Standards for water quality
Luna B. Leopold
1967, Conference Paper, World petroleum congress proceedings
The quality which is necessary depends on the use to which the water will be put. Because uses vary, so also must quality standards. Maintaining any level of quality presents a problem of cost and depends on variations in natural water characteristics, in time and space, and variations in volume...
Stump and tree nesting by mallards and black ducks
Lewis M. Cowardin, G.E. Cummings, P.B. Reed Jr.
1967, Journal of Wildlife Management (31) 229-235
Studies conducted 1961-65 at the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in New York demonstrated that mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) and black ducks (Anas rubripes) make extensive use of stumps and dead snags for nest sites. Nest densities in timbered habitats compared favorably with those in untimbered habitats. Nest success was generally higher...
Plans of the U.S.Geological Survey, water resources division for research, investigations, and data collection in ground water
J. E. Upson
1967, Groundwater (5) 13-19
The Geological Survey has been the foremost agency in the investigation of ground‐water resources in the United States beginning about 1910. Most of the basic principles of modern ground‐water hydrology were developed in the Survey's program of cooperative investigations. Use of ground water in the United States in 1960 was about 17½ percent of all water uses, excluding water power. The use will probably increase, though at a decreasing rate. Although amount of use may level off, the...
Plans of the U.S.Geological Survey, water resources division for research, investigations, and data collection in ground water
J. E. Upson
1967, Groundwater (5) 13-19
The Geological Survey has been the foremost agency in the investigation of ground‐water resources in the United States beginning about 1910. Most of the basic principles of modern ground‐water hydrology were developed in the Survey's program of cooperative investigations. Use of ground water in the United States in 1960 was about 17½ percent of all water uses, excluding water power. The use will probably increase, though at a decreasing rate. Although amount of use may level off, the...
The cone of depression and its use in solving water problems
Edward J. Schaefer
1967, Groundwater (5) 2-4
No abstract available. ...
Artificial Recharge at Valley City, North Dakota, 1932 to 1965
T. E. Kelly
1967, Groundwater (5) 20-25
Valley City, North Dakota, has an average daily water use of 750,000 gallons, which is obtained from wells tapping pattly confined gravel deposits in the Sheyenne River valley. These deposits at Valley City have a maximum thickness of more than 50 feet and an areal extent of approximately 1 square...
Temperature and water-quality conditions for the period July 1963 to December 1965, Patuxent River Estuary, Maryland
Robert L. Cory, Jon W. Nauman
1967, Report
Graphs and tables obtained from continuous records of surface-water temperature from five stations for the period july 1963 through December 1965 and of surface, salinity, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, tide-stage, wind data and bottom temperature from a single station are presented herein. Effects of powerplant cooling water on water temperature were...
Prospecting for gold in the United States
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Report
Prospecting for gold is something that probably everyone dreams of trying at least once. To the person who is mainly concerned with this activity as a vacation diversion, prospecting offers a special excitement. There is a constant hope that the next pan of sediment may be "pay dirt," and no...
Water resources data for Indiana, 1966
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Water Data Report IN-66-1
The surface-water records for the 1966 water year for gaging stations, partial-record stations, and miscellaneous sites within the State of Indiana are given in this report. For convenience there are also included records for a few pertinent gaging stations in bordering states. The quality-of-water investigations of the U.S. Geological Survey are...
Results of the second phase of the drought-disaster test-drilling program near Morristown, N.J.
John Vecchioli, William D. Nichols, Bronius Nemickas
1967, New Jersey Division of Water Policy and Supply Water Resources Circular 17
The continued drought in northeastern New Jersey through the summer of 1966 with its attendant water-supply problems resulted in an extension of the drought-disaster test-drilling program originally requested by the Office of Emergency Planning on August 30, 1965. Authorization to continue test drilling was fiven by the Office of Emergency...
Mountains and plains Denver's geologic setting
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Report
A slice of geologic history is exposed to view in the Denver, Colorado area. Denver is situated on the High Plains near the east front of the Rocky Mountains. As one travels westward from Denver toward the mountains, successively older rocks are crossed from the geologically young rocks of the...
An electrical analog study of the geometry of limestone solution
M. S. Bedinger
1967, Groundwater (59) 24-24
This study of the geometry of limestone solution is based on the following conditions: (1) the limestone is impermeable but contains and transmits water in joints, fractures, bedding‐plane partings, and solution channels; (2) at depth, the limestone aquifer is underlain by impermeable rock; (3) ground water in the limestone is under water‐table conditions; (4) recharge to the limestone is by infiltration of precipitation through the overlying rock...
