Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Ground water in the Escalante Valley, Beaver, Iron, and Washington Counties, Utah

January 1, 1950

Escalante Valley in southwestern Utah is one of the largest and most important ground-water areas of the State, with 1,300 square miles of arid land and an additional 1,500 square miles in its tributary drainage basin. Ground water is obtained from gravel and sand beds in the unconsolidated valley fill. In 1950 more irrigation wells were pumped than in any other basin of Utah, and their total pumpage exceeded 80,000 acre-feet. Farming is done chiefly in the Beryl-Enterprise district at the south (upper) end of the valley, where it depends almost entirely upon ground water, and in the Milford and Minersville districts in the northeast-central part of the valley. This progress report concerns chiefly the Beryl-Enterprise and Milford districts.

Publication Year 1950
Title Ground water in the Escalante Valley, Beaver, Iron, and Washington Counties, Utah
Authors Philip F. Fix, W.B. Nelson, B. E. Lofgren, R.G. Butler
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype Other Government Series
Series Title Technical Publication
Series Number 6
Index ID 70178711
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Utah Water Science Center