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<br />
<br />VER71CAL HYDRAULIC CONDUC71VI7Y MEASUREMENTS IN mE DENVER BASIN, COLORADO
<br />
<br />those shale layers can exceed 2000 ft can be impractica1.
<br />Measurements can also be made by installing piezometers in
<br />individual permeable layers and measuring head differences
<br />across the separating confining layers while stressing one of
<br />the layers; however, this can be costly.
<br />From a practical perspective, vertical hydraulic conduc-
<br />tivity of the confining shale layers is currently best mea-
<br />sured by performing hydraulic tests on samples of the
<br />shale layers. It is also important to collect the data where
<br />the resource is being the most intensely exploited, i.e., the
<br />center of the Basin. Samples from outcrops very likely will
<br />not be representative of conditions within the basin due to
<br />weathering effects and the absence of overburden pres-
<br />sures. Therefore, core samples provide the best representa-
<br />tive data; however core samples from within the Denver
<br />Basin are rare.
<br />To date, direct measurements from cores have been
<br />published for only five locations (Fig. 1), three of which
<br />are located in close proximity to each other near the deep-
<br />est part of the Basin. The other two are at the north end of
<br />the Basin near the South Platte River. The core hole pro-
<br />jects and the hydraulic conductivity data collected from
<br />fine-grained sediments encountered in the core holes are
<br />summarized below.
<br />
<br />Saint Vrain Core
<br />
<br />In the late 1970s the USGS, in cooperation with the Col-
<br />orado Department of Natural Resources, drilled a core hole
<br />near Saint Vrain, Weld County (Fig. 1) to evaluate the phys-
<br />ical characteristics of the Laramie-Fox Hills aquifer (Major
<br />et a1., 1983). The core hole penetrated only the Laramie-
<br />Fox Hills aquifer as the synorogenic sediments comprising
<br />the upper Denver Basin aquifers are absent in this area.
<br />Core samples were obtained to a depth of 890.5 ft for
<br />geologic description, along with petrographic, hydraulic
<br />conductivity, and porosity analyses. Sixteen core samples
<br />were analyzed for both horizontal and vertical hydraulic
<br />conductivity using air and water (Major et a1., 1983); and
<br />five of these were from shale intervals. Core Laboratories,
<br />Ine. performed intrinsic permeability analyses on plug
<br />samples taken from the cores and the results were con-
<br />verted to hydraulic conductivity as listed in Table 3. The
<br />results of analysis for vertical hydraulic conductivity
<br />through the shale samples collected from the Laramie-Fox
<br />Hills aquifer at this northern location in the Denver Basin
<br />range between 8.0xl0-4 and 9.4xlO-8 cm/sec with a median
<br />value of 7.7xl0-5 em/sec.
<br />
<br />Castle Pines Core
<br />
<br />In 1987 Castle Pines Metropolitan District and Castle
<br />Pines North Metropolitan District, through their water
<br />
<br />resources consultant Jehn and Wood, Inc., and in coopera-
<br />tion with the USGS, drilled two core holes near the town
<br />of Sedalia, Douglas County (Robson and Banta, 1993).
<br />Located just 7.5 miles from the western edge of the Denver
<br />Basin (Fig. 1), these core holes are relatively proximal to
<br />the source area of the synorogenic Denver Basin sediments.
<br />Core hole Cl penetrated approximately 1,895 ft through
<br />the Dawson and Denver aquifers and into the Arapahoe
<br />aquifer where a core barrel was lost, forcing abandonment
<br />of the hole. A second core hole, CIA, approximately 28 ft
<br />away from Cl, continued coring through the Laramie-Fox
<br />Hills to a depth of 3110 ft. Data collected from the core
<br />included lithologiC descriptions of about 2400 ft of core
<br />and laboratory analysis of mineralogy, grain size, bulk and
<br />grain density, porosity, specific yield, and specific retention
<br />for selected core samples (Robson and Banta, 1993). From
<br />the recovered core, 33 individual samples were selected
<br />for permeability analysis. Many of the samples analyzed for
<br />permeability were collected of coarser grained-sediments
<br />in the aquifers, however, a number were reportedly col-
<br />lected from finer-grained intervals descrihed as consisting
<br />of mudstone.
<br />Permeability of the samples was measured using gas as
<br />the saturating medium. A specific method is not referenced
<br />in Robson and Banta (1993); however the source of the
<br />data is a written communication from Anthony Garcia at
<br />the Porous Media Laboratory at Colorado State University.
<br />Table 3 lists the results as hydraulic conductivity in cm/sec
<br />from 15 of the finer-grained or more poorly sorted litholo-
<br />gies. The results of analysis for vertical hydraulic conduc-
<br />tivity through the finer-grain and poorly sorted lithologies
<br />collected from the Denver Basin aquifers at this western
<br />location in the Denver Basin range between 7.3xlO-4 and
<br />5.1xl0-6 cm/sec with a median value of 8.6xlO-5 cm/sec.
<br />
<br />Kiowa Core
<br />
<br />In 1999 the Kiowa core was obtained from a site within
<br />the town of Kiowa, Elbert County (Fig. 1), as a component
<br />of the Denver Basin Project, which is a cooperative and
<br />multidisciplinary research effort by the Denver Museum of
<br />Nature & Science to study the evolution of the Denver Basin
<br />(Raynolds et a1., 2001). The site, approximately 26 miles
<br />from the western edge of the Denver Basin, was selected to
<br />be farther away than the Castle Pines core location.
<br />The core hole penetrated 2256 ft through the Dawson,
<br />Denver, Arapahoe, and Laramie-Fox Hills aquifers and was
<br />terminated in the Pierre Shale. Approximately 93% of the
<br />rock penetrated was recovered. Core samples were han-
<br />dled and stored to minimize dehydration and physical dis-
<br />turbance (Lapey, 2001). Fifty-five samples were collected
<br />from the core for laboratory measurement of hydraulic
<br />conductivity (Raynolds et a1., 2001; Lapey, 2001) and
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<br />The Rocky Mountain Association of Geoiogisls
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