Water resources of the Grand Rapids area, Michigan
G.J. Stramel, C.O. Wisler, L.B. Laird
1954, Circular 323
The Grand Rapids area, Michigan, has three sources from which to obtain its water supply: Lake Michigan, the Grand River and its tributaries, and ground water. Each of the first two and possibly the third is capable of supplying the entire needs of the area.This area is now obtaining a...
Geology and ground-water resources of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation, North Dakota, with a section on chemical quality of the ground water
Robert James Dingman, Ellis D. Gordon, H. A. Swenson
1954, Water Supply Paper 1259
The Fort Berthold Indian Reservation occupies about 1,000 square miles in west- central North Dakota. The Missouri and Little Missouri Rivers flow through the area and form part of its boundaries. Garrison Dam, which is under construction on the Missouri River 30 miles downstream from the east boundary of the...
The Model VI transmission fluorimeter for the determination of uranium
Charles Alvin Kinser
1954, Circular 330
An improved transmission fluorimeter (Model VI) for use in the determination of uranium consists of a line-operated, low-voltage d-c supply, powering a small 3-watt ultraviolet lamp as a source of long wavelength ultraviolet radiation; a Model V phototube housing and. fluorimeter head containing the sample holder, shutter, and primary and...
Criteria for the mode of emplacement of the alkaline stock at Mount Monadnock, Vermont
Randolph W. Chapman
1954, Geological Society of America Bulletin (65) 97-114
The alkaline stock at Mount Monadnock, Vermont, described briefly by Wolff (1929), has been restudied in detail. Its petrography and structure are discussed here and conclusions are drawn as to its mode of emplacement. The stock consists of plutonic and hypabyssal rocks which intrude folded Ordovician (?) schist and quartzite. The longer axis, trending north-northwest across the strike of the country...
Morphologic variation and mode of growth of Devonian Trepostomatous Bryozoa
R.S. Boardman
1954, Science (120) 322-323
No abstract available....
A variable, circular‐arc rule; An aid in constructing stereographic projections
Robert E. Wallace, B. Fried, John Guptil
1954, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (35) 645-646
A drafting instrument which provides a ruling edge for drawing arcs of circles the radii of which are unusually long is described. A complete range of arcs of different curvature, within the limits prescribed by the construction of the instrument, are obtainable. This instrument was developed originally to allow accurate construction of circular arcs of very low...
Aeromagnetic surveys in the Aleutian, Marshall, and Bermuda Islands
Fred Keller Jr., J. L. Meuschke, L.R. Alldredge
1954, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (35) 558-572
Total‐intensity aeromagnetic surveys of the Aleutian Marshall, and Bermuda Islands were completed in 1948. The anomalies associated with the Aleutian volcanoes are attributed mainly to topographic relief and are not an indication of the degree of volcanic activity. Eniwetok presents a magnetic pattern that would be produced by an irregular‐shaped rimmed depression in the basement, modified by the two adjoining seamounts, and differs from...
Sedimentary facies of iron-formation
H. L. James
1954, Economic Geology (49) 235-293
The sedimentary iron-formations of Precambrian age in the Lake Superior region can be divided on the basis of the dominant original iron mineral into four principal facies: sulfide, carbonate, oxide, and silicate. As chemical sediments, these rocks reflect certain aspects of the chemistry of the depositional environments. The major control, at least for the sulfide,...
Modification of the glacial chronology of the San Juan Mountains, Colorado
G.M. Richmond
1954, Science (119) 614-615
No abstract available....
Total-intensity magnetic anomalies of three-dimensional distributions by means of experimentally derived double layer model fields
I. Zietz, R.G. Henderson
1954, Science (119) 329-330
No abstract available....
Uranium-bearing lignite in southwestern North Dakota
George W. Moore, Robert E. Melin, Roy C. Kepferle
1954, Trace Elements Investigations 463
Uranium-bearing lignite was mapped and sampled in the Bullion Butte, Sentinel Butte, HT Butte, and Chalky Buttes areas in southwestern North Dakota. The uraniferous lignite occurs at several stratigraphic positions in the Sentinel Butte member of the Fort Union formation of Paleocene age. A total of 261 samples were collected...
A contagious disease of salmon, possibly of virus origin
R.R. Rucker, W.J. Whipple, J.R. Parvin, C.A. Evans
1953, Fishery Bulletin (54) 35-46
Production records for 1885, 1891–1908, and 1929–49, indicate cyclic fluctuations for several important species of fish. The average annual take (all species) of 3,582,000 pounds in 1929–49 was 3,503,000 pounds below the 1891–1908 mean of 7,085,000 pounds. Decline in the output of lake herring alone from 5,841,000 pounds in 1891–1908...
