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Page 2744, results 68576 - 68600

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The Pleistocene of Indiana and Michigan and the history of the Great Lakes
Frank Leverett, Frank Bursley Taylor
1915, Monograph 53
This monograph describes the glacial features and the great glacial lakes of a district in Indiana and Michigan lying between the areas covered by Monographs XXXVIII, and XLI. The glacial features are treated mainly by Mr. Leverett, and the glacial lakes and their moraines by Mr. Taylor. The pre-Wisconsin glacial...
Oil and gas in the western part of the Olympic Peninsula, Washington
Charles T. Lupton
1915, Bulletin 581-B
High-grade paraffin oil is reported to have been discovered in the western part of the Olympic Peninsula, Wash., as early as 1881. Since then attempts to obtain oil or gas in commercial quantities by drilling have been made from time to time in different localities in this region, but without...
The inorganic constituents of echinoderms
F. W. Clarke, W. C. Wheeler
1915, Professional Paper 90-L
In a recent paper on the composition of crinoid skeletons we showed that crinoids contain large quantities of magnesia, and that its proportion varies with the temperature of the water in which the creatures live. This result was so novel and surprising that it seemed desirable to examine other echinoderms...
Progress report on stream measurement work carried on in cooperation with the United States Geological Survey: Section in Ninth biennial report of the State Engineer to the governor of Utah: 1913-1914
E.A. Porter
1914, Utah State Engineer Biennial Report 9
Utah, like other states in the arid region of the United States, points with just pride to her present and future agricultural developments. She proudly boasts, and no doubt justly too, that her fields of green vegetation are inexhaustible and always expanding, and with due vigilance and care on the...
Profile surveys in Bear River basin, Idaho
Robert Bradford Marshall
1914, Water Supply Paper 350
Bear River rises on the northern slope of the Uinta Mountains, in the northeastern part of Utah, and after a circuitous course in which it leaves Utah and enters Wyoming, Utah, and Wyoming in turn and makes a long detour in Idaho it returns to Utah and finally discharges its waters into Great Salt...
Profile surveys in Snake River basin, Idaho
Robert Bradford Marshall
1914, Water Supply Paper 347
Snake River, the largest tributary of the Columbia, rises among the high peaks of the Rocky Mountains in Yellowstone National Park, heading in the divide from which streams flow northward and eastward into the Missouri, southward to the Colorado and the lakes of the Great Basin, and westward to the Columbia. From the headwater region,...