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Page 124, results 3076 - 3100

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Chemical interactions of aluminum with aqueous silica at 25 degrees Celsius
John David Hem, C. E. Roberson, Carol J. Lind, W.L. Polxer
1973, Water Supply Paper 1827-E
Solutions containing from 10 -5 to 10 -2 moles per liter of aluminum and dissolved silica in various ratios were aged at pH levels between 4 and 10 at 25?C. A colloidal amorphous product having the composition of halloysite was produced in most solutions. It had a consistent and reversible...
Ground water in the Eugene-Springfield area, southern Willamette Valley, Oregon
F. J. Frank
1973, Water Supply Paper 2018
The cities of Eugene and Springfield and their outlying suburban and rural districts constitute an area of rapid population growth where progressively greater volumes of ground water are being required for irrigation and industrial and public supplies. The area is also one of diverse geologic and hydrologic conditions. As used...
United States mineral resources
Donald A. Brobst, Walden P. Pratt, editor(s)
1973, Professional Paper 820
The work on this volume began in January 1972, but in a broader sense its production began many years ago. The chapters were written by geologists most of whom have had many years of experience studying the geology of mineral deposits, and more particularly the commodities about which they have...
Annealing history limits for inhomogeneous, native gold grains as determined from Au-Ag diffusion rates
Gerald K. Czamanske, George A. Desborough, Fraser E. Goff
1973, Economic Geology (68) 1275-1288
Quantitative study of intrinsic inhomogeneities in native gold grains from three deposits in the western United States has revealed concentration profiles that represent the integrated sum of natural diffusion plus original chemical heterogeneity. By assuming that measured natural concentration gradients result solely from diffusion, upper limits may be placed on...
Eclogites from southwestern Oregon
Edward D. Ghent, Robert G. Coleman
1973, Geological Society of America Bulletin (84) 2471-2488
Eclogite, high-grade blueschist, and amphibolite blocks occur within the Mesozoic Otter Point Formation of southwestern Oregon and are inferred to have been tectonically emplaced by eastward-directed overthrusting involving Colebrooke Schist and serpentinite.Eclogite from southwestern Oregon is very similar in bulk chemistry and mineralogy to the well-studied eclogite of California.Calculations of...
Alaska-Aleutian range batholith: Geochronology, chemistry, and relation to circum-Pacific plutonism
Bruce L. Reed, Marvin A. Lanphere
1973, GSA Bulletin (84) 2583-2610
Potassium-argon mineral ages and reconnaissance mapping of approximately 65,000 sq km in south-central Alaska indicate that the Mesozoic and Cenozoic plutonic rocks in the region were emplaced during three discrete intrusive epochs. Most of the plutonic rocks are part of the Alaska-Aleutian Range batholith; the remainder appear as outcrops in...
Disseminated pyrite in a latite porphyry at Texan Mountain, Hudspeth County, Texas
Thomas E. Mullens
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 519-521
A pyrite-bearing latite porphyry that contains fragments of syenite and a quartz porphyry intruded into the Cretaceous Cox Sandstone are well exposed in a roadcut at Texan Mountain, Hudspeth County, Tex. The pyrite, which occurs along tiny fractures as well as disseminated, and the multiple episodes of intrusion, coupled with copper minerals in veins in...
Petrography and structural relations of granitic basement rocks in the Monterey Bay area, California
Donald C. Ross, Earl E. Brabb
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 273-282
In the past, the granitic basement of the Coast Ranges has been thought to be dominantly quartz diorite and low in K-feldspar.  However, a study of outcrops around Monterey Bay, basement well samples, and dredge samples from Monterey Bay shows that the granitic basement averages about 15 to 20 percent K-feldspar.  Therefore, as...
Geochronology of Precambrian rocks of the Teton Range, Wyoming
John C. Reed Jr., R. E. Zartman
1973, Geological Society of America Bulletin (84) 561-582
Note: This paper is dedicated to Aaron and Elizabeth Waters on the occasion of Dr. Waters' retirement.The oldest rocks in the Teton Range are complexly deformed interlayered biotite gneiss, plagioclase gneiss, amphibole gneiss, and amphibolite. Also, within these rocks, there are concordant bodies of strongly lineated quartz monzonite gneiss, here...
Timing of mesozoic and cenozoic plutonic events in circum-Pacific North America
Marvin A. Lanphere, Bruce L. Reed
1973, GSA Bulletin (84) 3773-3782
Evaluation of isotopic ages of granitic intrusive rocks of large batholiths in circum-Pacific North America indicates that Mesozoic and Cenozoic plutonism was episodic but not periodic. Three intrusive epochs have been defined in the Alaska-Aleutian Range batholith of Alaska on the basis of...
An empirical NaKCa geothermometer for natural waters
R.O. Fournier, A.H. Truesdell
1973, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (37) 1255-1275
An empirical method of estimating the last temperature of water-rock interaction has been devised. It is based upon molar Na, K and Ca concentrations in natural waters from temperature environments ranging from 4 to 340°C. The data for most geothermal waters cluster near a straight line when plotted as the...
