Introduction

Gold was discovered in the bed of the South Platte River in 1858. Prospectors flocked to Colorado as they had flocked only a few years before to California. They worked the sands and gravels of Cherry Creek, Clear Creek, Boulder Creek, and California Gulch. Exhausting the [placer] sands of the stream bottoms, they moved higher to mine gold-bearing [veins] at Central City and Blackhawk. Mining camps sprang into existence overnight, each heralding some new “strike,” each populated by a new rush of fortune seekers. As lower areas were mined out, prospectors moved yet higher—to Breckenridge, Gold Hill, and Empire, Aspen, Leadville, and Cripple Creek. Silver was found as well as gold, then iron, and later tungsten and molybdenum. The metallic ring of mining tools echoed from Colorado’s peaks. Fortunes were made here. Legends were born.

Prospectors and miners were not, however, the first people interested in the rocks of Colorado. Earlier, bands of nomadic Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians had searched Colorado’s hills for flint for arrowheads and brightly colored clays for warpaint. Cliff-dwelling Pueblo Indians in southwestern Colorado sought clay for their pottery and [fossil] seashells for the magic of their medicine men. And from farther to the southwest, Navajo tribesmen came to Colorado for turquoise.

From clay to gold, much of Colorado’s wealth has come from her mountains. But after the rush to the mines, as [veins] were mined out and placers worked over, as values and prices changed, her population sought the riches of the prairies: fertile lands for agriculture, and in the rock layers below, black gold—vast accumulations of oil and natural gas. The tablelands and [plateaus] west of the mountains yield their wealth, too. Here are valley farms, fed often by irrigation water, and ranch country. Here is more oil, and in some areas precious metals and uranium.

In recent years Colorado’s prairies, peaks, and [plateaus] have brought new meaning to all America: the state now provides an attractive playground for state residents and their visitors. Campgrounds, streams, lakes, and high trails beckon in summer; barren slopes deep in winter snow attract the skier. More and more, those who live in Colorado and those who visit her seek to understand these mountains and hills and prairies, to learn of her geologic origins and her far distant past. For tourist and resident, casual visitor, ski enthusiast, Sunday picnicker, for all those who have met Colorado and enjoyed her, this book is written.

Topographically, scenically, and geologically, Colorado can be divided into the three provinces shown here.

[PLATEAUS] UINTA MTS. GREEN RIVER BASIN Yampa River Steamboat Springs UINTA BASIN White River WHITE RIVER PLATEAU ROAN PLATEAU Glenwood Springs Colorado River Grand Junction GRAND [MESA] Gunnison River UNCOMPAHGRE PLATEAU Dolores River PARADOX BASIN MESA VERDE MOUNTAINS NORTH PARK RABIT EARS RANGE PARK RANGE MIDDLE PARK GORE RANGE FRONT RANGE ELK MTS. Aspen SAWATCH RANGE Leadville MOSQUITO RANGE Fairplay SOUTH PARK WEST ELK MTS. Gunnison Salida WET MTS. SANGRE DE CRISTO RANGE SAN LUIS VALLEY Rio Grande Alamosa SAN JUAN MTS. Ouray Silverton Durango MESA DE MAYA PLAINS Fort Collins South Platte River Denver GREAT PLAINS Colorado Springs Arkansas River WET MT. VALLEY HUERFANO PARK La Junta Walsenburg

I
Colorado’s Three Provinces

Scenically, Colorado is divided into three provinces: the Plains or Prairies on the east, the Rocky Mountains bisecting the state from north to south, and the Colorado [Plateaus] on the west. There are a number of local variations of course, but by and large the provinces are clearly defined. These three divisions will form the basis for our discussion of the geology of Colorado, for the scenic differences are almost exactly paralleled, and usually controlled, by differences in geologic structure.