Water quality at Patuxent River Bridge, MD
Robert L. Cory, Jon W. Nauman
1967, Report
No abstract available....
Geochemistry and ground-water movement in northwestern Minnesota
R.W. Maclay, T. C. Winter
1967, Groundwater (5) 11-19
The relation between water quality and water movement within the ground-water reservoir may be better understood if studies of flow systems are used in conjunction with hydrochemical methods. Within small watersheds, local, intermediate, and regional flow systems may develop, depending upon the shape, the relief, and the thickness of the...
Water resources of the Guanica area, Puerto Rico: A preliminary appraisal, 1963
Neal E. McClymonds
1967, Report
Guánica and the lower Rio Loco valley lie between the extensive agricultural development in Lajas Valley to the west and the industrial development at Guayanilla to the east. Having a protected deep-water port, the Guánica area is particularly well suited to further development. The economic growth of the area depends,...
Devonian of the Northern Rocky Mountains and plains
Charles A. Sandberg, William J. Mapel
1967, Conference Paper, International symposium on the Devonian system
The Devonian System, represented predominantly by shallow-water marine carbonate, is widespread in Montana, Wyoming, eastern Idaho, North Dakota, South Dakota, and northwestern Nebraska. It comprises cratonic rocks in the east and miogeosynclinal rocks in the west. The cratonic rocks thicken generally northward from their southern limit in Wyoming across...
Physical limnology of Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron
Alfred M. Beeton, Stanford H. Smith, Frank F. Hooper
1967, Technical Report 12
Water temperature and the distribution of various chemicals measured during surveys from June 7 to October 30, 1956, reflect a highly variable and rapidly changing circulation in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron. The circulation is influenced strongly by local winds and by the stronger circulation of Lake Huron which frequently causes...
Serial publications commonly cited in technical bibliographies of the United States Geological Survey
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Report
This compilation is a listing of the serial publications cited in the following publications of the United States Geological Survey: Geophysical Abstracts, Abstracts of North American Geology, Bibliography of North American Geology, and Bibliography of Hydrology of the United States. A supplement of publications added since the main list was...
The Amazon, measuring a mighty river
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Report
The Amazon, the world's largest river, discharges enough water into the sea each day to provide fresh water to the City of New York for over 9 years. Its flow accounts for about 15 percent of all the fresh water discharged into the oceans by all the rivers of the...
Chlorophyll variation with tide and plankton productivity in an estuary
Eugene Brummer Welch, Gary W. Isaac
1967, Journal of the Water Pollution Control Federation (39) 360-366
No abstract available....
Hydrologic applications of lithofacies clastic-ratio maps
Wayne A. Pettyjohn, Phillip G. Randich
1967, Conference Paper, Proceedings, South Dakota Academy of Science
No abstract available....
Mineral and chemical variations within an ash-flow sheet from Aso caldera, Southwestern Japan
P. W. Lipman
1967, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (16) 300-327
Although products of individual volcanic eruptions, especially voluminous ash-flow eruptions, have been considered among the best available samples of natural magmas, detailed petrographic and chemical study indicates that bulk compositions of unaltered Pleistocene ash-flow tuffs from Aso caldera, Japan, deviate significantly from original magmatic compositions. The last major ash-flow sheet...
Ground-water research in the U.S.A.
C. L. McGuinness
1967, Earth-Science Reviews (3) 181-202
Ground-water reservoirs and the overlying unsaturated zone-collectively, the "subsurface"-have an enormous capacity to supply water to wells and useful plants, to store water to meet future needs for the same purposes, and, under suitable precautions, to accept wastes. This capacity can be exploited on a maximum scale, however, only on...
Hydrologic and climatologic data, 1966, Salt Lake County, Utah
A. G. Hely, Reed W. Mower, C. A. Horr
1967, Utah Basic-Data Release 13
An investigation of the water resources of Salt Lake County, Utah, was undertaken by the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey in July 1963. This investigation is a cooperative project financed equally by the State of Utah and the Federal Government in accordance with an agreement between the...
Carbon-13-rich diagenetic carbonates in miocene formations of California and Oregon
K. J. Murata, I.I. Friedman, B.M. Madsen
1967, Science (156) 1484-1486
Carbon unusually rich in C13(δC13 = +5.4 to +19.0 per mil relative to the Peedee belemnite carbonate standard of the University of Chicago) is...