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Page 5873, results 146801 - 146825

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Geology of the Windsor quadrangle, Massachusetts
Stephen A. Norton
1967, Open-File Report 67-170
The Windsor quadrangle lies on the boundary between the eugeosynclinal and miogeosynclinal rocks of the Appalachian geosyncline on the western flank of the metamorphic high in western New England. Precambrian rocks crop out in a north-trending belt in the central part of the quadrangle. They have been classified into 2 formations....
Geologic framework and petroleum potential of the Atlantic Coastal Plain and continental shelf, with a section on stratigraphy
John Charles Maher, Esther English Richards Applin
1967, Open-File Report 67-152
The Atlantic Coastal Plain and Continental Shelf of North America is represented by a belt of Mesozoic and Cenozoic rocks, 150 to 300 miles wide and 2,400 miles long, extending from southern Florida to the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. This belt of Mesozoic and Cenozoic rocks encompasses an area of...
Some engineering geology problems at Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky
Frank W. Osterwald
1967, Open-File Report 67-173
The U.S. Geological Survey, at the request of the rational Park Service, participated in a field symposium May 22-26, 1967, at Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky. This symposium, held by the National Park Service, was to determine the applicability of the Wilderness Act of 1964 to underground and surface portions...
Geology of the Arnold Pond quadrangle, Oxford and Franklin Counties, Maine
David S. Harwood
1967, Open-File Report 68-121
The Arnold Pond quadrangle lies on the northwest limb of the boundary Mountain anticlinorium (Albee, 1961), a major northeast-trending fold that extends across northern New Hampshire, west-central Maine and adjacent Quebec. The anticlinorium is defined in a regional sense by the Taconic unconformity separating pre-Silurian rocks from the rocks of...