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Page 12, results 276 - 300

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The volcanic, sedimentologic, and paleolimnologic history of the Crater Lake caldera floor, Oregon:Evidence for small caldera evolution
C. Hans Nelson, Charles R. Bacon, Stephen W. Robinson, David P. Adam, J. Platt Bradbury, John H. Barber Jr., Deborah Schwartz, Ginger Vagenas
1994, Bulletin (106) 684-704
Apparent phreatic explosion craters, caldera-floor volcanic cones, and geothermal features outline a ring fracture zone along which Mount Mazama collapsed to form the Crater Lake caldera during its climactic eruption about 6,850 yr B.P. Within a few years, subaerial deposits infilled the phreatic craters and then formed a thick...
A field-trip guide to Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho: Volcanic, hydrothermal, and glacial activity in the region
Robert O. Fournier, R.L. Christiansen, R. A. Hutchinson, K. L. Pierce
1994, Bulletin 2099
This field-trip guide was originally prepared for the 7th International Symposium on Water/Rock Interaction (WRI-7) held in July 1992 in Park City, Utah. A large and diversified group of earth scientists and accompanying family members participated in this 3 1/2-day field trip that focused on water/rock interactions over widely ranging...
Shorter contributions to paleontology and stratigraphy, 1993
William Jasper Sando, editor(s)
1994, Bulletin 2073
The name Crummies Member of the Breathitt Formation is here given to a marine unit that I.C. White in 1885 called the Cannelton Limestone in the Kanawha River valley of West Virginia. Rocks now assigned to the Crummies Member have been miscorrelated by other workers with the Campbell Creek Limestone of White (1885)...