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Page 5984, results 149576 - 149600

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ground water in North America
Harold E. Thomas, Luna Bergere Leopold
1964, Science (143) 1001-1006
The fast-growing demands on this natural resource expose a need to resolve many hydrologic unknowns....
Submicroscopic spherules and color of tektites
A. N. Thorpe, F. E. Senftle
1964, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (28)
Magnetic susceptibility measurements of 18 tektites from various strewn fields have been made as a function of temperature from 77°K to room temperature. A relatively large temperature-independent component of the magnetic susceptibility was observed in all cases, and an analysis of the data...
Life history of lake herring in Lake Superior
William R. Dryer, Joseph Beil
1964, Fishery Bulletin (63) 493-530
The average annual commercial catch of lake herring (Coregonus artedi) in U.S. waters of Lake Superior was nearly 12 million pounds in 1929-61. This production contributed 62.4 percent of the total U.S. take of lake herring for the Great Lakes. About 90 percent of the annual catch is...
Hydrology of the Babylon-Islip area, Suffolk County, Long Island, New York
Edward J. Pluhowski, Irwin H. Kantrowitz
1964, Water Supply Paper 1768
The report area comprises 270 square miles, and includes most of the Towns of Babylon and Islip, and parts of the Towns of Huntington, Smithtown, and Brookhaven, in southwestern Suffolk County, New York. Almost all the water used in the area is obtained from wells screened in permeable zones of...
Minor-element composition and organic carbon content of marine and nonmarine shales of Late Cretaceous age in the western interior of the United States
H. A. Tourtelot
1964, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (28) 1579-1604
The composition of nonmarine shales of Cretaceous age that contain less than 1 per cent organic carbon is assumed to represent the inherited minor-element composition of clayey sediments delivered to the Cretaceous sea that occupied the western interior region of North America. Differences in minor-element content between these samples and...
The spottail shiner in Lower Red Lake, Minnesota
Lloyd L. Smith Jr., Robert H. Kramer
1964, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (93) 35-45
On the basis of 14,564 spottail shiners (Notropis hudsonius) from Red Lakes, Minnesota, growth rates, strength of year classes, and food utilization were studied. Males and females had different body-scale relationships, and females grew faster than males. There was high correlation between water temperature and growth rate. Strength of year...
Fused rock from Köfels, Tyrol
Daniel J. Milton
1964, Tschermaks Mineralogische und Petrographische Mitteilungen (9) 86-94
The vesicular glass from Köfels, Tyrol, contains grains of quartz that have been partially melted but not dissolved in the matrix glass. This phenomenon has been observed in similar glasses formed by friction along a thrust fault and by meteorite impact, but not in volcanic glasses. The explosion of a...
[Book review] Politics and water resources
Luna Bergere Leopold
1964, Science (144) 402-403
Arizona is a state in which development has proceeded sufficiently rapidly relative to the available water supply that its water problems are as acute as those of nearly any other state in the Union. Owing to the fact that, in the past, the principal use of water was for irrigation,...
Ground-water reconnaissance in the Burnt River valley, Baker County, Oregon
Don Price
1964, Open-File Report 64-128
The Burnt River valley in southern Baker County, Oreg., is underlain by rocks that range in age from pre-Tertiary to Quaternary. The pre-Tertiary rocks consist mainly of argillites, schists, limestones, and intrusive igneous rocks, while the Tertiary rocks consist mainly of felsic and mafic volcanic tuffs, lava flows and breccias,...
Selected hydrologic data, upper Sevier River basin, Utah
Carl H. Carpenter, Gerald B. Robinson Jr., Louis Jay Bjorklund
1964, Utah Basic-Data Report 8
This report is intended to serve two purposes: (1) to make available to the public basic ground-water data useful in planning and studying development of water resources, and (2) to supplement an interpretive report that will be published later.Records were collected during 1961-63 by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation...
Developing a State Water Plan: A basic water resource data program for Utah
Ted Arnow, R.H. Langford, M. T. Wilson
1964, Cooperative Investigations Report 1
Reliable data on Utah's water resources are essential to development of a State Water plan. While the need for such data was outlined in the report entitles "Developing a State Water Plan - Utah's water resources, problems, and needs - A challenge" published by the Utah Water and Power Board...
A thermodynamic study of pyrite and pyrrhotite
P. Toulmin III, P. B. Barton Jr.
1964, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (28) 641-671
Through the use of the electrum-tarnish method the following equation has been found to interrelate the composition of pyrrhotite, fugacity of sulfur, and temperature: In this equation fs2 is the fugacity of sulfur relative to the ideal diatomic gas at 1 atm, N is the mol fraction of FeS in pyrrhotite (in the...