The Willow Creek district, Alaska
Stephen Reid Capps
1915, Bulletin 607
Results of spirit leveling in Minnesota, 1897 to 1914, inclusive
Robert Bradford Marshall
1915, Bulletin 560
The calcite marble and dolomite of eastern Vermont
T. Nelson Dale
1915, Bulletin 589
No abstract available....
Origin of the zinc and lead deposits of the Joplin region, Missouri, Kansas, and Oklahoma
Claude Ellsworth Siebenthal
1915, Bulletin 606
Faunas of the Boone limestone at St. Joe, Arkansas
George Herbert Girty
1915, Bulletin 598
Rhode Island coal
George H. Ashley
1915, Bulletin 615
Fauna of the so-called Boone chert near Batesville, Arkansas
George Herbert Girty
1915, Bulletin 595
Results of spirit leveling in Arizona, 1899 to 1915, inclusive
Robert Bradford Marshall
1915, Bulletin 573
The fractional precipitation of some ore-forming compounds at moderate temperatures
Roger Clark Wells
1915, Bulletin 609
Results of spirit leveling in Idaho, 1896 to 1914, inclusive
Robert Bradford Marshall
1915, Bulletin 567
Geology and mineral resources of Kenai peninsula, Alaska
George Curtis Martin, Bertrand Leroy Johnson, Ulysses Sherman Grant
1915, Bulletin 587
Contributions to economic geology (short papers and preliminary reports), 1913: Part II - mineral fuels
Marius Robinson Campbell, David White
1915, Bulletin 581
No abstract available....
Mineral resources of Alaska: Report on progress of investigations in 1914
Alfred H. Brooks
1915, Bulletin 622
No abstract available....
Some mining districts in northeastern California and northwestern Nevada
James M. Hill
1915, Bulletin 594
Scattered over its sparsely settled and generally arid expanse the State of Nevada contains approximately 200 centers of past or present mining activity. Some of these mining districts, such as the Comstock,1 Eureka,2 Tonopah,3 and Goldfield,4 have added millions to the world's wealth in precious metals and have been given...
Bibliography of North American geology for 1914, with subject index
John M. Nickles
1915, Bulletin 617
Analyses of rocks and minerals from the laboratory of the United States Geological Survey, 1880 to 1914
Frank Wigglesworth Clarke
1915, Bulletin 591
The present Geological Survey of the United States was organized in 1879. In 1880, in connection with the Colorado work, a chemical laboratory was established at Denver in charge of W. F. Hillebrand, with whom were associated Antony Guyard and, later, L. G. Eakins. In 1882 W. H. Melville was...
Geology and coal resources of North Park, Colorado
A. L. Beekly
1915, Bulletin 596
Contributions to economic geology (short papers and preliminary reports), 1913 : Part I - metals and nonmetals except fuels
F. L. Ransome, Hoyt S. Gale
1915, Bulletin 580
No abstract available....
Anticlinal structure in parts of Cotton and Jefferson counties, Oklahoma
Carroll H. Wegemann
1915, Bulletin 602
The Broad Pass region, Alaska with sections on Quaternary deposits, igneous rocks and glaciation
Fred Howard Moffit, Joseph E. Pogue
1915, Bulletin 608
No abstract available....
The phosphate deposits of Florida
George Charlton Matson
1915, Bulletin 604
The stratigraphy of the Montana group, with special reference to the position and age of the Judith River Formation in north-central Montana
C.F. Bowen
1915, Professional Paper 90-I
No abstract available....
Lavas of Hawaii and their relations
Whitman Cross
1915, Professional Paper 88
No abstract available....
The composition of crinoid skeletons
F. W. Clarke, W. C. Wheeler
1915, Professional Paper 90-D
No abstract available....
A reconnaissance in the Canyon Range, west-central Utah
G. F. Loughlin
1915, Professional Paper 90-F