Geochemical evidence for possible concealed mineral deposits near the Monticello Box, northern Sierra Cuchillo, Socorro County, New Mexico
Wallace R. Griffitts, Henry V. Alminas
1968, Circular 600
Rutile and topaz in Precambrian gneiss, Jefferson and Clear Creek Counties, Colorado
Douglas M. Sheridan, Richard B. Taylor, Sherman P. Marsh
1968, Circular 567
Disseminated rutile and major amounts of topaz have been identified in Precambrian topaz-quartz gneiss northwest of Evergreen, Colo. The rutile occurs in quartz-topaz-sillimanite gneiss that forms a stratigraphic unit which is 11 to 100 feet thick and is identified along strike for more than 7,000 feet. Three composite chip samples...
Suggested areas for prospecting in the central Koyukuk River region, Alaska
Thomas P. Miller, Oscar J. Ferrians
1968, Circular 570
Platinum and associated elements at the New Rambler mine and vicinity, Albany and Carbon Counties, Wyoming
P. K. Theobald, Charles Emmet Thompson
1968, Circular 607
Platinum-group metals in the Medicine Bow Mountains were first identified by W. C. Knight in 1901. In the Medicine Bow Mountains, these metals are commonly associated with copper, silver, or gold in shear zones that cut a series of mafic igneous and metamorphic rocks. At the New Rambler mine, where...
An atomic-absorption method for the determination of gold in large samples of geologic materials
Gordon H. VanSickle, Hubert William Lakin
1968, Circular 561
A laboratory method for the determination of gold in large (100-gram) samples has been developed for use in the study of the gold content of placer deposits and of trace amounts of gold in other geologic materials. In this method the sample is digested with bromine and ethyl ether, the...
Index of surface-water records to September 30, 1967 - Part 6, Missouri River basin
H.P. Eisenhuth
1968, Circular 576
Reports and maps of the Geological Survey released only in the open files, 1967
Betsy A. Weld, Margaret S. Griffin, George W. Brett
1968, Circular 548
Reconnaissance investigations of the discharge and water quality of the Amazon River
Roy Edwin Oltman
1968, Circular 552
Selected published estimates of the discharge of Amazon River in the vicinity of Obidos and the mouth are presented to show the great variance of available information. The most reasonable estimates prepared by those who measured some parameters of the flow were studied by Maurice Parde, who concluded that the...
Time of travel of water in the Great Miami River, Dayton to Cleves, Ohio
Daniel P. Bauer
1968, Circular 546
Index of surface-water records to September 30, 1967 - Part 7, Lower Mississippi River basin
H.P. Eisenhuth
1968, Circular 577
Geochemical anomalies in the Swales Mountain area, Elko County, Nevada
Keith Brindley Ketner, James George Evans, Thomas D. Hessin
1968, Circular 588
Distribution of gold, copper, and some other metals in the McCarthy B-4 and B-5 quadrangles, Alaska
E. M. MacKevett, James G. Smith
1968, Circular 604
Determination of gold in geologic materials by solvent extraction and atomic-absorption spectrometry
Claude Huffman, J.D. Mensik, L.B. Riley
1967, Circular 544
The two methods presented for the determination of traces of gold in geologic materials are the cyanide atomic-absorption method and the fire-assay atomic-absorption method. In the cyanide method gold is leached with a sodium-cyanide solution. The monovalent gold is then oxidized to the trivalent state and concentrated by extracting into...
Effects of the Truckee, California, earthquake of September 12, 1966
Reuben Kachadoorian, R. F. Yerkes, Arvi O. Waananen
1967, Circular 537
The Truckee, Calif., earthquake of September 12, 1966, had a magnitude of 5.4 on the Richter scale, as reported by the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. It was felt over an area extending from San Francisco eastward to Salt Lake City and from Bakersfield northward beyond Chico, Calif. Ground breakage...
Uranium reserves and progress in exploration and development
Arthur Pierce Butler
1967, Circular 547
Reports and maps of the Geological Survey released only in the open files, 1966
Betsy A. Weld, Margaret S. Griffin, George W. Brett
1967, Circular 528
Bedded barite in East Northumberland Canyon, Nye County, Nevada
Daniel R. Shawe, F. G. Poole, Donald Albert Brobst
1967, Circular 555
Bedded barite has been identified in the course of stratigraphic studies by the U.S. Geological Survey in and near East Northumberland Canyon, Toquima Range, Nye County, Nev. The barite beds are interlayered in black chert of probable Ordovician age. The barite rock is mostly dark gray and massive, has a...
Flood information for flood-plain planning
Conrad D. Bue
1967, Circular 539
Floods are natural and normal phenomena. They are catastrophic simply because man occupies the flood plain, the highwater channel of a river. Man occupies flood plains because it is convenient and profitable to do so, but he must purchase his occupancy at a price-either sustain flood damage, or provide flood-control...
Economic significance of revised age relations of rocks in the Cornucopia mining district, Elko County, Nevada
Robert Roy Coats
1967, Circular 549
Recent geologic work in the Cornucopia mining district, a small silver-gold mining district in northwestern Elko County, Nev., has resulted in significant revision of the geological interpretation. Rocks formerly thought to be premineralization in age, but unmineralized, are now known to be postmineral extrusives, resting unconformably on the altered andesite...
Distribution of gold, tellurium, silver, and mercury in part of the Cripple Creek district, Colorado
Garland Bayard Gott, J. H. McCarthy, G.H. Van Sickle, J. B. McHugh
1967, Circular 543
Geochemical exploration studies were undertaken in the Cripple Creek district to test the possibility that large low-grade gold deposits might be found. Surface rock samples taken throughout the district indicate that the volcanic rocks between the productive veins contain an average of about 0.6 ppm (part per million) gold. In...
A simple mercury vapor detector for geochemical prospecting
William W. Vaughn
1967, Circular 540
The detector utilizes a large-volume atomic-absorption technique for quantitative determinations of mercury vapor thermally released from crushed rock. A quartz-enclosed noble-metal amalgamative stage, which is temperature controlled and is actuated by a radio-frequency induction heater, selectively traps the mercury and eliminates low-level contamination. As little as 1 part per billion...
Gold-bearing sedimentary rocks in northwest Wyoming — A preliminary report
J.C. Antweiler, J. D. Love
1967, Circular 541
No abstract available....
Ground water of the Piedmont and Blue Ridge provinces in the Southeastern States
H. E. LeGrand
1967, Circular 538
Marine sediment sample preparation for analysis for low concentrations of fine detrital gold
H. Edward Clifton, Arthur Hubert, R. Lawrence Phillips
1967, Circular 545
Analyses by atomic absorption for detrital gold in more than 2,000 beach, offshore, marine-terrace, and alluvial sands from southern Oregon have shown that the values determined from raw or unconcentrated sediment containing small amounts of gold are neither reproducible nor representative of the initial sample. This difficulty results from a...
The aeration capacity of streams
W. B. Langbein, W. H. Durum
1967, Circular 542