Uranium-bearing carbonaceous shale and lignite in the Goose Creek district, Cassia County, Idaho, Boxelder County, Utah and Elko County, Nevada
William Jameson Mapel, William James Hail
1953, Trace Elements Investigations 339
The Goose Creek district includes about 260 miles in southern Cassia County, Idaho, and adjacent parts of Boxelder County, Utah, and Elko County Nev. The-area comprises the northern and central parts of an intermontane basin drained by northward-flowing Goose Creek and its tributaries. An essentially conformable sequence of fluviatile, lacustrine, and...
The Model VI transmission fluorimeter for the determination of uranium
Charles A. Kinser
1953, Trace Elements Investigations 370
Water supply of the Birmingham area, Alabama
W.H. Robinson, J.B. Ivey, G. A. Billingsley
1953, Circular 254
Sufficient water is available in the streams of the area surrounding Birmingham to supply any foreseeable demand; however, to utilize these streams impounding reservoirs and rather long supply lines will be required. Moderate supplies of ground water are available from wells, springs, and mines. The average water use in the...
Geology and geography of the Henry Mountains region, Utah
Charles B. Hunt, Paul Averitt, Ralph L. Miller
1953, Professional Paper 228
The Henry Mountains region in southeastern Utah is one of the classic areas in geology because of the study made there by Grove Karl Gilbert in 1875 and 1876. His report on the geology of the mountains was the first to recognize that intrusive bodies may deform their host rocks...
Stratigraphic relationships of Cretaceous and early Tertiary rocks of a part of northwestern San Juan basin
Elmer Harold Baltz Jr.
1953, Open-File Report 53-8
The Bridge Timber Mountain area in south-central La Plata County, southwestern Colorado lies mostly in the northwestern part of the Central San Juan Basin but contains a segment of the bounding Hogback 'monocline' and Four-Corners platform. The area contains rocks of late Cretaceous through early Eocene age, as well as...
Modified Norris electric tape
Wallace de Laguna
1953, Open-File Report 53-53
Water resources of the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, Minnesota
Charles Henry Prior, Robert Schneider, W. H. Durum
1953, Circular 274
The water supply of the Minneapolis-St. Paul area is adequate to satisfy present requirements and requirements for many years to come if the area continues to develop at about the present rate. The flow of -the Mississippi River at the Twin Cities is more than sufficient to meet the demands of...
Changes in chemical quality of the Arkansas River in Oklahoma and Arkansas (1946-52)
T.B. Dover, J.W. Geurin
1953, Open-File Report 53-289
Systematic chemical quality-of-water investigations have been carried on in both Oklahoma and Arkansas by the Geological Survey in cooperation with State and Federal agencies during the past several years. Results of the Survey's quality-of-water investigations are usually published in the annual Water-Supply Papers. However, as the Geological Survey has made...
Geology of the Knife River area, North Dakota
William Edward Benson
1953, Open-File Report 53-21
The Knife River area, consisting of six 15-minute quadrangles, includes the lower half of the Knife River valley in west-central North Dakota. The area, in the center of the Williston Basin, is underlain by the Tongue River member of the Fort Union formation (Paleocene) and the Golden Valley formation (Eocene)....
Summary of annual records of chemical quality of water of the Arkansas River in Oklahoma and Arkansas, 1945-1952
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1953, Open-File Report 53-288
This report summarizes information collected to date in the Arkansas River Basin in Oklahoma and Arkansas, and shows, within the limitations of present information, the chemical quality of water in the Arkansas River downstream from the Oklahoma-Kansas State line to its junction with the Mississippi River, and the influence of...
Results of reconnaissance for radioactive minerals in parts of the Alma district, Park County, Colorado
Charles Thomas Pierson, Quentin Dreyer Singewald
1953, Circular 294
Pitchblende was discovered in July 1951 in the Alma mining district, Park County, Colo., by the U. S. Geological Survey acting on behalf of the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission. The pitchblende is associated with Tertiary veins of three different geologic environments: (1) veins in pre-Cambrian rocks, (2) the London...
Observation of a "front" of regional metamorphism
Rene Perrin, Marcel Roubault, S. H. Britt (translator)
1953, Open-File Report 54-32
Drawing his inspiration from the theories on metamorphism by reaction in the solid state, and from some observations, Rene Perrin in his article 'Perrin, Rene, Le metamorphisms generateur de plissement, Annales des Hines, Paris, October 1935.' "Metamorphism, the generator of folding" stated in 1935: 1) that some "sudden arrest" of regional...
Modification of the electric tape for measuring water levels in wells
W.D. Waterman
1953, Open-File Report 53-267