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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Geology of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee and North Carolina
Philip Burke King, Robert B. Neuman, Jarvis B. Hadley
1968, Professional Paper 587
The boundary between Tennessee and North Carolina is delimited for about 50 miles in midlength by the crests of the Great Smoky Mountains, which include some of the highest summits in the southeastern United States, and which culminate in Clingmans Dome (alt 6,642 ft). Ramifying spurs and foothills descend northwestward...
Sedimentary features of the Blackhawk formation (Cretaceous) at Sunnyside, Carbon County, Utah
John O. Maberry
1968, Open-File Report 68-170
The Blackhawk Formation at Sunnyside, Utah, was deposited along the western margin of the Western Interior Cretaceous sea during southeastward withdrawal of the sea. Sand was the dominant type of land-derived sediment deposited in the Sunnyside district during the regressive phases. Sand bodies prograded seaward in response to changing sediment...
Late Eocene nonmarine diatoms from the Beaver Divide area, Fremont County, Wyoming
K. E. Lohman, George W. Andrews
1968, Professional Paper 593-E
The Beaver Divide is a high escarpment of Tertiary nonmarine strata in central Wyoming separating the Sweetwater Plateau from the relatively low-lying Wind River Basin. The Wagon Bed Formation of middle and late Eocene age and the Beaver Divide Conglomerate Member of the White River Formation-this member being of early...
Water resources of Wisconsin, Fox-Wolf River basin
Perry G. Olcott
1968, Hydrologic Atlas 321
PURPOSE AND SCOPE The purposes of this report are to (1) describe the geohydrology of the basin, (2) describe and relate the surface- and ground-water systems, (3) discuss existing and possible future water problems in the basin, and (4) to suggest means of possible solutions. The scope of the study was...