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Page 5661, results 141501 - 141525

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Surficial geology of the Mount Tom quadrangle, Massachusetts
Fredrick D. Larsen
1972, Open-File Report 72-219
Movement of the last ice sheet in the Mount Tom quadrangle was due south during time of major advance as indicated by striations, drumlins, and indicator stones. Erratics of the Belchertown Tonalite, derived from the northeast portion of the Easthampton quadrangle, have been carried southward a distance of at least...
Benefaction studies on the Hasan Celebi magnetite deposit, Turkey
Jean W. Pressler, Ali Akar
1972, Open-File Report 72-303
Bench-scale and semicontinuous tests were performed on surface, trench, and diamond drill core samples from the Hasan Celebi low-grade magnetite deposit to determine the optimum benefication procedures utilizing wet magnetic separation techniques. Composite core samples typically contain about 27 percent recoverable magnetite and require crushing and grinding through 1 mm...
Reconnaissance bedrock geologic map of the Chugach Mountains near Anchorage, Alaska
Sandra H. B. Clark
1972, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 350
The area between Knik and Turnagain Arms east of Anchorage is underlain mostly by rocks that are part of an extensive arcuate belt of thick Mesozoic marine deposits that extend through the Chugach-Kenai-Kodiak Mountains. The two main units in this belt are the Jurassic (?) and Cretaceous Valdez (?) Group...
Flood of June 1972: Chemung River near Waverly, New York
L.A. Wagner, P.H. Hamecher
1972, Open-File Report 72-430
In June 1972, tropical storm Agnes caused sever flooding in Pennsylvania and southern New York. The flood, on many major streams were the highest known since the river valleys were settled. Maximum discharges were as much as twice the discharge of a 50-year flood. In southern New York, large areas...
Map showing flood of June 1972 resulting from tropical storm Agnes, Susquehanna River at Kingston, Pennsylvania
H.N. Flippo Jr., L.W. Lenfest Jr.
1972, Open-File Report 72-118
In June 1972, tropical storm Agnes caused severe flooding within a broad area extending from North Carolina to Southern New York. Flood elevations along the Susquehanna River were the highest ever recorded. In the Wilkes-Barre area, flood elevations exceeded those of 1865 and 1936 by about eight feet. Maximum discharges...