Learn
Why is this study important?
This report combines data collected from boring deep narrow holes into the ground with new aeromagnetic and gravity measurements. This combination of data provides the most comprehensive analysis to date of the thickness, shape, and boundaries of basin-fill aquifers of the Big Chino, Little Chino, and Verde Valley sub-basins.
Langenheim, V.E., DeWitt, Ed, and Wirt, Laurie, 2005, Geophysical framework based on analysis of aeromagnetic and gravity data, upper and middle Verde River watershed, Yavapai County, Arizona: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5278, 25 p., 1 plate. Analysis of aeromagnetic and gravity data provides new insights into the geometry of geologic structures of the upper and middle Verde River watershed, Yavapai County, Arizona. Magnetic anomalies reveal hidden volcanic rocks lying at shallow depths beneath the ground surface in Williamson, Little Chino, Big Chino, and Verde Valleys in the upper Verde River watershed. Concentrations of shallowly buried volcanic plugs or centers are located down-gradient of springs (Del Rio) and perennial flow (Williamson Valley), suggesting that these volcanic centers or plugs may retard ground-water flow. Magnetic data also map paleochannels that were filled with basalt (6 to 4 Ma) as Big Chino Valley formed and subsided during late Tertiary. The magnetic data reveal a predominantly northeast- to north-striking structural grain within Proterozoic basement rocks, in contrast to the generally northwest strike of late Tertiary faults in this region. The magnetic grain may serve as a proxy for fracturing and faulting, an important source of permeability in these generally impermeable rocks. Magnetic and gravity data also delineate exposed and concealed faults within the study area. The Big Chino Fault and Verde Fault Zone have the largest amounts of vertical throw of the faults in the study area on the basis of gravity, magnetic, and limited well data. These faults bound deep (1-2 km) basins in Big Chino and Verde Valleys. The geophysical data also reveal concealed faults in Williamson Valley that bound a previously undiscovered basin with approximately 1 km of Cenozoic fill inferred from inversion of gravity data. Little Chino and Lonesome Valleys, including the upper reach of the Agua Fria Basin, are characterized by basin fill that has an irregular distribution, with local, north- to northwest-striking pockets of thicker sediment, but nowhere exceeds 1 km of thickness. A 15- to 20-km-long northwest-striking magnetic lineament that passes through Page Springs in Verde Valley can be used to project a mapped fault 5-10 km northwest and southeast of its mapped trace. The co-location of the lineament, mapped fault, and Page Springs suggests structural influence on the location of this large spring. CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL REPORT