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The
Uinta Basin and Mountains are located in the northeast
corner of the state and are part of a larger physiographic
area known as the Colorado Plateau Province. The Uinta
Mountains, a folded and faulted anticlinorium (a succession
of geological anticlines and synclines), are 150 miles
long and are oriented in an east-west direction; they
extend from Heber Valley on the west to Cross Mountain
in Colorado to the east. The mountain range is thirty
miles wide. The Uintas contain some of the highest mountain
peaks in the state, Kings Peak being the highest at 13,520
feet. The mountains receive annually about thirty inches
of precipitation. During the Pleistocene era the Uintas
were extensively glaciated. Lakes formed by this process
dominate the mountains. Some of the larger lakes today
serve as important reservoirs for the Wasatch Front.
In addition to the Great Salt Lake, the Uinta Mountains
are perhaps the most important physiographic feature in
northern Utah and the central Intermountain region. The
Uintas are central to the historic and economic developments
of northern Utah. They are the source for several of the
most important Wasatch Front rivers and streams including
the Bear, the Weber, and the Provo. They are also an important
source of water for Green River, a major tributary to
the Colorado River. The Uintas contain Ashley and Wasatch
National Forests as well as the High Uinta Primitive Area.
The Uinta Basin lies south of the Uinta Mountains. The
southern rim of the basin is formed by the Tavaputs Plateau
of the Book Cliffs, and the western rim is formed by the
Wasatch Mountains. The central portion of the basin has
an elevation of 5,000 to 5,500 feet. Asphalt Ridge divides
the Utah portion of the Basin into two unequal parts.
Between Asphalt Ridge and the Utah-Colorado state line
is Ashley Valley, named for William H. Ashley an important
fur-trapping and trading entrepreneur of the 1820s.
The average annual precipitation for the Uinta Basin is
less than 8.5 inches, with a smaller area around Ouray
and Leota receiving less than 6 inches annually. Nevertheless,
the basin is well watered. The Strawberry River drains
the eastern slope of the Wasatch Mountains. The south
flank of the Uintas is drained by Current Creek, the Duchesne
River, Lake Creek, the Uinta River, Ashley Creek, and
Big and Little Brush creeks. The southern portion of the
Basin contains fewer streams and are much smaller in volume
then those of the northern point. Green River slices through
the Uintas at Split Mountain and flows through the Uinta
Basin in a southwesterly direction. At Ouray the Green
is joined by the Duchesne River, and White River which
flows from the east.
Based on the modified Kopper system for identifying climatic
zones, the Uintas, the Wasatch Mountains, and the southwest
portion of the Book Cliffs are classified as undifferentiated
highlands and the Uinta Basin as steppe. The Basin averages
between 80 and 160 frost-free days a year while much of
the Uintas has less than 40 days free of frost.
The Uinta Basin and Mountains possess an abundance of
prehistoric remnants. A short distance north of Jensen
on the Green River is a famous dinosaur quarry. This area
was first discovered in 1909 by geologist Earl Douglas
of the Carnegie Museum. During the next several years
Douglas and others excavated and hauled to eastern museums
tons of dinosaur fossils from the Morrison Formation of
the Upper Jurassic Age. In 1915 President Woodrow Wilson
set aside 80 acres as a national monument. Intensive study
and work continues at Dinosaur National Monument, nine
miles north of Jensen, and thousands of visitors tour
the monument each year.
At least two Paleo-Indian cultural sites (12,000-8,500
before present) have been located in the Uinta Basin.
These people were primarily hunters of the mammoth, bison,
and other big game. During the Archaic period (8,500-2,500
B.P.), the basin was occupied by Plateau Archaic People,
people were gatherers as well as hunters. More recently,
people identified with the Fremont Culture have occupied
the Uinta Basin. The Fremont Culture parallels in time
and development the better known Anasazi Culture. People
of the Fremont Culture lived in semi-subterranean shelters
(kivas) and were dependent primarily upon corn agriculture
and hunting of smaller game and fishing.
During the ethnohistorical period (A.D. 1300 to present),
the Uinta Basin has been occupied by the Uinta-ats (Uinta),
a band of Utes. The basin was also occasionally visited
by the Northern and Northwestern Shoshones. The basin
at one time was a rich provider of food and clothing for
the Ute Indians.
