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Page 5761, results 144001 - 144025

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The Raft River Basin, Idaho-Utah as of 1966: A reappraisal of the water resources and effects of ground-water development
E.H. Walker, L.C. Dutcher, S.O. Decker, K.L. Dyer
1970, Open-File Report 70-355
The Raft River basin, mostly in south-central Idaho and partly in Utah, is a drainage basin of approximately 1,510 square miles. Much arable land in the basin lacks water for irrigation, and the potentially irrigable acreage far exceeds the amount that could be irrigated with the 140,000 acre-feet estimated annual...
Geologic map of the Arvada quadrangle, Colorado
Robert M. Lindvall
1970, Open-File Report 70-198
Many of the engineering-geologic problems in the Arvada quadrangle are related to the unconsolidated surficial deposits, which mantle the bedrock to depths of as much as 40 or 50 feet. In this report most of the emphasis is placed on the map distribution of these materials and on a description...
Water resources of the Redwood River watershed, southwestern Minnesota
Wayne A. Van Voast, L.A. Jerabek, R.P. Novitzki
1970, Hydrologic Atlas 345
The Redwood River watershed contains 739 square miles underlain by glacial drift and sedimentary and crystalline rocks. The land surface slopes gently northeastward and eastward from altitudes greater than 1900 feet at the southwestern edge to less than 850 feet at the mouth of the Redwood River in the east. The...
Morphology, sedimentation, and seismic characteristics of an arctic beach, Nome, Alaska - with economic significances
H. Gary Greene
1970, Open-File Report 70-142
Arctic beaches exhibit characteristics that do not occur on beaches in more temperate zones. In the summer of 1967 morphological, sedimentological, and seismic refraction studies were made on an arctic beach near Nome, Alaska, in order to better define these distinguishing characteristics.Several distinct microrelief structures are developed during ice break-up...
Various aspects of uranium ore rolls in the United States
Elbert Nelson Harshman
1970, Open-File Report 70-154
About 40 percent of the uranium ore reserves in the United States, minable at $8 per pound of contained U308, are in roll-type deposits in the State of Wyoming. The host rocks are arkosic sandstones, deposited in intermontane basins under fluvial conditions, and derived from the granitic cores of mountain...
Accoustical survey of Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays, western Gulf of Maine
Brian E. Tucholke, Robert N. Oldale, C. D. Hollister
1970, Open-File Report 70-331
The accompanying map shows the amount of acoustic penetration achieved in the sediments of the western Gulf of Maine using a 3.5 kHz echo sounding system and illustrates the pronounced control of topography on sediment distribution. Little or no sub-bottom penetration was observed in areas of sand and gravel on...