The recovery of ground-water levels in Brooklyn, New York, from 1947 to 1950
Norbert Joseph Lusczynski
1952, Circular 167
No abstract available....
Water resources of the Lake Erie shore region in Pennsylvania
John William Mangan, Donald W. Van Tuyl, Walter F. White
1952, Circular 174
An abundant supply of water is available to the Lake Erie Shore region in Pennsylvania. Lake i£rie furnishes an almost inexhaustible supply of water of satisfactory chemical quality. Small quantities of water are available from small streams in the area and from the ground. A satisfactory water supply is one...
Water-loss investigations: Volume 1--Lake Hefner studies technical report
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1952, Circular 229
Index of water-resources records in the Delaware River basin to September 30, 1951
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1952, Circular 190
This report is an index of all surface-water, ground-water, and quality-of-water data which have been or are now being collected on a continuous or periodic basis, by the U. S. Geological Survey and the cooperating agencies in the Delaware River basin, to September 30, 1951. The index is divided into...
Electrical resistivity studies of subsurface conditions near Antigo, Wisconsin
H. Cecil Spicer
1952, Circular 181
Resistivity measurements are reported for the glaciated area near Antigo, Wis., to locate buried sand and gravel deposits in the glacial drift, which might be developed as aquifers, and to determine depths to the pre-Cambrian bedrock. The results of the resistivity study are presented both as cross sections and as...
Reconnaissance of the geology and ground-water resources of the Horse Creek-Bear Creek area, Laramie and Goshen Counties, Wyoming
H. M. Babcock, John Richard Rapp, W. H. Durum
1952, Circular 162
No abstract available....
Selected papers on uranium deposits in the United States
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1952, Circular 220
The industrial utility of public water supplies in the Mountain States, 1952
E. W. Lohr, C. S. Howard, R.T. Kiser, J.D. Hem, H. A. Swenson
1952, Circular 203
The location of industrial plants is dependent on an ample water supply of suitable quality. Information relating to the chemical characteristics of the water supplies is not only essential to the location of many plants but also is an aid in the manufacture and distribution of many commodities.Public water supplies...
Summary of ground-water development in Alaska, 1950
Dagfin John Cederstrom
1952, Circular 169
New Year flood of 1949 in New York and New England
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1952, Circular 155
The industrial utility of public water supplies in the Pacific States, 1952
E. W. Lohr, R.T. Kiser, C. S. Howard, I.W. Walling
1952, Circular 232
The industrial utility of public water supplies in the West North-Central States, 1952
E. W. Lohr, P.C. Benedict, H. A. Swenson, T.B. Dover
1952, Circular 206
Water resources of the Mahoning River basin, Ohio, with special reference to the Youngstown area
William Perry Cross, M.E. Schroeder, Stanley Eugene Norris
1952, Circular 177
Ground-water resources of the Wood River unit of the lower Platte River basin, Nebraska
Charles Franklin Keech
1952, Circular 139
Reconnaissance of the geology and ground-water resources of the Pumpkin Creek area, Morrill and Banner Counties, Nebraska, with a section on the chemical quality of the water
H. M. Babcock, F. N. Visher, W. H. Durum
1952, Circular 156
No abstract available....
Hydrologic reconnaissance of the Green River in Utah and Colorado
H. E. Thomas
1952, Circular 129
The Green River, rising in Wyoming and draining high mountains in that state, northeast Utah and northwest Colorado, is a major tributary of the Colorado River. In the late summer, after the snow has melted from these mountains, the flow in the Green River reaches its minimum for the year....
The industrial utility of public water supplies in the east south central states, 1952
E. W. Lohr, G. A. Billingsley, J.W. Geurin, W.L. Lamar
1952, Circular 197
The location of industrial plants is dependent on an ample water supply of suitable quality. Information relating to the chemical characteristics of the water supplies is not only essential to the location of many plants but also is an aid in the manufacture and distribution of many commodities. Public water...
Geology of the northern Crystal Falls area, Iron County, Michigan
F.J. Pettijohn
1952, Circular 153
The industrial utility of public water supplies in the West South-Central States, 1952
E. W. Lohr, J.R. Avrett, Burdge Irelan, G. A. Billingsley, T.B. Dover
1952, Circular 221
Water levels and artesian pressure in observation wells in the United States, 1949, Part 2, Southeastern States
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1952, Water Supply Paper 1157
Uranium-bearing coal and carbonaceous rocks in the Fall Creek area, Bonneville County, Idaho
James D. Vine, George Winfred Moore
1952, Circular 212
Uraniferous coal, carbonaceous shale, and carbonaceous limestone occur in the Bear River formation of Early Cretaceous age at the Fall Creek prospect, in the Fall Creek area, Bonneville County, Idaho. The uranium compounds are believed to have been derived from mildly radioactive silicic volcanic rocks of Tertiary age that rest...
Movements of waterfowl broods in Manitoba
Charles D. Evans, Arthur S. Hawkins, William H. Marshall
1952, Special Scientific Report - Wildlife 16
Tertiary stratigraphy of South Carolina
C. Wythe Cooke, F. Stearns MacNeil
1952, Professional Paper 243-B
Waterfowl populations and breeding conditions - summer 1951
Walter F. Crissey
1952, Special Scientific Report - Wildlife 13
Volcanic debris in uraniferous sandstones, and its possible bearing on the origin and precipitation of uranium
Aaron C. Waters, Harry Clifford Granger
1952, Trace Elements Investigations 170