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Open-File Report 2007–1360

Characterization of Petroleum Residue in the Entrada Sandstone, Colorado National Monument

By Paul G. Lillis and J. David King

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Open-File Report
2007-1360 PDF (10.5 MB)
Introduction

As part of the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) petroleum resource assessment of the Uinta-Piceance Province, Colorado and Utah, in 2000 (USGS Uinta-Piceance Assessment Team, 2003), some 170 oils, oil stains, and oil seeps were geochemically characterized and divided into genetic types (Lillis and others, 2003). Recognized oil types include Minturn, Phosphoria, Grassy Trail Creek, Mancos, Mesaverde, and Green River. Subsequent to that study, the existence and general locality of petroleum residue in the Middle Jurassic Entrada Sandstone in Colorado National Monument (CNM) was brought to the attention of the authors (Scott and others, 2001). Because the analysis of such non-commercial petroleum deposits commonly yields valuable regional resource-trend information, we collected and characterized the reported CNM petroleum residue and compared the results with identified oil types in the Uinta-Piceance Province.

Three samples of Entrada Sandstone with petroleum residue were collected near Little Park Road along the south edge of the CNM in sec.20, T.12S., R.101W. The approximate extent of the petroleum staining was determined by field testing with solvent, and the stains appear to be restricted to the upper part of the “board beds” unit (informal name, Scott and others, 2001) of the Entrada Sandstone between the two fault traces of the Glade Park fault.

Version 1.0

Posted November 2007


Suggested citation:

Lillis, P.G., and King, J.D., 2007, Characterization of petroleum residue in the Entrada Sandstone, Colorado National Monument: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2007-1360, 18 p.



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