Large springs in the United States
Oscar Edward Meinzer
1927, Water Supply Paper 557
What are the largest springs in the United States, how much water do they discharge, and what geologic conditions produce them are questions of much popular interest and considerable scientific and economic importance. Yet the information in regard to large springs has been so widely scattered and so difficult to...
Plants as indicators of ground water
Oscar Edward Meinzer
1927, Water Supply Paper 577
Perhaps the most outstanding feature of the flora of the desert is its relation or lack of relation to the water table. On the one hand are the plants which are adapted to extreme economy of water, which depend on the rains that occur at long intervals for their scanty...
Surface water supply of the United States, 1923, Part IX, Colorado River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1927, Water Supply Paper 569
Contributions to the hydrology of the United States, 1926
Nathan C. Grover
1927, Water Supply Paper 580
Surface water supply of the United States, 1922, Part IX, Colorado River basin
Nathan C. Grover, Robert Follansbee, A.B. Purton, Roger C. Rice
1927, Water Supply Paper 549
Surface water supply of the United States, 1924, Part III, Ohio River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1927, Water Supply Paper 583
Surface water supply of the United States, 1923, Part VI, Missouri River Basin
Nathan C. Grover, W.A. Lamb, C. G. Paulsen, Robert Follansbee, J.B. Spiegel, E.L. Williams, H. B. Kinnison, H.C. Beckman
1927, Water Supply Paper 566
Geology of No. 3 reservoir site of the Carlsbad Irrigation Project, New Mexico, with respect to water-tightness
O. E. Meinzer, B. C. Renick, Kirk Bryan
1927, Water Supply Paper 580-A
No abstract available....
A comparison of the genera Metaplacenticeras Spath and Placenticeras Meek
John B. Reeside Jr.
1927, Professional Paper 147-A
In a recent examination of a considerable suite of specimens from the Western Interior of the United States belonging to the Cretaceous ammonite genus Placenticeras Meek the writer made comparisons of the species from the Interior with those from the Cretaceous of the Pacific coast ordinarily designated Placenticeras pacificum J....
Correlation of geologic formations between east-central Colorado, central Wyoming, and southern Montana
W. T. Lee
1927, Professional Paper 149
Shorter contributions to general geology, 1926
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1927, Professional Paper 147
Geography, geology, and mineral resources of part of southeastern Idaho with descriptions of Carboniferous and Triassic fossils
W. C. Mansfield, G.H. Girty
1927, Professional Paper 152
No abstract available....
American Tertiary mollusks of the genus Clementia
W. P. Woodring
1927, Professional Paper 147-C
Aside from its value as an aid in determining the age of Tertiary beds, the chief interest of the genus Clementia lies in the anomalous features of its present and former distribution. An attempt is made in this paper to trace its geologic history, to point out its paleobiologic significance,...
Surface water supply of the United States, 1923 : Part 12, North Pacific drainage basins ; C. Pacific slope basins in Oregon and lower Columbia River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1927, Water Supply Paper 574
Surface water supply of Hawaii : July 1, 1922 to June 30, 1923
Nathan C. Grover, E.D. Burchard
1927, Water Supply Paper 575
Bessemer-Vandiver folio, Alabama
Charles Butts
1927, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 221
Mineral resources of Alaska, report on progress of investigations in 1925. The Toklat-Tonzona River region. Geologic investigations in northern Alaska
S. R. Capps, P. S. Smith
1927, Bulletin 792-C
Mineral resources of Alaska, report on progress of investigations in 1925. Mineral industry of Alaska in 1925 and administrative report
Fred Howard Moffit
1927, Bulletin 792-A
The Montana earthquake of June 27, 1925
J. T. Pardee
1927, Professional Paper 147-B
The earthquake of June 27, 1925, in Montana caused considerable damage within an area of 600 square miles or more, the center of which is in latitude 46° 5' N. and longitude 111° 20' W., a short distance southeast of Lombard. It was a seismic disturbance of the first...
The cephalopods of the Eagle sandstone and related formations in the Western Interior of the United States
J.B. Reeside Jr.
1927, Professional Paper 151
Geology and ore deposits of the Leadville mining district, Colorado
S. F. Emmons, J.D. Irving, G. F. Loughlin
1927, Professional Paper 148
Adequate treatment of so large and so extensively developed a district as that of Leadville necessitates a voluminous report, in which the practical questions of prime interest to the commercial world can not be systematically answered until the data on which they depend are discussed. Many readers will no doubt...
Upper Triassic marine invertebrate faunas of North America
J.P. Smith
1927, Professional Paper 141
Geology of the upper Matanuska valley, Alaska, with a section on the igneous rocks
Stephen Reid Capps, John Beaver Mertie Jr.
1927, Bulletin 791
No abstract available....
Contributions to economic geology (short papers and preliminary reports), 1927: Part I - Metals and nonmetals except fuels
Gerald Francis Loughlin, George Rogers Mansfield
1927, Bulletin 795
The Geological Survey's "Contributions to economic geology" are published in two parts, one including papers on metals and nonmetals except fuels and the other including papers on mineral fuels. As the subtitle indicates, most of the papers in these volumes are of three classes (1) short papers describing as thoroughly...
Bibliography of North American geology for 1923-24
John M. Nickles
1927, Bulletin 784