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Page 5893, results 147301 - 147325

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Surface water records of Missouri, 1964
1966, Water Data Report MO-64-1
The quality-of-water investigations of the U.S. Geological Survey are concerned with the chemical and physical characteristics of surface and ground water supplies of the Nation. The basic records for the 1964 water year for quality of surface waters within the State of Missouri are given in this report. The data...
The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: regional effects
David S. McCulloch, Samuel J. Tuthill, Wilson M. Laird, J. E. Case, D.F. Barnes, George Plafker, S. L. Robbins, Reuben Kachadoorian, Oscar J. Ferrians Jr., Helen L. Foster, Thor N. V. Karlstrom, M. J. Kirkby, Anne V. Kirkby, Kirk W. Stanley
1966, Professional Paper 543
This is the third in a series of six reports that the U.S. Geological Survey published on the results of a comprehensive geologic study that began, as a reconnaissance survey, within 24 hours after the March 27, 1964, Magnitude 9.2 Great Alaska Earthquake and extended, as detailed investigations, through several...
Developing a state water plan: Ground-water conditions in Utah, spring of 1965
Ted Arnow, R.G. Butler, R. W. Mower, N.B. Holman, R.M. Cordova, C.H. Carpenter, L.J. Bjorklund, G.B. Robinson, G. W. Sandberg
1965, Cooperative Investigations Report 3
This report is the second in a series of annual reports that describe ground-water conditions in Utah. It includes individual discussions of the most important areas of ground-water withdrawal in the State for the claendar year of 1964. Water-level fluctuations, however, are described for the period spring 1964 through spring...
Ground water in Jordan Valley, Salt Lake County, Utah
Ted Arnow
1965, Utah State Engineer Water Circular 1
This article was compiled largely from a technical report on ground-water conditions in the Jordan Valley which was prepared as part of a cooperative program between the Utah State Engineer and the U.S. Geological Survey to study the water resources of Utah. If you would like to read the more...
Reevaluation of the ground-water resources of Tooele Valley, Utah
Joseph S. Gates
1965, Technical Publication 12
This study of the geohydrology of Tooele Valley, Utah, was made by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Utah State Engineer during the period 1958-63. The purpose of the study was to update an earlier investigation of ground water in Tooele Valley made by the Geological Survey during...
Ground water in Northern Utah Valley, Utah: A progress report for the period 1948-1963
R.M. Cordova, Seymour Subitsky
1965, Technical Publication 11
Thomas (Hunt and others, 1953) compiled and evaluated a large amount of ground- and surface-water data for northern Utah Valley for the years prior to 1948. This report, which was prepared as part of the Statewide cooperative program between the Utah State Engineer and the U.S. Geological Survey, is designed...
Water-resources appraisal of the Snake Valley area, Utah and Nevada
James W. Hood, F. Eugene Rush
1965, Technical Publication 14
The Snake Valley area is a north-trending narrow depression that extends about 135 miles along the central Nevada-Utah border. The area covers about 3,480 square miles. Within the area, the principal ground-water reservoir is in the unconsolidated deposits of Quaternary and Tertiary age that underlie about 1.2 million acres. Carbonate...
Oral immunization of rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) against an etiologic agent of "redmouth disease"
1965, Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (22) 713-719
Rainbow trout were fed a pelleted diet containing killed cells of the etiologic agent of a bacterial disease, redmouth. These fish in addition to appropriate controls were subsequently challenged with virulent homologous organisms. Ninety per cent of the redmouth immunized fish survived the basic challenge using virulent organisms in contrast...
Virus diseases of the salmonidae in the western United States. I. Etiology and epizootiology
1965, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (126) 502-519
The history of fish diseases in western United States shows an increasing awareness that viruses could cause epizootics in fish. Fishery biologists bunked first, for protozoan and metazoan parasites, then for bacteria, and if none could be identified assumed that the mortalities were attributable to nutritional deficiency, Microbiologists in general...
Experimental hexamitiasis in juvenile coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and steelhead trout (Salmo gairdner)
1965, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (94) 53-61
An exogenous strain of cultured Hexamita salmonis (Moore) was employed to induce trophic hexamitiasis in otherwise disease-free juveniles of coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri). Mortality and growth were the parameters used to detect the effects of hexamitiasis on the two species. Two levels of each of...
Virus diseases of salmonidae in the western United States. II. Aspects of pathogenesis
W. T. Yasutake, T. J. Parisot, G.W. Klontz
1965, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (126) 520-530
During the 10 to 15 years investigators from Europe and eastern United States have reported fish diseases of virus etiology. Rucker et al. in 1953 were the first to report a disease of possible virus origin in fish in the western United States. Since then many workers in the western...
Geology and ground-water resources of the Walla Walla River basin Washington-Oregon
R. C. Newcomb
1965, Water Supply Bulletin 21
The Walla Walla River, whose drainage basin of about 1,330 square miles lies astride the Washington-Oregon boundary, drains westward to empty into the Columbia River. The basin slopes from the 5,000-foot crest of the Blue Mountains through a structural and topographic basin to the terraced lands adjoining the Columbia River...
Base-flow studies Nueces River, Texas quantity and quality, November 23-25, 1964
W.E. Reeves, P. B. Rohne, J.F. Blakey, Carter R. Gilbert
1965, Report 2
An investigation was made by the U.S. Geological Survey, under a cooperative agreement with the Texas Water Development Board, to determine the changes in quantity and chemical quality of the base flow of the Nueces River in a 52.2-mile reach beginning at U.S. Highway 90 and extending to the crossing...
Ground water in the alluvium of Otter Creek Basin, Oklahoma
Jerrald R. Hollowell
1965, Bulletin 27
Otter Creek basin comprises 287 square miles in Kiowa, Comanche, and Tillman Counties. The basin is not typical of southwestern Oklahoma in that it includes massive mountains and scattered knobs and peaks of the Wichita Mountains. Alluvium covers much of the southern half of the basin but is restricted to...
Ground water in the alluvium of Elk Creek basin, Oklahoma
Jerrald R. Hollowell
1965, Bulletin 28
The Elk Creek basin comprises 584 square miles in Washita, Beckham, and Kiowa Counties. The basin is typical of southwestern Oklahoma with nearly level plains broken by gentle rolling hills and low escarpments, except for the extreme southern part, where seven granite and gabbroic knobs and ridges of the Wichita...
Description of the Pungo River formation in Beaufort County
Joel O. Kimrey
1965, Bulletin 79
This report describes the lithology and stratigraphy of the Pungo River Formation that underlies part of Beaufort County, North Carolina. The formation contains potentially economic beds of phosphatic sand. It is composed of interbedded phosphatic clays, diatomaceous clays, phosphatic limestones, silty claystones, coquinas, calcareous clays, and phosphatic sands. The P2...