The first white men to set eyes on the Uinta Basin and
Uinta Mountains were members of the small Spanish expedition
from Santa Fe headed by Fray Silvestre Velez de Escalante
and Fray Francisco Atanasio Dominguez. The expedition
crossed into Utah and the Uinta Basin several miles northeast
of present day Jensen. These intrepid explorers opened
the Uinta Basin and the eastern portion of the Great Basin
to Spanish, and later Mexican, American, and British fur-trappers
and traders. Between the late 1820s and the 1840s the
basin and mountains were visited by such men as William
H. Ashley, Etienne Provost, Antoine Robidoux, and Kit
Carson. At least two semipermanent trading posts were
established in the basin: Fort Robidoux, sometimes referred
to as Fort Uintah or Winty (1830s-44) and Fort Kit Carson
(1833-34). Several important U.S. government expeditions
visited the area, including Captain John C. Fremont expedition
in the 1840s, and Major John Wesley Powell who floated
down the Green River from Green River, Wyoming in 1869
and again in 1871.
The Uinta Basin drew little interest during the initial
phase of settlement of the Great Basin. Early in the 1860s
Brigham Young did order a small expedition to the Uinta
Basin to determine the suitability for locating settlements
there. Upon the expedition's return, the Deseret News
reported that the expedition had found little there and
that the basin was a "vast contiguity of waste...valueless
excepting for nomadic purposes, hunting grounds for Indians
and to hold the world together."
Soon after, most of the Uinta Basin was set aside by Presidential
proclamation for an Indian reservation. It was not until
the late 1860s, however, that most of the Utes residing
in Utah Valley and areas south were relocated to the new
Indian reservation. A second temporary Indian reservation,
located south of present day Ouray, was established in
1882 following the Meeker incident in western Colorado
in 1879. The two reservations encompassed over 3.5 million
acres, much of which is semi-arid. Today the Uintah Utes,
White River Utes, and Uncompahgre Utes occupy only a small
fraction of their former reservation lands; however, the
courts have granted to the Utes greater legal jurisdiction
over the land which were once the original Indian reservations.
Unlike other settlements in Utah, Ashley Valley was not
a "called" by Mormon leaders to be settled.
Beginning in the early 1870s, Mormon ranchers and other
whites from the Indian Reservation began filtering into
Ashley Valley, which first served as excellent summer
feeding grounds for herds of cattle. By 1880 there was
a permanent population sufficiently large enough for Uintah
County to be established by the territorial legislature.
Within a decade Gilsonite and other asphaltum minerals
were discovered in Uintah County as well as on the eastern
edges of both Indian reservations. National and local
pressure soon mounted to have the two Indian Reservations
opened to white development. However, it was not until
the passage of the Dawes Act of 1887 that there was federal
means were established to have both Uinta Basin Indian
reservations opened. By 1898, following an effective campaign
by national and local mining interests, the Uncompahgre
Indian Reservation was thrown open to miners and settlers.
The Uintah Reservation followed in the summer of 1905,
after allotments of 160 acres were made to each adult
male married Indian, (lesser amounts were allotted to
single males, single women and orphaned Indian children).
In August of 1905 thousands of potential homesteaders
rushed to Grand Junction, Colorado, and to Vernal, Price,
and Provo, Utah, to register for the land drawing which
was held at the end of the month in Provo. Only a fraction
of registrants actually took up homesteads and many of
those eventually gave up on their efforts to secure cheap
farmland. A sizeable portion of Strawberry Valley was
reserved for reclamation purposes. Additional lands were
added to Ashley and Wasatch National Forests. And some
lands located along the foothills of the south flank of
the Uintas were reserved for Indian grazing grounds.
The Uinta Basin has been susceptible to frequent economic
boom-bust cycles. For the most part these have been connected
with the discovery or development of various natural resources
coupled with national and international economic conditions.
The first of these cycles was the rush for fur-bearing
animals in the 1820s to 1840s. This was followed by the
discovery of Gilsonite and other asphaltums. A railroad
line was planned but never fully materialized. The third
boom-bust cycle was the opening of the two reservations
which increased the white population sufficiently that
Duchesne County was carved out of Wasatch County. Commercial
oil production was begun 1948 but was not fully exploited
until the 1970s with increased the price of crude oil.
This in turn spurred private and public ventures to develop
an inexpensive process for separating oil from oil shale
and tar sands. Shortage of housing, increased school enrollments,
and a vigorous economic activity was experienced in the
1970s because of this oil activity. However, in 1980 international
oil prices began to fall. Correspondingly the economic
health of the Uinta Basin fell sharply. The development
of water resources for the Wasatch Front has been yet
another economic stimulus but this, too, has been only
temporary.
There is little that remains in the Uinta Basin from these
economic flourishes. What does remain is a small population
base of whites and Indians supported by a fragile economy
based on agriculture and some tourism. The Uinta Basin
continues to remain in the shadows of the Wasatch Mountains
and the Wasatch Front.
Craig Fuller
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