Destructive floods of the United States in 1903
E.C. Murphy
1904, Water Supply Paper 96
Accuracy of stream measurements
Edward C. Murphy
1904, Water Supply Paper 95
Report of progress of stream measurements for the calendar year 1903, Part IV, Interior Basin, Pacific, and Hudson Bay drainage
John Clayton Hoyt
1904, Water Supply Paper 100
A treatise on metamorphism
Charles Richard Van Hise
1904, Monograph 47
The Menominee iron-bearing district of Michigan
William Shirley Bayley
1904, Monograph 46
A gazetteer of Delaware
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 230
Boundaries of the United States and of the several States and Territories, with an outline of the history of all important changes of territory (third edition)
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 226
A gazetteer of Maryland
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 231
Experiments on schistosity and slaty cleavage
George Ferdinand Becker
1904, Bulletin 241
Schistosity as a structure is important, and it is a part of the business of geologists to explain its origin. Slaty cleavage has further and greater importance as a possible tectonic feature. Scarcely a great mountain range exists, or has existed, along the course of which belts of slaty rock...
A gazetteer of West Virginia
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 233
Geology of the Hudson Valley between the Hoosic and the Kinderhook
T. Nelson Dale
1904, Bulletin 242
The tin deposits of the York region, Alaska
Arthur James Collier
1904, Bulletin 229
Results of primary triangulation and primary traverse, fiscal year 1903-04
Samuel Stinson Gannett
1904, Bulletin 245
Catalogue and index of the publications of the Hayden, King, Powell, and Wheeler surveys
Laurence Frederick Schmeckebier
1904, Bulletin 222
The gazetteer of Virginia
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 232
Report of progress in the geological resurvey of the Cripple Creek district, Colorado
Waldemar Lindgren, F. L. Ransome
1904, Bulletin 254
A gazetteer of Texas (second edition)
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 224
Geographic tables and formulas (second edition)
Samuel Stinson Gannett
1904, Bulletin 234
Economic geology of the Iola quadrangle, Kansas
George Irving Adams, Erasmus Haworth, W.R. Crane
1904, Bulletin 238
No abstract available....
A geological reconnaissance across the Cascade range near the forty-ninth parallel
George Otis Smith, Frank C. Calkins
1904, Bulletin 235
Gypsum deposits in the United States
George Irving Adams
1904, Bulletin 223
No abstract available....
Analyses of rocks from the laboratory of the United States Geological Survey, 1880-1903
F. W. Clarke
1904, Bulletin 228
The present Geological Survey of the United States was organized in 1879. In 1880 a chemical laboratory was established at Denver, in connection with the Colorado work, in charge of Dr. W. F. Hillebrand, with whom were associated Mr. Antony Guyard and, later, Mr. L. G. Eakins. In 1882 Dr....
Contributions to economic geology, 1903
Samuel Franklin Emmons, C. W. Hayes
1904, Bulletin 225
The United States Geological Survey, its origin, development, organization, and operations
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1904, Bulletin 227
The United States Geological Survey, in the Department of the Interior, was created by act of Congress approved March 3, 1879, so that March 3, 1904, marks the completion of the twenty-fifth year of its existence. The quarter-century anniversary happens to fall near the date set for the opening of...
Preliminary report on the geology of the Arbuckle and Wichita mountains in Indian Territory and Oklahoma
J. A. Taff, H. F. Bain
1904, Professional Paper 31
The Arbuckle Mountains consist of a moderately elevated table -land or plateau in the east-central part of the Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory. The plateau ranges in elevation from 1,300 feet above sea, in its contracted western part, to 750 feet, at the east end, where it coalesces with the bordering...