Geology and water resources of Owens valley, California
Willis T. Lee
1906, Water Supply Paper 181
The underflow of the South Platte Valley
Charles Sumner Slichter, Henry C. Wolff
1906, Water Supply Paper 184
Prevention of stream pollution by distillery refuse, based on investigations at Lynchburg, Ohio
Herman Stabler
1906, Water Supply Paper 179
Report of progress of stream measurements for the calendar year 1905, Part VIII, Missouri River drainage
Cyrus Cates Babb, M.C. Hinderlider, J.C. Hoyt
1906, Water Supply Paper 172
The Tertiary and Quaternary pectens of California
Ralph Arnold
1906, Professional Paper 47
This paper consists of two parts. The first is a brief outline of the different Tertiary and Pleistocene formations of California, giving the type localities, where, when, and by whom first described, their salient characters, where they and their supposed equiyalents are known to occur, the species of Pecten found...
Report of progress of stream measurements for the calendar year 1905, Part XII, The Great Basin drainage
M.C. Hinderlider, G.L. Swendsen, Henry Thurtell
1906, Water Supply Paper 176
Report of progress of stream measurements for the calendar year 1905, Part IX, Meramec, Arkansas, Red, and lower western Mississippi River drainages
M.C. Hinderlider, J.M. Giles, John Clayton Hoyt
1906, Water Supply Paper 173
Mineral resources of the United States, 1905
David T. Day
1906, Report
No abstract available....
Twenty-seventh annual report of the Director of the United States Geological Survey
Charles D. Walcott
1906, Annual Report 27
During the last fiscal year the character of the work and the organization of the force remained substantially the same as described in the Twenty-sixth Annual Report. Accounts of the work performed in geology and paleontology, chemistry and physics, topography and geography, and hydrography, hydrology, and hydro-economics, as well as...
Zinc and lead deposits of the Upper Mississippi Valley
Harry Foster Bain
1906, Bulletin 294
The zinc and lead mines of the upper Mississippi Valley are in the southwest portion of Wisconsin and in adjacent parts of Illinois mid Iowa. The boundaries of the region are in part indefinite, since sporadic occurrences of the minerals are found outside the mining region proper. It is usual...
Glacial stages in Southeastern New England and vicinity
M. L. Fuller
1906, Science (24) 467-469
No abstract available....
A new analysis of the water of Owens Lake, California
C. H. Stone, F. M. Eaton
1906, Journal of the American Chemical Society (28) 1164-1170
No abstract available....
Cooperation Between the United States and Various States in Topographic, Hydrographic, and Geologic Work
1905, Report
Report of progress of stream measurements for the calendar year 1904, Part X, Colorado River and Great Basin drainage
M.C. Hinderlider, G.L. Swendsen, A.E. Chandler
1905, Water Supply Paper 133
Preliminary report on the geology and underground water resources of the central Great Plains
N. H. Darton
1905, Professional Paper 32
The area to which this report relates is shown in Pl. II. It comprises the greater portions of South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas, and the eastern portions of Colorado and of Wyoming, an area of about one-half million square miles. It is the result of my investigations during the past...
Forest conditions in the Gila River Forest Reserve, New Mexico
T. F. Rixon
1905, Professional Paper 39
The Gila River Forest Reserve was established by proclamation of President McKinley on March 2, 1899. The following is a statement of the boundaries as laid down in the proclamation: "Beginning at a point on the boundary line between New Mexico and Arizona, where it is intersected by the north...
Geology of the central Copper River region, Alaska
Walter C. Mendenhall
1905, Professional Paper 41
It is an interesting evidence of the prompt responsiveness of our governmental organization to popular needs that the year 1898, which saw the first rush of argonauts to Alaska as a result of the discovery of the Klondike in 1986, saw also several well-equipped Federal parties at work in the...
Contributions to mineralogy from the United States Geological Survey
Frank Wigglesworth Clarke
1905, Bulletin 262
The Triassic cephalopod genera of America
Alpheus Hyatt, J.P. Smith
1905, Professional Paper 40
The marine Triassic section of .America is unusually complete, and its thickness compares favorably with that of any other region. All three subdivisions-Lower, Middle, and Upper Triassic--are represented by calcareous deposits, aggregating approximately 4,000 feet in thickness. Of this amount, about 800 feet belong to the Lower Triassic, about 1,000...
Report on progress of investigations of mineral resources of Alaska in 1904
Alfred H. Brooks
1905, Bulletin 259
During the last two years the United States Geological Survey has met the demand of the mining public for early publication of economic results by issuing an annual bulletin entitled "Contributions to Economic Geology." Though these volumes have made no attempt to treat exhaustively any of the subject discussed, and...
The normal distribution of chlorine in the natural waters of New York and New England
Daniel Dana Jackson
1905, Water Supply Paper 144
Ebensburg folio, Pennsylvania
Charles Butts
1905, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 133
Greeneville folio, Tennessee-North Carolina
Arthur Keith
1905, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 118
No abstract available....
Bradshaw Mountains folio, Arizona
T.A. Jaggar Jr., Charles Palache
1905, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 126
Paleontology of the Malone Jurassic formation of Texas
Francis Whittemore Cragin, T. W. Stanton
1905, Bulletin 266
No abstract available....