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GEOLOGY OF THE DENVER BASIN <br />The Denver Basin is a structural basin bounded by the Front Range on the west and <br />extends eastward to near Limon, Colorado. The basin's margin extends southward from near <br />Greeley on the north to a location several miles to the south and east of Colorado Springs. In <br />total, the structural Denver Basin includes an area of more than 6,700 square miles. The basin is <br />generally defined by the lower boundary of the Laramie -Fox Hills aquifer, which is the <br />lowermost of the four principal aquifers found in the basin. Figure 1 is a map of the Denver <br />Basin that identifies the lower boundary of each of the Denver Basin aquifers. <br />The formations present in the basin that comprise the principal aquifers are composed of <br />sedimentary rocks that are up to 3,000 feet thick in the deepest part of the basin. A generalized <br />cross-section is attached as Figure 2. In descending order, the hydrogeologic units are identified <br />as the Dawson, Denver, Arapahoe, and Laramie -Fox Hills aquifers. <br />Extensive studies of these aquifers have been conducted over a period of about 100 years. <br />Water from the aquifers has been utilized in the Denver area for domestic supplies since the <br />1880's. The most recent and most detailed study of the aquifer system was completed by the <br />Colorado Division of Water Resources in 1985 as part of a legislatively mandated study <br />commonly known as Senate Bill 5. During the study, the staff of the Division collected <br />extensive information on the nature of the aquifers, the occurrence of ground water in the <br />aquifers, and the effects of pumping ground water from the aquifers on surface streams <br />throughout the basin. The estimated amount of water contained in the aquifers is presented in <br />Table 1. <br />The Colorado Division of Water Resources' study resulted in re -defining the aquifer <br />system into the four major aquifers currently recognized. For the reader to better understand the <br />aquifer system, a brief discussion of each hydrogeologic unit is presented below. It should be <br />noted that the Division's work in this area is recognized as the authoritative study of the Denver <br />Basin aquifers, and is utilized by the consulting community and governmental/regulatory <br />agencies. <br />DAWSON AQUIFER <br />The Dawson aquifer is the uppermost aquifer in the basin and covers an area of <br />approximately 1,400 square miles. The aquifer varies in thickness, depending upon location, and <br />attains a maximum thickness of almost 1,200 feet in the vicinity of Monument. The Dawson is <br />at or near the land surface throughout its entire areal extent. The aquifer is composed of <br />predominately conglomeratic, coarse-grained arkosic sandstones with minor amounts of <br />interbedded clay and clay shale. The northern portion of the aquifer can be subdivided into two <br />hydrogeologic units known as the Upper and Lower Dawson aquifers. This separation is based <br />on the presence of an approximately 50 -foot thick shale layer that hydraulically isolates the <br />