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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ground-water resources and geology of Cook County, Georgia
Charles W. Sever
1972, Open-File Report 72-345
Aquifer-performance tests and aquifer studies indicate that the limestone beneath the city of Adel and probably most of Cook County contains potable water to a depth of only about 400 to 500 feet and that "deep" wells that tap these limestones obtain most of their water from a few thin,...
New Mexico district work-effort analysis computer program
W. L. Hiss, A.P. Trantolo, J.L. Sparks
1972, Open-File Report 72-165
The computer program (CAN 2) described in this report is one of several related programs used in the New Mexico District cost-analysis system. The work-effort information used in these programs is accumulated and entered to the nearest hour on forms completed by each employee. Tabulating cards are punched directly from...
Shallow ground water in the Zamin Dawar area, Helmand Province, Afghanistan
N. E. McClymonds
1972, Open-File Report 73-166
The Zamin Dawar area lies between Kajakai Reservoir and Musa Qala Rud (river) in southcentral Afghanistan, about 90 km (kilometers) northeast of Lashkar Gab. The area comprises two main stream drainage areas: that of Gulmesh Mandeh (ephemeral stream) to the east which includes mostly plains with low hills on the...
A study of the Flint River, Michigan, as it relates to low-flow augmentation
Gordon C. Hulbert
1972, Open-File Report 72-175
One of the uses of the Flint River is dilution of waste-water. Population and industrial growth in the Flint area hah placed new demands on the stream and emphasized the need for an analysis of the surface water resources of the basin. This report describes selected streamflow characteristics of the...
Travel time for solutes, upper Sabine River basin, Texas, April 16-30, 1972
Willard B. Mills
1972, Open-File Report 72-257
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Sabine River Compact Administration, conducted time-of-travel studies in the Sabine River Basin on April 16-30, 1972. One study was made on the main stem of the Sabine River in four reaches from Lake Tawakoni to Toledo Bend Reservoir, a distance of 219...
Brief summary of the hydrogeology of Bangladesh
J.R. Jones
1972, Open-File Report 74-1056
The average annual precipitation in Bangladesh ranges from about 50 inches in the west-central part to about 200 inches in the northeast. Most of the rain falls during the southwest monsoon so that local precipitation is heavy at the same time flood waters of the Brahmaputra and Ganges rivers arrive....
The ground-water system in southeastern Laramie County, Wyoming
Marvin A. Crist, William B. Borchert
1972, Open-File Report 72-80
Increased development of irrigation wells in southeastern Laramie County, Wyo., has caused concern about the quantity of water available. Ground water from approximately 230 large-capacity wells is used to irrigate most of the 18,165 acres under irrigation. The purpose of this study is to provide more knowledge about the character...
Water for cranberry culture in the Cranmoor area of central Wisconsin
Louis J. Hamilton
1972, Water Supply Paper 1999-I
The Cranmoor area of central Wisconsin is the principal cranberry producing area of the State. Cranberries are grown in only about 2.5 square miles of an 80-square-mile marsh and swamp in the Cranberry Creek basin. Cranberry growers have built reservoirs and ditches throughout 25 square miles of marsh for better...
Water resources of Clay, Greene, Craighead, and Poinsett Counties, Arkansas
Marion S. Hines, Raymond O. Plebuch, A. G. Lamonds
1972, Hydrologic Atlas 377
Water is available in Clay, Greene, Craighead, and Poinsett Counties from ground-water and surface-water sources. However, ground water is more accessible in many places than surface water. Ground water is available from the alluvium, which covers all the area except Crowleys Ridge, and is also available from other formations below...