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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ground water availability in Acadia National Park and vicinity, Hancock and Knox counties, Maine
Bruce P. Hansen
1980, Open-File Report 80-1050
In general, yield of water from individual wells in unconsolidated surficial deposits is low (0-10 gallons per minute). Several small, unconsolidated deposits may yield moderate quantities (50-100 gallons per minute) but these have not been adequately tested.Yields from 160 wells in the crystalline bedrock range from 0.5 gallons per minute...
On radon emanation as a possible indicator of crustal deformation
Chi-Yu King
1979, Tectonophysics (52) 120-120
Radon emanation has been monitored in shallow capped holes by a Tracketch method along several active faults and in the vicinity of some volcanoes and underground nuclear explosions. The measured emanation shows large temporal variations that appear to be partly related to crustal strain changes. This paper proposes a model...
Radium and uranium concentrations and associated hydrogeochemistry in ground water in southwestern Pueblo County, Colorado
J. Karen Felmlee, Robert Allen Cadigan
1979, Open-File Report 79-974
Radium and uranium concentrations in water from 37 wells tapping the aquifer system of the Dakota Sandstone and Purgatoire Formation in southwestern Pueblo County, Colorado, have a wide range of values and define several areas of high radioactivity in the ground water. Radium ranges from 0.3 to 420 picocuries per...
Disequilibrium in the 238uranium series in samples from Yeelirrie, Western Australia
R.S. Lively, R.S. Harmon, A. A. Levinson, C.J. Bland
1979, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (12) 57-65
Uranium-series disequilibrium studies carried out on samples from the Yeelirrie uranium deposit, Western Australia, indicate that uranium and radium have been migrating within the deposit during recent times, and are actually being removed from the deposit. Samples collected for 230Th/234U age dating were found to be substantially out of equilibrium,...
Natural radioactivity in geothermal waters, Alhambra Hot Springs and nearby areas, Jefferson County, Montana
Robert B. Leonard, Victor J. Janzer
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 529-540
Radioactive hot springs issue from a fault zone in crystalline rock of the Boulder batholith at Alhambra, Jefferson County, in southwestern Montana. The discharge contains high concentrations of radon, and the gross alpha activity and the concentration of adium-226 exceed maximum levels recommended by the Environmental Protection Agency for drinking...
Continuous tilt, strain, and magnetic field measurements near four earthquakes (ML = 3.6 to 3.8) on the San Andreas fault, California
M.J.S. Johnston, A.C. Jones, C.E. Mortensen, B.E. Smith
1978, Open-File Report 78-987
Four moderate earthquakes (M = 3.6 to 3.8) have occurred on the San Andreas fault in central California since October, 1977. These earthquakes are the first since 1974 to occur at this magnitude level within the array of tilt, strain, and magnetic instruments between Chalome (35.726N, 12.249 W) and San...
Radon emanation on the San Andreas Fault
C. Y. King
1978, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (10) 136-138
Radon is a radioactive gas with a half-life of 3.8 days. (Half-life is the time required for the substance to lose half of its radioactivity by decay.) It is itself produced by the decay of uranium. Radon is constantly emanated from the Earth into the atmosphere. Many cases are known...
Radon emanation on San Andreas Fault
C.-Y. King
1978, Nature (271) 516-519
Subsurface radon emanation monitored in shallow dry holes along an active segment of the San Andreas fault in central California shows spatially coherent large temporal variations that seem to be correlated with local seismicity. ??1978 Nature Publishing Group....
Assay for uranium and determination of disequilibrium by means of in situ high resolution gamma-ray spectrometry
Allan B. Tanner, Robert M. Moxham, F. E. Senftle
1977, Open-File Report 77-571
Two sealed sondes, using germanium gamma-ray detectors cooled by melting propane, have been field tested to depths of 79 m in water-filled boreholes at the Pawnee Uranium Mine in Bee Co., Texas. When, used as total-count devices, the sondes are comparable in logging speed and counting rate with conventional scintillation...
Geological and geochemical investigations of uranium occurrences in the Arrastre Lake area of the Medicine Bow Mountains, Wyoming
W. Roger Miller, R. S. Houston, K. E. Karlstrom, D.M. Hopkins, W. H. Ficklin
1977, Open-File Report 77-92
Metasedimentary rocks of Precambrian X age in and near the Snowy Range wilderness study area of southeastern Wyoming are lithologically and chronologically similar to those on the north shore of Lake Huron in Canada. The rocks in Canada contain major deposits of uranium in quartz-pebble conglomerates near the base of...
Effects of radon in drill holes on gamma-ray logs
Lowell Sinclair Hilpert, Carl Maurice Bunker
1957, Economic Geology (52) 438-455
Drill holes in uranium deposits in the Todilto limestone of Late Jurassic age near Grants, New Mexico, do not yield duplicate gamma-ray logs when probed at different times; some logs show equivalent uranium greatly in excess, in thickness and grade, of the chemical and laboratory radiometric analyses. Radon and its...