B., 1970, Origin and depositional environment of uranium deposits of the Grants region, New Mexico: Stanford University unpublished Ph.D. thesis, 228 P• Stearns, C. E., 1943, The Galisteo Formation of north-central New Mexico: Jour. Geology, v. 51, no. 5, p. 301-319. 76 Steven, T. A., 1972, Precambrian, Upper Cretaceous and Cenozoic igneous rocks, in Geologic atlas of the Rocky Mountain region: Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, P• 53-54, 229-232. Steven, T. A., Mehnert, H. H., and Obradovich, J. D., 1967, Age of volcanic activity in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado: u. s. Geol. Survey Research 1967, P• 47-55. Stokes, w. 1., 1944, Morrison formation and related deposits in and adjacent to the Colorado Plateau: Geol. Soc. America Bull., v. 55, P• 951-992. 1961, Fluvial and eolian sandstone bodies in Colorado Plateau, -------Geometry of sandstone bodies: Am. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists, in P• 151- 178. Stone, w. J., and Mizell, N.H., 1978, Basic subsurface data compiled for hydrologic study of San Juan Basin, northwest New Mexico: New Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Open-File Rept. 89. Swift, R., 1956, Study of the Morrison Formation and related strata, northcentral New Mexico: Univ. New Mexico M.S. thesis, 79 P· Timmer, R. s., 1976, Geology and sedimentary copper deposits in the western part of the Jarosa and Seven Springs quadrangles, Rio Arriba and Sandoval Counties, New Mexico [M. s. thesis]: Albuquerque, University New Mexico, 151 P• Trice, E. 1., 1957, Geology of the Lagunitas Lakes area, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico [M.A. thesis]: Austin, University of Texas, 99 P• Trieman, A. H., 1975, Precambrian geology of the Ojo Caliente quadrangle, New Mexico [M. s. thesis]: Stanford, Stanford University. Vine, J. D., 1962, Geology of uranium in coaly carbonaceous rocks: Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 356-D, 170 P• u. s. Vine, J. D., and others, 1958, The role of humic acids in the geochemistry of uranium: United Nations Internat. Conf. Peaceful Uses Atomic Energy, Geneva, 2nd Proc., v. 2, P• 187-191. Vizcaino, H. P., and O'Neill, A. J., 1977, Preliminary study of the uranium potential of Tertiary rocks in the central San Juan Basin, New Mexico: u.s. Energy Research and Development Admin. Open-File Report GJBX-78(77), 27 P• Vizcaino, H. P., O'Neill, A. J., and Dotterer, F. E., 1978, Preliminary study of the favorability for urartium in the Madera Limestone, and Cutler and Chinle Formations of the Sierra Nacimiento-Jemez ~fuuntains area, New Mexico: U.S. Dept. of Energy Open-File Report GJBX-4(78), 18 P· 77 \.Jassenburg, G. J., and Lamphere, M. A., 1965, Age determinations in the Precambrian of Arizona and Nevada: Geol. Soc. America Bull., v. 76, no. 7, P• 735-758. Waters, A. c., and Granger, H. c., 1953, Volcanic debris in uraniferous sandstones and its possible bearing on the origin and precipitation of uranium: u. s. Geol. Survey Circ. 224, 26 P• Weide, David L., 1977, Unpublished photogeologic maps of Pueblo Bonito NW, Pueblo Bonito, Kimbeto, Sargent Ranch, and Fire Rock Well quadrangles New Mexico: u.s. Geol. Survey, scale 1:24,000. Wenrich-Verbeek, K. J., 1976, Water and stream-sediment sampling techniques for use in uranium exploration: u.s. Geol. Survey Open-File Report 76- 77. 1977, Anomalous uranium in the waters of the Rio Ojo Caliente, New ----· Mexico, in Short papers of the u.s. Geol. Survey Uranium-rnorium Symposium 1977: u.s. Geol. Survey Circ. 753, P• 73-75. The effectiveness of stream - sediment sampling along the Rio Ojo Caliente, New Mexico: u. s. Geol. Survey Open-File Rept. 78-843, 9 P• ----~·1978, Wood, G. H., and Northrop, s. A., 1946, Geology of the Nacimiento Mountains, San Pedro Mountain, and adjacent plateaus in Sandoval and Rio Arriba Counties: u.s. Geol. Survey Oil and Gas Prelim. Map 57, scale 1:125,000. Wood, G. H., Jr., Kelley, V. G., andMacAlpin,. A. G., 1948, Geology of southern part of Archuleta County, Colorado: U.S. Geol. Survey Oil and Gas Inv. Prelim. Map 81, scale 1:63,360. Woodward, L. A., 1974, Tectonics of central-northern New Mexico, in Ghost Ranch: New Mexico Geol. Soc. Guidebook, 25th Field Conferen~, P• 123135. Woodward, L. A., Gibson, G. G., and McLelland, D., 1976, Geology of Gallina quadrangle, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico: New Mexico State Bureau Mines and 11ineral Resources Geol. Map 39, scale 1:24,000. Woodward, L. A., Kaufman, w. H., and Anderson, J. B., 1972, Nacimiento fault and related structures, northern New Mexico: Geol. Soc. America Bull., Vo 83, P• 2383-2396. Woodward, L. A., McLelland, D., Anderson, J. B., and Kaufman, w. H., 1972, Geologic map and section of Cuba quadrangle, New Mexico: New Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Geol. Map 25, scale 1:24,000. Woodward, L. A., McLelland, D., and Kaufman, w. H., 1974, Geologic map and sections of the Nacimiento Peak quadrangle, New Mexico: New Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Geol. Map 32, scale 1:24,000. 