Ground-water hydrology and glacial geology of the Kalamazoo area, Michigan
Morris Deutsch, K.E. Vanlier, P.R. Giroux
1960, Progress Report 23
The Kalamazoo report area includes about 150 square miles of Kalamazoo County, Mich. The area is principally one of industry and commerce, although agriculture also is of considerable importance. It has a moderate and humid climate and lies within the Lake Michigan “snow belt”. Precipitation averages about 35 inches per...
Basic geology and ground-water data for Clay County, Minnesota
J.W. Bingham
1960, Bulletin 8
No abstract available....
Occurrence of strontium in the surface and ground waters of Champaign county, Ohio
A.J. Feulner, J.H. Hubble
1960, Economic Geology (55) 176-186
Naturally occurring strontium was found in both surface and ground waters during an investigation of the water resources of Champaign County, Ohio. The strontium is related to the presence of celestite (strontium sulfate) in rocks associated with evaporite deposition. The principal source of celestite in Ohio is in rocks of Late Silurian age. Celestite is present also in the glacial...
Geology and ground-water hydrology of the Redlands-Beaumont area, California, with special reference to ground-water outflow
W.L. Burnham, Lee Carlton Dutcher
1960, Report
The Redlands-Beaumont area is bordered by the Santa Ana River on the north, the San Bernadina River on the northeast, the Yucaipa Hills and the San Gorgonio Pass on the east, and the Badlands and the San Jacinto fault on the south and south-west. Large alluvial fans underlie much of...
Geology and ground-water resources of the island of Kauai, Hawaii
Gordon A. Macdonald, Dan A. Davis, Doak C. Cox
1960, Bulletin 13
Kauai is one of the oldest, and is structurally the most complicated, of the Hawaiian Islands. Like the others, it consists principally of a huge shield volcano, built up from the sea floor by many thousands of thin flows of basaltic lava. The volume of the Kauai shield was on...
Moles and their control
U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife
1960, Wildlife Leaflet 421
No abstract available....
Geophysical abstracts 176-179 January-December 1959
1960, Bulletin 1106
Abstracts of current literature pertaining to the physics of the solid earth and to geophysical exploration....
Controlling birds: vagrant domestic pigeons
U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife
1960, Wildlife Leaflet 413
No abstract available....
Earthquake fluctuations in wells in New Jersey
Charles R. Austin
1960, New Jersey Division of Water Policy and Supply Water Resources Circular 5
New Jersey is fortunate to be situated in a region that is relatively stable, geologically. For this reason scientists believe, on the basis of the best scientific evidence available, that the chances of New Jersey experiencing a major earthquake are very small. The last major earthquake on the east coast...
Factual data for public-supply wells and selected irrigation wells in Monmouth County, New Jersey
Leo A. Jablonski
1960, New Jersey Division of Water Policy and Supply Water Resources Circular 4
The investigation of the ground-water resources of Monmouth County is part of a Statewide water-resources program. This study was made by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the new Jersey Department of Conservation and Economic Development, Division of Water Policy and Supply. It was under the general direction of...
A geologic-profile plotter
O.T. Marsh
1960, Economic Geology (55) 201-204
Design and uses are described of an easy-to-construct instrument that facilitates construction of profiles of land surfaces, geologic formations, or other features such as profiles of geophysical or geochemical anomalies. Response to data from users of the instrument indicates that it is both faster and more convenient than previous methods. ...
Age and growth of the whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis, of Munising Bay, Lake Superior
Thomas A. Edsall
1960, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (89) 323-332
This study is based on a sample of 415 whitefish collected in 1953 from an unexploited population in Munising Bay, Lake Superior. Gill-net and trawl catches had different length-frequency distributions and age compositions, but estimates of growth from the two catches were very similar. The body-scale relation is...
The stoneroller, Campostoma anomalum (Rafinesque), in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
R. E. Lennon, P. S. Parker
1960, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (89) 263-270
The stoneroller (Campostoma anomalum) is one of the more important fish in Great Smoky Mountains National Park because of its abundance and habits. Although esteemed locally as a food and a bait fish, the stoneroller is exploited but little since the fishing regulations which govern the utilization of game fishes...
The crystal structure of cesium biuranyl trisulphate, Cs2(UO2)2(SO4)3
M. Ross, H. T. Evans Jr.
1960, Journal of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry (15) 338-351
The crystal structure of the new compound Cs(UO2)2(SO4)3 has been determined by X-ray diffraction methods. The compound is tetragonal, space group P421m">P421m (D2d3), with a = 9·62 ± 0·02, c = 8·13 ± 0·01Å">c = 8·13 ± 0·01Å, and Z = 2; s.g. (calc.)...
