Are we running out of water?
Raymond L. Nace
1967, Circular 536
Water supplies are not running out, but time is getting short to stem waste of water and destructive exploitation of the environment before harm is done that may be irreparable. Most of the world's water is oceanic brine. Of the waters on the land, most is frozen in Antarctica and...
Reports and maps of the Geological Survey released only in the open files, 1965
Betsy A. Weld, Margaret S. Griffin, George W. Brett
1966, Circular 518
Regional trends in water-well drilling in the United States
Gerald Meyer, Granville G. Wyrick
1966, Circular 533
Between the towns of Macon and Taylorville in central Illinois lies a ridge that is part of a system of ridges and knolls largely composed of sand and gravel. This ridge contains an important aquifer. An extensive electrical earth resistivity survey was conducted over the ridged-drift aquifer. Inversion of the...
Tectonic creep in the Hayward fault zone, California
Dorothy H. Radbruch-Hall, M. G. Bonilla
1966, Circular 525
Tectonic creep is slight apparently continuous movement along a fault. Evidence of creep has been noted at several places within the Hayward fault zone--a zone trending northwestward near the western front of the hills bordering the east side of San Francisco Bay. D. H. Radbruch of the Geological Survey and...
Ground-water research in the United States
O. M. Hackett
1966, Circular 527
The interior of the Earth, an elementary description
Eugene C. Robertson
1966, Circular 532
Evidence on the structure and composition of the earth's interior comes from (1) observations of surface rocks, (2) geophysical data from earthquakes, flow of heat from the interior, the magnetic field, and gravity, (3) laboratory experiments on surface rocks and minerals, and (4) comparison of the earth with other planets,...
Gold geochemical anomaly in the Cortez district, Nevada
Ralph Leroy Erickson, G.H. Van Sickle, H. M. Nakagawa, J. H. McCarthy, Kam Leong
1966, Circular 534
An area in the Cortez district, Nevada, previously established to be anomalous in arsenic, antimony, and tungsten has been found to be anomalous also in mercury and gold. Samples from narrow quartz veins, calcite veins, and shear zones in partially silicified limestone in the lower plate of the Roberts thrust...
Water quality of the Potomac River estuary at Washington, D.C.
W. H. Durum, Walter Basil Langbein
1966, Circular 529-A
The promise of precise borehole gravimetry in petroleum exploration and exploitation
Thane Hubert McCulloh
1966, Circular 531
This report provides comprehensive information on the geology, geohydrology, and mineral resources of Boone and Winnebago Counties for use in resource-based land-use planning and development. Data on the composition, thickness, and regional distribution of glacial drift and bedrock materials were used to construct maps of: geologic materials to a depth...
Gravimetric effects of petroleum accumulations--A preliminary summary
Thane Hubert McCulloh
1966, Circular 530
Negative gravity anomalies of very local extent and with amplitudes of 1.2 milligals or less have been observed over some known petroleum and natural gas fields in southern California and South Dagestan, U.S.S.R. Field evidence, laboratory measurements, and theory indicate that these anomalies are mainly the result of hydrocarbon pore...
Distribution of gold, silver, tellurium, and mercury in the Ely Mining District, White Pine County, Nevada
Garland B. Gott, J. H. McCarthy
1966, Circular 535
The changing pattern of ground-water development on Long Island, New York
Ralph C. Heath, B. L. Foxworthy, Philip M. Cohen
1966, Circular 524
Ground-water development on Long Island has followed a pattern that has reflected changing population trends, attendant changes in the use and disposal of water, and the response of the hydrologic system to these changes. The historic pattern of development has ranged from individually owned shallow wells tapping glacial deposits to...
Tritium rainout over the United States in 1962 and 1963
G.L. Stewart, C.M. Hoffman
1966, Circular 520
The magnitude and frequency of floods are defined regionally for small streams (drainage This report describes the tritium sampling network established by the U.S. Geological Survey. Tritium rainout data are included for 1962 and 1963 precipitation collected at 15 stations in the United States and Puerto Rico. These data are...
Mineral resources of the Grandfather Mountain window and vicinity, North Carolina
Bruce Bryant, John Calvin Reed
1966, Circular 521
No abstract available....
Preliminary report on the water resources of the Kau District, Hawaii
Dan A. Davis, George Yamanaga
1966, Circular C27
No abstract available....
Stream quality in Appalachia as related to coal-mine drainage, 1965
James E. Biesecker, J. Richard George
1966, Circular 526
A stream-quality reconnaissance at 318 locations in May 1965 offered the first opportunity for a contemporaneous regional collection and appraisal of water-quality data in Appalachia. The results provide a means of regional comparison of the influence of coal-mine drainage on stream quality at approximately median streamflow. The results disclose that...
Pesticide-wildlife studies by states, provinces, and universities. An annotated list of investigations through 1964
J.L. George
1965, Circular No. 224
Bulrushers and bulrushlike plants of eastern North America
N. Hotchkiss
1965, Circular 221
The Clinch River study--An investigation of the fate of radionuclides released to a surface stream
R.J. Pickering, P.H. Carrigan, F.L. Parker
1965, Circular 497
The Clinch River Study is a multiagency effort to evaluate the physical, chemical, and biological effects of the release to de Clinch River of low-level radioactive wastes from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The major radionuclides released are ruthenium-106, cesium-137, cobalt-60, and strontium-90. Hydrologic and biologic studies have indicated that...
Reports and maps of the Geological Survey released only in the open files, 1964
Betsy A. Weld, Margaret S. Griffin, George W. Brett
1965, Circular 498
Organic-rich shale of the United States and world land areas
Donald Cave Duncan, Vernon Emanuel Swanson
1965, Circular 523
Index of surface-water records to December 31, 1963--Part 7, Lower Mississippi River basin
H.P. Eisenhuth
1965, Circular 507
Selected references on saline ground-water resources of the United States
John Henry Frederick Feth
1965, Circular 499
Index of surface-water records to December 31, 1963: Part 10. - The Great Basin
H.P. Eisenhuth
1965, Circular 510
This report lists the streamflow and reservoir stations in The Great Basin·for which records have been or are to be published in reports of the Geological Survey for periods through December 31, 1963. It supersedes Geological Survey Circular 390....
Index of surface-water records to December 31, 1963--Part 4, St. Lawrence River basin
B.A. Anderson, C.B. Ham
1965, Circular 504