Artesian water in the Florida peninsula
V. T. Stringfield
1936, Water Supply Paper 773-C
The thiem method for determining permeability of water-bearing materials and its application to the determination of specific yield; results of investigations in the Platte river valley, Nebraska
Leland K. Wenzel
1936, Water Supply Paper 679-A
Abstract contains content that can not be displayed, please see the publication for abstract...
Surface water supply of the United States, 1935 : Part 13 Snake River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1936, Water Supply Paper 793
Surface water supply of the United States, 1934, Part VII, Lower Mississippi River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1936, Water Supply Paper 762
Geology of the Monument Valley-Navajo Mountain region, San Juan County, Utah
Arthur A. Baker
1936, Bulletin 865
No abstract available....
Mineral resources of the region around Boulder Dam
D. F. Hewett, Eugene Callaghan, B.N. Moore, T.B. Nolan, W.W. Rubey, W. T. Schaller
1936, Bulletin 871
Geology and ore deposits of the Bayard area, Central Mining District, New Mexico
Samuel Grossman Lasky
1936, Bulletin 870
Possibility of new oil pools in the Siliceous lime and Bartlesville sand in T. 23 N., R. 10 E., Osage County, Oklahoma
N. Wood Bass
1936, Bulletin 886-A
Geology and mineral resources of the Butler and Zelienople quadrangles, Pennsylvania
George Burr Richardson
1936, Bulletin 873
The Book Cliffs coal field in Emery and Grand counties, Utah
Daniel Jerome Fisher
1936, Bulletin 852
Geology and mineral resources of the Bellefonte quadrangle, Pennsylvania
Charles Butts, Elwood S. Moore
1936, Bulletin 855
No abstract available....
Geology of the Anthracite Ridge coal district, Alaska
Gerald Ashley Waring
1936, Bulletin 861
Geology of the Coastal Plain of South Carolina
Charles Wythe Cooke
1936, Bulletin 867
Correlation of the Jurassic formations of parts of Utah, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado
A. A. Baker, C. H. Dane, J.B. Reeside Jr.
1936, Professional Paper 183
No abstract available....
The flora of the New Albany shale: Part 1, Diichnia kentuckiensis, a new representative of the Calamopityeae
C.B. Read
1936, Professional Paper 185-H
Geomorphology of the north flank of the Uinta Mountains
W. H. Bradley
1936, Professional Paper 185-I
The Uinta Mountains, whose northern margin is almost coincident with the southern boundary of Wyoming, extend from the Wasatch Range eastward across the northern part of Utah into northwestern Colorado. They were carved out of a large, simple anticlinal fold of sedimentary rocks arched up into essentially their present...
Mineral resources of Alaska, report on progress of investigations in 1934. Upper Copper and Tanana Rivers, Alaska
F. H. Moffit
1936, Bulletin 868-C
Mineral resources of Alaska, report on progress of investigations in 1934. Mineral industry of Alaska in 1934
P. S. Smith
1936, Bulletin 868-A
The Rosebud coal field, Rosebud and Custer Counties, Montana
W. G. Pierce
1936, Bulletin 847-B
No abstract available....
Phosphate rock near Maxville, Philipsburg, and Avon, Montana
J. T. Pardee
1936, Bulletin 847-D
No abstract available....
The Richey-Lambert coal field, Richland and Dawson Counties, Montana
F.S. Parker
1936, Bulletin 847-C
No abstract available....
Mineral deposits of the Ruby-Kuskokwim region
J.B. Mertie Jr.
1936, Bulletin 864-C
No abstract available....
The diurnal fluctuation in the ground‐water and flow of the Santa Ana River and its meaning
Harold C. Troxell
1936, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (17) 496-504
In the time alloted for this subject it will be impossible to discuss, in its entirety, all phases of the methods used in computing the loss of water by transpiration from native plant‐life along the Santa Ana River. The results of this work are published in Bulletin 44 of the...
Flow‐duration characteristics of Illinois streams
J. H. Morgan
1936, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (17) 418-426
The paper entitled “An investigation of the flow‐duration characteristics of North Carolina streams,” by Thorndlke Saville and John Dargan Watson, which was published by the American Geophysical Union in its report of the Fourteenth Annual Meeting in 1933 (pp. 406–425), stimulated the writer, who is familiar with the streams discussed,...
Means of recognizing source beds
P.D. Trask, H.W. Patnode
1936, Conference Paper
Eight characteristics of sediments are considered as possible means of recognizing source beds: 1, quantity of organic matter in the sediments; 2, reducing power, which is a measure of ability of the sediments to reduce chromic acid; 3, color of sediments; 4, volatility of sediments; 5, degree of volatility, which...