Two pollen diagrams from southeastern Minnesota: Problems in the regional late-glacial and postglacial vegetational history
H.E. Wright Jr., Thomas C. Winter, Harvey L. Patten
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1371-1396
Kirchner Marsh and Lake Carlson are located 3 miles apart in Dakota County about 15 miles south of Minneapolis in the St. Croix moraine, which was formed by the Superior lobe during the Gary phase of the Wisconsin glaciation. During the Mankato phase that followed, the Des Moines lobe advanced to within...
Epigenetic, diplogenetic, syngenetic, and lithogene deposits
T. S. Lovering
1963, Economic Geology (58) 315-331
Much of the disagreement over "epigenetic" And "Syngenetic" Deposits Is Semantic; Some Ores And altered rocks are in part syngenetic and in part epigenetic and for them the term "diplogenetic" is proposed. All these terms are primarily time terms related to the contemporaneity of the deposit and the enclosing rock, but...
The atomic ratios of natural ferruginous biotites with reference to 'the stability relations of the ferruginous biotite, annite'
Margaret D. Foster, David R. Wones, H.P. Eugster
1963, Journal of Petrology (4) 302-306
The atomic ratios given by Eugster and Wones (1962) for analyses of high FeO-low MgO micas cited by Foster (1960) are in error. The recalculated atomic ratios herein presented show that only three of the thirteen have low (OH+F), and only one has characteristics that may possibly be due...
Aromatic fluorine compounds. XI. Replacement of chlorine by fluorine in halopyridines
G. C. Finger, L. D. Starr, D. R. Dickerson, H. S. Gutowsky, J. Hamer
1963, Journal of Organic Chemistry (28) 1666-1668
The α-halogenated pyridines react with potassium fluoride in various solvents to give replacement of the α-halogen by fluorine. A 50% yield of 2-fluoropyridine was obtained from 2-chloropyridine by heating with potassium fluoride in dimethyl sulfone or tetramethylene sulfone for twenty-one days; 2-bromopyridine gave a similar yield with a heating period...
Boron-oxygen polyanion in the crystal structure of tunellite
J. R. Clark
1963, Science (141) 1178-1179
The crystal structure of tunellite, SrO·3B2O3·4H2O, with infinite sheets of composition n[B6O9(OH)2]2-, has cations and water molecules in the spaces within the sheets. Adjacent sheets are held together by hydrogen bonding through the water molecules. The boron-oxygen polyanions provide the first example in hydrated borate crystals of one oxygen linked...
Age, growth, and maturity of round whitefish of the Apostle Islands and Isle Royale Regions, Lake Superior
Merryll M. Bailey
1963, Fishery Bulletin (63) 63-75
The round whitefish has been of some commercial importance in the upper Great Lakes but production in Lake Superior has generally been small; the United States average was 26,600 pounds for 1929-59. This study is based on 1,173 fish collected in the Apostle Islands in 1958-60 and 103 collected at...
Persistence of DDT and its metabolites in a farm pond
W.R. Bridges, B.J. Kallman, A.K. Andrews
1963, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (92) 421-427
A farm pond near Morrison, Colorado, was treated with 0.02 p.p.m. of DDT in June 1961. The persistence and distribution of the insecticide in materials sampled from the aquatic environment were studied until November 1962. Detectable amounts of DDT were not found in the water after 3 weeks. Residues in...
Age and growth of the whitefish in Lake Superior
William R. Dryer
1963, Fishery Bulletin (63) 77-95
The average annual commercial production of whitefish in the U.S. waters of Lake Superior dropped from 2,194,000 pounds in 1879-1908 to 504,000 pounds in 1911-59. The modern production, though far below the earlier, has accounted for more than 10 percent of the total value of the fishery in all...
Copper in the United States, exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii
Arthur R. Kinkel Jr., N. P. Peterson
1962, Mineral Investigations Resource Map 13
The copper districts in the United States (exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii) are shown on the accompanying map. In compiling the map, the estimated total quantity of copper present before mining was used to assign districts to size categories, and both production and reserves are included without distinction as to...
Glacier observations, Glacier National Park, Montana, 1961
Arthur Johnson
1962, Open-File Report 62-69
This report records the results obtained during the 1961 season in the continuing program of glacier observations in Glacier National Park. The investigations currently in progress relate to the Grinnell and Sperry Glaciers. This program is carried on cooperatively by the Geological Survey, the National Park Service and the Weather...
Short papers in geology, hydrology, and topography; Articles 1-59: Geological Survey Research 1962
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1962, Professional Paper 450-B
This collection of 59 short papers on subjects in the fields of geology, hydrology, topography, and related sciences is one of a, series to be relea~ed during the year as chapters of Professional Paper 450. The papers in this chapter report on the scientific and economic· results of current work...
Test holes drilled in support of ground-water investigations, Project Gnome, Eddy County, New Mexico
J.B. Cooper
1962, Open-File Report 62-31
Project Gnome is a proposed underground nuclear shot to be detonated within a massive salt bed in Eddy County, N. Mex. Potable and neat potable ground water is present in rocks above the salt and is being studied in relation to this nuclear event. This report presents details of two...
Origin of erosional surfaces in the Lebanon Valley, Pennsylvania
Harold Meisler
1962, Geological Society of America Bulletin (73) 1071-1082
Summit elevations in the Lebanon Valley, part of the Great Valley, range from 440 to 720 feet above msl (mean sea level). This range cannot be accounted for adequately by the peneplain concept. Although accordant summits, the chief evidence for peneplains, occur over large areas, summits are not accordant between...
