Geology and possible oil and gas resources of the faulted area south of the Bearpaw Mountains, Montana
Frank Reeves
1925, Bulletin 751-C
No abstract available....
Contributions to economic geology (short papers and preliminary reports), 1923-1924, Part I, Metals and nonmetals except fuels. Deposits of magnesia alum near Fallon, Nevada
D. F. Hewett
1925, Bulletin 750-E
The occurrence of copper on Prince William Sound
F. H. Moffit
1925, Bulletin 773-C
No abstract available....
Mineral investigations in southeastern Alaska
A. F. Buddington
1925, Bulletin 773-B
No abstract available....
Geology and coal resources of the Axial and Monument Butte quadrangles, Moffat County, Colorado
Eugene Thomas Hancock
1925, Bulletin 757
Ore deposits of the Saddle Mountain and Banner mining districts, Arizona
Clyde Polhemus Ross
1925, Bulletin 771
No abstract available....
Geology and ground-water resources of Townsend Valley, Montana
Joseph Thomas Pardee
1925, Water Supply Paper 539
No abstract available....
Surface water supply of the United States, 1923, Part I, North Atlantic slope basins
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1925, Water Supply Paper 561
Contributions to economic geology (short papers and preliminary reports), 1923-1924: Part II. - Mineral fuels
K. C. Heald, W. T. Thom Jr.
1925, Bulletin 751
No abstract available....
Rock formations in the Colorado Plateau of Southeastern Utah and Northern Arizona
C.R. Longwell, H.D. Miser, R.C. Moore, Kirk Bryan, Sidney Paige
1925, Professional Paper 132-A
The field work of which this report is a record was done in the summer and fall of 1921 by members of the United States Geological Survey. A project to build a large storage dam at Lees Ferry, on Colorado River in northern Arizona, called for a detailed topographic survey...
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 34 degrees to 35 degrees latitude, 120 degrees to 121 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-Q
An early Eocene florule from central Texas
Edward Wilber Berry
1925, Professional Paper 132-E
In 1916 I described a florule collected by Alexander Deussen and L. W. Stephenson at the town of Earle, in Bexar County, Tex. This florule was tentatively considered of Midway age by these geologists, and examination of the fossil plants tended to confirm this assignment, particularly because of their lack...
The resuscitation of the term Bryn Mawr gravel
Florence Bascom
1925, Professional Paper 132-H
In the course of geologic and physiographic work in eastern Pennsylvania, it has seemed to the writer that the time was ripe for the restriction of the term Brandywine formation, now including presumably both Pliocene and Pleistocene gravels, and the reinstatement of the old term Bryn Mawr gravel for a...
Relations of the Wasatch and Green River formations in northwestern Colorado and southern Wyoming, with notes on oil shale in the Green River formation
J. D. Sears, W. H. Bradley
1925, Professional Paper 132-F
No abstract available....
Correlation of the Eocene formations in Mississippi and Alabama
Wythe Cooke
1925, Professional Paper 140-E
During Eocene time the site of the boundary between the States of Mississippi and Alabama fell within the transition zone between the Mississippi embayment and the open Gulf of Mexico. That different types of deposition proceeded simultaneously within these two regions may be inferred from the different facies which...
Geologic structure of San Juan Canyon and adjacent country, Utah
H.D. Miser
1925, Bulletin 751-D
No abstract available....
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: Introduction
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-A
Mineral resources of the Kamishak Bay region. The Cold Bay-Katmai district. The outlook for petroleum near Chignik, Alaska
George Curtis Martin, Kirtley Fletcher Mather, Walter R. Smith
1925, Bulletin 773-D
No abstract available....
The physical features of central Massachusetts
William C. Alden
1925, Bulletin 760-B
No abstract available....
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 33 degrees to 34 degrees latitude, 116 degrees to 117 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-H
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 33 degrees to 34 degrees latitude, 118 degrees to 119 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-J
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 34 degrees to 35 degrees latitude, 115 degrees to 116 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-L
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 32 degrees to 33 degrees latitude, 115 degrees to 116 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-C
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 34 degrees to 35 degrees latitude, 116 degrees to 117 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-M
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 33 degrees to 34 degrees latitude, 117 degrees to 118 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-I