Deep Glen Rose Formation in South Texas (the 'Maverick Basin' aquifer)

Summary

In 2021, the Geologic Advisory Unit of the Railroad Commission of Texas identified reports of fresh to slightly saline produced water in a deep portion of the Glen Rose Formation in Maverick, Zavala, and Dimmit counties that could be a potential source of water for local communities. The aquifer currently has a working name of the Maverick Basin aquifer. Fresh and slightly saline groundwater is reported at depths between 5,000 and 8,000 feet below land surface.

Three dimensional map of the top of the Glen Rose Formation in the Maverick Basin, mapped by the TWDB BRACS department. Image shows Maverick, Zavala, Kinney, Uvalde, and Dimmit counties overlain by a polygon representing a draft extent of the slightly saline water in the Glen Rose Formation, projected into the subsurface to the top of Glen Rose Formation. The figure includes Mexico showing the top of Glen Rose Formation elevated in the Sierra del Burro Mountains west of MAverick County.

What we currently know

  • Aquifer type: confined transborder aquifer with artesian flow
  • Formation: Upper Glen Rose Formation, Trinity Group
  • Depth: greater than 5,000 feet
  • Area of aquifer in Texas: at least 650 square miles
  • Recharge zone: believed to be 50 miles west of the Rio Grande in the Sierra del Burro Mountains in Mexico, as evidenced by isotopic data

Pseudo cross section of the top of the Glen Rose Formation in the Maverick Basin mapped by the TWDB BRACS department. The view is to the north with west to the left and east to the right. The figure includes Mexico showing the top of Glen Rose Formation rising until it reaches the surface in the Sierra del Burro Mountains west of Maverick County. The deepest portion of the Glen Rose is to the east.

Status update

  • TWDB BRACS staff have entered well logs into the BRACS database in the Maverick Basin and have created elevation and depth surfaces for the top of the Glen Rose Formation (top of Trinity Group) that includes the Maverick Basin area and extends into Mexico. Current working elevation and depth raster files are available for download.
  • In 2023, The TWDB BRACS department contracted with INTERA Inc. to summarize known information of this water resource, with a final report due by August 31st, 2024.
  • On May 8th, 2024, the TWDB hosted a webinar where INTERA presented their findings on the likely structural controls on the aquifer, and their recommendations for performing aquifer tests.

Additional resources

TWDB Reports

ID Date Type Description
GMR17-01 April 2017 Groundwater Management Report Transborder Aquifers: A Summary of Aquifer Properties, Policies, and Planning Approaches for Texas, Surrounding States, and Mexico
LP-214 February 1995 Limited publication Evaluation of Ground-Water Quality in Texas Counties Bordering the Rio Grande
5617 December 1956 Bulletin Records of Water-Level Measurements in Dimmit, Maverick, and Zavala Counties, Texas
5203 March 1952 Bulletin Winter Garden District Dimmit and Zavala Counties and Eastern Maverick County, Texas
M302 1940 Historical Groundwater Report Records of Wells, Winter Garden District, Dimmit and Zavala Counties and Eastern Maverick County, Texas
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