78 Woodward, L. A., McLelland, D., and Husler, J. w., 1977, Precambrian rocks of the northern part of the Nacimiento uplift, New Mexico, in San Juan Basin III: New Mexico Geol. Soc. Guidebook, 28th Field Conf., P• 93-98. Woodward, L. A., and Schumacher, o. L., 1973, Morrison Formation of southeastern San Juan Basin, New Mexico: New Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources Circ. 129. Woodward, L. A., and Timmer, R. s., 1979, Geology of Jarosa quadrangle, New Mexico: New Mexico Bureau Mines and Mineral Resources, Geologic Map 47, scale 1:24,000. Wright, J. c., and Dickey, D. D., 1979: in press. u. s. Geol. Survey Open-File Rept., Wright, R. J., 1955, Ore controls in the sandstone uranium deposits of the Colorado Plateau: Econ. Geology, v. 50, no. 2, p. 135-155. 79 COLORADO _ _ _ __;or• ,. 45' - - - - --..,.--- . ::;· ···-- ~-···- lG!I' -;,r• . EXPLANATION ( \ + + + + + + J. +· - lI _j. I / /---......------:.__. \ ~- / ( MOST FAVORABLE AREA I /' \ \.. + __ j . I / / -~ / Brushy Basin Member-Westwater Canyon Member of the Morrison Formation / /- / I ., :.-----..~~~-. . . . . . . . . . ...,----.- ====~~~ -...-~--------·-=-~---~--........_~ URANIUM MESOURCE EVALUAflON ISSUED BY fHE U.S. DEPAR(MENT OF ENEHGY / \ ../ Approximate .subsurface boundary ---...., // I \ \ /? f . 1. / I // L --.._.;--) / / _i. _,. I I I \ I / \ I /'OST FAVORABLE\\ AREA ---- /I 1 Ojo Alamo Sandstone I / ~ I I I 1.~· . ! :>.• _ _ _ _ _ _..........,____________.....__ _ _ _ _ _.,.--_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 10 0 5 ........... I // FAVORABLE AREA \ I \ Burro Canyon Formation I + . -L I I I I + ---____ 0 10 20 15 15 _j 20 25 KILOMETERS ~~---~-~0·~--~~~~--~~~~-~--~~ PLATE 1.--AREAS FAVORABLE FOR URANIUM DEPOSITS IN THE BURRO CANYON FORMATION, OJO ALAMO SANDSTONE, AND THE BRUSHY BASIN AND WESTWATER CANYON MEMBERS OF THE MORRISON FORMATION Plate 1. 1979 AZTEC I I - NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO "'I1oa•--------- ------ JC' I~· EXPLANATION lOB" JC' 107" -37" URANIUM OCCURRENCES CLASSIFICATION Sedimentary Plutonic Minor prospect or mineral lii70X + 15'r- +- + + + + Volcanic Other -¢- liiii A l<il ,... Mine t1aving production o11er 200,000 pounds u3 o8 1\1 A Not visited DY 6Y . • • •* QY pv Not found ox c::.x ox -Qx Mininf;l District ---- - - ' D Prospect or mine, production unknown ' 6 Si(lnificant prospect or mine reporting minor production occurrence ( 0 () \ -------"" -. 45' ~51 50~ .. + 1 3ll'r: + + + + + + 1X ~77Y ~3 0 2X sx 10171 y liil7 04 kii!46Y ~11 liiilsx oax 12 ~ liiiJ9X 13 101' ox liiil14Y 10156 + "'i- + + 101' 5 + Eij65X + ~BOY ~2x9 31 iiiii16 iiiii17X -+- + - 15' !iij22Y 28 liiii6BX as~iiiit-33 30 32X 34X 73 101'8 59XIiiil;! 23 x liiil6 8 X 67X 45Y:,5 26 10120 IOI19Y 27 liiil6 6 iiiil21 35X~ 36liil 37 40 1iij 63X 41X liiii82X ,. _j_ lOB" "' URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY ,.l liiil61 I liiil4'1 ,,. ~---L...--~---" 15' Des 39~38 liiii64X I iiiil62 X 1:17" l 10142 "' H' "' 106" BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 0 10 10 15 15 20 20 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS PLATE 2.--URANIUM OCCURRENCE MAP Compiled by A. C. Huffman, Jr., Allan R. Kirk, and Pamela G. L. Sikkink, U. S. Geological Survey Plate 2. 1979 AZTEC NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO ~r·lr"'"--T-'---;----------17"'---------,---T"o:_'_ _ _ _ __:_,-------\1.:.:._•·--------,---r--T'J":_'------------T":_'1/ I \ I A. j_ I ~~-----r---\-\_:______-J----..J<-Im--~-_~ ~ ! \ Flight line H-----~----~----~----~-+\--~~-~~Km~~~~~----~\----~ _____ .,..Km .___ \ - -~hamc - + H-- + e Tectonic divisions Kd/Km/ _\ rdjm +-'~ Qal Quaternary alluvium Qg Quaternary gravel Tv Tertiary volcanics Lib Lobato Basalt 1/ Ta Abiquiu Tuff of Smith .L Tsj San Jose Formation Tn Nacimiento Formation Kkf Kirtland Formation and Fruitland Formation, undivided Km Mancos Shale Kd Dakota Sandstone Ju Morrison Formatio.n, Entrada Sandstone, and Todilto undivided Jm Morrison Formation I ;I ARCHU~TAARCH BRAZOS UPLIFT I F!ctp£ 1- .,. .--t .--T-ie-rr_a_A_m~la_r_ili_a~--~~-------r--------------~ _\ _Lm ~t-~~----~+-------------~----------+-----------~----------~}-----~---~~----~~---4------~---i----------~~~ - j ~ \ C:AMA BASIN \ I ~---~~~--~--~~--~~~-,,~~-=~='~~-~--~ r----.. SAN JUAN BASIN 11111 \._ Km . Km \ o· ~~------------~~----------~--~~r-----------~--~+~--------+-----~~-----t-t---~~-____2\_J~,f-~--~--------~J~Ki~~----------1-tillr-------------~~" 17 1/1 I 1 I \ I Tsj/Tn 1!411 tlill ) J FRENCH MESA GALLINA UPI 1FT Chinle Formation ·.v~ Il ) 1: I+ + L -r~--------~-------~--------~-----~---------~~~~-r,~----+-----~~~7d~-~~~~~biq~uiu~,~~-----~ + 1~- Cites and towns GEOLOGIC UNIT 1: + ' Uranium anomaly MAP SYMBOL --. + - IIIW'K~ _..Km~- \ (/ EXPLANATION ~------'----4"1!.:...'-.-.---------,-~r:··--------rilDIJ" 37" I RIO GRANDE TROUGH + -15' IQg Pc Cutler Formation pC Precamb_rian rocks Source of data: Geodata lnternatio.nal, l~c, U~79~ ..,-.· ~erial radiome.tric and magnetic su!'vey, tq:tec NTMS•.;.. Colorado and New Mexico; U.S. Department of Energy Open-File report GJBX-65 '80 -_r:_-------_-----_---_-_-:_+;_-_-_-_-----_-_-~-----~p-£-t__N_A_C-IM-IE~N~T~~o-.l!l-c-/~-c+-/""-l--L---::::=J~~------T-Ib-._,t<~rL----~~, 1----t -----_-_-----:_---_-_-__-_j-t-----:_-_-------_-----:_j-+---------:_-_-----_------ 1·/s UPLIFT \ Bll ( ( JEMEZ VOLCANIC FIELD • \ p~"" J,t_ --~ --------~----------~-----------4-----------4------~~~~..~~--J\-t~L_------i-----------~--)-----~--~~ ~~T-:- ~j{a)./ _!a/Pc .Cuba '?,•..~---'--------~.;:--------_j--,~; - .__________j'----;+,1!.----------,---,1;~,.-:::=-------1 ~ URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT Of ENERGY .!. ( - l 30' /1 IS' ,. 