Determination of niobium in the parts per million range in rocks
F. S. Grimaldi
1960, Analytical Chemistry (32) 119-121
A modified niobium thiocyanate spectrophotometric procedure relatively insensitive to titanium interference is presented. Elements such as tungsten, molybdenum, vanadium, and rhenium, which seriously interfere in the spectrophotometric determination of niobium, are separated by simple sodium hydroxide fusion and leach; iron and magnesium are used as carriers for the niobium. Tolerance...
Anisotropy of the magnetic susceptibility of gallium
T. Pankey Jr.
1960, Journal of Applied Physics (31) 1802-1804
The bulk magnetic susceptibilities of single gallium crystals and polycrystalline gallium spheres were measured at 25°C. The following anisotropic diamagnetic susceptibilities were found: a axis (−0.119±0.001)×10−6 emu/g, b axis (−0.416±0.002)×10−6 emu/g, and c axis (−0.229±0.001) emu/g. The susceptibility of the polycrystalline spheres, assumed to be the average value for the bulk susceptibility of gallium, was (−0.257±0.003)×10−6 emu/g at 25°C, and (−0.299±0.003)×10−6 emu/g at −196°C. The susceptibility of liquid gallium was (0.0031±0.001)×10−6 emu/g at 30°C and 100°C. Rotational diagrams of the susceptibilities in the three orthogonal planes of the...
How volcanoes grow
J. P. Eaton, K. J. Murata
1960, Science (132) 925-938
Geology, geochemistry, and geophysics disclose the constitution and eruption mechanism of Hawaiian volcanoes....
Automatic measurements and computations for radiochemical analyses
J. N. Rosholt, J. R. Dooley Jr.
1960, Analytical Chemistry (32) 1093-1098
In natural radioactive sources the most important radioactive daughter products useful for geochemical studies are protactinium-231, the alpha-emitting thorium isotopes, and the radium isotopes. To resolve the abundances of these thorium and radium isotopes by their characteristic decay and growth patterns, a large number of repeated alpha activity measurements on...
Theoretical stusy of the reaction between 2,2',4' - trihydroxyazobenzene-5-sulfonic acid and zirconium
Mary H. Fletcher
1960, Analytical Chemistry (32) 1827-1836
Zirconium reacts with 2,2',4'-trihydroxyazobenzene-5-sulfonic acid in acid solutions to Form two complexes in which the ratios of dye to zirconium are 1 to 1 and 2 to 1. Both complexes are true chelates, with zirconium acting as a bridge between the two orthohydroxy dye groups. Apparent equilibrium constants for the...
Diagenesis of metabolites and a discussion of the origin of petroleum hydrocarbons
Irving A. Breger
1960, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (19) 297-308
Proteins and carbohydrates are rapidly degraded to compounds of no direct interest in the problem of the origin of petroleum. Lignin, if carried into marine basins in the form of humic substances, is probably the major progenitor of kerogen rather than the precursor of petroleum. Pigments are but minor contributors...
Potentiometric titration and equivalent weight of humic acid
A. M. Pommer, Irving A. Breger
1960, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (20) 30-44
The “acid nature” of humic acid has been controversial for many years. Some investigators claim that humic acid is a true weak acid, while others feel that its behaviour during potentiometric titration can be accounted for by colloidal adsorption of hydrogen ions. The acid character of humic acid has been...
Core logs from five test holes near Kramer, California
William K. Benda, Richard C. Erd, Ward C. Smith
1960, Bulletin 1045-F
In 1957, five test holes were drilled near Kramer, Calif., in the western Mojave Desert, for the U.S. Geological Survey. The drill sites are in topographic basins where gravimetric and geologic surveys indicated the presence, beneath alluvium, of a thick section of Quaternary and Tertiary sedimentary and volcanic rocks.Two holes,...
Seasonal abundance and vertical movements of planktonic crustacea in Lake Michigan
LaRue Wells
1960, Fishery Bulletin (60) 343-369
U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service Fishery Bulletin no. 172...
The new Fish Control Laboratory at La Crosse
R. E. Lennon
1960, Badger Sportsman (16) 5
Abstract has not been submitted...
Collection and preservation of fish and other materials exposed to pesticides
Oliver B. Cope
1960, Progressive Fish-Culturist (22) 103-108
The effects of pesticides on fish have become improtant to fish conservation since World War II, when DDT first came into common use. With the development of other potent insecticides and the increasing use of massive dosages in more recent years, the threat to fish and fish foods has increased....