Stability relations of the ferruginous biotite, annite
H.P. Eugster, D. R. Wones
1962, Journal of Petrology (3) 82-125
Annite, KFe3AISi3O10(OH)2 a member of the iron biotites and the ferrous analogue of phlogopite, has been synthesized and its phase relations have been determined as functions of temperature, fugacity of oxygen (fo2), and total pressure (Ptotal≈PH2O+PH2). A method for controlling fo2at high total pressures is described, and data for the 'oxygen...
Limiting parameters in the magnetic interpretation of a geologic structure
G. E. Andreasen, I. Zietz
1962, Geophysics (27) 807-814
A prominent aeromagnetic anomaly in Randolph County, Indiana, suggests the existence of a dikelike structure within the Precambrian basement rocks. Because of the ambiguity inherent in magnetic interpretation, a unique solution for the parameters involved (depth of burial, geometric configuration, and magnetic susceptibility of the mass producing the anomaly) is impossible. However, if one of the <span...
Lower temperature terminations of the three-phase region plagioclase-alkali feldspar-liquid
D. B. Stewart, E. H. Roseboom Jr.
1962, Journal of Petrology (3) 280-315
Geological and experimental evidence indicate that the three-phase field, plagioclase-alkalifeldspar-liquid, may terminate in several different ways. The possible terminations have been developed from Schreinemakers' rules governing the disappearance of three-phase fields. In igncous rocks, these different terminations may arise from variations in the relative amounts of additional components in magmas, or from...
Disease-protective symbiosis among fishes and other aquatic animals
S. F. Snieszko
1962, Progressive Fish-Culturist (24) 59-59
There have been numerous observations of one species of animal removing parasites from another. These are, however, generally regarded as biological curiosities rather than as significant factors in the control of parasites or disease....
The detection of sulphur in contamination spots in electron probe X-ray microanalysis
I. Adler, E.J. Dwornik, H. J. Rose Jr.
1962, British Journal of Applied Physics (13) 245-246
Sulphur has been identified as one of the elements present in the contamination spot which forms under the electron beam in the microprobe. The presence of the sulphur results in a rapid change in intensity measurements causing a loss of observed intensity for elements other than sulphur. The source of...
The solubility of quartz in water in the temperature interval from 25° to 300° C
G.W. Morey, R.O. Fournier, J.J. Rowe
1962, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (26) 1029-1040
The solubility of quartz in water was investigated by three sets of experiments at 1000 atm PH2O and temperatures ranging from 45° to 300°C at water pressures appropriate for the coexistence of three phases, gaseous water, liquid, and quartz, at temperatures ranging from 69° to 240°C a long term study of the...
Geologic summary of the Appalachian basin, with reference to the subsurface disposal of radioactive waste solutions
George Willis Colton
1961, Trace Elements Investigations 791
The Appalachian basin is an elongate depression in the crystalline basement complex which contains a great volume of predominantly sedimentary stratified rocks. As defined in this paper it extends from the Adirondack Mountains in New York to central Alabama. From east to west it extends from the west flank of...
Geologic summary of the Appalachian Basin, with reference to the subsurface disposal of radioactive waste solutions
George Willis Colton
1961, Open-File Report 62-28
The Appalachian basin is an elongate depression in the crystalline basement complex which contains a great volume of predominantly sedimentary stratified rocks. As defined in this paper it extends from the Adirondack Mountains in New York to central Alabama. From east to west it extends from the west flank of...
Progress report on wells penetrating artesian aquifers in South Dakota
R. W. Davis, C.F. Dyer, J.E. Powell
1961, Water Supply Paper 1534
Artesian aquifers underlie most of South Dakota and large areas in adjacent States. About 15,000 wells have been completed since 1881 in these aquifers within South Dakota. Many wells that originally flowed have ceased to flow and have been abandoned, and others have been equipped with pumps. Many thousands, however,...
Reconnaissance study of quaternary faults in and south of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
D. Love
1961, Geological Society of America Bulletin (72) 1749-1764
Normal faults offset a bedrock surface scoured by Pleistocene ice in several areas within and south of Yellowstone National Park. Recurrent earthquake shocks and fresh appearance of some scarps suggest that movement is continuing along some faults. Four systems of faults are described. Quaternary movement occurred along more than 60 faults on the Mirror Plateau, 15...
Paleoecology of an early oligocene biota from Douglass Creek Basin, Montana
Richard L. Konizeski
1961, Geological Society of America Bulletin (72) 1633-1642
Douglass Creek basin lies west of the Continental Divide in the northern part of the Rocky Mountain physiographic province. Numerous minor environmental differences exist between the Douglass Creek area and the Pipestone Springs and Canyon Ferry areas east of the Divide. In the 19th century, however, the three areas had identical...
An aeromagnetic profile from anchorage to Nome, Alaska
E. R. King
1961, Geophysics (26) 716-726
A total-intensity profile was obtained on a 500-mile flight by a U. S. Geological Survey airplane from Anchorage to Nome, Alaska, on May 4, 1954. The average flight altitude was 6,000 ft above sea level except over the Alaska Range where the flight altitude was 9,000 ft. This profile crossed eight of the major...