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` J • • <br />The Mesa Verde Formation is unconformably overlain by the Tertiary Age <br />Rudy or Wasatch Formation. This formation consists of red to <br />buff-colored shales, red sandstones, and red to gray conglomerates. The <br />sediments of this formation are weathered volcanic rocks. The Ohio <br />Creek conglomerate is the basal unit within the formation and is 100 to <br />200 feet thick. <br />Igneous intrusive rocks exist within the North Fork Drainage Basin. A <br />diorite plug about 1,000 feet in diameter outcrops along Hubbard Creek <br />in the SE 1/4 of Section 7. This may represent the erosional remnants <br />of a volcanic flow feeder. Sills have injected the Lower Coal-Bearing <br />member, particularly the "B" and "C" seams. These sills consist of <br />diorite and appear to have their source to the northwest of Terror Creek. <br />The alluvium of the North Fork of the Gunnison River consists of <br />Quaternary Age deposits of mixed coarse sand, cobbles and boulders. <br />These coarse sediments are composed primarily of igneous and metamorphic <br />rock types, and have their source area in the headwaters and upper <br />reaches of the North Fork. This coarse alluvium is capped by finer <br />sands and silts. The North Fork alluvium in the area of the Hawk's <br />Nest, Bear, Mt. Gunnison and Somerset Mines is fairly narrow in width <br />and between 50 to 70 feet thick. About a mile below the town of <br />Somerset, Colorado, the width of alluvium increases while the thickness <br />of alluvium decreases to about 35 feet. <br />3. Description of the Ground Water Regime <br />Six categories of potential aquifers occur in the Somerset Coal Field. <br />These are: 1) the alluvial and terrace deposits associated with the <br />North Fork of the Gunnison River; 2) the localized, shallow alluvium <br />along creeks tributary to the North Fork; 3) the discontinuous, <br />lenticular and laminar sandstones of the Mesa Verde Formation; 4) the <br />Rollins sandstone; 5) the coal seam; 6) shallow colluvial surficial <br />deposits; and 7) fracture zones in bedrock. <br />The most significant occurrence of ground water in the region is <br />associated with the alluvium of the North Fork of the Gunnison River <br />(Figure 4). Significant thicknesses of alluvial sand and gravel between <br />30 to 80 feet exist along the North Fork. Numerous wells are developed <br />in the alluvium with an average yield of 17.4 qpm. A pumping test <br />conducted by Bear Coal Company on an alluvial well near the site of the <br />Bear No. 3 Mine yielded a value of 806.5 g/d/ft for transmissivity and <br />0.2 for storability. <br />Three water quality analyses were conducted for the Bear No. 3 Mine on <br />three wells completed in the North Fork alluvium. Two wells exceeded <br />drinking water standards for total dissolved solids, sodium and <br />sulfate. The well located closest to the North Fork (the Bear No. 3 - <br />office well) showed the lowest levels of these constituents. This is <br />35 <br />