Casselton-Fargo folio, North Dakota-Minnesota
Charles Monroe Hall, D.E. Willard
1905, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 117
Record of deep-well drilling for 1904
Myron Leslie Fuller, E. F. Lines, A. C. Veatch
1905, Bulletin 264
In this report, which is the first of a proposed series of annual publications, are presented the results of the first six months' work by the United States Geological Survey in the systematic collection of well records and samples. Much time having been occupied in organization and preliminary correspondence, the...
Results of primary triangulation and primary traverse, fiscal year 1904-5
Samuel Stinson Gannett
1905, Bulletin 276
Beaver folio, Pennsylvania
Lester Hood Woolsey
1905, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 134
No abstract available....
Status of the Mesozoic floras of the United States, Second paper: Part I.-Text, Part II.-Plates
Lester Frank Ward
1905, Monograph 48
Comparison of a wet and crucible-fire methods for the assay of gold telluride ores, with notes on the errors occurring in the operations of fire assay and parting
W. F. Hillebrand, Eugene Thomas Allen
1905, Bulletin 253
Taconic physiography
T. Nelson Dale
1905, Bulletin 272
The normal distribution of chlorine in the natural waters of New York and New England
Daniel Dana Jackson
1905, Water Supply Paper 144
Geology and water resources of Oklahoma
Charles Newton Gould
1905, Water Supply Paper 148
Bibliographic review and index of papers relating to underground waters published by the United States Geological Survey, 1879-1904
Myron Leslie Fuller
1905, Water Supply Paper 120
Destructive floods in the United States in 1904
Edward C. Murphy
1905, Water Supply Paper 147
Underground waters of eastern United States
Myron L. Fuller
1905, Water Supply Paper 114
The present paper is a brief summary of the underground water conditions in eastern United States, prepared to meet the demands of drillers and others for information relating to the general water resources of the various States or of specified regions.The detail with which the several regions or subjects are...
Preliminary list of deep borings in the United States
Nelson Horatio Darton
1905, Water Supply Paper 149
The first preliminary list of deep borings in the United States was issued as Water-Supply Papers Nos. 57 and 61. The present publication includes all of the wells listed in these two papers, together with many additional borings, mostly of recent date. Messrs. M. L. Fuller and A. C. Veatch,...
Preliminary report on the geology and water resources of central Oregon
Israel C. Russell
1905, Bulletin 252
Field assay of water
Marshall O. Leighton
1905, Water Supply Paper 151
The copper deposits of the Clifton-Morenci district, Arizona
Waldemar Lindgren
1905, Professional Paper 43
The oldest rocks of the Clifton quadrangle are pre-Cambrian granite and quartzitic schists, separated by an important unconformity from the covering Paleozoic strata. The latter comprise a total thickness of 1,500 feet. At the base lie 200 feet of probably Cambrian quartzitic sandstone, succeeded by 200 to 400 feet of...
Observations on the ground waters of Rio Grande Valley
Charles Sumner Slichter
1905, Water Supply Paper 141
Preliminary report on the underground waters of Washington
Henry Landes
1905, Water Supply Paper 111
Underground waters of Salt River valley, Arizona
Willis Thomas Lee
1905, Water Supply Paper 136
Field measurements of the rate of movement of underground waters
Charles Sumner Slichter
1905, Water Supply Paper 140
Report of progress of stream measurements for the calendar year 1904, Part III, Susquehanna, Patapsco, Potomac, James, Roanoke, Cape Fear, and Yadkin River drainages
Nathan Clifford Grover, J.C. Hoyt
1905, Water Supply Paper 126
The Triassic cephalopod genera of America
Alpheus Hyatt, J.P. Smith
1905, Professional Paper 40
The marine Triassic section of .America is unusually complete, and its thickness compares favorably with that of any other region. All three subdivisions-Lower, Middle, and Upper Triassic--are represented by calcareous deposits, aggregating approximately 4,000 feet in thickness. Of this amount, about 800 feet belong to the Lower Triassic, about 1,000...
Cement materials and industry of the United States
Edwin C. Eckel
1905, Bulletin 243
Twenty-Sixth Annual Report of the Director of the United States Geological Survey, 1904-1905
Charles D. Walcott
1905, Annual Report 26
IntroductionRemarks on the work of the yearBranches of workThe United States Geological Survey was created in 1879 for the purpose—as its name implies—of examining and reporting on the geologic structure and mineral resources and products of the national domain. To the adequate description of geologic formations and structure cartography is...
The disposal of strawboard and oil-well wastes
Robert Lemuel Sackett, Isaiah Bowman
1905, Water Supply Paper 113