Laserfiche WebLink
23 <br /> and county laws as discussed in Section 1 .1, Regulatory <br /> Framework. <br /> 2.2 Geologic Context <br /> In 1985 a study was completed by Fox consultants that provided a <br /> detailed summary of the geologic setting of the Dowe Flats area <br /> for the purpose of assisting in the planning and execution of <br /> subsurface explorations and engineering investigations in this <br /> area. This study addresses regional and local bedrock stratig- <br /> raphy and structural geology. The scope of the Fox report <br /> included compilation of existing geologic data through August <br /> 1984 and interpretation of these data aided by aerial photography <br /> interpretation and site reconnaissance (Fox 1995) . <br /> The Dowe Flats area is in the Foothills Belt, a transition zone <br /> between the Front Range physiographic province to the West and <br /> the Denver Basin physiographic province to the east. The Front <br /> Range, which is the eastern most range of the Southern Rocky <br /> Mountains, begins on the northern side of the Arkansas River in <br /> southern Colorado and extends northward for approximately 185 <br /> miles to the Wyoming border. The range varies from 25 to 45 <br /> miles in width (Boos and Boos, 1957) , and was formed by vertical <br /> uplift and subsequent erosion of the sedimentary strata to expose <br /> the Precambrian core. Remnants of the original sedimentary <br /> cover, now present as truncated sedimentary rocks along the <br /> uplift flank, are tilted by drag along the uplift boundaries. <br /> The more resistant tilted rocks, generally sandstones and some <br /> carbonates, form linear hogbacks that parallel the mountain <br /> front. The less resistant shales have been eroded away to form <br /> linear valleys between the hogbacks. This linear system of <br /> valleys and ridges is present along most of the eastern Front <br /> Range boundary. <br /> The Foothills Belt is a transitional area about five to 10 miles <br /> wide between these two major physiographic provinces. The <br /> sedimentary beds adjacent to the Precambrian mountain front are <br /> steeply dippling and occasionally overturned. The dip <br />