skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: URANIUM DEPOSITS UNDER CONGLOMERATIC SANDSTONE OF THE MORRISON FORMATION, COLORADO AND UTAH

Journal Article · · Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer.

In southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah, strata of conglomeratic sandstone are localized at the base of the Brushy Basin Member of the Morrison Formation of Jurassic age. These discrete lithologic units contain sedimentary structures oriented in a prevailing easterly direction. They are believed to cover about one-third of the underlying Salt Wash Member in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah, and they locally rest on ore-bearing sandstone in the Salt Wash Member. Eastward-trending planar cross-stratification and trough cross- stratification and a general westward coarsening of sediments in the conglomeratic sandstone strata suggest that they are the products of stream aggradntion from westerly source areas. Uranium--vanadium deposits in the uppermost, almost continuous, layer of sandstone of the Salt Wash Member are classified accordg to their association with the conglomerate strata. Of the 365 deposits studied in the uppermost sandstone layer of the Salt Wash Member, 101 are known to be directly beneath conglomeratic sandstone strata, 211 are below the projected extension of conglomeratic sandstone strata, 33 are beyond the safe limits of such projection, and 18 are lateral to the margins of conglomeratic sandstone strata. At places, near clusters of deposits in the uppermost sandstone of the underlying Salt Wash Member, conglomeratic sandstone strata of the Brushy Basin Member are also mineralized. It is postulated that ground-water movement during deposition of the Morrison Formation in Late Jurassic time localized the uranium and vanadium. The direction of this ground-water movement is believed to have been related to streams that deposited the conglomeratic strata, so that in the orebearing sandstone metal ions contained in the ground water were localized in places of high transmissibility and in the vicinity of decaying organic debris. According to the age of the ores, precipitution of the metals was much later than their localization, probably during Late Cretaceous or early Tertiary time. (auth)

Research Organization:
U.S. Geological Survey, Grand Junction, Colo.
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
NSA Number:
NSA-12-009163
OSTI ID:
4340141
Journal Information:
Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer., Vol. Vol: 69; Other Information: Orig. Receipt Date: 31-DEC-58
Country of Publication:
Country unknown/Code not available
Language:
English