The Late Cretaceous ammonites Scaphites leei Reeside and Scaphites hippocrepis (DeKay) in the western interior of the United States
William Aubrey Cobban
1969, Professional Paper 619
Structural and stratigraphic significance of the Buchia zones in the Colyear Springs-Paskenta area, California
David Lawrence Jones, Edgar Herbert Bailey, Ralph Willard Imlay
1969, Professional Paper 647-A
Geological Survey research 1969, Chapter A
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1969, Professional Paper 650-A
A descriptive catalog of selected aerial photographs of geologic features in areas outside the United States
C.R. Warren, D. L. Schmidt, C. S. Denny, W.J. Dale
1969, Professional Paper 591
Geological Survey research 1969, Chapter C
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1969, Professional Paper 650-C
This collection of 38 short papers is the second published chapter of "Geological Survey Research 1969." The papers report on scientific and economic results of current work by members of the Geologic, Topographic, and Water Resources Divisions of the U.S. Geological Survey.Chapter A, to be published later in the year,...
Ferns from the Chinle Formation (Upper Triassic) in the Fort Wingate area, New Mexico
S.R. Ash
1969, Professional Paper 613-D
Micromineralogy of galena ores, Burgin mine, East Tintic district, Utah
A. S. Radtke, C.M. Taylor, H. T. Morris
1969, Professional Paper 614-A
Sample size and meaningful gold analysis
H.E. Clifton, R. E. Hunter, F. J. Swanson, R. L. Phillips
1969, Professional Paper 625-C
Hydrogeologic information on the Glorieta Sandstone and the Ogallala Formation in the Oklahoma Panhandle and adjoining areas as related to underground waste disposal
James Haskell Irwin, Robert B. Morton
1969, Circular 630
The Oklahoma Panhandle and adjacent areas in Texas, Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico have prospered because of the development of supplies of fresh water and of oil and gas. The Ogallala and, in places, Cretaceous rocks produce fresh water for irrigation, public supply, and domestic and stock use through approximately...
Geographic Applications Program: reports completed and in preparation
Robert H. Alexander
1969, Open-File Report 69-3
Radio description of geologic features examples and conclusions
Ivo Lucchitta, John W. M’Gonigle, David Schleicher
1969, Open-File Report 69-153
Mineral resources of the Mission Mountains primitive area, Missoula and Lake Counties, Montana
Jack Edward Harrison, M.W. Reynolds, M. D. Kleinkopf, E. C. Pattee
1969, Bulletin 1261-D
Detection of thick surficial deposits on 8-14 u infrared imagery of the Madison Plateau, Yellowstone National Park
Henry A. Waldrop
1969, Open-File Report 69-310
Summary of Cretaceous stratigraphy in part of the McCarthy quadrangle, Alaska
David Lawrence Jones, E.M. MacKevett Jr.
1969, Bulletin 1274-K
The construction of thematic land use maps with spacecraft photography
David E. Schwarz, D.S. Simonett, G.F. Jenks, J.R. Ratzlaff
1969, Open-File Report 69-243
Stratigraphy of the Albemarle Group of the Carolina slate belt in central North Carolina
Arvid A. Stromquist, Harold Wesley Sundelius
1969, Bulletin 1274-B
Terrestrial impact structures; a bibliography, 1965-68
Jacquelyn H. Freeberg
1969, Bulletin 1320
Water Resources Data for Colorado, 1968; Part 2: Water quality records
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1969, Water Data Report CO-68-2
Geologic evaluation of anomalies between like-polarized and cross-polarized K-band side-looking radar imagery of Yellowstone National Park
Gerald Martin Richmond
1969, Open-File Report 69-222
Water quality and discharge of streams in the Lehigh River Basin, Pennsylvania
Edward F. McCarren, Walter B. Keighton
1969, Water Supply Paper 1879-H
The Lehigh River, 100 miles long, is the second largest tributary to the Delaware River. It drains 1,364 square miles in four physiographic provinces. The Lehigh River basin includes mountainous and forested areas, broad agricultural valleys and areas of urban and industrial development. In the headwaters the water is of...
Pecos National Monument, New Mexico: Its geologic setting
Ross Byron Johnson
1969, Bulletin 1271-E
The ruins of the pueblos and missions of Pecos lie on the east bank of Glorieta Creek near its junction with the Pecos River at the south end of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in north-central New Mexico. Here the Pecos River and Glorieta Creek have formed a broad rolling...
Land subsidence due to ground-water withdrawal Tulare-Wasco, area California
B. E. Lofgren, R.L. Klausing
1969, Professional Paper 437-B
No abstract available....
Geologic map of west-central part of Lander County, Nevada
John H. Stewart, Edwin H. McKee
1969, Open-File Report 69-270
No abstract available....
Geology of the Gardiner area, Park County, Montana
George D. Fraser, Henry A. Waldrop, Harold Julius Hyden
1969, Bulletin 1277
Hydrogeology of the Scioto River Valley near Piketon, south-central Ohio
Stanley Eugene Norris, Richard E. Fidler
1969, Water Supply Paper 1872
A systematic study was made of one of Ohio's principal aquifers, a sand and gravel outwash in the Scioto River Valley, to determine the feasibility of developing a ground-water supply of 20 million gallons per day at a site near Piketon. The first part of the study was spent in...