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Lake Bonneville: Geology of southern Cache Valley, Utah

January 1, 1962

This report, covering about 450 square miles in southern Cache Vally, Utah, is one of a series dealing with the geology of Pleistocene Lake Bonneville. The report summarizes in tabular form the Paleozoic formations that are exposed in the mountains adjacent to Cache Valley and describes briefly the Tertiary formations—the Wasatch and Salt Lake formations— which are exposed in the valley. Most of the report deals with the Quaternary deposits.

Fan gravel and landslides of pre-Lake Bonneville Quaternary age are exposed in a few places at the edges of the basin, and well logs indicate a deep fill of this age in the subsurface of the basin interior. The sediments of Lake Bonneville comprise the Lake Bonneville group. The oldest of the unconsolidated deposits are the Alpine and Bonneville formations, which were mostly mapped together in southern Cache Valley. These formations are composed mostly of silt, but they include some gravel in embankments and small deltas. Their thickness ranges from about 50 to 100 feet.

Overlying the Alpine and Bonneville formations is the Provo formation 50 to 75 feet thick. In Cache Valley, as elsewhere in the Lake Bonneville basin, the Provo includes extensive gravel deposits in bars, spits, and deltas. It is the surface formation in much of Cache Valley. Deposits younger than the Provo, mostly of Recent age, include alluvial flans, flood-plain alluvium, natural levee deposits along the Bear River, slope wash, eolian sand, and cones of spring tufa. Several faults, active in Tertiary time, are mapped.

Well logs indicate that the pre-Lake Bonneville deposits of Quaternary age are surprisingly thin in Cache Valley, suggesting that the valley had exterior drainage during most of Pleistocene time. The logs show two main aquifers of gravel and sand— the upper one between the Provo formation and the Alpine and Bonneville formations and the other directly beneath the Alpine and Bonneville deposits. These aquifers probably are alluvium deposited during interlake intervals.

The shore embankments and deltas of the Lake Bonneville group are abundant sources of gravel and sand for construction. Much of the gravel is suitable for concrete aggregate.

Publication Year 1962
Title Lake Bonneville: Geology of southern Cache Valley, Utah
DOI 10.3133/pp257C
Authors J. S. Williams
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Professional Paper
Series Number 257
Index ID pp257C
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse