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Page 434, results 10826 - 10850

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The Wasatch Plateau coal field, Utah
Edmund M. Spieker
1931, Bulletin 819
The Wasatch Plateau, the northeasternmost of the great group of high plateaus in central and southern Utah, is underlain by a succession of Cretaceous rocks that, contain valuable coal beds, and the eastern part of the plateau, in which the coal is accessible, is generally known as the Wasatch Plateau...
The Gilbert district, Nevada
Henry Gardiner Ferguson
1927, Bulletin 795-F
The eastern part of the Monte Cristo Range, in Esmeralda County, Nev., has been prospected for many years, and one mine, the Carrie, was developed as early as 1890. The discovery of high-grade ore by the Gilbert brothers on the Last Hope claim in 1924 led to a boom during...
Surface waters of Kansas, 1919-1924
H. B. Kinnison
1926, Report
The Kansas legislature in 1917 passed the Water Commission act, entitled, "An act relating to floods, drainage, water power, domestic water supply, navigation, irrigation, and providing for state control of all matters relating thereto, and providing for a Water Commission in the state of Kansas." Under this act the Water Commission...
Correlation of the basal Cretaceous beds of the Southeastern States
Wythe Cooke
1926, Professional Paper 140-F
The basal Cretaceous deposits that fringe the inner margin of the Coastal Plain from eastern Alabama to central North Carolina, where they are overlapped by Miocene sands, have been commonly classified as of Lower Cretaceous age and correlated roughly with the Patuxent formation of the Potomac group of Maryland and...
The resuscitation of the term Bryn Mawr gravel
Florence Bascom
1925, Professional Paper 132-H
In the course of geologic and physiographic work in eastern Pennsylvania, it has seemed to the writer that the time was ripe for the restriction of the term Brandywine formation, now including presumably both Pliocene and Pleistocene gravels, and the reinstatement of the old term Bryn Mawr gravel for a...
A new fauna from the Colorado group of southern Montana
John B. Reeside Jr.
1925, Professional Paper 132-B
This paper describes a small but interesting fauna collected in 1921 by W. T. Thorn, Jr., Gail F. Moulton, T. W. Stanton, and K. C. Heald in the Crow Indian Reservation in southern Montana. The locality is in sec. 36, T. 6 S., R. 32 E., Big Horn County, and...
Water powers of the Great Salt Lake basin
Ralf Rumel Woolley, Nathan Clifford Grover, W. T. Lee
1924, Water Supply Paper 517
The Great Salt Lake basin comprises that part of the Great Basin that drains into Great Salt Lake, Utah. It is about 27,000 square miles in area and includes the northern part of Utah, a small part of eastern Nevada, the southeast corner of Idaho, and the southwest corner of...
Ground water in Santa Clara Valley, California
William O. Clark
1924, Water Supply Paper 519
Santa Clara Valley extends southeastward from San Francisco, lying between the Diablo Range on the northeast and the Santa Cruz and Gabilan ranges on the southwest. (See Pl. I.) Its north end is occupied by the southern part of San Francisco Bay. Toward the south it rises gradually and becomes...
Surface waters of Kansas, 1895-1919
R.C. Rice
1921, Report
Kansas is preeminently an agricultural state. According to the United States census of 1910, the area in farms was 43,384,799 acres, or 67,789 square miles, 83 per cent of the total area of the state —82,158 square miles. The products of these farms rank high in value among those of farms...