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Page 5489, results 137201 - 137225

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Land-surface subsidence at Seabrook, Texas
R.K. Gabrysch, C.W. Bonnet
1975, Water-Resources Investigations Report 76-31
Removal of water, oil, and gas from the subsurface in Harris and Galveston Counties, Texas, has caused a decline in fluid pressures, which is turn had resulted in subsidence of the land surface. Subsidence of the land surface at Seabrook is due principally to the removal of water. Significnt subsidence...
Estimate of sediment discharges, Santa Ana River at Santa Ana and Santa Maria River at Guadalupe, California
Carl G. Kroll
1975, Water-Resources Investigations Report 74-40
The computed sediment discharge of Santa Ana River at Santa Ana for the water years 1968-71 was 11,700,000 tons (10,600,000 tonnes) of suspended sediment and 5,000,000 tons (4,500,000 tonnes) of coarse sediment. The computed discharge of Santa Maria River at Guadalupe for the water years 1969-71 was 9,500,000 tons (8,600,000...
The geologic story of Arches National Park
Stanley William Lohman
1975, Bulletin 1393
According to former Superintendent Bates Wilson (1956), Prof. Lawrence M. Gould, of the University of Michigan, was the first to recognize the geologic and scenic values of the Arches area in eastern Utah and to urge its creation as a national monument. Mrs. Faun McConkie Tanner told me that Professor...
The geologic story of Isle Royale National Park
N. King Huber
1975, Bulletin 1309
Isle Royale is an outstanding example of relatively undisturbed northwoods lake wilderness. But more than simple preservation of such an environment is involved in its inclusion in our National Park System. Its isolation from the mainland provides an almost untouched laboratory for research in the natural sciences, especially those studies...