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Page 5786, results 144626 - 144650

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The talc, soapstone, and asbestos deposits of Massachusetts
Newton Earl Chute
1969, Open-File Report 69-39
Several talc and soapstone deposits were worked in Massachusetts from about 1810 to 1922. Most of these deposits are in the Chester Amphibolite, or in serpentine lenses in or adjacent to the amphibolite along a belt that extends north-south across the State from Rowe to West Granville; it appears...
Measurement of discharge by the moving-boat method
George F. Smoot, Charles E. Novak
1969, Techniques of Water-Resources Investigations 03-A11
This chapter describes the procedures for measuring discharge in large streams by the moving-boat technique. During the traverse of a boat across a stream, a sonic sounder records the geometry of the cross section, and a continuously operating current meter senses the combined stream and boat velocities. These data are...
Surface water investigations in Afghanistan: a summary of activities from 1952 to 1969
Arthur O. Westfall
1969, Open-File Report 73-364
The purpose of this report is to summarize briefly the history of the Surface Water Research project since its inception in 1952, the work accomplished, and the problems encountered. In general, each topic is discussed under two periods of time: 1952-1963, when projects were confined to the Helmand River Valley...
Availability of ground water for large-scale use in the Malad Valley-Bear River areas of southeastern Idaho: an initial assessment
W.L. Burnham, A.H. Harder, N. P. Dion
1969, Open-File Report 69-28
Five areas within the Bear River drainage of southeastern Idaho offer potential for further development of ground water--the valley north of Bear Lake, north of Soda Springs, Gem Valley, Cache Valley in Idaho, and Malad Valley in Idaho. Saturated deposits north of Bear Lake are too fine-textured to yield large...