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Page 4992, results 124776 - 124800

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Hydrology of the Lake Deaton and Lake Okahumpka area, Northeast Sumter County, Florida
Edward P. Simonds, E. R. German
1980, Open-File Report 80-733
The Floridan aquifer in the Lake Deaton and Lake Okahumpka area is 50 to 130 feet below land surface. During the 16-year period 1963-78 lake evaporation exceeded rainfall by 0.4 inches. Drainage from Lake Deaton and its surrounding area goes into Chitty Chatty Creek and on the Hogeye Sink when...
Surficial geology of Richland quadrangle, Oswego County, New York
Todd S. Miller
1980, Open-File Report 80-763
The location and extent of 12 kinds of surficial deposits in Richland quadrangle, Oswego County, N.Y., are mapped on a 7.5-minute U.S. Geological Survey topographic map. The map was compiled to indicate the lithology potential for ground-water development at any specific location....
Hydrology and chemical quality of ground water in Crowley County, Colorado
Doug Cain, Barbara J. Ryan, Patrick J. Emmons
1980, Open-File Report 80-681
Significant quantities of groundwater can be obtained from several alluvial water-table aquifers possibly from two deep confined sandstone aquifers in Crowley County, Colo. The major water-table aquifer is the alluvium along the Arkansas River valley where well yields may be as much as 2,000 gallons per minute. Minor alluvial aquifers...
Water table in the High Plains aquifer in 1978 in parts of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming
Edwin D. Gutentag, John B. Weeks
1980, Open-File Report 80-50
The High Plains aquifer includes an area of about 177,000 square miles, with 74 percent of the area in Kansas, Nebraska, and Texas, and 26 percent of the area in Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming. The High Plains aquifer consists of one or more hydraulically connected geologic...