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Page 2519, results 62951 - 62975

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Are we running out of water?
Raymond L. Nace
1967, Circular 536
Water supplies are not running out, but time is getting short to stem waste of water and destructive exploitation of the environment before harm is done that may be irreparable. Most of the world's water is oceanic brine. Of the waters on the land, most is frozen in Antarctica and...
Areal geology of the western Mojave Desert, California
Thomas W. Dibblee Jr.
1967, Professional Paper 522
This report and map represent part of a geologic investigation by the U.S. Geological Survey of the known and potential deposits of borate minerals in the southern California desert regions. The primary purpose of this report and the geologic map (pl. 1) is to provide a geologic background for the...
General field and office procedures for indirect discharge measurements
M. A. Benson, Tate Dalrymple
1967, Techniques of Water-Resources Investigations 03-A1
The discharge of streams is usually measured by the current-meter method. During flood periods, however, it is frequently impossible or impractical to measure the discharges by this method when they occur. Consequently, many peak discharges must be determined after the passage of the flood by indirect methods, such as slope-area,...
Measurement of peak discharge at dams by indirect methods
Harry Hulsing
1967, Techniques of Water-Resources Investigations 03-A5
This chapter describes procedures for measuring peak discharges using dams, weirs, and embankments. Field and office procedures limited to this method are described. Discharge coefficients and formulas are given for three general classes of weirs-sharp-crested, broad-crested, and round-crested-and for highway embankments and weirs of unusual shape. The effects of...
Measurement of peak discharge at width contractions by indirect methods
Howard Frederick Matthai
1967, Techniques of Water-Resources Investigations 03-A4
This chapter describes procedures for measuring peak discharges using open-channel width contractions. Field and office procedures limited to this method are described. The discharge equation based on the continuity and energy equations between an approach cross section and the contracted section under a bridge or contraction is given. Contractions...
Explorers from space
Raymond W. Fary Jr.
1967, Journal of Geological Education (15) 99-104
The statement that a new era in exploration is opening will almost surely bring to mind the venturing of man into space and the ever more imminent exploration of the moon. The reference here, however, is to exploration of earth itself and to the unique capabilities for study of the...
Availability of ground water in Decatur County, Iowa
J.W. Cagle, W. L. Steinhilber
1967, Iowa Geological Survey Water Atlas 2
Decatur County and several other counties in south-central Iowa comprise an area that has been chronically short of good-quality water.  Municipalities, industries and rural water users alike have been affected by the water shortage.  Municipalities have experienced serious problems in obtaining potable supplies adequate to keep pace with their growth...
Evaluation of potential sources of water in Crater Lake Natonal Park, Oregon
E. R. Hampton
1967, Report
Crater Lake National Park, in volcanic terrain at the crest of the southern Cascade Range, is well watered by a 67-inch average annual precipitation, measured at park headquarters. Existing park facilities utilize springs that provide quantities of water adequate for present-day as well as foreseeable future needs. Ground water occurs under...
Climate and streamflow of Puerto Rico
E.V. Giusti, M. A. Lopez
1967, Caribbean Journal of Science (7) 87-93
The presently available data on streamflow, runoff rainfall, and temperature of Puerto Rico are evaluated, although the period of record is very short, with a view to contributing to the knowledge of hydrology of tropical islands. The average annual streamflow in Puerto Rico is 45 percent of the annual rainfall, or 15 percent more than in the eastern piedmont of...
Silica in alkaline brines
B.F. Jones, S.L. Rettig, H.P. Eugster
1967, Science (158) 1310-1314
Analysis of sodium carbonate-bicarbonate brines from closed basins in volcanic terranes of Oregon and Kenya reveals silica contents of up to 2700 parts per million at pH's higher than 10. These high concentrations of SiO2 can be attributed to reaction of waters with silicates, and subsequent evaporative concentration accompanied...
Stratigraphy and paleoenvironment of the phosphatic miocene strata of North Carolina
T. G. Gibson
1967, Geological Society of America Bulletin (78) 631-650
Foraminifera and Mollusca collected from the phosphatic Pungo River Formation and the overlying Yorktown Formation in eastern North Carolina were analyzed and interpreted for stratigraphic and environmental significance in order to determine optimum depositional sites for primary phosphorite. The Mollusca and benthonic foraminifera of the Pungo River Formation correlate with those of the Calvert Formation...
Rocks of eocene age on fippennies ledge, Gulf of Maine
J. Schlee, A.H. Cheetham
1967, Geological Society of America Bulletin (78) 81-84
In August 1965, a scallop dredge from R/V Albatross brought up many pieces of fossiliferous opaline chert or porcellanite of Eocene age from Fippennies Ledge, a bank 70 m deep in the central Gulf of Maine. Their presence in this area supports the idea that part of the Gulf is underlain by sedimentary rocks of Tertiary age. Occurrence in the porcellanite of two...
Viscosity and finite strength of the mantle as determined from water and ice loads
Max D. Crittenden Jr.
1967, Geophysical Journal International (14) 261-279
Some recent examples of transient Earth loads (Lake Bonneville, Utah; Glacier Bay, Alaska; northeast Greenland) indicate that both the viscosity and finite strength of the mantle are lower than is commonly presumed. A time constant (1/e) of 4000 years is estimated for Lake Bonneville, and of 1000 years for...
Back-pack unit for capturing waterfowl and upland game by night-lighting
Rod C. Drewien, H.M. Reeves, P. F. Springer, T.L. Kuck
1967, Journal of Wildlife Management (31) 778-783
A night-lighting unit, designed as a light weight back-pack, proved successful for capturing waterfowl pairs, pheasants (Phasianus colchicus), and cottontail rabbits (Sylvilagus floridanus) during the spring and summer when most breeding populations are widely dispersed. Eighty ducks of seven species were captured in 48 hours (1.7 ducks per hour) of...