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Page 408, results 10176 - 10200

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Loss of halogens from crystallized and glassy silicic volcanic rocks
D. C. Noble, V. C. Smith, L. C. Peck
1967, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (31) 215-223
One hundred and sixty-four F and Cl analyses of silicic welded tuffs and lavas and glass separates are presented. Comparison of the F and Cl contents of crystallized rocks with those of nonhydrated glass and hydrated glassy rocks from the same rock units shows that most of the halogens originally...
An operational theory of laser-radar selenodesy
R.L. Wildey, R.E. Schlier, J. A. Hull, G. Larson
1967, Icarus (6) 315-347
A theory of the utilization of laser techniques for ranging from the Earth to the Moon for the purpose of providing control points on the lunar surface at which the figure of the Moon is measured to an accuracy at least an order of magnitude better than that of...
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...
Contributions of year-classes of blue pike to the commercial fishery of Lake Erie, 1943-59
John W. Parsons
1967, Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (24) 1035-1066
The blue pike (Stizostedion vitreum glaucum) contributed about 12.7 million lb annually to the commercial production of fish in Lake Erie in 1915–59. Production averaged about 27% of the total for all species; in some years it exceeded 50%. The catch fluctuated greatly and was featured by a series of...
Acid-fast intranuclear inclusion bodies in the kidneys of mallards fed lead shot
L. N. Locke, George E. Bagley, H.D. Irby
1966, Bulletin of the Wildlife Disease Association (2) 127-131
Acid-fast intranuclear inclusion bodies were found in the cells of the proximal convoluted tubules of the kidneys of mallards fed one, two, three or eight number 6 lead shot and maintained on cracked or whole corn and on grain-duck pellet diets. No acid-fast inclusion bodies were found in mallards fed...
Trichinosis in Maryland raccoons
D.J. Winslow, D.L. Price, R.C. Neafie, C. M. Herman
1966, Bulletin of the Wildlife Disease Association (2) 81-82
During recent studies of experimental Chagas’ disease, trichinosis was found in 2 out of a total of 44 Maryland raccoons (Procyon lotor) examined histologically following necropsy. All raccoons were trapped near the towns of Beltsville or Laurel. The raccoons found to have trichinosis were trapped in the area of the...
Water-surface profiles of Raccoon River at Des Moines, Iowa
Philip J. Carpenter, David H. Appel
1966, Open-File Report 67-37
This investigation was undertaken as a part of the cooperative program with the Iowa Institute of Hydraulic Research, the City of Des Moines, and the U.S. Geological Survey.  The purpose of this report is twofold: 1.  To present water-surface profiles and rating curves for existing channel conditions in the 4-mile reach...
Crustal study of a continental strip from the Atlantic Ocean to the Rocky Mountains
I. Zietz, Elizabeth R. King, Wilburt Geddes, E.G. Lidiak
1966, Geological Society of America Bulletin (77) 1427-1447
Twenty aeromagnetic profiles over a 100-mile-wide strip along the arc of a great circle passing through Denver, Colorado, and Washington, D. C, reveal large anomalies of major crustal significance. Contoured data disclose several areas of distinct magnetic patterns reflecting basement lithology and structure. The mafic rocks of the Blue Ridge and Piedmont and the Keweenawan mafic belt in...
Magnetic data on the structure of the central Arctic Region
E. R. King, I. Zietz, L.R. Alldredge
1966, Geological Society of America Bulletin (77) 619-646
A study of 23,000 miles of total intensity aeromagnetic profiles in the central Arctic has been made by the U. S. Geological Survey and the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. The profiles were flown at 20,000 feet above sea level and cover approximately 1,350,000 square miles of the Arctic Ocean between the North Pole...
Proportion of recovered goose and brant bands that are reported
R. K. Martinson, J.A. McCann
1966, Journal of Wildlife Management (30) 856-858
A few more than one-third of the goose and brant bands recovered by hunters were reported to the Bird Banding Laboratory (a rate of 0.361) during the 1962-64 hunting seasons. We calculated this band-reporting rate by comparing the estimated number of goose and brant bands recovered by hunters, based on...
Airborne geophysical study in the Pensacola Mountains of Antarctica
John C. Behrendt, L. Meister, J. R. Henderson
1966, Science (153) 1373-1376
A seismic reflection, gravity, and aeromagnetic reconnaissance was made in the Pensacola Mountains, Antarctica, during the 1965-66 austral summer. Prominent ice streams located between the Neptune and Patuxent Ranges and east of the Forrestal Range overlie...
Isotopic study of galenas from the upper Mississippi Valley, the Illinois-Kentucky, and some Appalachian Valley mineral districts
A. V. Heyl, M.H. Delevaux, R. E. Zartman, M. R. Brock
1966, Economic Geology (61) 933-961
Analyses of lead isotopes in galena in carbonate rock ore deposits collected from several mineralized districts in the Central and Eastern Interior of the United States support previous studies in establishing that the galena is anomalously radiogenic ("J"type")- This study, using care-fully selected samples to test some géologie relationships, shows region-wide and distrietwide systematic variations in isotope...
Digital computer methods for water‐quality data
C.O. Morgan, R.J. Dingman, J.M. McNellis
1966, Groundwater (4) 35-42
The digital computer is used on a routine basis in the ground-water program in Kansas for tasks ranging from the listing of water-quality data in tabular and publishable form to statistically and graphically analyzing a mass of data.In the past year a number of computer programs in FORTRAN IV have...
