Water-level trends in key observation well May-July 1963 (Abstracted from U. S. Geological Survey “Water Resources Review”)
S. W. West
1963, Groundwater (1) 50-50
No abstract available. ...
Television — A new tool for the ground‐water geologist
J.T. Callahan, R. L. Wait, M.J. McCollum
1963, Groundwater (1) 4-6
The television camera has become a tool of the ground‐water geologist, enabling him to examine visually the inside of a well deep below the land surface. Using the camera, the rocks can be viewed in place. Of great importance to the ground‐water studies in coastal Georgia, the camera enables the geologist to see the important <span...
Chemical analyses of surface waters in Colorado, October 1959 to September 1962
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1963, Report
Data presented herein are records of water quality for the period October 1959 to September 1962 for the sampling sites shown below and on the enclosed map. The data are preliminary and subject to revision. Final records are published in the annual series of Geological Survey Water-Supply Papers entitled "Quality...
Recharge rates of principal aquifers in Lake County, Indiana
J.S. Rosenshein
1963, Groundwater (1) 13-20
The upper 350 to 400 feet of rocks underlying Lake County, Indiana, form a single but complex hydrologic system. The rock units composing this system consist (in ascending order) of dolomite, clay till (unit 4), glaciofluvial sand (unit 3), clay till (unit 2), and lacustrine sand, silt, and clay (unit...
Origin of some intermittent ponds on quartzite ridges in western North Carolina
John C. Reed Jr., Bruce H. Bryant, John T. Hack
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1183-1188
Several intermittent ponds and closed depressions as much as 200 feet wide occur on the crests of ridges in gently dipping Cambrian(?) quartzites in the southeastern foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Morganton, North Carolina. The unconsolidated fill and debris in the ponds consists of clayey sand and saprolite with accessory minerals that could have...
Composition of fluid inclusions, cave-in-rock fluorite district, Illinois, and upper Mississippi valley zinc-lead district
W. E. Hall, I. Friedman
1963, Economic Geology (58) 886-911
No abstract available. ...
Distribution of fluorine in unaltered silicic volcanic rocks of the western conterminous United States
R.R. Coats, W.D. Gross, L. F. Rader Jr.
1963, Economic Geology (58) 941-951
An investigation of more than 170 samples of glass-rich volcanic rocks of rhyolitic or rhyodacitic composition shows marked regional variations in the fluorine content. The uniformity of the class of rocks was controlled by index of refraction determinations on fused beads and by chemical analyses of about one-seventh of the total number. The fluorine content...
Migratory game birds special permits: for salvage of sick, injured, or oil-soaked migratory game birds for rehabilitation and propagation: for acquisition and propagation of rare and endangered species
U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife
1963, Wildlife Leaflet 456
No abstract available....
Big game inventory for 1962
U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife
1963, Wildlife Leaflet 454
No abstract available....
Factors influencing the pore volume of fine-grained sediments under low-to-moderate overburden loads
R.H. Meade
1963, Sedimentology (2) 235-242
An anomalous increase of pore volume with increasing depth in the range 0—1,900 ft. occurs in fine‐grained sediments along the east side of the San Joaquin Valley of Cali‐ fornia. Several possible causes for the anomaly were inferred from a literature search and from study of the core samples. Statistical analyses of...
Hypervelocity impact of steel into Coconino Sandstone
Eugene Merle Shoemaker, D. E. Gault, H. J. Moore, R. V. Lugn
1963, American Journal of Science (261) 668-682
Impact of a 0.4019-g steel sphere at 4.27 km/sec into Coconino Sandstone [Permian] from Meteor Crater, Arizona, produced a crater 11-12 cm across and 2.45 cm deep. The ejecta consist of sandstone fragments, disaggregated sand, splinters of sand...
The hydraulic geometry of a shallow estuary
W. B. Langbein
1963, International Association of Scientific Hydrology - Bulletin (8) 84-94
An analogy with entropy production in steady-state systems leads to a statement that the geometry of natural waterways is governed by two opposing influences: a) equal work per unit of area of bed, and b) minimum work done in the system as a whole. The resulting calculations applied to shallow, estuaries are verified...
Preliminary results of a study of calcium carbonate saturation of ground water in central Florida
William Back
1963, International Association of Scientific Hydrology - Bulletin (8) 43-51
The departure of ground water from equilibrium with calcite is being studied in central Florida. Measurements of pH, temperature, and concentration of bicarbonate made in the field are used with standard laboratory analyses of water samples to calculate an ion activity product (K) for calcium carbonate. The calculated Kiap is compared with the...
Birds protected by Federal law
U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife
1963, Wildlife Leaflet 455
No abstract available....
