Estimated use of water in the United States - 1950
Kenneth Allen MacKichan
1951, Circular 115
An estimated 170,000 million gallons of water was withdrawn from the ground, lakes, or streams each day on the average during 1950 and used on the farms and in the homes, factories, and business establishments of the United States. An additional 1,100,000 million gallons per day was used to generate...
Coking-coal deposits of the western United States
Louise R. Berryhill, Paul Averitt
1951, Circular 90
Geohydrologic systems in the Anadarko basin in the central United States are controlled by topography, climate, geologic structures, and aquifer hydraulic properties, all of which are the result of past geologic and hydrologic processes, including tectonics and diagenesis. From Late Cambrian through Middle Ordovician time, a generally transgressive but cyclic...
Detroit River group in the Michigan basin
Kenneth K. Landes
1951, Circular 133
This report attempts to correlate the outcropping rocks in the type locality of the Detroit River group with the thick sequence of rocks that has been explored by many drilled wells in the Michigan Basin during the last twenty years. The surface nomenclature as recently revised (Ehlers, 1950) is suggested...
Construction materials in Graham County, Kansas
Frank E. Byrne, Vincent Bruce Coombs, Claude Williard Matthews
1951, Circular 51
Hydrology of stock-water reservoirs in Arizona
Walter Basil Langbein, C.H. Hains, R. C. Culler
1951, Circular 110
Bibliography on titanium to January 1, 1950
Jean Richards Carpenter, Gwendolyn Werth Luttrell
1951, Circular 87
Water resources of the Atlanta metropolitan area
R. W. Carter, Stephen M. Herrick
1951, Circular 148
Index of surface-water records, part 2, South Atlantic and eastern Gulf of Mexico basins, to September 30, 1950
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1951, Circular 122
A field method for the determination of tungsten in soils
Frederick Norville Ward
1951, Circular 119
Floods in Georgia, frequency and magnitude
Rolland William Carter
1951, Circular 100
Geologic construction-material resources in Rawlins County, Kansas
Henry Vorhees Beck, Robert K. McCormack
1951, Circular 132
Geologic construction-material resources in Sheridan County, Kansas
Henry Vorhees Beck, Robert K. McCormack
1951, Circular 118
Virgin Valley opal district, Humboldt County, Nevada
Mortimer Hay Staatz, Herman L. Bauer Jr.
1951, Circular 142
The Virgin Valley opal district, Humboldt County, Nevada, is near the Oregon-Nevada border in the Sheldon Game Refuge. Nineteen claims owned by Jack and Toni Crane were examined, sampled, and tested radiometrically for uranium. Numerous discontinuous layers of opal are interbedded with a gently-dipping series of vitric tuff and ash...
A review of the geology and coal resources of the Bering River coal field, Alaska
Farrell F. Barnes
1951, Circular 146
Index of surface-water records, part 12, Pacific slope basins in Washington and upper Columbia River basin, to September 30, 1950
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1951, Circular 102
Ground-water conditions in the Dutch Flats area, Scotts Bluff and Sioux Counties, Nebraska, with a section on chemical quality of the ground water
H. M. Babcock, F. N. Visher, W. H. Durum
1951, Circular 126
The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) studied contamination induced by irrigation drainage in 26 areas of the Western United States during 1986-95. Comprehensive compilation, synthesis, and evaluation of the data resulting from these studies were initiated by DOI in 1992. Soils and ground water in irrigated areas of the...
Index of surface-water records, part 1, North Atlantic slope basins, to September 30, 1950
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1951, Circular 138
Pumice deposits of the Klamath Indian Reservation, Klamath County, Oregon
George Walton Walker
1951, Circular 128
A large volume of pumice is widely distributed over the Klamath Indian Reservation in 'flow' and 'fall' deposits. The flow material on the Reservation is restricted to the area west of Klamath Marsh, and the fall material is thickest immediately southeast of the Marsh. Tests of the chemical and physical...
Scaphitoid cephalopods of the Colorado group
W. A. Cobban
1951, Professional Paper 239
Foraminifera of the Lodo Formation, central California; General introduction and part 1, Arenaceous Foraminifera
M.C. Israelsky
1951, Professional Paper 240-A
Geology of the Huancavelica quicksilver district, Peru
Robert Giertz Yates, Dean Frederick Kent, Jaime. Fernandez Concha
1951, Bulletin 975-A
Paleocene foraminifera of the Gulf coastal region of the United States and adjacent areas
Joseph A. Cushman
1951, Professional Paper 232
Fresh-water mollusks of Cretaceous age from Montana and Wyoming
Teng-Chien Yen
1951, Professional Paper 233-A
Foraminifera from the Arctic Slope of Alaska; general introduction and Part 1, Triassic foraminifera
Helen Tappan
1951, Professional Paper 236-A
Key to the families of common commercial fishes in the Philippines
Agustin F. Umali
1951, Research Report 21