Proportion of recovered duck bands that are reported
R. K. Martinson
1966, Journal of Wildlife Management (30) 264-268
Band-reporting rates (the proportion of duck bands recovered by hunters that are actually reported to the Bird Banding Laboratory) appear to have decreased between the late 1950's and early 1960's. About one-half the banded ducks bagged during the 1958-59 and 1959-60 hunting seasons were reported-a rate similar to those recorded...
Packer testing in water wells near Sarasota, Florida
Horace Sutcliffe Jr., B.F. Joyner
1966, Groundwater (4) 23-27
During February and March 1964, the U. S. Geological Survey ran caliper, conductance, and temperature logs on several wells in the Sarasota area. The Florida Geological Survey had previously run gamma ray and electric logs on the same wells. Two flowing wells were selected for packer testing. The two wells are about the same depth, penetrate essentially the same geologic horizons, and are about...
The design and use of hydrogeologic maps
J.C. Warman, D.R. Wiesnet
1966, Groundwater (4) 25-26
A map should treat the critical problems in a way understandable to the intended reader. Some maps appropriately show only one or two pertinent hydrogeologic parameters. Point‐data maps make little or no interpretation of the data. Four‐dimensional maps‐those that include an elapsed span of time or projection of hydrogeologic variables into the future‐represent a high degree of interpretation of data; they...
The roosting behavior of the red-winged blackbird in the southern United States
B. Meanley
1965, The Wilson Bulletin (77) 217-228
This report concerns the roosting behavior of the Red-winged blackbird and associated species ; and is based on observations made over a 14-year period mainly in the Southern United States....Th e greatest concentrations of Red-winged Blackbirds in the southern states occur in the Coastal Plain Province in or near major...
Care of captive woodcocks
William H. Stickel, William G. Sheldon, Lucille F. Stickel
1965, Journal of Wildlife Management (29) 161-172
Numbers of American woodcocks (Philohela minor) were held in cages for experimental work lasting several months. Injuries caused by birds attempting to flush were greatly reduced by clipping feathers from one wing, by making cage walls opaque, and by using high cages or false ceilings of fabric. Size of cage...
Geology of the Coeur d'Alene district, Shoshone County, Idaho
S. Warren Hobbs, Allan B. Griggs, Robert E. Wallace, Arthur B. Campbell
1965, Professional Paper 478
The Coeur d'Alene district, near the base of the northern panhandle of Idaho, is one of the world's larger lead- zinc and silver-producing areas. The greater part of the dis~rict i~ included within five map areas, from east to west the Pottsville, Mullan, Wallace, Kellogg, and Smelterville, which were geologically...
Water-supply potential from an asphalt-lined catchment near Holualoa Kona, Hawaii
Salwyn S.W. Chinn
1965, Water Supply Paper 1809-P
The Jenkins-Whitesburg area includes approximately 250 square miles In Letcher and Pike Counties in the southeastern part of the Eastern Coal Field. In this area ground water is the principal source of water for nearly all rural families, most public supplies, several coal mines and coal processing plants, and one...
An evaluation of aquifer and well characteristics of municipal well fields in Los Alamos and Guaje Canyons, near Los Alamos, New Mexico
Robert L. Cushman
1965, Water Supply Paper 1809-D
The Jenkins-Whitesburg area includes approximately 250 square miles In Letcher and Pike Counties in the southeastern part of the Eastern Coal Field. In this area ground water is the principal source of water for nearly all rural families, most public supplies, several coal mines and coal processing plants, and one...
Water-resources reconnaissance of the Ouachita Mountains, Arkansas
Donald R. Albin
1965, Water Supply Paper 1809-J
The Jenkins-Whitesburg area includes approximately 250 square miles in Letcher and Pike Counties in the southeastern part of the Eastern Coal Field. In this area ground water is the principal source of water for nearly all rural families, most public supplies, several coal mines and coal processing plants, and one...
Ordovician, Silurian, and Devonian biostratigraphy of east-central Alaska
Michael Churkin Jr., Earl E. Brabb
1965, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (49) 172-185
A predominantly shale and chert sequence has been mapped from the Canadian border at Latitude 65°00′ N. to the Nation River about 25 miles northwest. It has Ordovician and Silurian graptolites in the lower half, and Middle Devonian corals and Upper Devonian spores in the upper half.The lower half of...
Solubility measurements in the system CaSO4-NaCL-H2O at 35°, 50°, and 70°cand one atmosphere pressure
E-An Zen
1965, Journal of Petrology (6) 124-164
The solubilities in the system CaSO4-NaCl-H2O, at 1 atm pressure and 35°, 50°, and 70°C, have been determined by approaching the solubility curves from both the undersaturation and supersaturation sides. The experimental runs are of long duration, as much as 3 months; these rates should be commensurate with those of the appropriate geological processes, and so the results should be directly applicable...
Epizootiologic studies on filarioids of the raccoon
C. M. Herman, D.L. Price
1965, Journal of Wildlife Management (29) 694-699
Filarioid worms (Dirofilaria immitis, D. tenuis, Dipetalonema procyonis, and D. llewellyni) were discovered in raccoons (Procyon lotar) in Maryland. Raccoons were trapped in lowland, upland, and agricultural-residential areas, which were further classified as stream borders, poorly drained, and well drained. Data on incidence of D. llewellyni were analyzed on basis...