- San Juan Basin
.
As a
drainage basin , the San Juan Basin is defined by the drainage of the San Juan River and its tributaries, which include theAnimas River and theFlorida River . The San Juan River flows into theColorado River .The region is notable both by its marked
arid ity and by a rugged topography ofplain s andvalley s interspersed bybutte s,canyon s andmesa s. Its most striking features includeChaco Canyon (northwestern New Mexico, between Farmington and Santa Fe) andChacra Mesa . The San Juan Basin also has uplands that exceed elevations of 9,800 feet. As the region gently increases in elevation in a southeasterly direction, the Basin's streams flow to the northwest, eventually draining into theColorado River . [Fagan 2005, pp. 41-43.]Geology
The drainage of the San Juan River is roughly coincident with the San Juan
structural basin , a large downwarp of sedimentary rocks of mostlyMesozoic age. As a geologic region, the San Juan Basin is noted for its large deposits ofcoal ,uranium , andnatural gas . Since the 1980s, theFruitland Formation in the basin has been one of the major US sources ofcoalbed methane .Citations
References
* Harvard reference
Last1 = Fagan
Given1 = B
Year = 2005
Title = Chaco Canyon: Archaeologists Explore the Lives of an Ancient Society
Publisher = Oxford University Press
ID = ISBN 0-19-517043-1.ee also
Uranium mining in New Mexico
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