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Lake Bonneville: Geology and hydrology of the Weber Delta district, including Ogden, Utah

January 1, 1966

A cooperative investigation to determine the geology of the Weber Delta district, with emphasis on the occurrence and chemical quality of ground water, was made by the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation with the later assistance of the Utah State Engineer in the final preparation of the report. The Weber Delta district covers an area of almost 400 square miles between the Wasatch Range and the east shore of Great Salt Lake in north-central Utah. The district, which is about 30 miles long and 3-20 miles wide, is dominated by the Wasatch Range on the east. West of the mountains is a generally narrow foothill area, from which flatlands, interrupted by a few low sand ridges, slope gently westward to the shore of Great Salt Lake. Breaching the foothills and the flatlands near the center of the district is the Weber Delta, which is the largest of the deltas built in the Pleistocene Epoch by Lake Bonneville on an open plain. The Weber Delta, the smaller delta of the Ogden River to the north, and the alluvial fans of several small streams, coalesce to form a belt of plateau-like high-lands from 2 to 7 miles wide and about 10 miles long from north to south. Ten miles north of the city of Ogden the Pleasant View salient projects westward from the front of the Wasatch Range, and about 15 miles west of the mountain front, Little Mountain rises 450 feet above the surface of the nearly level plain.

Publication Year 1966
Title Lake Bonneville: Geology and hydrology of the Weber Delta district, including Ogden, Utah
DOI 10.3133/pp518
Authors John Henry Frederick Feth, D.A. Barker, L.G. Moore, Randy J. Brown, C.E. Veirs
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Professional Paper
Series Number 518
Index ID pp518
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Utah Water Science Center