The north end of the Sawatch Range plunges under shales and sandstones along the Eagle River east of Wolcott. Gypsum in the sediments here has acted like putty: the layers of rock in which it was deposited have become peculiarly crumpled, making the area along the Eagle River (visible from U. S. Interstate 70) between Avon and Edwards hummocky and irregular. Vegetation is unusually sparse here because of gypsum in the soil.

About midway between Edwards and Wolcott, the Eagle River suddenly changes direction and flows northward for about a mile before resuming its former westward course. This sudden change is caused by a sharp north-south [fold] in the [sedimentary rocks] on the northwestern flank of the Sawatch Range. A magnificent series of roadcut and hillside exposures along the highway here illustrates the close relation between rock layers and river course. Within about a mile, the highway cuts through rocks of Pennsylanian, Permian, Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous age, spanning a geologic time interval of more than 200 million years.

The south end of the Sawatch Range, at Monarch Pass, contains steeply dipping Late Paleozoic limestones and coal beds. The coal has been mined on a small scale; the limestone is now quarried for use as a flux in iron smelters at Pueblo.

The area below the Aspen Mountain ski lift is highly complex geologically. It is particularly well known because of extensive prospecting and mining activity in the region.

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Elk Mountains and West Elk Mountains

The Elk Mountains and West Elk Mountains appear to be westward continuations of the Sawatch Range. Structurally, however, they are not faulted [anticlines] like most of the other ranges in Colorado, but are composed of a series of layers of Paleozoic sediments thrust westward over one another. These rocks, often crumpled and highly metamorphosed, are cut by numerous sills, [dikes], and other intrusions, many of which have caused mineral enrichment locally.

At Maroon Bells, in the canyon of Maroon Creek, and at Redstone on the Crystal River, these metamorphosed sediments are well exposed. Here, red sandstones and shales have been altered to quartzites and slate. At Marble, metamorphism of a thick limestone bed has produced white marble of great beauty, known as Yule Marble. This decorative stone was quarried extensively until about 1940. It was used in the Lincoln Memorial and several other monumental structures; in the town of Marble it has been used for the doorsteps of log cabins! The largest block quarried, for the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery, measured 14 by 7.4 by 6 feet in the rough, and weighed 56 tons.