100 BASE MAP CONfROL FROM USGS 0 10 10 15 15 25 MILES 20 25 KILOMETERS PLATE 3.--INTERPRET ATIVE MAP OF AERIAL RADIOMETRIC URANIUM ANOMALIES , Preliminary analysis by Pamela G. L. Sikkink, U.S. Geological Survey Plate 3. 1979 AZTEC NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO ,. 1or• ,. "' 1011• 15' ,. EXPLANATION Water Samples Numbers beside symbol are (uranium/conductivity) x 1000. bnly those ratios greater than 7 are shown 12.00. * VI • v • .6.75 .32.05 Springs Stream Well Roman numerals designate areas divided on drainage or geologic units. See table 1a in the text + + + "' *10.80 IV Data from Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Report LA-728-MS: Bolivar, S. L., 1978 Uranium hydrochemical and stream sediment reconnaissance of the Aztec NTMS Quadrangle, Department of Energy Open-File report GJBX"-129 '78 i3.28 7.87 *11.60 8.80* • 7.30 *14.00 *10.40 Ill .,. + + + + + + .9.05 "' *9.00 ... *7.40 -.J1·29 IX ,.. + + + VIII + + + _j_ I "' .._3.67 II URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY -.10.37 0 5 . 10 15 20 25 MILES BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 15 10 20 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~~~~~~ PLATE 4A.--URANIUM/CONDUCTIVITY IN WATER SAMPLES Compiled by Pamela G. L. Sikkink, U. S. Geological Survey Plate 4A. 1979" NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO EXPLANATION j ~· 3U' 107' + 60 8 @@ + @ @ (1) + 8 50 ~ @ Lower Limit of Detection (LLD) -1.00 ppm Median -1.00 ppm Maximum - 18.00 ppm Minimum < LLD 45 2 · Total Number of Samples - 1003 Number of Samples ~ LLD - 550 + ,.. + 0 @ 80 @ 8 @ 8 + + 8+ 8 @ 8 8 @ + " "' 8 ~ 8 ~ u. ® c "' 0 8 8 @ + 8 "'rr 8. 8 @ 8 c + ~ <ll 8 a. + +@ + + _j_ __ --'--1 + :t + + 8 + 8 13 + + .01 0.1 100 10 1.0 1000 + U (ppm) @ 8 + @ 8 + + +@ (1) .() +8 + + + .0001 .0005 + + @> +@ 8 + 8 + 8+@ @ @ 8 8 & .0500 + .c co .c + + + 8 8. + @ + lS@ ~@ @ @+ #+ + + + ~ > + .+ . ::J 0 0 + + ++0 + <1>cv + ~1) 8+ 0+ 4- .::) _.,., -+ ., !'t"+ , ® G 0 8 ".:J I I I I I I r r r I I I I I I I I r I I I I r r r I I I I I r I I I ' -~--~- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I . 1-~~! I I I I I I I I I I I I r I I I I I I I I I I -,---rI I r --1---l.- r I I -~--T- r I I I I I ·I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 0.01 + C!l I I I I I I I I I I I I I I r r r I I I I I I I I I I I -+ti- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -r--~- -r-,- I 1 1 -+--1-- ; -,--,- Ol 0 c: I + 2.0 r:1l "0 Q) --~---,- :::E + 1.0 -~--L Q) .c E r r 0.0 0 I- I I I I I I I I I I I I I •I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I f._ r f. . o· I r r I I I I r r r "0 I I I r ..;+--l-- -4---1--- --r--r--.L_--- I I I I I I I I r I 10 . I _lI __ IL _ I 8101~ +I 1.0 rn -1.0 I I > Q) 1- -3.0 +-+- I I I 100. c: 0 .~ r I --,--;-.---,- I -+--t- - I I I I r I -1-----lI I -T--r- -r--r- -T--r-- + Cumulative frequency + +(1) + @ r:ll "0 c: r:1l en 1000. 0 + distribution of uranium (ppm)_ in stream- sediment samples + 0 0 I I .... " Q + @ I + 3.0 r I + + ++ I I I I 0.1 I I I -r-v ....... I· I -t----1- I . I I I r r I I I I I I I I I I I -~-- I I ) VI I _.l __ I I -r--t-- U (ppm) + + and I I I I r I I I I -~--T I I I I It-t- --+--~- --1- I -+--1--- r r --1--4-- r I I I I I I I I I --1--...l.I I I I I I I I I I I r ,. ' --,--r-r--1'_L_.J_ __,__.1_ . 001 + +c:l +@ + 8+ + @ @ + 0 8+ + f 0 _____ j;,:;· 8 15. 15' OF CtJERGY I I I I I I I -r--,--,--T- .9999 + + ·+ distribution uranium (ppm) in stream - --t--t-I I ++ +. .~EPARTMEIH I I .9995 "'-'+++ ...+ ++ + .9950 + -'-- I I I ._.J . ®+ 6 +;. @0(1) .9500 0 .... I I I I E + E1!. I - ' - _ _J_ ::J 13 + .7500 I r I I I I .5000 - I I I I -~---l- Cl> 8 0 8_,.. + + + + @ + 0. co @ + + .2500 I -~---+- I I -r---,- 0 ._ ++} + 8 + 8+@ + @ @8 + Q @ 8 frequency samples -r--,- --r-,- r:Jl 8 @ .0050 I I -J----iI I + 8 8 8 + + @ the 8 + 8 of analytical range of sediment 8 + Histogram @ Sample locality and symbols indicating U (ppm) \i;i6° Data in -any interval are greater than or- eqUal to the lower limit, and less than the upper limit_for"that class 0 10 20 15 10 0 15 20 U (ppm) 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~~~~~~ PLATE 48.:-'--DISTRIBUTION AND CONCENTRATION OF URANIUM (PPM) IN. STREAM - SEDIMENT SAMPLES + Samples collected and analyses compiled by the following U.S. Geological Survey per~onner: T.R. Analyses by < 1.0 0 1.0-2.0 Peacock, R.F. Dubiel, D.J. Hammond, R.J. Noah, J.J._ Irvin, M.A. Stanton, L.K. Walker, J.R. McDonnell, Keith Robinson, R.L. Reed. . ·, ® 2.0-:-5.0 GEOCO, Inc., Wheatridge. Colorado ~ 5.0-10 +1o- 2o Compiled by Jeffrey J. Irvin and Keith Robinson, U.S. Geologica! Survey (1)- In locafities where replicate value is indicated sampte.s were collected, only the highest AZTEC NEW COLORADO ~EXICO/ EXPLANATION 1,'• 60 (_!• • s Lower Limit of Detection (LLD) - 0.05 ppb Median -. 4.00 ppb Maximum - 44.00 ppb Minimum < LLD Total Number of Samples - 186 Number of Samples ::: LLD - 182 50 ;>. <.J ~ 40 ::1 rr 32.8 Q) u: ,, 30 c:: Q) <.J ~ " a. 20 10 I~ 0 0 c.s .01 .05 0.1 1.0 100 10 0 u 1000 (ppb) Histogram of the frequency di'strlbutlon and analytical range of uranium (ppb) In groundand surface- water s_a.mplos • •. . 