Sediment problems in urban areas
Harold P. Guy
1970, Circular 601-E
A recognition of and solution to sediment problems in urban areas is necessary if society is to have an acceptable living environment. Soil erosion and sediment deposition in urban areas are as much an environmental blight as badly paved and littered streets, dilapidated buildings, billboard clutter, inept land use, and...
Preliminary report on the geologic events associated with the May 31, 1970, Peru earthquake
George Edward Ericksen, George Plafker, Jaime. Fernandez Concha
1970, Circular 639
Elemental sulfur in Eddy County, New Mexico
Jim S. Hinds, Richard R. Cunningham
1970, Circular 628
Sulfur has been reported in Eddy County, N. Mex., in rocks ranging from Silurian to Holocene in age at depths of 0-15,020 feet. Targets of present exploration are Permian formations in the Delaware Basin and northwest shelf areas at depths of less than 4,000 feet. Most of the reported sulfur...
A strategy for the geologic exploration of the planets
M. H. Carr
1970, Circular 640
The geology of the planets bears directly on three basic aims of lunar and planetary exploration: determination of the origin and evolution of the solor system; determination of the origin and evolution of life; and clarification of the nature of the processes shaping man's terrestrial environment (National Academy of Sciences, 1966...
Flood-hazard mapping in metropolitan Chicago
John Richard Sheaffer, Davis W. Ellis, Andrew Maute Spieker
1970, Circular 601-C
Gold content of water, plants, and animals
Robert Sprague Jones
1970, Circular 625
Hydrologic implications of solid-water disposal
William Joseph Schneider
1970, Circular 601-F
The disposal of more than 1,400 million pounds of solid wastes in the United States each day is a major problem. This disposal in turn often leads to serious health, esthetic, and environmental problems. Among these is the pollution of vital ground-water resources. Of the six principal methods of solid-waste disposal...
A preliminary study of the effects of water circulation in the San Francisco Bay estuary : A. Some effects of fresh-water inflow on the flushing of south San Francisco Bay, B. Movement of seabed drifters in the San Francisco Bay estuary and the adjacent Pacific Ocean
D. S. McCulloch, D. H. Peterson, P.R. Carlson, T. J. Conomos
1970, Circular 637-A,B
Water for the cities - The outlook
William Joseph Schneider, Andrew Maute Spieker
1969, Circular 601-A
Except perhaps for the arid Southwest, water resources are generally sufficient to meet the needs of cities for the foreseeable future. Cities will continue to expand and additional rural areas will be converted to urban and suburban complexes. Demands for urban water will continue to rise and this will place...
Hydrogeologic information on the Glorieta Sandstone and the Ogallala Formation in the Oklahoma Panhandle and adjoining areas as related to underground waste disposal
James Haskell Irwin, Robert B. Morton
1969, Circular 630
The Oklahoma Panhandle and adjacent areas in Texas, Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico have prospered because of the development of supplies of fresh water and of oil and gas. The Ogallala and, in places, Cretaceous rocks produce fresh water for irrigation, public supply, and domestic and stock use through approximately...
Sensor detection capabilities study
John Emery Wilson
1969, Circular 616
Results of geological and geochemical investigations in an area northwest of the Chulitna River, central Alaska Range
C. C. Hawley, A. L. Clark, M.A. Herdrick, S. H. B. Clark
1969, Circular 617
Sedimentary and volcanic rock units of Paleozoic and Mesozoic age, faults, and elongate bodies of intrusive rock, particularly serpentinites, have a dominant northeasterly trend in an area northwest of the Chulitna River between Eldridge Glacier and Bull River. The serpentinites locally contain abnormal (as much as 0.5 percent) concentrations of...
Disposal of liquid wastes by injection underground--Neither myth nor millennium
Arthur M. Piper
1969, Circular 631
Injecting liquid wastes deep underground is an attractive but not necessarily practical means for disposing of them. For decades, impressive volumes of unwanted oil-field brine have been injected, currently about 10,000 acre-feet yearly. Recently, liquid industrial wastes are being injected in ever-increasing quantity. Dimensions of industrial injection wells range widely...