Correlations and problems in belt series stratigraphy, Northern idaho and western Montana
J. E. Harrison, A.B. Campbell
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1413-1427
A continuous strip of geologic maps has recently been completed along the Idaho-Montana state line between Clark Fork, Idaho, and Superior, Montana. New stratigraphic and petrographic information provides the basis for stratigraphic correlations and for the interpretation of facies changes in this part of the basin of deposition of the Precambrian Belt <span...
Anomalous gravity field in east-central California
Howard W. Oliver, Don R. Mabey
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1293-1298
Bouguer gravity values at about 11,000 stations in east-central California range from -14 mgal near Merced to -274 mgal in Long Valley. Gravity lows in the west and south parts of the San Joaquin Valley and over local basins south and east of the Sierra Nevada are produced by large thicknesses of Upper Cretaceous and Cenozoic...
Two pollen diagrams from southeastern Minnesota: Problems in the regional late-glacial and postglacial vegetational history
H.E. Wright Jr., Thomas C. Winter, Harvey L. Patten
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1371-1396
Kirchner Marsh and Lake Carlson are located 3 miles apart in Dakota County about 15 miles south of Minneapolis in the St. Croix moraine, which was formed by the Superior lobe during the Gary phase of the Wisconsin glaciation. During the Mankato phase that followed, the Des Moines lobe advanced to within...
Early pennsylvanian currents in the southern Appalachian Mountains
John Schlee
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1439-1451
Measurement of more than 1200 cross-beds in lower Pennsylvanian sandstones of the southern Appalachian Mountains reveals a broad pattern of sediment transport to the southwest and west. Most of the sand appears to have been derived from the east and to have moved south-westward parallel to the axis of the Appalachian geosyncline. The pattern...
Metasomatic origin of large parts of the Adirondack Phacoliths
A.E.J. Engel, C.G. Engel
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 349-352
A metasomatic origin seems established for large parts of the granite phacoliths in the northwest Adirondack Mountains, New York. This conclusion is based upon the discovery and detailed mapping of a blurred but widespread stratigraphic sequence in the phacoliths. Highly complicated patterns of relict beds are defined by alternations of granitic gneiss, amphibolite, oligoclase-quartz...
Natural radioactivity in Washington County, Maryland
R.M. Moxham
1963, Geophysics (28) 262-272
Natural gamma-radioactivity patterns in Washington County, Maryland, reflect the principal variations in lithology. The highest radioactivity is associated with the more argillaceous parts of the geologic section and with soils derived from high-potassium carbonate rocks. Surface radiation intensity ranges from about 5 to 30 microroentgens per hour, of which the rocks contribute...
Pleistocene marine microfauna in the Bootlegger Cove Clay, Anchorage, Alaska
R.A.M. Schmidt
1963, Science (141) 350-351
Ostracods and Foraminifera, associated with mollusks, indicate a marine depositional environment for part of the Bootlegger Cove Clay. The definite Arctic and North Atlantic affinities of the microfauna suggest a possible migration through the Bering-Chukchi seaway during the late Pleistocene....
Transformation of montmorillonite to kaolinite during weathering
Z. S. Altschuler, E.J. Dwornik, H. Kramer
1963, Science (141) 148-152
Extensive deposits of kaolinite in Florida are formed by transformation of montmorillonite during low-temperature supergene weathering. The transformation occurs by intracrystalline leaching of interlayer cations and tetrahedral silica layers. Interposition of stripped layers within montmorillonite creates a regular 1:1 mixed-layered montmorillonite-kaolinite, a new clay structure. Kaolin-like layers are nourished by...
Reef Creek Detachment Fault, Northwestern Wyoming
William G. Pierce
1963, GSA Bulletin (74) 1225-1236
he Reef Creek fault is in northwestern Wyoming, a few miles east of the northeast border of Yellowstone National Park. It lies within the area covered by the more extensive Heart Mountain fault. Like that fault, it is a décollement or detachment fault in which strata became detached along a basal shearing...
Hydrologic bench marks to distinguish the effects of climate vs. man
H.D. Wilson Jr.
1963, Groundwater (1) 13-14
There is a vital need for hydrologic data representing various environments that are free from the effects of man's activities. Without such data hydrologists will be stymied in distinguishing hydrologic changes caused by man from those caused by climate. To provide this background information, the U. S. Geological Survey is planning a nationwide hydrologic <span...
Saline ground water — A little used and unmapped resource
J. L. Poole
1963, Groundwater (1) 18-20
Vast quantities of saline ground water await new commercial uses and economical demineralization processes for recognition as a valuable resource. Saline ground water is more widely distributed than any other natural resource, occurring throughout the United States and in geologic formations ranging from the oldest to the youngest. The Coastal Plain has the...