0001 .0005 eo<1> .0050 I .c «! .c 0 (OJ 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 •• (1) ...0 a. «! (OJ ::l E ". ::l u .9500 I I I I I I I I I I I I I ·I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ·I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -,--,--,---r- I I I I _L,._..J_ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I --~--1- I I I I I I I I I -1---1- --1---1-I I I I I I I I I I -r-:-:-"1-:I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I .I -;---t- -,--~- -,--rI I --1--...j.I I I I I I I I I I I I I I --t--+- ~-l I I I -r'-r-T--r-- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ~~-I I I I I I I I I I. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -+---f-.I I I I I I 'I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ~T,..-r- 0.01 E 0.0 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -+--1-- I I _l_ __ I I L.:.. I 0 :;::: «! ~2.0 > (])0 ... "0 I I 0 .!:::: rn c -1.0 I I I I I I --r--r.-r---,-:- --J:--·I -~--L- + 1.0 -~--T,- -3.0 +-+- l J I ~I ·I lo olol<!.l ~1•1 I I _ __J_;_;_[_ I Ol 0 +2.0 -f-.--~- .9999 I ....... +3.0 -+-...;.1-- -1----1- _L.._.J_ .001 «! "0 c «! Ci5 o 0.1 1.0 10. 100 . 1000. u (ppb) n 0 Cumulative frequency distribution of uranium (ppb) 1n ground- and surface- water _sam_ples .., Sample locality and symbols indicating U (ppb) value o) Datll in any interval are greater than than the upper limit for t"hat class u --- ·~~~-:--:--:--:--...;._-----------------,.-------------------------------'------~~-.... l "\ · r. ~ i!1, • r ·; • :; •. · • . . 'j ·.: 0 10 15 20 25 MILES !"'••·•• : Samples 10 I -,--,- --i- I I -,--,- I I T7~I I -1--v ~JL!~I I I I -~--1- .9995 X • I I I -~--T- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I _-:-:1_::-:--T::I I I I I --,---r- I I -t---1-I I -+--1--- u I I --~--,.-:- I I '.) I I I . 9950 --r-"1- 00"> 0 .7500 I I -~-·I I Q) ...> I I : .5000 I I I I .2500 I I -r-,- 0 .0500 I I -1---t- --;---t- 20 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~~~~~~ 15 PLATE 4C.--DISTRIBUTION AND CONCENTRATION OF URANIUM (PPB) IN GROUND- AND SURFACE- WATER SAMPLES following Peacock, collected the 0 U.S. Geofogfcal Survey personnel: T.R. R.F. Dubiel, D.J. Hammond, R.J. Noah, J.J. and analys.es 0 Irvin, M.A. Stanton, L.K. Walker, Keith Robinson, R.L. Reed. Analyses by GEOCO, Inc., compiled by J.R. McDonnell, Wheatridge, 0 0 Colorado (!) ~ • Compiled by Jeffrey J. Irvin and Keith Robinson, U.S. Geological Survey (1)- In or equal to the lower limit, an_d less (ppb) < .05 .05r0.1 0.1-0.2 0.2-'0.5 0.5-1.0 1.0-2.0 2.0-5.0 5.0- 10 10 -20 20-50 localities where replicate samples were collected, only the lllghest uranium value is indicated s- Surface-water samples; all others ar!3: ground-water samples AZTEC NEW MEXICO/ C~LORADO EXPLANATION H!f''~·---------------------------T''~·--------------------------~3~o·~----------------------~--~"~'--------------------------_ji~D7~·--------------------------~15~'--------------------------~3~D'___________;~---------------r"-'--------------------------'-,''' l!l 0 30 0 Median - 3.33 Maximum • 93.75 Minimum .. 0.15 Total Number of Samples - 181 26.5 25 >. (.) :;; 20 ::J ., 0' 0 0 u: 0 15 ., c 0 0 0 (.) a; 9.9 10 Cl. 0 0 0 0 -1- + 0 + 0 0 ® 0 + + + + 5 .,. 0 0 0 0 0 2.8 0 0 .01 0.1 @ @ 100 10 1.0 1000 U (ppb) X 1000 I conductivity 0 0 0 Histogram of the frequency distribution and analytical range of uranium (ppb)_ X 1000 I conductivity In ground- and surface water aamples 0 ® 0 0 0 .0001 .0005 0 -+ ,.. (1) + 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l"' 0 >- 0 0 0 0 0 -+ + + 0 .0050 oo 0 ® L@ 0 ® 0( 1 ) 0 0 0 a; 0 0 .5000 .7500 :::J (.) .9500 ,.. 0 oCb 0 0 + 0 0 0 + @ 0 0 0 + + + + .9905 0 @ 0 0 0 ® I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -'1--+- -+--t-- -t---+- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -1---'- I I I I I I I I I --+--~- I I I I I L- I I I I I I I I I I _..J._ _ _!_ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I --+--+I : -y -i~-+ ~~ItI _.!I __ .l_ I I -T--r- I I I I I .1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I +3.0 +2_0 I I --,--,- + 1.0 -1--~ e I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -<---1-- -1---1- I -+--1-- -1--+ -'I I I I I I I I I I L. -r--,- -T--r-- -+--!-- I I 0.0 I -,--r.-L I I I -..j..--1-- I I ,--,- I I I I I I I I I I ~-~- ~t-L I I I I -ry --1--~- I -+-+I -,--,- -~.t I I -,--r- I I -t---1I I ...0 -1.0 ~2.0 --r---r- I -+-+- +-+ -3.0 I I I I +I · Io olol0 @1•1• I I 0.01 0.1 10. 1.0 100. 1000. U (ppb) X 1000 I conductivity @ 0 Cumulative frequency distribution of- uranium (ppb) X 1000 1 conductivity In ground - end 0 0 I I I -L-.J_ .001 0 I I --,--T-r--JI 1- ® Ol!l I I I -r-,- .9989 ® 0 0 l!l 0 ® .9950 ,. I I I I _,_I __,_I 0 0 @ I I I I -1..-..J- :::J 0 I I I I I I I -r--,--,--T- E 0 I I I I > e l!lo ® 0 a. I I .,--,- -,--,- --+--+- Q) ® 0 0 .2100 I I I I I I .a Ill .a ...0 @ 0 0 .0500 I I _.__-t_ ___,I__ ;I - 0 0 (1) surface- water samples ® e 0 0 ® Sample locality and symbols indicating U (ppb) X 1000 value conduct.vlty . .. ® @ L ®o 8 ~~;~•.~~------------------------~,,~.------------------~~------~,,I~.--------------------------~~--~J2--------------------~~~07~'--------------------------~,~,.----------------------------,,,~.----------------------------~,~.----------------------------~~o;:· URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Data In any interval are greater than or ·equal upper limit for that class BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 10 0 20 15 25 MILES : Samples corrected 0 10 15 20 25 KILOMETERS PLATE 4D.