- Raton Basin
The Raton Basin is a geologic
structural basin in southernColorado and northernNew Mexico . It takes its name fromRaton Pass and the town ofRaton, New Mexico . In extent, the basin is approximately 50 miles east-west, and 90 miles north-south, in Huerfano and Las Animas Counties, Colorado, andColfax County, New Mexico .Topography
Although structurally a basin, the Raton Basin forms a topographic high dissected by eastward-flowing streams such as the
Purgatoire River . The basin forms the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, immediately east of theSangre de Cristo Range .Geology
The sedimentary beds that form the basin are of
Paleozoic ,Mesozoic andTertiary age. In the eastern part of the basin, the sedimentary section is capped by flows ofbasalt ofMiocene age. [Charles L. Pillmore (1991) "Geology and Coal Resources of the Raton Coalfield", US Geological Survey, Bulletin 1972(D).] The basin is highly asymmetrical, the beds dipping more steeply on the west side than the east.The sedimentary rocks of the basin are extensively intruded by
igneous plugs, dikes and sills ofEocene toOligocene age. Two large granitic intrusives near the center of the basin formEast Spanish Peak andWest Spanish Peak . Dikes offelsic to intermediate composition radiate outward from East and West Spanish Peaks. Dikes ofmafic andultramafic composition trend east-northeast to west-southwest across the basin. [Ross B. Johnson (1969) "Geologic Map of the Trinidad Quadrangle, South-Central Colorado", US Geological Survey, Miscellaneous Geologic Investigations Map I-558.] Basaltic sills tend to intrude along thecoal beds.The site of the Raton Basin was a coastal plain at the end of Cretaceous and beginning of
Tertiary time, and has a well-preserved sequence of rocks spanning the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. For this reason, the Raton Basin had been studied for evidence of theiridium anomaly thought to be evidence for a large meteor impact at the end of theCretaceous that is in turn thought to have caused theCretaceous–Tertiary extinction event . The boundary is represented in the basin by a 1-cm thicktonstein clay layer which has been found to contain anomalously high concentrations of iridium. The boundary clay layer is accessible to the public atTrinidad Lake State Park , among other places in the basin.Natural Resources
Coal
Bituminous coal mines opened in the Raton Basin in 1873.Walsenburg, Colorado ,Trinidad, Colorado andRaton, New Mexico became coal-mining towns. The coal deposits are in the Vermejo Formation (Cretaceous ) and overlying Raton Formation (Cretaceous andPaleocene ). [Ross B. Johnson (1961) "Coal Resources of the Trinidad Coal Field in Huerfano and Las Animas Counties", Colorado, US Geological Survey, Bulletin 1112-E.] Most of the mines were underground room-and-pillar, although in later years some mines in New Mexico used longwall mining. Some strip mining was done in New Mexico.Much of the mining on the Colorado side of the basin supplied the steel mills at
Pueblo, Colorado . Production through 1975 was 326 million short tons (295 million tonnes). [R.M Flores and L.R. Bader (1999) "A Summary of Tertiary Coal resources of the Raton Basin, Colorado and New Mexico", US Geological Survey, Professional paper 1625-A, p.13.] There are currently no active coal mines in the basin, although the New Elk coal mine is being permitted to reopen. [J. Burnell and C. Carroll, "Colorado," "Mining Engineering", May 2008, p.p.81-82.]Oil and gas
A number of wells have been drilled over the years seeking conventional oil and natural gas, but none has been produced in economic quantities in the basin. In April 2008, Pioneer Natural Resources announced that they were developing natural gas reserves in the Cretaceous
Pierre Shale on their leasehold in the Raton Basin.Coalbed methane
Coals in the Raton Basin were long known to be "gassy." During development of the Morely mine in the early part of the 20th century, two gas relief wells were drilled into the coal, as a safety measure to drain off gas ahead of mining. [R.M Flores and L.R. Bader (1999) "A Summary of Tertiary Coal resources of the Raton Basin, Colorado and New Mexico", US Geological Survey, Professional paper 1625-A, p.13.]
The first wells seeking to produce
coalbed methane were drilled in the Raton Basin in 1982. [H. Thomas Hemborg (1998) "Spanish Peak Field, Las Animas County, Colorado", Colorado Geological Survey, Resource Series 33.] Thousands of wells have successfully extractedcoalbed methane from theVermejo Formation andRaton Formation coals. The productive coalbed methane area now covers the central part of the basin, and straddles theColorado -New Mexico state line. The two major producing companies arePioneer Natural Resources (on the Colorado side) andEl Paso Corporation (on the New Mexico side).References
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