Thermal conductivity of carbonate rocks
J. Thomas Jr., R.R. Frost, R.D. Harvey
1973, Engineering Geology (7) 3-12
The thermal conductivities of several well-defined carbonate rocks were determined near 40°C. Values range from 1.2 W m−1C−1 for a highly porous chalk to 5.1 W m−1C−1 for a dolomite. The thermal conductivity of magnesite (5.0) is at the high end of the range, and that for Iceland Spar Calcite (3.2) is near the...
Distribution of copper and other metals in gully sediments of part of Okanogan County, Washington
Kenneth F. Fox Jr., C. Dean Rinehart
1972, Bulletin 65
A geochemical exploration program aimed at determining regional patterns of metal distribution as well as pinpointing areas likely to contain undiscovered ore deposits was carried out in north-central Okanogan County, Washington. About 1,000 gully and stream sediment samples were collected from a rectangular area of about 800 square miles. The...
Preliminary examination of lunar samples: Part A: a petrographic and chemical description of samples from the lunar highlands
The Lunar Sample Preliminary Examination Team
1972, Book chapter, Apollo 16 preliminary science report (NASA SP 315)
More than four-fifths of the surface of the Moon consists of a profoundly cratered irregular surface designated terra or highlands by analogy with the terrestrial continents. These terra regions have much higher albedos than the physiographically lower and much smoother mare regions. The difference in albedo can now be ascribed...
Water resources inventory of Connecticut Part 6: Upper Housatonic River basin
Michael A. Cervione Jr., David L. Mazzaferro, Robert T. Melvin
1972, Connecticut Water Resources Bulletin 21
The upper Housatonic River basin report area has an abundant supply of water of generally good quality, which is derived from precipitation on the area and streams entering the area. Annual precipitation has averaged about 46 inches over a 30-year period. Of this, approximately 22 inches of water is returned...
Water-temperature data acquisition activities in the United States
F. H. Pauszek
1972, Water-Resources Investigations Report 72-2
Along with the growing interest in water quality during the last decade, the need for data on all types of water-quality parameters has also increased. One parameter of particular interest, because of its many ramifications, is temperature. It influences many of the chemical and physical processes that take place in...
Significance of ground-water chemistry in performance of North Sahara Tube wells in Algeria and Tunisia
Frank Eldridge Clarke, Blair F. Jones
1972, Water Supply Paper 1757-M
Nine ground-water samples from the principal shallow and deep North Sahara aquifers of Algeria and Tunisia were examined to determine the relation of their chemical composition to corrosion and mineral encrustation thought to be contributing to observed decline in well capacities within a UNESCO/UNDP Special Fund Project area. Although the...
Mineral deposits of the northwestern Hijaz quadrangle, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Robert Francis Johnson, Virgil A. Trent
1972, Open-File Report 72-195
A reconnaissance of portions of the Northwestern Hijaz quadrangle in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was made during 1964 and 1965 as part of a mineral survey of the Precambrian crystalline rocks of the country. The survey is being made under the terms of an agreement between the Saudi Arabia...
Geology and Mineral Resources of the Northern Part of the North Cascades National Park, Washington
Mortimer Hay Staatz, Rowland W. Tabor, Paul L. Weis, Jacques F. Robertson, Ronald M. Van Noy, Eldon C. Pattee
1972, Bulletin 1359
The northern part of the North Cascades National Park in northern Washington is north of the Skagit River between Mount Shuksan on the West and Ross Lake on the east. The area occupies approximately 500 square miles of steep mountains and thickly forested valleys centered on the precipitous Picket Range. Old...
Chemical quality of water in the Walnut River basin, south-central Kansas
Robert B. Leonard
1972, Water Supply Paper 1982
Improper disposal of oil-field brine and other wastes has adversely affected the naturally diverse chemical quality of much of the water in the Walnut River basin, south-central Kansas. The basin is an area of about 2,000 square miles in the shape of a rough triangle with its apex toward the...
Geology and water resources of the Bitterroot Valley, southwestern Montana, with a section on chemical quality of water
R. G. McMurtrey, Richard L. Konizeski, M. V. Johnson, John H. Bartells, H. A. Swenson
1972, Water Supply Paper 1889
The Bitterroot Valley is a Late Cretaceous structural basin that was partly filled at its deepest point by more than 1,640 feet of Tertiary sediments. These sediments grade valleyward from coarse colluvial deposits along the edges of the valley to fine-grained deposits and then to coarse channel deposits of the...
Geohydrologic summary of the Pearl River basin, Mississippi and Louisiana
Joseph W. Lang
1972, Water Supply Paper 1899-M
Fresh water in abundance is contained in large artesian reservoirs in sand and gravel deposits of Tertiary and Quaternary ages in the Pearl River basin, a watershed of 8,760 square miles. Shallow, water-table reservoirs occur in Quarternary deposits (Pleistocene and Holocene) that blanket most of the uplands in .the southern...