Geological report on water conditions at Platt National Park, Oklahoma
Charles Newton Gould, Stuart Leeson Schoff
1939, Open-File Report 39-14
Platt National Park, located in southern Oklahoma, containing 842 acres, was established by Acts of Congress in 1902, 1904, and 1906. The reason for the setting aside of this area was the presence in the area of some 30 'mineral' springs, the water from which contains sulphur, bromide, salt, and other...
Floods in the Canadian and Pecos River basins of New Mexico, May and June 1937
Tate Dalrymple
1939, Water Supply Paper 842
In May and June floods occurred in the Canadian and Pecos River Basins of New Mexico that were unusually high and in many places were record breaking. The floods were caused by heavy rains that occurred over the eastern part of the State from May 23 to June 4 in...
Fluctuations in artesian pressure produced by passing railroad‐trains as shown in a well on Long Island, New York
C. E. Jacob
1939, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (20) 666-674
Perhaps one of the chief interests of ground‐water hydrologists is the study of water‐level fluctuations. Since the beginning of the science of hydrology attempts have been made to interpret these phenomena and determine their significance. On the basis of actual observations and “with special reference to Long Island, New York,”...
Part III—Fundamental research in geophysics relating to prospecting
Irwin Roman
1939, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (20) 298-303
In addition to projects such as those reported in parts I and II above, the Section of Geophysics of the Federal Government has undertaken a considerable amount of fundamental research.Two such field‐projects may be mentioned, one a magnetometric study in the Comstock District of Nevada, and the other a resistivity‐study...
Report of committee on relation of inch and meter
R.M. Wilson
1939, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (20) 306-308
Those of you who attended the annual meeting of this Section on April 27, 1938, heard a paper entitled “A method for introducing a new standard of length” that was presented by Professor Philip Klssara, calling attention to the Bill then in Congress proposing to redefine the length of the...
Relation of fall stream‐flow to spring runoff
H.C. Eagle
1939, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (20) 117-221
In the prediction of spring runoff from precipitation‐records or snow‐surveys, one of the factors which seems to require consideration is the amount of water held in ground‐storage. The determination of the quantity of water in ground‐storage is a difficult problem involving soil‐sampling, measurements of ground‐water wells, and measurements of the...
Report of committee on glaciers, April 1939
Francois E. Matthes
1939, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (20) 518-523
The Committee on Glaciers at present is constituted as follows:Harry Fielding Reid—Professor‐Emeritus of Geology, Johns Hopkins University (former member of the International Glacier Commission), 608 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MarylandWilliam H. Hobbs—Professor‐Emeritus of Geology, University of Michigan (until recently Vice‐ President of the International Glacier Commission, at present associate member), Ann...
The age, growth, and feeding habits of the whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis (Mitchell), of Lake Champlain
John Van Oosten, Hilary J. Deason
1939, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (68) 152-162
This study is based on 120 whitefish collected in northern Lake Champlain (Missisquoi Bay) in 1930 and on 175 whitefish taken in southern Lake Champlain in 1931. Since the whitefish population had not been exploited commercially after 1912 in United States waters and after 1915 in Canadian waters, its study...
The age, growth, sexual maturity, and sex ratio of the common whitefish, Coregonus clupeaformis (Mitchill), of Lake Huron
John Van Oosten
1939, Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters (24) 195-221
During five years (1939-43) of nutritional research on pen-reared bobwhite quail at the Patuxent Research Refuge, Bowie, Maryland, observations on picking among birds of all ages showed the following results: 1. Picking occurred on all grains tested: corn, wheat, oats, oat groats, barley, millet, buckwheat, kaffir, and mixtures of cereals....
Migratory fish, a problem of interstate cooperation?
John Van Oosten, William C. Adams, William L. Finley, Fred A. Westerman
1939, Transactions of the North American Wildlife Conference (4) 25-43
Bobwhite quail chicks, when given a choice of balanced diets in which the essential difference was the protein supplement, showed preferences for one diet containing 49 per cent peanut oil meal, another containing a mixture of 9 per cent meat and bone scraps (50% protein) with 38 per cent soybean...
The evolution of habit in Tempskya
C.B. Read
1939, Lloydia (2) 63-72
1. The genus Tempskya Corda, of Upper Cretaceous age in western America, is characterized by a markedly dichotomous solenostelic stem system sheathed in a felt of its own adventitious roots. A composite stemlike structure is thus formed which has been termed a false stem. 2. As primary bases for the...
Igneous activity in the Comstock District, Nevada
F. C. Calkins
1938, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (19) 262-262
The oldest igneous rocks in the Comstock District are amphibolites probably derived from basalts and of Triassic age. These are intruded by pre‐Tertiary quartz monzonlte and by granodiorite of Sierran facies, the latter not being exposed on the surface but found on mine‐dumps. Igneous activity recorded mainly in volcanic rocks...
