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Page 4024, results 100576 - 100600

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Publication Extents

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Sand and gravel aquifers of Schuyler County, New York
Todd S. Miller
1990, Water-Resources Investigations Report 90-4073
Some sand and gravel aquifers in Schuyler County may be capable of supplying large quantities of drinking water. To obtain information needed for proper management and protection of the aquifers and to ensure an adequate water supply for the future, the U.S. Geological Survey, in coopations with the county, compiled...
Water withdrawals in the Roanoke-Chowan Subregion of North Carolina and Virginia, 1983
M.W. Treece Jr.
1990, Water-Resources Investigations Report 90-4007
The Chowan-Roanoke Subregion of North Carolina and Virginia comprises an area of about 18,300 sq mi, of which 7,600 sq mi are in North Carolina and 10,700 sq mi are in Virginia. Precipitation in the region is relatively high, and therefore water supplies appear to be plentiful. However, projected increases...
Plan of study for the Ohio-Indiana carbonate-bedrock and glacial- aquifer system
E. F. Bugliosi
1990, Open-File Report 90-151
The major aquifers of 35,000 sq mi area in western Ohio and eastern Indiana consist of Silurian and Devonian carbonate bedrock and Quaternary glacial deposits. These bedrock units and glacial deposits have been designated for study as part of the U.S. Geological Survey 's Regional Aquifer System Analysis program, a...
Floods of February 1989 in Tennessee
Ferdinand Quinones, C. R. Gamble
1990, Water-Resources Investigations Report 89-4207
Rainfall amounts of over 5 inches the night of February 13 and the morning of February 14, 1989, caused flooding in areas of Middle and West Tennessee. The towns of Lebanon in Middle Tennessee and Obion in West Tennessee were most severely affected. Most of the business district in Lebanon...