A redescription of Ferdinand Roemer's Paleozoic types from Texas
Josiah Bridge, G.H. Girty
1937, Professional Paper 186-M
Inferences about the origin of oil as indicated by the composition of the organic constituents of sediments
P.D. Trask
1937, Professional Paper 186-H
Fossil plants from the Stanley shale and Jackfork sandstone in southeastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas
David White
1937, Professional Paper 186-C
Some deep wells near the Atlantic coast in Virginia and the Carolinas
W. C. Mansfield
1937, Professional Paper 186-I
The molluscan fauna of the Alum Bluff group of Florida, Part VI, Pteropoda, Opisthobranchia, and Ctenobranchia
Julia Gardner
1937, Professional Paper 142-F
Stratigraphic relations of the Austin, Taylor, and equivalent formations in Texas
L. W. Stephenson
1937, Professional Paper 186-G
Geology of the Marathon region, Texas
P. B. King
1937, Professional Paper 187
The flora of the New Albany shale; Part 2, The Calamopityeae and their relationships
Charles B. Read
1937, Professional Paper 186-E
Material referable to Calamopitys americana, Calamopitys foerstei, Stenomyelon muratum, Kalymma lirata, Kalymma resinosa, and Kalymma auriculata, from the upper portion of the New Albany shale in central Kentucky, is described. All these species are based on the internal structure of stems and petioles. The suggestion is made that the genus...
Fossil flora of the Wedington sandstone member of the Fayetteville shale
David White
1937, Professional Paper 186-B
Additions to some fossil floras of the western United States
R.W. Brown
1937, Professional Paper 186-J
The stratigraphy of the Upper Cretaceous rocks north of the Arkansas River in eastern Colorado
C. H. Dane, W. G. Pierce, J.B. Reeside Jr.
1937, Professional Paper 186-K
The Tertiary floras of Alaska, with a chapter on the geology of the Tertiary deposits
Arthur Hollick, P. S. Smith
1936, Professional Paper 182
No abstract available....
New Upper Cretaceous Ostreidae from the Gulf region
L. W. Stephenson
1936, Professional Paper 186-A
Geomorphology of the north flank of the Uinta Mountains
W. H. Bradley
1936, Professional Paper 185-I
The Uinta Mountains, whose northern margin is almost coincident with the southern boundary of Wyoming, extend from the Wasatch Range eastward across the northern part of Utah into northwestern Colorado. They were carved out of a large, simple anticlinal fold of sedimentary rocks arched up into essentially their present...
The flora of the New Albany shale: Part 1, Diichnia kentuckiensis, a new representative of the Calamopityeae
C.B. Read
1936, Professional Paper 185-H
Correlation of the Jurassic formations of parts of Utah, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado
A. A. Baker, C. H. Dane, J.B. Reeside Jr.
1936, Professional Paper 183
No abstract available....
Geology and ore deposits of the Montezuma quadrangle, Colorado
T. S. Lovering
1935, Professional Paper 178
Upper Eocene foraminifera of the southeastern United States
J.A. Cushman
1935, Professional Paper 181
Pre-Cambrian rocks of the Lake Superior region: A review of newly discovered geologic features, with a revised geologic map
C. K. Leith, R. J. Lund, Andrew Leith
1935, Professional Paper 184
No abstract available....
The minerals of Franklin and Sterling Hill, Sussex County, New Jersey
Charles Palache
1935, Professional Paper 180
Origin of the copper deposits of the Ducktown type in the southern Appalachian region
C. S. Ross
1935, Professional Paper 179
No abstract available....
The Gold Hill Mining District, Utah
T.B. Nolan
1935, Professional Paper 177
The Gold Hill quadrangle is in west central Utah and is limited by parallels 40? and 40?15' and meridians 113?45' and 114?. This area includes the norlh end of the Deep Creek Mountains, one of the ranges in the Great Basin. The climate of the region, like that of the...
A lower Lance florule from Harding County, South Dakota
E. W. Berry
1934, Professional Paper 185-F
Geology and ore deposits of the Breckenridge mining district, Colorado
T. S. Lovering
1934, Professional Paper 176
Studies on the alkalinity of some silicate minerals
R.E. Stevens
1934, Professional Paper 185-A