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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Reconnaissance of the Red Lake River, Minnesota
Lev Ropes, Richmond F. Brown, D.E. Wheat
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 299
This report is intended to serve a wide range of people including educators, scientists, planners, and those who wish to enjoy travel on the river. the data-summary charts, graphs, and tables are intended to be specific enough so that users who require precise information need not resynthesise the original numerical...
Ground-water resources of the St. James area, South-central Minnesota
L.H. Ropes
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 334
The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the quality and quantity of the ground-water resources in the area of St. James, Minnesota. St. James is located in the center of Watonwan County in south-central Minnesota. The area is covered by a thick layer of glacial drift which is underlain...
Water resources of the Yellow Medicine River Watershed, Southwestern Minnesota
R.P. Novitzki, Wayne A. Van Voast, L.A. Jerabek
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 320
Glacial drift and Cretaceous sedimentary rocks are the major aquifers in the Yellow Medicine River watershed unit. The Yellow Medicine and Minnesota Rivers are the major sources of surface water. For physiographic regions – Upland Plain, Slope, Lowland Plain, and Minnesota River Flood Plain – influence surface drainage, and the flow...
Ground water in the Ogallala formation in the southern high plains of Texas and New Mexico
J.G. Cronin
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 330
The Ogallala Formation of Tertiary (Pliocene) age is the principal aquifer in the Southern High Plains of western Texas and eastern New Mexico. This heavily pumped aquifer supplies practically all the water used for irrigation, municipal, industrial (except oil-field repressuring), and domestic purposes. Although the ground water in the Ogallala Formation...
Hydrology of a part of the Big Sioux drainage basin, eastern South Dakota
Michael J. Ellis, Donald G. Adolphson, Robert E. West
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 311
In 1960 the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Dakota State Water Resources Commission and the South Dakota State Geological Survey, started a program for the hydrogeologic investigation of glacial drift in selected drainage basins in eastern South Dakota. This program was designed to delineate water-bearing deposits of...