The Mesaverde group at Sunnyside, Utah

Open-File Report 60-18
Prepared in cooperation with the U.S. Bureau of Mines
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Abstract

The Mesaverde group of Late Cretaceous age at Sunnyside, Utah consists in ascending order; the Blackhawk formation, Castlegate sandstone and the Price River formation. The Mancos shale inter-tongues with the Blackhawk formation.

The Mancos shale formed in an offshore marine environment, the Blackhawk formation formed in a mixed marine and continental environment and the Castlegate and Price River formations at Sunnyside, Utah formed in a continental environment.

Thin even bedding characterizes the Mancos shale except where it extends as a thin tongue into the Blackhawk formation. Tongues of the Mancos shale in the Blackhawk formation have in places disrupted bedding and locally contain impressions of twigs and branches. Disrupted bedding with mottling, irregular and uneven bedding, and very thick bedding with cross stratification resembling lower foreshore laminae, are primary structures common in modern marine sediments and can also be found in the marine tongues of the Blackhawk formation. Massive, wedge-shaped, cut-and-fill structures characteristic of fluviatile deposits are found in the Castlegate-Price River formations.

Particle size distribution in the marine tongues of the Blackhawk formation shows an increasing coarseness as shoreline deposits are approached. Coal particles are generally absent in the marine sandstones of the Blackhawk formation but are commonly found in abundance in the continental sandstones in the Blackhawk.

The economic coal beds within the Blackhawk formation at Sunnyside have been reported as consisting of a "Lower" Sunnyside seam and an "Upper" Sunnyside seam. Stratigraphic sections and drill logs indicate that these seams may be splits of one major coal bed and that the term "Upper" Sunnyside seam refers to more than one major split.

The relationship of the splits in the Sunnyside coal seams and the lithologic characteristics of the coal indicate that the coal swamp existed on a low-lying coastal plain close to sea level where swamp accumulations were interrupted occasionally by fluviatile deposition.

Subsidence due to compaction of underlying sediments, aggradation as the shoreline regressed as well as slow tectonic subsidence or gradual eustatic rise in sea level are factors which may account for the thickness of the Sunnyside coal beds.

Study Area

Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title The Mesaverde group at Sunnyside, Utah
Series title Open-File Report
Series number 60-18
DOI 10.3133/ofr6018
Year Published 1960
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Description Report: 70 p.; 4 Plates: 68.42 x 18.23 inches or smaller
Country United States
State Utah
City Sunnyside
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