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Page 6442, results 161026 - 161050

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ground-water resources of Kansas
R.C. Moore, S. W. Lohman, J.C. Frye, H.A. Waite, Thad G. McLaughlin, Bruce Latta
1940, Kansas Geological Survey Bulletin (1940) 1-112
Introduction: Water is a necessity of life. Accordingly, every person is deeply interested in the subject of water supply. He knows that he must have water to drink. He depends indirectly on water for all his food and clothing. He may want water in which to wash. Civilized man has...
Ground water in the Oklahoma Panhandle
S.L. Schoff
1940, Economic Geology (35) 534-545
An investigation begun in 1937 by the United States and the Oklahoma Geological Surveys, has shown that the depth to the water table in the Oklahoma Panhandle ranges from less than 25 feet in parts of major valleys to about 3oo feet in parts of the uplands. In 8 upland...
Geology and ground-water resources of the islands of Lanai and Kahoolawe, Hawaii
Harold T. Stearns, Gordon Andrew Macdonald, Joel Howard Swartz
1940, Bulletin 6
Lanai lies 59 miles southeast of Honolulu, Oahu, has an area of 141 square miles, and is 3,370 feet high. (See fig. 1 and pl. 1.) Lanai City is the only town of importance. The island produces pineapples and cattle. The surface above about 1,200 feet is generally covered with...
Tagging experiments with lake trout, whitefish, and other species of fish from Lake Michigan
Oliver H. Smith, John Van Oosten
1940, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (69) 63-84
A total of 2,902 Lake Michigan fish was tagged and released, 48.8 per cent of which were lake trout and 85 per cent lake trout, lake herring, and whitefish. A total of 388 fish or 13.4 per cent was recaptured. The percentages of returns indicated a tremendous fishing intensity for...
A new fungus disease of trout
H.S. Davis, E.C. Lazar
1940, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (70) 264-271
A new species of fungus, for which time name Saprolegnia invaderis is proposed, was found in fingerling trout at the Leetown (West Virginia) hatchery. Infection occurs through the alimentary tract from which the fungus grows out through the body cavity and the abdominal wall to the exterior, where zoospores and...
Scyphidia micropteri, a new protozoan parasite of largemouth and smallmouth black bass
E. W. Surber
1940, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (69) 169-175
A small urn‐shaped peritrichous protozoan, apparently an undescribed species, was found on the gills and bodies of largemouth and smallmouth black bass in ponds at Leetown, West Virginia. A heavy mortality among a lot of fingerling largemouth bass probably resulted from suffocation due to the organisms on the gills. Specimens...
Ridge-making thin sandstone in Frederick County, Virginia: Chapter C
R.S. Edmundson
1939, Book chapter, Contributions to Virginia Geology--II
It is generally recognized that massive thick-bedded sandstones and relatively weak shales and soluble limestones form characteristic surface features. The uncommon effect of a thin argillaceous sandstone in producing ridges in an area in northern Virginia, in which the writer has recently done detailed field work, is briefly described in...