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Page 6307, results 157651 - 157675

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Pumice deposits in the Alaska Peninsula-Cook Inlet region
R.M. Moxham
1952, Open-File Report 52-103
Three principal areas of pumice deposition have been found in the Alaska Peninsula-Cook Inlet region: Katmai National Monument, Augustine Island, and the Veniaminof-Aniakchak area. Vast quantities of pumice were deposited in Katmai National Monument resulting from the eruption of Mt. Katmai and related volcanic action in 1912. The principal deposits in...
Geology and hydrology of dam sites on the island of St. Croix, Virgin Islands
R. R. Meyer
1952, Open-File Report 52-98
The Virgin Islands Corporation plans to build a series of small earth dams along some of the streams on the island of St. Croix, and field studies involving the selection and hydrology of possible sites was carried on by the Geological Survey during the months of August and September 1951....
Clay, near Nenana, Alaska
R.A. Eckhart
1952, Open-File Report 52-172
The clay deposit here described is located on the west side of the Alaska Railroad about 3.7 miles south of Nenana in N.E. 1/4 Sec. 3, T. 5 S., R. 8 W. (see figure 1). The surface of the deposit has a relief of less than 10 feet and is...
Industrial clays, other than potential sources of alumina of the Columbia Basin
I. G. Sohn
1952, Circular 158
During World War II, the Columbia Basin in Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and the western portion of Montana developed into an important industrial area because of the abundance of hydroelectric ,Power and industrial raw materials. The industries that were established led to a substantial increase in Population, and additional industrial and...
Water resources of the Detroit area, Michigan
Chester Owen Wisler, G.J. Stramel, Leslie Bostwick Laird
1952, Circular 183
The water used for all purposes in the Detroit area is obtained from three sources: Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River, their tributary streams and inland lakes, and ground water. During 1950 Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River provided 2,896 million gallons per day (mgd), or 98.3 percent...
Uranium-bearing coal and carbonaceous rocks in the Fall Creek area, Bonneville County, Idaho
James D. Vine, George Winfred Moore
1952, Circular 212
Uraniferous coal, carbonaceous shale, and carbonaceous limestone occur in the Bear River formation of Early Cretaceous age at the Fall Creek prospect, in the Fall Creek area, Bonneville County, Idaho. The uranium compounds are believed to have been derived from mildly radioactive silicic volcanic rocks of Tertiary age that rest...
Geochemical and mineralogical methods of prospecting for mineral deposits
A. Ye Fersman, S. A. Borovik, G.V. Gorshkov, S.D. Popov, A.F. Sosedko, Lydia Hartsock, A.P. Pierce
1952, Circular 127
Fersman's book "Geochemical and mineralogical methods of prospecting for mineral deposits" (Geokhimicheskiye i mineralogicheskiye metody poiskov poleznykh iskopayemykh) covers all petrographic, mineralogical, and geochemical techniques that are used either directly or indirectly in mineral exploration. Chapter IV is of particular interest because it describes certain geochemical methods and principles that...