Surface water supply of the United States, 1930 : Part 12. North Pacific slope drainage basins : C. Pacific slope basins in Oregon and lower Columbia River Basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1932, Water Supply Paper 709
Tertiary and Quaternary geology of the lower Rio Grande region, Texas
Arthur C. Trowbridge
1932, Bulletin 837
Surface water supply of the United States, 1931, Part IX, Colorado River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1932, Water Supply Paper 719
Surface water supply of the United States, 1928, Part II, South Atlantic slope and eastern Gulf of Mexico basins
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1932, Water Supply Paper 662
Surface water supply of the United States, 1931, Lower Mississippi River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1932, Water Supply Paper 717
Surface water supply of the United States, 1931 : Part 10, The Great Basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1932, Water Supply Paper 720
Surface water supply of the United States, 1930, Part VII, Lower Mississippi River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1932, Water Supply Paper 702
Surface water supply of the United States, 1930, Part VI, Missouri River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1932, Water Supply Paper 701
Pliocene fossils from limestone in southern Florida
W. C. Mansfield
1932, Professional Paper 170-D
Quaternary geology of Minnesota and parts of adjacent States
Frank Leverett, F.W. Sardeson
1932, Professional Paper 161
Lower Triassic ammonoids of North America
J.P. Smith
1932, Professional Paper 167
The Upper Cretaceous ammonite genus Barroisiceras in the United States
J.B. Reeside Jr.
1932, Professional Paper 170-B
Geology and ore deposits of the Bonanza mining district, Colorado, with a section on history and production
W. S. Burbank, C.W. Henderson
1932, Professional Paper 169
Mineralogy of drill cores from the potash field of New Mexico and Texas
Waldemar Theodore Schaller, Edward Porter Henderson
1932, Bulletin 833
The potash field of southeastern New Mexico and adjacent parts of Texas is confined to the southern part of the Permian salt basin, covering about 40,000 square miles. The potash and associated minerals lie in a body of Permian halite, whose top is at least several hundred feet below the...
Contributions to economic geology (short papers and preliminary reports), 1931-32, Part II, Mineral fuels. The Jackson gas field, Hinds and Rankin counties, Mississippi
W. H. Monroe
1932, Bulletin 831-A
The Ashland coal field, Rosebud, Powder River, and Custer Counties, Montana
N. W. Bass
1932, Bulletin 831-B
No abstract available....
Quality of water of the Colorado River in 1928-1930
C. S. Howard
1932, Water Supply Paper 638-D
This report gives the results obtained in the continuation of a study of the Colorado River begun in 1925.1 The analyses represent composites of daily samples collected by the observers at the gaging stations on the Colorado River at Cisco, Utah, and Lees Ferry and Grand Canyon, Ariz.; on the...
Geology and ground-water resources of the Dalles region, Oregon
A. M. Piper
1932, Water Supply Paper 659-B
No abstract available....
Outline of methods for estimating ground-water supplies
O. E. Meinzer
1932, Water Supply Paper 638-C
No abstract available....
Geology and ore deposits of the Pioche district, Nevada
L.G. Westgate, Adolph Knopf
1932, Professional Paper 171
LOCATION AND SURFACE FEATURES The Bristol Range, Highland, and Ely Range quadrangles make up the larger part of a. rectangular area 35 miles north and south by 24 miles east and west, which lies 19 miles west of the Nevada-Utah line and about 250 miles southwest of Salt Lake...
Physiography and glacial geology of eastern Montana and adjacent areas
W. C. Alden
1932, Professional Paper 174
Nitrate deposits of the United States
George Rogers Mansfield, Leona Boardman
1932, Bulletin 838
No abstract available....
A Miocene flora from Grand Coulee, Washington
E. W. Berry
1932, Professional Paper 170-C
Physiography and Quaternary geology of the San Juan Mountains, Colorado
Wallace W. Atwood, Kirtley F. Mather
1932, Professional Paper 166
The scenic beauty, rugged contour, and great variety of geologic phenomena displayed by the San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado have lured to that region many geologists, both professional and amateur, as well as countless laymen. Serious geologic studies in these mountains seem to fall historically into three periods. The first...
The geologic importance of the lime-secreting algae, with a description of a new travertine-forming organism
M.A. Howe
1932, Professional Paper 170-E