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(GP/GT) for Additional Water Supply in the Lower Rio Grande

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<strong>in</strong>cluded distributary channel or delta-front environments, or as<br />

barrier islands and strand pla<strong>in</strong>s <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>in</strong>terdeltaic areas. These<br />

massive sandstones, when orig<strong>in</strong>ally deposited, <strong>for</strong>med extensive<br />

aquifers with considerable lateral extent (Henry and Morton, 1982).<br />

Growth fault<strong>in</strong>g, with <strong>the</strong> attendant thicknesses of sediments, has<br />

resulted <strong>in</strong> a structural sett<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Rio</strong> <strong>Grande</strong> Embayment which<br />

<strong>in</strong>cludes major fault trends and m<strong>in</strong>or associated faults, some of<br />

which are parallel, and some of which are transverse to <strong>the</strong> ma<strong>in</strong><br />

trends (Figs. 2,3). syndeposi tional units which thicken toward <strong>the</strong><br />

ma<strong>in</strong> faults <strong>for</strong>m folds, or rollovers, which dip markedly <strong>in</strong>to <strong>the</strong><br />

faults.<br />

Rapid sedimentation also resulted <strong>in</strong> shale ridges, and<br />

shale diapirs (Coll<strong>in</strong>s, 1983). Well No. 5 (Fig. 1 and 2)<br />

penetrated a shale diapir which displaced <strong>the</strong> section vertically<br />

upward (Table 1).<br />

With<strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> study area, <strong>the</strong> dom<strong>in</strong>ant growth fault is <strong>the</strong><br />

McAllen fault, which extends from south of <strong>the</strong> <strong>Rio</strong> <strong>Grande</strong> northward<br />

as much as 150 miles (Coll<strong>in</strong>s, 1983) (Figs 1 and 3).<br />

This fault<br />

may be due to <strong>in</strong>stability, or weakness, <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> basement which<br />

resulted <strong>in</strong> activity throughout <strong>the</strong> Oligocene-Miocene depositional<br />

<strong>in</strong>terval. The greatest movement, or activity, of <strong>the</strong> fault<br />

occurred dur<strong>in</strong>g deposition of <strong>the</strong> mar<strong>in</strong>e (lower and middle) Frio<br />

sequence (Coll<strong>in</strong>s, 1983). To <strong>the</strong> east <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> study area, <strong>the</strong> Donna<br />

fault created a relatively stable area (Coll<strong>in</strong>s, 1983). The<br />

movement on <strong>the</strong> Donna<br />

fault was not as cont<strong>in</strong>uous, and <strong>the</strong><br />

displacement was not as great, as along <strong>the</strong> McAllen fault.<br />

This<br />

differential movement resulted <strong>in</strong> a flatten<strong>in</strong>g of <strong>the</strong> dip towards<br />

<strong>the</strong> Donna fault. The relatively small Weslaco fault, far<strong>the</strong>r to<br />

II-6

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