Contributions to economic geology 1906 : Part I - metals and nonmetals except fuels
Samuel Franklin Emmons, Edwin C. Eckel
1907, Bulletin 315
Oil and gas fields of Greene County, PA
Ralph Walter Stone, Frederick Gardner Clapp
1907, Bulletin 304
No abstract available....
Geography and geology of a portion of southwestern Wyoming with special reference to coal and oil
A. C. Veatch
1907, Professional Paper 56
No abstract available....
Contributions to economic geology, 1906, Part I, Metals and nonmetals except fuels--Clays and Clay Products
John T. Porter, Charles Butts, Millard King Shaler, J.H. Gardner, Jethro Otto Veatch, Nevin Melancthon Fenneman, George W. Stose, Edwin F. Lines, William Clifton Phalen, Lawrence Martin
1907, Bulletin 315-I
Flowing wells and municipal water supplies in the middle and northern portions of the southern peninsula of Michigan
Frank Leverett
1907, Water Supply Paper 183
A large amount of data on water supplies was collected by the writer in the course of glacial investigations made under the direction of Prof. T. C. Chamberlin in the last five years in the Southern Peninsula of Michigan. These investigations resulted in a partial acquaintance with conditions in about...
Contributions to economic geology 1906 : Part I - metals and nonmetals except fuels -- Nickel, Uranium, etc.; Lead and Zinc
H. S. Gale, George Otis Smith, George Frederick Kay
1907, Bulletin 315-C
Pollution of Illinois and Mississippi Rivers by Chicago sewage, a digest of the testimony taken in the case of the State of Missouri v. the State of Illinois and the Sanitary District of Chicago
Marshall O. Leighton
1907, Water Supply Paper 194
The testimony taken in the suit of the State of Missouri against the State of Illinois and the sanitary district of Chicago comprises the best symposium on river pollution, its biological and chemical aspects, and its general and special sanitary significance that has ever been assembled. The contentions of both...
The Bonnifield and Kantishna regions, Alaska
Louis Marcus Prindle
1907, Bulletin 314-L
Contributions to economic geology, 1906, Part I, Metals and nonmetals except fuels--Abrasive Materials
Ralph Arnold, Robert Anderson
1907, Bulletin 315-O
Mineral resources of the United States, 1906
David T. Day
1907, Report
No abstract available....
Twenty-eighth annual report of the Director of the United States Geological Survey
George Otis Smith
1907, Annual Report 28
The plan of operations for the last fiscal year, including an itemized statement of the appropriations, amounting to $1,758,720, with the allotments thereof, was approved by the Secretary of the Interior on July 10, 1906. The work of the various branches and divisions conformed to this plan, and a detailed...
Pleistocene terracing in the North Carolina coastal plain
Barry L. Johnson
1907, Science (26) 640-642
No abstract available....
Normal faulting in the Bullfrog District
W. H. Emmons
1907, Science (26) 221-222
No abstract available....
Geology of the Marysville mining district, Montana: A study of igneous intrusion and contact metamorphism
Joseph Barrell
1907, Professional Paper 57
The Marysville mining district had been for many years previous to 1899 one of the noted gold-producing centers of Montana. The mines are situated around the margins of in irregular batholith of quartz diorite, whose surface exposure is from half a mile to 1 1/2 miles broad and 2 1/2...
Localities of Field Work and Assignments of Employees: Season of 1906
1906, Report
Report on the operations of the coal-testing plant of the United States Geological Survey at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, Saint Louis, Missouri, 1904: Part I.--Field work, classification of coals, chemical work
E.W. Parker, J.A. Holmes, M. R. Campbell
1906, Professional Paper 48
The authority for conducting at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition an investigation of the coals and lignites of the United States is contained in the act of Congress providing for the urgent deficiencies in the appropriations for the fiscal year 1905, and approved February 18, 1904, as follows: For analyzing and testing....
Underground water resources of Long Island, New York
A. C. Veatch, Charles Sumner Slichter, Isaiah Bowman, W.O. Crosby, R.E. Horton
1906, Professional Paper 44
As Long Island is the largest island on the eastern coast of the United States, and is of such size, 120 miles long and 23 miles wide, that it is a more or less noticeable feature on even very small-scale maps, little need be said of its general geographic position....
Geology and underground waters of the Arkansas Valley in eastern Colorado
N. H. Darton
1906, Professional Paper 52
In the valley of Arkansas River in southeastern Colorado there is an area of considerable extent in which artesian flows are available. During the last ten years numerous wells have been sunk to develop this important resource and, in most cases in the lower lands, abundant water supplies have been...
The areas of the United States, the States, and the Territories
Henry Gannett
1906, Bulletin 302
The Juneau gold belt, Alaska: A reconnaissance of Admiralty Island, Alaska
Arthur Coe Spencer, Charles Will Wright
1906, Bulletin 287
No abstract available....
Geology and mineral resources of Mississippi
Albert Forster Crider
1906, Bulletin 283
Underground waters of Tennessee and Kentucky west of Tennessee River and of an adjacent area in Illinois
Leonidas Chalmers Glenn
1906, Water Supply Paper 164
The Tertiary and Quaternary pectens of California
Ralph Arnold
1906, Professional Paper 47
This paper consists of two parts. The first is a brief outline of the different Tertiary and Pleistocene formations of California, giving the type localities, where, when, and by whom first described, their salient characters, where they and their supposed equiyalents are known to occur, the species of Pecten found...
Geology and mineral resources of part of the Cumberland Gap coal field, Kentucky
G. H. Ashley, L. C. Glenn
1906, Professional Paper 49
The Cumberland Gap coal field lies in Bell and Harlan counties, in the southeast corner of Kentucky and in Claiborne and Campbell counties, Tenn., and extends in a general northeast-southwest direction between Pine and Cumberland mountains from Fork Mountain on the southwest to the heads of Poor and Clover forks...
Dover folio, Delaware-Maryland-New Jersey
Benjamin LeRoy Miller
1906, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 137