Preliminary beach morphology and environmental map, Adra Delta to Cabo de Gata, Almeria Province, Spain
H. Gary Greene, J. Garcia-Rodriquez, E. Vargas
1975, Open-File Report 75-678
Memorandum: an assessment of potential U.S. uranium supply
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1975, Open-File Report 75-378
Atlas of urban and regional change, Phoenix, Arizona, land use, 1970, and land use change 1970-1972
James R. Wray
1975, Open-File Report 75-203
Atlas of urban and regional change, Tucson, Arizona, land use, 1970, and land use change, 1970-1972
James R. Wray
1975, Open-File Report 75-204
Water availability of Monroe County, Alabama
John C. Scott, Marvin E. Davis, Jerald F. McCain, Harry M. Whitman
1975, Open-File Report 75-478
Preliminary geologic map of the coastal plain in Fairfax County, Virginia
Lucy M. Force
1975, Open-File Report 75-415
Photomosaic base map of the Willamette River basin, Oregon: A tool for land and water-resource planning
S. D. Vickers, W. M. Brown, Antonio Jurado, D. A. Rickert
1975, IMAP 921-A
No abstract available....
WATSTORE: National Water Data Storage and Retrieval System of the U. S. Geological Survey; user's guide
Norman E. Hutchison
1975, Open-File Report 75-426
The U.S. Geological Survey investigates the occurrence , quantity, quality, distribution, and movement of the surface and underground water resources of the Nation. The investigations, which are conducted by the Water Resources Division, of the Survey include: systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of water data; investigation of in and agricultural...
Lakes in the greater Denver area, Front Range urban corridor, Colorado
T. W. Danielson
1975, IMAP 856-B
The many lakes in Colorado's semiarid Front Range Urban Corridor have an especially high value. In the past they were used primarily to store water for irrigation and domestic uses. Some were used for recreation. Today, rapid suburban development in the Front Range Urban Corridor is accompanied by a shift of the...
Principal facts for gravity stations in the Geysers-Clear Lake region, California
William F. Isherwood, Rodger H. Chapman
1975, Open-File Report 75-107
No abstract available. ...
Gravity and magnetic studies of The Geysers-Clear Lake geothermal region, California
William F. Isherwood
1975, Open-File Report 75-368
In order to explore for economic steam reservoirs, it is important to know the complete, three-dimensional geology which governs such a system. The Geysers-Clear Lake region California (figure 1), has the world's largest production of commercial power from a dry steam geothermal reservoir. This paper describes gravity and magnetic field...
Origin and age of postglacial deposits and assessment of potential hazards from future eruptions of Mount Baker, Washington
Jack H. Hyde, Dwight Raymond Crandell
1975, Open-File Report 75-286
Eruptions and other geologic processes at Mount Baker during the last 10,000 years have repeatedly affected adjacent areas, and especially the valleys that head at the volcano. Most mudflows from the volcano were caused by massive avalanches of volcanic rock that had been partly altered to clay by steam and...
Oil-shale Fischer assay data, tables of average oil-yield values, and oil-yield histograms of U.S. Geological Survey coreholes CR-1 and CR-2, Piceance Creek Basin, Colorado
John R. Donnell, Janet K. Pitman
1975, Open-File Report 75-580
Experimental results of atomic absorption analyses for indium and thallium in 803 nonmagnetic concentrates from Alaska
William C. Overstreet, George L. Crenshaw, Arthur E. Hubert, Sam Rosenblum, Ricke J. Smith
1975, Open-File Report 75-253
The development in the U.S. Geological Survey of rapid methods for the determination by atomic absorption spectrophotometry of indium and thallium at limits of detection as low as 0.2 ppm each in geologic materials affords great advantages over spectrographic methods in studies concerned with values at or near the crustal...
Some limnological aspects of 20 selected lakes in Eagan and Apple Valley, Minnesota
M.R. Have
1975, Open-File Report 75-528
Selected physical, chemical, and biological parameters were determined to assess the quality of 20 lakes in the cities of Eagan and Apple Valley, Minn. All the lakes are eutrophic except Holland and Fish Lakes, which are mesotrophic. Some lakes (including Fish Lake) have storm sewer inlets but are not discernibly...
Geologic map showing upper Cretaceous, Paleocene, and lower and middle Eocene units and distribution of younger fluvial deposits in western Tennessee
William S. Parks, Ernest E. Russell
1975, IMAP 916
No abstract available. ...
Ground-water resources of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore, North Carolina
M.D. Winner
1975, Hydrologic Atlas 540
Geology of the Sage and Kemmerer 15-minute quadrangles, Lincoln County, Wyoming
William Walden Rubey, Steven S. Oriel, Joshua I. Tracey
1975, Professional Paper 855
Interpretive geologic map of the bedrock showing radioactivity, and aeromagnetic map of the Salisbury, Southmont, Rockwell, and Gold Hill quadrangles, Rowan and Davidson counties, North Carolina
A. A. Stromquist, H. W. Sundelius
1975, IMAP 888
Landforms map of the Herndon Quadrangle, Virginia
H.G. Rogers
1975, Open-File Report 75-597
A summary of Tertiary volcanic stratigraphy of the southwestern High Plateaus and adjacent Great Basin, Utah
Peter D. Rowley, John J. Anderson, Paul L. Williams
1975, Bulletin 1405-B
Reconnaissance geologic map of the Gila Wilderness study area, southwestern New Mexico
J.C. Ratte, D. L. Gaskill
1975, IMAP 886
Surface-water availability, Tuscaloosa County, Alabama
Alfred L. Knight, Marvin E. Davis
1975, Open-File Report 75-458
The average annual runoff, about 1,270 mgd (million gallons per day), originating in Tuscaloosa County is equivalent to 20 inches or 0.95 mgd per square mile. The Black Warrior and Sipsey Rivers, the largest streams in the county, have average flows of 5,230 mgd and 580 mgd, respectively, where they...
Geologic map of the Sebree quadrangle, Webster County, Kentucky
Dan E. Hansen
1975, Geologic Quadrangle 1238
Summary appraisals of the nation's ground-water resources – Upper Mississippi region
R. M. Bloyd
1975, Professional Paper 813-B
The Upper Mississippi Region in general is rich in water-surface water is plentiful, and ground water is a large, important, and manageable resource. Total potable water in storage in the outwash and alluvial aquifers of the Mississippi River valley and the subbasins is about 45,000 billion gallons. This is about...