Geologic structure of San Juan Canyon and adjacent country, Utah
H.D. Miser
1925, Bulletin 751-D
No abstract available....
Relations of the Wasatch and Green River formations in northwestern Colorado and southern Wyoming, with notes on oil shale in the Green River formation
J. D. Sears, W. H. Bradley
1925, Professional Paper 132-F
No abstract available....
The resuscitation of the term Bryn Mawr gravel
Florence Bascom
1925, Professional Paper 132-H
In the course of geologic and physiographic work in eastern Pennsylvania, it has seemed to the writer that the time was ripe for the restriction of the term Brandywine formation, now including presumably both Pliocene and Pleistocene gravels, and the reinstatement of the old term Bryn Mawr gravel for a...
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 37 degrees to 38 degrees latitude, 120 degrees to 121 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-II
Index of analyses of natural waters in the United States
W. D. Collins, C. S. Howard
1925, Water Supply Paper 560-C
Water power and irrigation in the Madison River basin, Montana
J.F. Deeds, W. N. White
1925, Water Supply Paper 560-A
Some floods in the Rocky Mountain region: Chapter G in Contributions to the hydrology of the United States, 1923-1924
Robert Follansbee, Paul V. Hodges
1925, Water Supply Paper 520-G
In 1923 severe floods occurred on the larger streams in Wyoming and a number of cloudburst floods on small streams in Wyoming and especially in Colorado. An investigation of the principal floods in each State was made, and the results are given in this paper, together with descriptions of two...
The artesian water supply of the Dakota sandstone in North Dakota, with special reference to the Edgeley quadrangle
Oscar E. Meinzer, Herbert A. Hard
1925, Water Supply Paper 520-E
The Dakota sandstone and the overlying dense plastic shales form the most remarkable artesian basin in the United States with respect to its great extent, the long distances through which its water has percolated from the outcrops of the sandstone in the western mountains to the areas of artesian flow,...
Power resources of Snake River between Huntington, Oregon and Lewiston, Idaho: Chapter C in Contributions to the hydrology of the United States, 1923-1924
William Glenn Hoyt
1925, Water Supply Paper 520-C
Thousands of people are familiar with that part of Snake River where it flows for more than 300 miles in a general westward course across the plains of southern Idaho, but few have traversed the river where it flows northward and for 200 miles forms the boundary between Idaho and...
Additional ground-water supplies for the city of Enid, Oklahoma
B. C. Renick
1925, Water Supply Paper 520-B
Variation in annual run-off in the Rocky Mountain region: Chapter A in Contributions to the hydrology of the United States, 1923-1924
Robert Follansbee
1925, Water Supply Paper 520-A
Records of run-off in the Rocky Mountain States since the nineties and for a few stations since the eighties afford a means of studying the variation in the annual run-off in this region. The data presented in this report show that the variation in annual run-off differs in different areas...
Water power and flood control of Colorado River below Green River, Utah
Eugene Clyde La Rue, Hubert Work, Nathan C. Grover
1925, Water Supply Paper 556
The purpose of this report is to present the facts regarding available water supply and all known dam sites on Colorado River between Cataract Canyon, Utah, and Parker, Ariz., and to show the relative value of these dam sites. To determine the relative value of the dam sites, a comprehensive...
Rock formations in the Colorado Plateau of Southeastern Utah and Northern Arizona
C.R. Longwell, H.D. Miser, R.C. Moore, Kirk Bryan, Sidney Paige
1925, Professional Paper 132-A
The field work of which this report is a record was done in the summer and fall of 1921 by members of the United States Geological Survey. A project to build a large storage dam at Lees Ferry, on Colorado River in northern Arizona, called for a detailed topographic survey...
An early Eocene florule from central Texas
Edward Wilber Berry
1925, Professional Paper 132-E
In 1916 I described a florule collected by Alexander Deussen and L. W. Stephenson at the town of Earle, in Bexar County, Tex. This florule was tentatively considered of Midway age by these geologists, and examination of the fossil plants tended to confirm this assignment, particularly because of their lack...
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 34 degrees to 35 degrees latitude, 120 degrees to 121 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-Q
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 37 degrees to 38 degrees latitude, 118 degrees to 119 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-GG
Surface water supply of the New-Kanawha River basin, West Virginia, Virginia, and North Carolina
N.C. Grover, Albert Howard Horton, Guy Clarke Stevens
1925, Water Supply Paper 536
Contributions to the hydrology of the United States, 1925
Nathan Clifford Grover
1925, Water Supply Paper 560
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 37 degrees to 38 degrees latitude, 121 degrees to 122 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-JJ
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 37 degrees to 38 degrees latitude, 119 degrees to 120 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-HH
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 36 degrees to 37 degrees latitude, 117 degrees to 118 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-AA
Contributions to the hydrology of the United States, 1923-1924
Nathan Clifford Grover
1925, Water Supply Paper 520
Spirit leveling in California, 1896-1923: 35 degrees to 36 degrees latitude, 120 degrees to 121 degrees longitude
Claude Hale Birdseye
1925, Bulletin 766-X
Geology and possible oil and gas resources of the faulted area south of the Bearpaw Mountains, Montana
Frank Reeves
1925, Bulletin 751-C
No abstract available....
Geology and coal resources of the Gallup-Zuni basin, New Mexico
Julian Ducker Sears
1925, Bulletin 767
No abstract available....