--DISTRIBUTION AND CONCENTRATION OF URANIUM (PPB) X 1000 I CONDUCTIVITY IN GROUND- AND SURFACEWATER SAMPLES and analytee complied by following U.S. Geological Survey peraonnel: 3 aamplea having U (ppb) content< the + T.R. Peacockt R.F. Dubiel, D.J. Hammond, R.J. Noah, J.J. Irvin, M.R. Stanton. L.K. Walker, J.R. McDonnell. Keith Aobinaon, R.L. Reed. Analyses b~ to the lower limit, and lesa than the U (ppb) X 1000 conductivity 0 0 0 GEOCO, Inc., Wheatrldge, Colorado ® @ •• Compiled by Jeffrey J. Irvin and Keith Robinson, U.S. Geological Survey (1)- LLD not Included In norrnallze'd data 0.1-0.2 0.2-0.5 0.5-1.0 1.0-2.0 2.0-5.0 5.0-c 10 10-20 20-50 50 -100 In rocalltlaa where replicate aamplea were collected, only the hlghaet uranium (ppb) )( 1000 J conductivity value Ia Indicated · --- W(543) 0 5(234) 21PPB0 9PPM W(54B) 0 23PPB C!D 5(307) 0 5(146) 5PPM 5PPM 0 ~~~~~ 0 W & NW(621) (1!1 28PPB 5(129) 6PPM 30 N PPB 621 FT. 0 5(3a7> 8PPM IIICuba 3~;~,.----------------------~,~,.~----------------------~,.~------------------------,,~,.------------------------~10'~.-----------------------.,.,~.-----------------------,,~o-------------------------~,.~----------------------1,,0~· URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY BASE MAP CONTROL 0 10 20 15 10 15 20 FRO~ I USGS 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS PLATE 4E.--INTERPRETIVE MAP OF U.S.G.S. HYDROGEOCHEMICAL AND STREAM - SEDIMENT DATA Compiled by Jeffrey J. Irvin and Keith Robinson, U.S. G'eological Survey Plate 4E. 1980 AZTEC. NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO EXPLANATION .. Sediment Samples (ppm) * ... /\···--. ..-"' ,.,, / ···-..."'{," _ __,. .. ,._.,~ ... .r·..- £::..6.2 ... - ... - ... - ..\ ~·......... , .•• , .• , ..-···-.. - -.. "'\,,•N'•• 9.3 iaJ'· .. ··........ " 0 Stream Chama liiiJ 7.0 b.. Artificial lake or pond liiiJ Dry stream 13.4 1\ ....... liiiJ,__, ... ),.-::::"''"'"'"--lijjJ~3.2 ··.\ + 1iiiJ Water samples (pp b) VI *• '-···..._ •* ......... '\..-. ............ "\... .. + + II IV 5A 14.9 .... ··~ ... ,.... ..·-~ ~~;J5.6 5.4 ·+ 30' Spring Stream Well Uranium mines visited in this study Towns ~ Roman numerals indicate drainage area and formations within tbose areas from which HSSR samples were taken. See Tables 1 and 1a in text Data from Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Report LA-7238-MS; Bolivar, S. L., 1978, Uranium hydrochemical and stream - sediment reconnaissance of the Aztec NTMS quadrangle, Department of Energy open-file report GJBX-129 (78) liiiJ Ll::6.7 il.6.8 Spring 5A a.~- 6.5 .+ + liiiJ11.00 67.3¥ ,.. + ,.. + URANIUM RESOURCE .EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 0 10 15 20 25 KILOMETERS ~~--~~--~~--~ PLATE 4.--SUMMAH'(_ OFANOMALOUS SEDIMENT AND WATER SAMPLES,, HYDROGEOCHEMICAL AND STREAM-SEDIMENT RECONNAISSANCE Compiled by Pamela G. L. Sikkink, U.S. Geological Survey Plate 4. 1979 .r.•.i .. EXPLANATION .• ~~o One·<oil or gas, well at location Single measured section at location e47 + + + + + + + o4S o4D .35 JO' + + + + + + + o34 .33 .32 tt3o .29 .28 .31 JJ.l 027 8 26 ...5 ....6 "25 20 +23 + " + " 8 21 .19 • 24 + + 0 16 .15 .,22 o17 JJ.2 JJ.3 + + - 15' 18 • JJ.4 .12 .13 .14 011 0 10 .3 o4 ,.. 108. •a 7 •a "' URAN 1UM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY • .,, .. 2 ,. 1 ~"·~ A .s .s 15' ,. ... 107" lO' 106" 15' BASE MAP COnTROL 0 5' 0 10 10 20 15 15 20 FRO~ USGS 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS PLATE 5A.--LOCATION MAP OF OIL AND GAS TEST WELLS AND MEASURED STRATIGRAPHIC SECTIONS INCLUDING THE MORRISON FORMATION Compiled by Steven M. Condon and Pamela G. L. Sikkink, U. S. Geological Survey Plate 5A.. 1979 ... '. NEW-MEXICO/ COLORADO -Sample locality and number •e 786 • e AREA 1 numbers are prefixed by MBC 764 AREA 2 numbers are prefixed by fVIBD 860 . 882 flltsso ~)878 .844 .602 . 0826 • 0855 0822 .606 .84 0574 • + -· • 766 ,j 31 684 846 0826 BOO 6288 • 794 e ;e 6 566(1) • 562.564 554. 5560560 • 0 + + + + + ·+ 602 sss0 522 . .524 AREA 516 514 516. • 520. • .508 OS 52 602(1) • • 5D4 750 • • • 8 664 119672 670 AREA • - '.752 500 0636 6320 2 O(N820 + 1!J1440 • • 746 662 + . 636 • 634 648 • (1)748 858 ett6o 8 .622 .fDfJ "' .810 780 •• • (1)498 196 •• 228 226• • •198 2oo 6')230 . 174 e 0854 686 • 580 5]6• . • . 582 550• (1)576 652 ~(If 586 • 584 • •544 .672 • 664 668 (1)650 1111 678 • • .680 .590 682 592 8 • 600 676 594 • ·.(1)598 • 96 • 626 • .630 8486 456 460 • • •478 11_626 • 5 3 8 - + - - - - - -......------·7;.0;.;0_.,_422. • (1) 462 ,464 158 • • . 204 162160 106 156(1,164 • • •• 454 • 134.(11132 + 072. • 07611!1 • e238 .346 244 0 8 0252 242 a316 e G 0 266 0 3o6 308 262 126 0012e 0S28 ..,.314 ..,. 0 376 .332 •o378 4000 3~~ •• ----~--------------~--~~ ..~.--------------------------~,~,;.--------------------------~,~.-~- 396(1) 39641 3901/l) 0382 15' 082 . I088 086 052. 042 roo • 026 024 176 0 164 8 166 ~50 034,. - • 046 0 188 0400 ' ' • .026 .162 CI)D46 038 044 020 """22.176 ...192 01... • ...... 194···. 0016 1711010 12 (1)190 0014 00 180 008 0 e214 222 .130 cr.1)334 336 036 '-o32 e .330 208 ··~1064 8os8 066. .064 G 220 21s Oo216 0224 • 060. ' .056 116 058 • llj)062 !19054 0116 0300254 0 302 .304 162 07o 060 096 • 078 .240 fi44 .. 10461 • 8102 oo4 092 .... 07 4 090. • 098€11 .100 + + _294 Ill 256 136 • 166 16B..,.j_ 202..164 106 452 .424 8172 .206 488 • •490 476 gs 136 .482 e 110 • 464 .670 .. URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY • .640 658 656 742 8 772. 