Manganese deposits of the Drum Mountains, Utah
Eugene Callaghan
1938, Economic Geology (33) 508-521
More than 15,000 tons of manganese ore has been produced from small deposits in the Drum Mountains in west-central Utah. Lenses of rhodochrosite, now largely weathered near the surface to manganese oxides, lie parallel to the bedding of Cambrian dolomites and shales near faults that are nearly normal to bedding....
Outlook for further ore discoveries in the Little Hatchet Mountains, New Mexico
Samuel Grossman Lasky
1938, Economic Geology (33) 365-389
The Little Hatchet Mountains contain two mining districts, the Eureka silver-lead-zinc district and the Sylvanite gold district, the deposits of each being associated with a mass of monzonite that intrudes Lower Cretaceous sediments. The same formations crop out in both districts, having been duplicated by a large post-ore fault, and...
Michigan's commercial fisheries of the Great Lakes
John Van Oosten
1938, Michigan History Magazine (22) 107-145
Five races of cottontail rabbits belonging to three species occur in Virginia. One of them, the Mearns cottontail (Sylvilagus floridanus mearnsi), is reported here for the first time. It occurs in six southwestern counties of the state, while the eastern cottontail (S. f. mallurus) occurs in the remainder of...
Morphometry of the cisco, Leucichthys artedi (Le Sueur), in the lakes of the Northeastern Highlands, Wisconsin
Ralph Hile
1938, Internationale Revue der Gesamten Hydrobiologie und Hydrographie (36) 57-130
In an earlier study (Hile, 1936) a detailed investigation was presented of the age and growth of the ciscoes of Trout Lake, Musckellunge Lake, Silver Lake, and Clear Lake in northeastern Wisconsin. It was demonstrated that the growth rate of the cisco varies widely from lake to lake within the...
Ground‐water in Utah
George H. Taylor
1937, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (18) 536-541
In common with many of the arid and semiarid States, the prosperity of Utah probably is more dependent upon the amount of water available than upon any other natural resource. Although only about four per cent of the State is irrigated, a shortage of water for irrigation becomes a major...
Extraordinary topaz‐replacement body in the Brewer Mine, South Carolina
Jewell J. Glass
1937, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (18) 243-246
A large body of massive topaz forms a part of the gold‐bearing lode at the Brewer Mine, South Carolina. This gold‐mine was opened 100 years ago and merits the distinction of being one of the early gold‐discoveries of the Southern Appalachian Region. The Brewer Mine is located near Jefferson, in...
Report of the committee on glaciers, 1936–37
Francois E. Matthes
1937, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (18) 293-299
The Committee was enlarged during the past year by one more member, Prof. J. E. Church of Reno, Nevada, Chairman of the Committee on Snow, who agreed to serve on it while the Chairman of the Committee on Glaciers in turn accepted membership on the Committee on Snow. Thus the...
Report of the committee on runoff, 1936–37
W. G. Hoyt
1937, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (18) 301-302
Since the last meeting of the Section of Hydrology there has been a change in the organization and membership of some of the research‐committees, one relating to rainfall, of which Merrill Bernard is Chairman, and one relating to runoff, were created to replace the one committee which had functioned heretofore...
Results to be expected from resistivity‐measurements
B. E. Jones
1937, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (18) 399-403
The work described in this paper was all done in connection with dam‐site investigations and was not directly connected with hydrology. However, geophysics is coming to have a place in hydrologic investigations, and these results may throw some light on what can be accomplished by resistivity‐measurements.We have found that,for many...
On the estimation of temperatures at moderate depths in the crust of the Earth
C. E. Van Orstrand
1937, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (18) 21-33
The modern deep well makes it possible to determine the temperatures of the rocks to depths exceeding two miles, and the rock‐samples obtained at these great depths enable the geologist to estimate the depths to the deeply buried basement‐rocks to a rather high degree of precision. The latter estimates are...
Disease relationship of domestic stock and wildlife
J.E. Shillinger
1937, Conference Paper, Transactions of the second north american wildlife conference
From the time that western civilization established itself on the North American continent until very recent years, little thought was given to the diseases, or other forms of loss, in game. In the process of bringing civilization and the incidental domestic arts and trades to the United States it appears...
Founders of fish culture - European origins
F. F. Fish
1936, Progressive Fish-Culturist (16) 8-10
Just where true fish culture appeared in history depends entirely upon what one considers fish culture to be. If the transportation of fishes from regions of plenty to those of few is to be regarded as fish culture - as it is by some even today - then this story...
The bacterial diseases of fish
F. F. Fish
1935, Progressive Fish-Culturist (2) 1-9
Of all the diseases responsible for the losses in the hatchery, those caused by the microscopic one-celled organisms, the bacteria, are the most common and present the most serious problem to the hatcheryman. They are found at practically every trout and salmon hatchery during some period of the year. The...