Utah: basic data for thermal springs and wells as recorded in GEOTHERM (open access)

Utah: basic data for thermal springs and wells as recorded in GEOTHERM

This GEOTHERM sample file contains 643 records for Utah. Records may be present which are duplicates for the same analyses. A record may contain data on location, sample description, analysis type (water, condensate, or gas), collection condition, flow rates, and the chemical and physical properties of the fluid. Stable and radioactive isotopic data are occasionally available. Some records may contain only location and temperature. This compilation should contain all the chemical data for geothermal fluids in Utah available as of December, 1981. 7 refs. (ACR)
Date: May 1, 1983
Creator: Bliss, J. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering Report on Drilling in the San Rafael Swell Area, Utah (open access)

Engineering Report on Drilling in the San Rafael Swell Area, Utah

"This report presents engineering details, statistics, and individual borehole histories of the 27 holes drilled for this project." (from Introduction)
Date: May 1980
Creator: Jones, L. I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Geologic Report on the San Rafael Swell Drilling Project, San Rafael Swell, Utah (open access)

A Geologic Report on the San Rafael Swell Drilling Project, San Rafael Swell, Utah

From abstract: Twenty-two holes totaling 34,874 feet (10,629.6 meters) were rotary and core drilled on the northern and western flanks of the San Rafael Swell to test fluvial-lacustrine sequences of the Morrison Formation and the lower part of the Chinle Formation. The objective of the project was to obtain subsurface data so that improved uranium resource estimates could be determined for the area.
Date: June 1980
Creator: Bluhm, Christopher T. & Rundle, John G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Uranium Resource Evaluation: Delta Quadrangle, Utah (open access)

National Uranium Resource Evaluation: Delta Quadrangle, Utah

The Delta 1°x2° Quadrangle, Utah contains rocks which range in age from the Precambrian through the Holocene. It lies in the eastern part of the Basin and Range Province, approximately 85 mi southwest of Salt Lake City. Most known uranium resource potential lies in four geographic environments in two geographic areas. Favorable environments are: (1) Tertiary tuffaceous sandstone and conglomerate epigenetic disseminated deposits; (2) volcanic hydroallogenic environments containing uranium-mineralized altered tephra in the beryllium tuff member of the Miocene Spor Mountain Formation; (3) pipes or small diatreme structures in the Paleozoic limestones and quartzites on Spor Mountain, defined as Tertiary volcanogenic hydroallogenic environments; and, (4) alluvial-lacustrine placer environments, on the east and west sides of the Deep Creek Range adjacent to the quartz monzonite Ibapah stock. The significant volume of Miocene rhyolites and tuffs in the Quadrangle contain uncommonly large abundances of uranium and thorium.
Date: September 1982
Creator: Cadigan, Robert Allen & Ketner, Keith Brindley
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental survey - tar sands in situ processing research program (Vernal, Uintah County, Utah). [Reverse-forward combustion; steam injection] (open access)

Environmental survey - tar sands in situ processing research program (Vernal, Uintah County, Utah). [Reverse-forward combustion; steam injection]

Research will be done on the reverse-forward combustion and steam injection for the in-situ recovery of oil from tar sands. This environmental survey will serve as a guideline for the consideration of environmental consequences of such research. It covers the construction phase, operational phase, description of the environment, potential impacts and mitigations, coordination, and alternatives. (DLC)
Date: March 1980
Creator: Skinner, Q.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Potential Hydrologic Impacts of a Tar-Sand Industry in 11 Special Tar Sand Areas in Eastern Utah (open access)

Potential Hydrologic Impacts of a Tar-Sand Industry in 11 Special Tar Sand Areas in Eastern Utah

From purpose and scope: This report summarizes the hydrology in and near the 11 Special Tar Sand Areas which were designated by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The 11 areas are in eastern Utah where normal annual precipitation generally ranges from less than 6 to about 20 inches and runoff is minimal.
Date: 1983
Creator: Lindskov, K. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library