570 ~740 Ofi . • 0798 572 790 • J 88 0 ' 842 o e <1>733 .768 77 (1)762• 604 • 876 350 0 0212 384 ,366 388_ 1!11210 0 30' 107" eoo6 0002 -------------------~,_~;-.-----c-----------------------,:1oi.B' BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 10 0 0 10 20 15 15 PLATE 58.--LOCATION MAP OF STREAM 20 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS SEDIMENT SAMPLES (PARTIAL) Compiled by Raymond L. Reed and Keith Robinson, U.S. Geological Survey (1) -Indicates replicate sample COLORADO ,. 15' ..EXPLANATION ... 107" '\"':_'---~---------'-'-,as~ 31 • -Sample locality and number ®767 . 71!;(1- .719 AREA 1 numbers are prefixed by 'MBC 791®®785 . 71-1. . .717 .713 . 647 e .881 76seJ65 767. .613 e 789 ®795 8.79.Cl>8ii·· (1) .(1)732 .734 .730 s.. • .15 ' 8 817 8 e1s + .736 791 • . 789 • •787 AREA + + eras • 775 76l• + + + ·+ • 771.769 ... 525 .523 ~61 (!;;759 + .728 801 0763 .865 .773 551 553 855 ~857 .853 507 • 505 509 • 501(1!• 503 ,;25 .823 • _l_ 4691 471. • .809 • 739 .639 .781 499 lL -. 779 (1)497 • • 8867 ®415 417 • .(1)419@411 473 • .475 e 11447 4 13 .449 445 + 441-.d "" 43s • 30' • 195 777 .633 .641 .643 • 647 2 .819 •811 813 • .751 AREA .(1)821 817 .645 . • 461 .459 685 . .683 .207 .581 629• . 631 . . $(1)57~583 591 627 + 27~ 139(1). 137 ®257 cr:os e265 .239.241 147 .,.243 145. Cll.. .. VT49 317 283• • .247 .249 .327 e 231e341 .343 0 311 313 315 307 • • e 09'1 e .293 o8a 07sl I 0 .103 .125 eoa3o97 . 101 073 0 8 0 8 8095 o'99 079 071@ • (1)083 077 @ 067 • 069 • (!1° 81 .087 0085 059. • . 115 57 • 117 061 tilL-· .055 • .053 .065 \051 .255 .245 107 .157-205 .155(1)1,. 1111 .105 "6;~1 -k + -.1)275 .135 e<1l133 • Ell . 123 •113 8 z .121 ° .251 030~253 179 185 041 • 035 .037 ff43.047 031 . 029 .025 177 23 • ~33 • •027 0039 021. .049 tl . ° 045 015 017A · - · 0 1 3 "' o1a e 183 0 187. 011 .003 .07 .009 ~"'o"'o"',----:c"i·'· I JO' 5 . AREA 2 numbers are prefixed by MBD: 0 10 20 15 10 0 15 20 BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS PLATE 5C.--LOCATION MAP OF STREAM- SEDIMENT SAMPLES (PARTIAL) Compiled by Raymond L. Reed and Keith Robinson, U.S. Geological Survey . ' -Indicates replicate sample ,-:; AZTEC,.,, NEW MEXICO/ COL'ORADO -;;·,:·· ir·'~,-~,~---------;~··-------:---'------,------:r"-'-------------,----r"l~·e=-ee-1--,-----------i~'·--~ -------~------1'"lc__·- - - - I .923 ,. I EXPLANATION ------1'::,''------------",6" 37" I e 655 -Sample locality and number .922 All numbers are prefixed by MBD s -Surface- water sample; all others are ground- water samples .652 (1) ,:55.653 + 45'- + + + + + + + + + - 45' .902 !0'- I + I .998 .617 610 -M' 0 .:91.564 563 .582 928 • ', .565 .889 .999 • .586 g(1)995.996 • 579,580 .988 8993 994 (1)554,555 ,573 "" • 570 569 572"' .616 • Ill Ill .997 .984 .981 553 .987 e982 .571 .615 I •• 561 562 .966 g983 .979 :i; IS' I--- Elsea + g985 7 ,978 .980 .978 • 542 4l + 8 46 .541 + + 55a+ e 567 + 503 501 • • • 502 8557 - ,. e:rJ05 504 ~06 509• •607 8556 551 8 .515 .(1)520,521 URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 0 10 0 10 20 15 15 20 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~~~~~~ PLATE 5D.--LOCATION MAP OF GROUND- AND SURFACEWATER SAMPLES Compiled by Raymond L. Reed and Keith Robinson, U.S. Geological Survey -Indicates replicate sample AZTEC, NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO -~·-------------I "-'r' ' --- --------- --- r 1 i i 30' _ _ _ _ _ __:,1 ~L·_ ~ 105" ___ ,. .,_._---------------- ---- EXPLANATION e Rock sample locality and nuniber All numbers are prefixed by MBC I I I I I I Analytical results are shown in Appendix B-1 I i I I I i I . r I j ... I ! I + I + + _.,. + + + + II . I I Ell 005-007 009,010 ,.rI + + + + + + + 003,008, e -I"' 001 ,002,004 j 208,209 (!) .211 I 205 .213 • 15'f-- + + + +- + + 848 101 • •202 203 850, • • q;j 204 201 + 214 • • 206,207 212 •• 216,217 861 • • 849,862 • 103 • 860 '~;.~ •. ----------:------------,/b-,.----------- - i~ --------------------.,.;,';-.-- • ~ 1C7" 210 • 102 ,. j, .. ].<;• URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY 10 15 20 PLATE 5.--ROCK SAMPLE LOCALITY MAP Compiled by Pamela G. L. Sikkink, U.S. Geological SuiVey Plate 5. 1979 AZTEC NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO ) \ 'K / /;, ~. I I ""' '- - 4.,!¥" / I ,y '~I ,_, / \ 7 f / ' ~ ~ ( y I I t I , I ' /A ,. --r-1) +"" ./ (< -1-. /r: 'li ' ( -1// 1_))\-.._.::::.....~.,~l /( I II_ ' .· ' / - ' , ; __ · ~ '-~ ~- ~ URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U, S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY .-> .. BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 0 10 15 20 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~~~~~~ PLATE 6.--DRAINAGE MAP . ' Plate 6. 1979 WEST D Delhi-Taylor 011 Corp. Florance-Federal N50 514 T30N RSW San Juan County, New MeKico El Paso Natural Gas co. #50 .SJU 29-5 NW1/4SE1/4 57 T29N R5W Rio Arriba County, New MeKico Continental Oil Company #1 South Dulcie SE1/4SE1/4 S6 T2BN R2W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico 83 73 65 . D' MANCOS SHALE DAKOTA SANDSTONE· BURRO CANYON FORMATION UNDIVIDED . CRETACEOUS -----Datum -----i-......----1=1* BRUSHY BASIN MEMBER INDEX MAP JURASSIC 37' 65 73 ·GR ·Gamma Ray SP ·Spontaneous Potential · R • Resistivity S-Sonic · C · Conductivity MIDDLE MEMBER (WESTWATER CANYON MEMBER) D' LOWER MEMBER (RECAPTURE MEMBER) SP R R 36' SP R AlbuQuerQue 107' c SP R R 106' c C' VI El Paso Natural Gas Co. Huertano . ~265. S12: T26N R10W San Juan County, New Mexico 47 Southern Union Production Co. Nickson #17 S22 T26N RBW San Juan County, New Mexico 46 Superior Oil Company Sealy Government #1q SW114SE114 57 T25N R6W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico 40 Pan American Petrol.eum Corp. Jlcarilla Tribal 72 #1 SW114SW1/4 56 T23N R3W RIO Arriba County, New MeKICO 191 Magnolia Petroleum Company lngwerson-Federal #4 SW1/4SE114 520 T24N R2W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico 34 Magnolia Petroleum #1 Henry NE1/4SE1/4 534 T24NR1W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico 195 Ghost Ranch Section S35 T25N R4E S2.T24N R4E Rio Arriba county, New Mexico CRETACEOUS -----Datum - - - t - - , r - - - - i I I 'I R R SP R PLATE 8A.--EAST-WEST STRATIGRAPHIC SECTIONS IN THE SAN JUAN BASIN AREA Compiled by Robert Lupe, Douglas P. Bauer, and Others, U.S. Geological Survey . URANiUM RESOURCE EVALUATION . ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Plate SA. 1979 .. AZTEC, NEW MEXICO SOUTH NORTH L Sun Oil Company Navajo Lands #1 SE1/4NW1/4 S25 T22N R9W San Juan County, New-Mexico 29 Sun Oil Company AH DES PI AH Navajo #1 S12 T23N R9W San Juan County, New Mexico 193 . Southern Union Production Co. Nickson #17 S22 T26N RBW San Juan County, New Mexico . 46 L' Delhi-Taylor Oil Corp. . Florance-Federal #50 S14 T30N RBW San Juan County, New Mexico 83 CRETACEOUS DAKOTA SANDSTONE BRUSHY BASIN MEMBER WESTWATER CANYON MEMBER JURASSIC SP ENTRADA SANDSTONE EXPLANATION OF LOG TYPES GR- Gamma-Ray SP- Spontaneous Potential R- Resistivity C- Conductivity Cal- Caliper S-Sonic GRSP R M SP R R R Sun Oil Company #1 McElvain Government SW1/4NW1/4 S23 T21N R2W Sandoval County, New Mexico Magnolia Petroleum #1·A Jicarilla SW1/4SE114 S18 T23N R2W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico 22 190 Magnolia Petroleum Company lngwerson·Federal #4 SW1/4SE114 S20 T24N R2W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico 34 Continental Oil Company #1 South Dulce SE114SE114 S6 T28N R2W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico Pan American Petroleum Corp. Pagosa-Jicarlila 11 NW1/4NW114 S23 T32N R3W Rio Arriba County, New Mexico 65 99 MANCOS SHALE CRETACEOUS DAKOTA SANDTONE · BURRO CANYON FORMATION UNDIVIDED INDEX MAP Cortez BRUSHY BASIN MEMBER L' M' 108' Durango 106' 272 107 37'+-----~----------------~~~--------------~ 99 83 65 MEMBER JUSRASSIC Shiprock RECAPTURE MEMBER Raton 46 ENTRADA SANDSTONE 34 193 SP R R 190 29 Gallup ~'~~--+---------~--~~------~------~--+ 108 ~ Albuquerque n 1 . Index Map Cross section lines within the Aztec Quadrangle 154 L 1.06 PLATE 8.--NORTH-SOUTH STRATIGRAPHIC SECTIONS IN THE SAN JUAN BASIN AREA Compiled by Robert Lupe, Douglas P. Bauer, and Others, U.S. Geological Survey URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION . ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF. ENERGY SP R R R GR Cal S M' To Cortez EXPLANATION Line of stratigraphic sections e162 eVIl Location· and number of drill-hole log used in the stratigraphic sections Location and number of measured section used in the stratigraphic sections Major roads 111 Uranium Resource Evaluation laaued by the U.S. Department of Energy PLATE 9.--INDEX MAP TO LOCATION OF STRATIGRAPHIC SECTIONS IN THE AZTEC AND SOME AD'JOINING NURE QUADRANGLES Compiled by Robert Lupe and others, U.S. Geological Survey a ALL UP Major towns EXF'LANATION ~ ~ Precambrian roc_ks bali' High-angle normal fault, bar and on• downthrown side~d~shed·where· .....·. location is aJlproximate or uncertain : +,/"/ ----- / ,/ I( ~UPLIFT + D o( Lagunas f I ARC:~~~TA ~ room~~ North El ~ / ~;:o t t l fa e. o~:"'$ High,..angle· reverse fault; rectangles on upthrown side . . . . Anticline showing axis and dlrec:tion of. plunge, dashed whe,-e location is·. approximate or unc.ertain, dotted where concealed Syncline Monocline Anticlinal bend, arrow of dip Synclinal bend, arrow of dip South B Vado Dome Boundary· of major CHAMA SAN JUAN BASIN BASIN REFERENCES + + + 0 .~+ + Baltz, 1967 Doney, 1968 FRENCH MESA - Kelley, 1955 .Kelley, 1963 ~aniE~y and Scott, 1978 Muehlberger, 1967 Ridgl!'lY and others, 1978 I + + Smith, Bailey, ·and ~oss, 1970 Smith; Budding, and Pitrat, .. ·~ 1961 Woodward, .1974 + + Woodward and Timmer, 1979 NACIMIENTO UPLIFT JEMEZ VOLCANIC FIELD Johnson Anticline 'r~ -----------~,;i;,~-_:_----------,!,,-,---------'------:c,J:..------)-'-----___.,,.b--~-'-L_j__~~T..-'-;J~L----------~,1,.. •. URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUHIO~ ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY ---------- .LL~----j__-------c;:loi·&' BASE MAP CONTROL FROM USGS 0 5 0 10 10 20 15 15 20 25 Ml LES 25 KILOMETERS . PLATE 1 GA.--MAJOR STRUCTURAL .AND TECTONIC FEATURES Compiled by Pamela G.L. Sikkink, U.S. Geological Survey 114. 40' 39' 113' ..., 112' 111' 11 a· 107' 108' 109' 106' 105" 103' 102" EXPLANATION ~----------~----~ Precambrian Outcrop ~---------t----------+-----~--~----------~--------4-----------~----------+-- . 38'~--~----t---~--~--------~---------+--------~---------t---------~--------~~ ' i' i ' ..I' UTAH !coLORADO ARIZONA :NEW MEXICO I : I ' i I : I 36' 104' ~-----t--------.jf-----~r------~1------i.:--~S!:!H!!:IP~R:_:O:.!;C~K~A~Z;.!T,SE~C~----..}i GALLUP '-_ ALBUQUERQUE zunl ,~ountaln Lad ron Mountains~ 'f\ 1 Magdalena.'-.· Mountains 3 0 . Milos Kilometers PLATE10B.