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Base of moderately saline ground water in the Uinta Basin, Utah, with an introductory section describing the methods used in determining its position

January 1, 1987

The base of the moderately saline water (water that contains from 3,000 to 10,000 milligrams per liter of dissolved solids) was mapped by using available water-quality data and by determining formation-water resistivities from geophysical well logs based on the resistivity-porosity, spontaneous potential, and resistivity-ratio methods. The contour map developed from these data showed a mound of very saline and briny water, mostly of sodium chloride and sodium bicarbonate type, in most of that part of the Uinta Basin that is underlain by either the Green River or Wasatch Formations. Along its northern edge, the mound rises steeply from below sea level to within 2,000 feet of the land surface and, locally, to land surface. Along its southern edge, the mound rises less steeply and is more complex in outline. This body of very saline to briny water may be a lens; many wells or test holes drilled within the area underlain by the mound re-entered fresh to moderately saline water at depths of 8,000 to 15,000 feet below lam surface.

Publication Year 1987
Title Base of moderately saline ground water in the Uinta Basin, Utah, with an introductory section describing the methods used in determining its position
Authors Lewis Howells, M.S. Longson, Gilbert L. Hunt
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype Other Government Series
Series Title Technical Publication
Series Number 92
Index ID 70179024
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Utah Water Science Center