Preliminary geologic map of the Long Creek quadrangle, Grant County, Oregon
T. P. Thayer, C. Ervin Brown
1967, Open-File Report 67-213
Floodflow characteristics at Highway I-20 and State Road 43, Crave Creek near Columbia, South Carolina
B.H. Whetstone
1967, Open-File Report 67-277
Records of wells and test holes in the Nevada Test Site and vicinity (through December 1966)
William Thordarson, R.A. Young, I.J. Winograd
1967, Open-File Report 67-218
Hydrogeologic and construction data obtained from 119 test holes, wells, and emplacement holes at the Nevada Test Site and vicinity (through December 1966) are tabulated. The availability of cuttings, cores, lithologic logs, geophysical logs, formation-water analyses, hydraulic test data, and detailed construction data for each hole, as well as references...
Floods in Waukegan Quadrangle, Northeastern Illinois
Roman T. Mycyk, V. Jeff May
1967, Hydrologic Atlas 234
Memorandum on the ground-water resources of the Natchez Trace Parkway headquarters area, Lea County, Mississippi
F.H. Thomson
1967, Open-File Report 67-217
A consolidated ADR (Analog Digital Recorder) trouble-shooting checklist for field and office use
R.E. Hammond
1967, Open-File Report 67-105
Water resources of the Two Rivers Watershed, Northwestern Minnesota
R.W. Maclay, Thomas C. Winter, G.M. Pike
1967, Hydrologic Atlas 237
The Two Rivers watershed includes two physiographic areas a lake plain and a till plain – within its 1,232 square miles. It lies in parts of Kittson and Roseau counties and includes the drainage basins of the Two Rivers and Joe River. The flat lake plain which extends 15 to 20...
Final investigation of water-well complaints related to Salmon Event in Tatum salt dome area, Lamar County, Mississippi
R.E. Taylor
1967, Open-File Report 67-211
Determination of channel capacity of reaches of Ash and Berenda Sloughs, distributary channels of the Chowchilla River, Madera County, California
Lynn Harmsen, H.A. Ray
1967, Open-File Report 67-107
Principal facts for gravity stations in the Yuma, Arizona, and Blythe, California areas
Donald L. Peterson, Arthur Comradi, Adel A. R. Zohdy
1967, Open-File Report 67-176
No abstract available. ...
Availability of ground water in parts of the New Madrid SE, Hubbard Lake, and Bondurant quadrangles, Jackson Purchase region, Kentucky-Tennessee
T. William Lambert
1967, Hydrologic Atlas 178
No abstract available....
Drastic lowering of Kingsbury Pond, Norfolk, Massachusetts
John R. Williams
1967, Open-File Report 67-278
Ground water of Baker Valley, Baker County, Oregon
David J. Lystrom, W.L. Nees, E. R. Hampton
1967, Hydrologic Atlas 242
Aeromagnetic map of the Round Mountain quadrangle and part of the Belmont quadrangle, Nevada
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Open-File Report 67-250
No abstract available....
Logs of holes drilled in 1955 and 1956 by U.S. Geological Survey, Dry Creek Basin area, Bull Canyon district, Montrose and San Miguel Counties, Colorado
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Open-File Report 67-257
No abstract available....
Aeromagnetic map of the Bullfrog and Bare Mountain quadrangles, Nevada-California
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Open-File Report 67-231
No abstract available....
Aeromagnetic map of the Goldfield quadrangle and part of the Cactus Peak quadrangle, Nevada
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Open-File Report 67-239
No abstract available....
Geologic map of the Brodhead quadrangle, east-central Kentucky
James Louis Gualtieri
1967, Geologic Quadrangle 662
Availability of ground water in the Clinton quadrangle, Jackson Purchase region, Kentucky
Arnold J. Hansen
1967, Hydrologic Atlas 175
Preliminary materials map of the Chester quadrangle, Hampshire and Hampden Counties, Massachusetts
George William Holmes
1967, Open-File Report 67-117
No abstract available....
National Atlas, Indian tribes, cultures & languages
William C. Sturtevant
1967, Report
Tribal distributions depicted on these maps (and on all other tribal maps covering a comparable area) are arbitrary at many points. Detailed knowledge of tribal areas was acquired at different times in different regions. For example, by the time knowledge was gained of the areas occupied by Plains tribes, many...
Surveying the earth's resources from space
William T. Pecora
1967, Surveying and Mapping (27) 639-643
Two developments, aerial photography and airborne geophysical surveying techniques, have already increased the rate at which new knowledge of the world's resources can be acquired. But even with far wider use of the tools and techniques already available, the problems that face us are greater than our current ability to...
Radar remote sensing in biology
Richard K. Moore, David S. Simonett
1967, BioScience (17) 384-390
The present status of research on discrimination of natural and cultivated vegetation using radar imaging systems is sketched. The value of multiple polarization radar in improved discrimination of vegetation types over monoscopic radars is also documented. Possible future use of multi-frequency, multi-polarization radar systems for all weather agricultural survey is...
Explorers from space
Raymond W. Fary Jr.
1967, Journal of Geological Education (15) 99-104
The statement that a new era in exploration is opening will almost surely bring to mind the venturing of man into space and the ever more imminent exploration of the moon. The reference here, however, is to exploration of earth itself and to the unique capabilities for study of the...
The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: effects on transportation, communications, and utilities
Malcolm H. Logan, Lynn R. Burton, Edwin B. Eckel, Reuben Kachadoorian, David S. McCulloch, Manuel G. Bonilla
1967, Professional Paper 545
This is the forth in a series of six reports that the U.S. Geological Survey published on the results of a comprehensive geologic study that began, as a reconnaissance survey, within 24 hours after the March 27, 1964, Magnitude 9.2 Great Alaska Earthquake and extended, as detailed investigations, through several...