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Page 415, results 10351 - 10375

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Frost heaving of piles with examples from Fairbanks, Alaska
Troy Lewis Pewe, R.A. Paige
1959, Open-File Report 60-111
Seasonal freezing of the ground is common throughout most of the world's land surface. As the ground freezes the surface of the ground may rise--this rising is termed frost heaving. Upward displacement of the ground upon freezing is not due alone to the freezing of water originally contained in the...
Geology of the upper Killik-Itkillik region, Alaska
William Wallace Patton Jr.
1959, Open-File Report 59-92
The upper Killik-Itkillik map area is a 2,500 square mile segment of foothills along the north front of the Brooks Range on the Arctic Slope of Alaska. The rocks exposed in this area include eleven formations of sedimentary rocks, three types of surficial deposits, and one igneous rock unit. The...
History of Imuruk Lake, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
David M. Hopkins
1959, GSA Bulletin (70) 1033-1046
A study of Imuruk Lake, a large, shallow lake in north-central Seward Peninsula, Alaska, illuminates the climatic history of northwestern Alaska and the tectonic history of central Seward Peninsula during Pleistocene and Recent time. Special interest attaches to the older lake sediments, because they contain evidence concerning the climate, fauna, and...
Field observations on effects of Alaska earthquake of 10 July 1958
D. Tocher, D. J. Miller
1959, Science (129) 394-395
The Alaska earthquake of 10 July 1958 was caused by movement on the Fairweather fault amounting to at least 21 1/2 feet horizontally and 3 1/2 feet vertically. Effects of strong shaking were evident over a large area in southeastern Alaska. In Lituya Bay an enormous wave, possibly resulting from...