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ContributorsGootee, Brian F. (Author) / Arizona Geological Survey (Publisher)
Created2009
Description

Our interdisciplinary team of a geologist and volunteers, working with the City of Scottsdale and the McDowell Sonoran Conservancy (MSC), has confirmed that an unusual rock outcropping in the McDowell Mountains within the McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale is travertine, a form of limestone. Limestone has not been identified previously

Our interdisciplinary team of a geologist and volunteers, working with the City of Scottsdale and the McDowell Sonoran Conservancy (MSC), has confirmed that an unusual rock outcropping in the McDowell Mountains within the McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale is travertine, a form of limestone. Limestone has not been identified previously in the McDowell Mountains or in the metro Phoenix area. This research is part of a coordinated effort on the part of MSC and the City of Scottsdale’s Preservation Division to use the talents and energy of MSC volunteers to better understand the geologic setting of the McDowell Sonoran Preserve. Travertine is a whitish sedimentary rock consisting of calcium carbonate. Travertine forms when calcium carbonate is deposited by mineral springs. There also is evidence of possible plant fossils and algal residue associated with the travertine. Our preliminary analysis indicates that the travertine was deposited 2 to 20 million years ago, during the formation of the McDowell Mountains.

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ContributorsBrown, David Earl (Author) / Arizona Geological Survey (Publisher)
Created2007
Description

This report details geothermal resource exploration done for Arizona Public Service and the U.S. Department of Energy in 2005 to evaluate the geothermal resources of the Clifton Hot Springs area in Greenlee County, eastern Arizona for electric power production. The intent of the evaluation was to determine the local geologic

This report details geothermal resource exploration done for Arizona Public Service and the U.S. Department of Energy in 2005 to evaluate the geothermal resources of the Clifton Hot Springs area in Greenlee County, eastern Arizona for electric power production. The intent of the evaluation was to determine the local geologic controls of the geothermal system and, using publicly available data and original mapping performed for this project, to recommend locations for Controlled Source Audiomagnetotelluric (CSAMT) cross sections. The results of the geophysics were then combined with the geologic mapping to site three gradient holes, two of which were drilled to depths of 635 feet and 1,000 feet, respectively.