Quantitative comparison of some aesthetic factors among rivers
Luna Bergere Leopold
1969, Circular 620
It is difficult to evaluate the factors contributing to aesthetic or nonmonetary aspects of a landscape. In contrast, aspects which lend themselves to cost-benefit comparisons are now treated in a routine way. As a result, nonmonetary values are described either in emotion-loaded words or else are mentioned and thence forgotten.The...
Gold-bearing jasperoid in the Drum Mountains, Juab and Millard Counties, Utah
Joseph Howard McCarthy, R. E. Learned, J.M. Botbol, T.G. Lovering, J.R. Watterson, R. L. Turner
1969, Circular 623
Gold in minerals and the composition of native gold
Robert Sprague Jones, Michael Fleischer
1969, Circular 612
Gold occurs in nature mainly as the metal and as various alloys. It forms complete series of solid solutions with silver, copper, nickel, palladium, and platinum. In association with the platinum metals, gold occurs as free gold as well as in solid solution. The native elements contain the most gold,...
Some shorter mineral resource investigations in Alaska
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1969, Circular 615
No abstract available....
Metalliferous deposits near Granite Mountain, eastern Seward Peninsula, Alaska
Thomas P. Miller, Raymond L. Elliott
1969, Circular 614
New deposits of lead, zinc, and silver were found in a large altered zone 18 miles long and 2 to 5 miles wide near Quartz Creek west of Granite Mountain in the eastern Seward Peninsula, Alaska. New deposits of molybdenum, bismuth, and silver were found associated with a previously reported...
Establishment of gold-quartz standard GQS-1
Hugh T. Millard, John Marinenko, John E. McLane
1969, Circular 598
A homogeneous gold-quartz standard, GQS-1, was prepared from a heterogeneous gold-bearing quartz by chemical treatment. The concentration of gold in GQS-1 was determined by both instrumental neutron activation analysis and radioisotope dilution analysis to be 2.61?0.10 parts per million. Analysis of 10 samples of the standard by both instrumental neutron...
Scientific or rule-of-thumb techniques of ground-water management--Which will prevail?
Charles Lee McGuinness
1969, Circular 608
Emphasis in ground-water development, once directed largely to quantitatively minor (but sociologically vital) service of human and stock needs, is shifting: aquifers are treated as possible regulating reservoirs managed conjunctively with surface water. Too, emphasis on reducing stream pollution is stimulating interest in aquifers as possible waste-storage media. Such management...
Gold in igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks
Robert Sprague Jones
1969, Circular 610
Mercury in soil gas and air--A potential tool in mineral exploration
Joseph Howard McCarthy, W.W. Vaughn, R. E. Learned, J. L. Meuschke
1969, Circular 609
The mercury content in soil gas and in the atmosphere was measured in several mining districts to test the possibility that the mercury content in the atmosphere is higher over ore deposits than over barren ground. At Cortez, Nev., the distribution of anorhalous amounts of mercury in the air collected...
Asbestos occurrence in the Eagle C-4 quadrangle, Alaska
Helen Laura Foster
1969, Circular 611
An asbestos occurrence was discovered in a remote part of the Eagle quadrangle, Alaska, in the summer of 1968 during geologic reconnaissance in connection with the U.S. Geological Survey's Heavy Metals program. The exposed part of the deposit consists of large joint blocks of serpentine which are cut by closely...
Reports and maps of the Geological Survey released only in the open files, 1968
Betsy A. Weld, Margaret S. Griffin, George W. Brett
1969, Circular 568
U.S. Geological Survey heavy metals program progress report 1968 - Field studies
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1969, Circular 621
The Heavy Metals program of the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Mines began in mid-1966 and thus at the end of calendar year 1968 was halfway through its third year. This progress report summarizes field studies carried out under the Geological Survey's part of the program during...