reportCentral Uintah County, located in northeastern Utah, lies in the Uinta Basin and is underlain by relatively undisturbed Tertiary lacustrine and fluviatile sediments. The area (shown in Figure 63) discussed in this chapter contains all of the known gilsonite veins in the western United States and is the site of large bituminous deposits including oil shale, tar sands, gas, and oil. Nearby portions of the same basin contain smaller deposits of other unusual bituminous substances, such as wurtzilite, tabbyite, ingramite, albertite, and ozocerite, the last of which is a native paraffin (Crawford, 1949; Hunt, 1954). Because of the detailed treatment given the oil shale, bituminous sandstones (tar sands), gas and oil deposits of the area by...