The Fairhaven gold placers, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
Fred Howard Moffit
1905, Bulletin 247
This manuscript is based on a geologic and topographic reconnaissance survey, made during the summer of 1903, of an important placer-gold district in the northeastern part of Seward Peninsula. The report is accompanied by a reconnaissance map by Mr. D. C. Witherspoon, topographer, under whose directions the field operations were...
The gold placers of the Fortymile, Birch Creek, and Fairbanks regions, Alaska
Louis Marcus Prindle
1905, Bulletin 251
No abstract available....
The petroleum fields of the Pacific coast of Alaska, with an account of the Bering River coal deposits
George Curtis Martin
1905, Bulletin 250
This report contains the result of a hasty examination of the structural and economic geology of the localities where indications of petroleum have been found. Though only a few wells have been drilled and it is too soon to predict an important future for the region as a petroleum producer,...
Miocene Foraminifera from the Monterey shale of California, with a few species from the Tejon formation
Rufus Mather Bagg Jr.
1905, Bulletin 268
No abstract available....
The copper deposits of Missouri
Harry Foster Bain, Edward Oscar Ulrich
1905, Bulletin 267
Geology and paleontology of the Judith river beds
Timothy William Stanton, John Bell Hatcher, Frank Hall Knowlton
1905, Bulletin 257
Mineral resources of the Elders Ridge quadrangle, Pennsylvania
Ralph Walter Stone
1905, Bulletin 256
Methods and Costs of Gravel and Placer Mining in Alaska
Chester Wells Purington
1905, Bulletin 263
Bibliography and index of North American geology, paleontology, petrology and mineralogy for the year 1904
Fred Boughton Weeks
1905, Bulletin 271
The origin of certain place names in the United States (second edition)
Henry Gannett
1905, Bulletin 258
Contributions to mineralogy from the United States Geological Survey
Frank Wigglesworth Clarke
1905, Bulletin 262
The Porcupine placer district, Alaska
Charles Will Wright
1904, Bulletin 236
The tin deposits of the York region, Alaska
Arthur James Collier
1904, Bulletin 229
Geology of the Hudson Valley between the Hoosic and the Kinderhook
T. Nelson Dale
1904, Bulletin 242
Analyses of rocks from the laboratory of the United States Geological Survey, 1880-1903
F. W. Clarke
1904, Bulletin 228
The present Geological Survey of the United States was organized in 1879. In 1880 a chemical laboratory was established at Denver, in connection with the Colorado work, in charge of Dr. W. F. Hillebrand, with whom were associated Mr. Antony Guyard and, later, Mr. L. G. Eakins. In 1882 Dr....
Economic geology of the Iola quadrangle, Kansas
George Irving Adams, Erasmus Haworth, W.R. Crane
1904, Bulletin 238
No abstract available....
Contributions to economic geology, 1903
Samuel Franklin Emmons, C. W. Hayes
1904, Bulletin 225
Catalogue and index of the publications of the Hayden, King, Powell, and Wheeler surveys
Laurence Frederick Schmeckebier
1904, Bulletin 222
Boundaries of the United States and of the several States and Territories, with an outline of the history of all important changes of territory (third edition)
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 226
Experiments on schistosity and slaty cleavage
George Ferdinand Becker
1904, Bulletin 241
Schistosity as a structure is important, and it is a part of the business of geologists to explain its origin. Slaty cleavage has further and greater importance as a possible tectonic feature. Scarcely a great mountain range exists, or has existed, along the course of which belts of slaty rock...
A gazetteer of Texas (second edition)
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 224
A gazetteer of Maryland
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 231
Results of primary triangulation and primary traverse, fiscal year 1903-04
Samuel Stinson Gannett
1904, Bulletin 245
The United States Geological Survey, its origin, development, organization, and operations
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1904, Bulletin 227
The United States Geological Survey, in the Department of the Interior, was created by act of Congress approved March 3, 1879, so that March 3, 1904, marks the completion of the twenty-fifth year of its existence. The quarter-century anniversary happens to fall near the date set for the opening of...
Report of progress in the geological resurvey of the Cripple Creek district, Colorado
Waldemar Lindgren, F. L. Ransome
1904, Bulletin 254