--SCHEMATIC DISTRIBUTION OF PRECAMBRIAN ROCKS IN NORTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO, NORTHEASTERN ARIZONA, SOUTHWESTERN COLORADO, AND SOUTHEASTERN UTAH ·.Compiled by Pamela G. L. ·slkkink, U.S. Geological Survey Sources of geologic data: Foster and Stipp (196,t)j King and Beikman, 1974; and Dane and Bachman,' 1965 · EXPLANATION Tertiary intru~ives--Many contain uranium deposits B~undary of volcanic field--Data· from Akers, .. ··. Shorty, and Stevens, 1971 Grand Mesa field Other Tertiary. and Quaternary flows--Data · mainly from New Mexico State Geologic Map, Geologic Atlas of the Rocky Mountain · Region, King and Beikman, 1974; and · Dane and Bachman, 1975 I I San 1laf1111l . intruslves 0 LA SAL MOUNTAINS 0 I 1 ~ 1 1 ~~ I i I i I () HENRY MOUNTAiNS .. O 0 o% 0 ABAJO MOUNTAINS oo ~ 0 Mt.~~ ro'~P 3 Miles 4 Kilometers 0 PLATE 10C.--SCHEMATIC DISTRIBUTION OF TERTIARY IGNEOUS ROCKS IN NORTHWESTERN NEW MEXICO, NORTHEASTERN ARIZONA, SOUTHWESTERN COLORADO, AND SOUTHEASTERN UTAH Compiled by Pamela G. L. Sikkink, U.S. Geological Survey URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Plate 100. 1979 AZTEC NEW MEXICO/ COLORADO ------~-----;:~-- --·------~~ _ _::____--i'~'·------.---------r'r:'·-~----------''71~~· 37" 1. Baltz, 1967, pl. I, scale 1:63,360 •. 2. Barker, 1958, pl. 1, scale 1:48,000. 3. Barkerandothers,1974, Fig. 1, scale 1:125,000. 4. Singler, 1965, scale 1:24,000. 10 26 20 20 D 10 + + 19 +9 + 5 • . Bingler, 1968, pl. 1, scale / ( 15 15 1~63,360. 6. Singler and others, 196Ba, scale 1:24,000. 7. Singler and others, 1968b, scale. I :24,000. 8. Dane, 1936, pl. 39, scale I:E;3,360; 9. Dane, 1948, scale 1:62,500. 10. Dane and Bachman, 1965, scale 1:500,000. II. Doney, 1968, pl. 1, scale 1:48,000. 12. ~resens 13. Hutchinson, 1968, unpub., scale unknown. 14. Johns and others, 1960, unpub., scale 1:24,000. 15. Landis and Dane, 1968, scale I :62,500. 16. Lindholm, 1963, unpub., scale unknown. 17. Manley, 1977, unpub., scale 1:24,000. 18. McLeroy, 1970, scale 1:94,900; scale lrl5,840. 19. Muehlberger, 1967, pi·. 1, scale 1:48,000. 18 5 11 22 ,--------- -- - - - -- -- r- + + i.. ______ ,I -i""""9c---._ ,....------+-------,--------1------,------j"' 1 24 21 21 5 24 24 4 6 10 27 24 24 14 24 and Stensrud, 1974, scale 1:763,000. I ,... . ~7 20 ... J1uf.'h Iberger, 196.8, . sca_l ~ 1 : 48, 000. 21. 0 Ison, 1977, unpub., sea Ie 1:48, 000; scale 1:62,500. · 22. Ritchie, 1969, unpub., scale 1:24,000. 23. Santos and others, 1975, scale 1:24,000. 24. Smith and others, 1961, pis. t-6, scale 1:24,000. 25. Smith and others, 1970, scale 1:125,000. 26. Trice, 1957, unpub., scale 1:24,000. 27. Trieman, 1975, unpub., scale 1:24,000. 28. Weide, 1977, unpub., scale 1:24,000. 29. Woodward and others, 1976, scale 1:24,000 • 30. Woodward and others, 1972, scale 1:24,000. 31. Woodward and others, 1974, scale I: 24,000. 14 "'t--------------129 -------r--------: ' 21 23 ! 26 28 25 21 17 ! 10 21 25 25 10 30' "' IS' BASE MAP CONTROL fROM USGS . URANIUM RESOURCE EVALUATION ISS OED BY THE U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY 10 15 0 20 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~s-~~~~ PLATE 11.--GEOLOGIC-MAP INDEX Compiled by Kim Manley and G. R. Scott, U.S. Geological Survey NEW MEXICO/ 15' IS' .!J" l 106. --------- INDEX ,. A. Areas Managed by National Park Service F-2 A-1 B. N-1 \ E-1~ ~ rr-1 + \E-1iR \E-~ + + F-2 + ' \;1 E-1 ... + __L Forest ServIce WI J derness, Wilderness Study; and Primitive Areas B-1 San Pedro Parks Wilderness Area B-2 Chama River Canyon WIlderness Area c. Forest Service RARE II Roadless Area 0. Bureau of Land Management Wilderness Inventor~ Unl ts E. Bureau of Land Management Withdrawn Nat I anal Resource Lands and Bureau of ReclamatIon WIthdrawals 1<-1 F-2 Chaco Canyon National Monument F. E-1 Reclamation and Water Power Project WIthdrawal E-2 Powersite Withdrawals Indian Lands F-1 Indian Lands F-2 Jicari II a Indian Reserva t i on · F-3 San Juan Pueblo Reserva t I on L-1 L. + + -L Nat lanai Trails _L I " N. L-1 Dominguez-Escalante Trail L-2 Cent inental Dlvlqe Trail Other Land Categories N-1 ·Tierra Amari I Ia Grant ,,, F-1 0 00~0 0 0 F -1 URAN!Ui.l ~ESOURCE EVALUAT[ON. ISSUED BY .THE U.,S, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY F-2 [~] 0 + + + Jl' BASE MAP CONTROL FROY USGS 10 0 0 10 20 15 15 20 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~~~~~~ PLATE 12. -'--GENERALIZED LAND STATUS MAP N-2 Piedra Lumbre .Grant N-3 Plaza Blanca Grant N-4 Lobato Grant N-5 Ojo Call ente Gran( N-6 Black Mesa Grant •.;. . -'·' MEXICO/ COLORADO \., __ _ -I I ~~Cow Cam~ I I \ GU 0 Ill! '-................ ! \ SlJG.ULOAf ·" v' MOU~TAIN .~::;;1~\igo ',, ·eo. em~~., . .......... .......... "'~~~-.. ..... a • ·• c.,,..l, ~~ 'f'n~[ 0 ' Sm;:" CARSON [OWCimp .-.~' \ I ". ) // \eaf: '<:."' ' , I I I I ~,5 i I ~ _n ..\~.nt I_____ _ I I roJ~ i I + .,w I \,o:,o I I •CowCamo \ I I S"!;mill \ .......... CARSON NATI NAL FOREST ,__~__:_::::._~~~--'-r~l--'-"'-'~-·~~f--~ '-,1 I I ..._ 1 1:. ~~~, I I I I I RESERVATION c.m~ I I I I I jRm!J. IL'S~l '"""' -; ... DU lA'N "' Jt'· ' . · Gn•ells• •' o<J'el I ~tOWAMlN I I I :· 0 c....n ~· . : •• ~. 0 n I ,llu·• I I Guwoll1 ' ! ""•0 I ~an h, I ,I ,,J",-------o~00S Gas well• I ! tit C.~ 1-10 ,I ~anw" 1. o ~ iR.,thtl I' I I I I ~~~-~-~~~--~~---~- URANI UU RESOURCE EVALUATION ISSUED BY THE U.S, DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY 10 0 10 BASE UAP CONTROL FROU USGS 20 15 15 20 25 MILES 25 KILOMETERS ~~~~s-~~~~ PLATE 13.--CULTURE MAP Plate 13. 1979 ",r,-·