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Page 59, results 1451 - 1475

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Summary of investigations of uranium deposits in the Pumpkin Buttes area, Johnson and Campbell Counties, Wyoming
Max L. Troyer, Edward J. McKay, Paul E. Soister, Stewart R. Wallace
1954, Circular 338
Uranium minerals were discovered in the Pumpkin Buttes area, Campbell and Johnson Counties, Wyo., by the U. S. Geological Survey in October 1951. From June to November 1952, an area of about 750 square miles was examined for uranium deposits, and 211 localities having abnormally high radioactivity were found; uranium...
Reconnaissance for radioactive deposits in east-central Alaska, 1949
Helmuth Wedow, M.G. White
1954, Circular 335
In the summer of 1949, several mines and prospects in the Fairbanks and Livengood quadrangles, east-central Alaska, were examined for the possible presence of radioactive materials. Also tested were metamorphic and sedimentary rocks of pre-Cambrian and Paleozoic age crossed by the Elliott Highway, which extends from Fox, near Fairbanks, northwestward...
The East Slope No. 2 uranium prospect, Piute County, Utah
Donald Gray Wyant
1954, Circular 322
The secondary uranium minerals autunite, metatorbernite, uranophane(?), and schroeckingerite occur in altered hornfels at the East Slope No. 9. uranium prospect. The deposit, in sec. 6, T. 9.7 S., R. 3 W., Piute County, Utah, is about 1 mile west of the Bullion Monarch mine which is in the central...
First Fourteen Years of Lake Mead
Harold E. Thomas
1954, Circular 346
This circular summarizes the results of recent studies of Lake Mead and its environs. Area-capacity tables, prepared on the basis of a hydrographic survey of the lake in 1948-49, show that the capacity of the reservoir was reduced 4.9 percent during the first 14 years after Hoover Dam was completed,...
Records of wells drilled for oil and gas in New Mexico
G. H. Dixon, D.H. Baltz, T.F. Stipp, R.A. Bieberman
1954, Circular 333
Data concerning nearly 3,000 of the more than 13,000 wells drilled in New Mexico, before September 1, 1953, including unsuccessful wildcat and field extension wells and most of the discovery wells, have been compiled and are published in this circular. Although the search for oil and gas has extended to...
Stripping-coal deposits on lower Lignite Creek, Nenana coal field, Alaska
Clyde Wahrhaftig, Joseph H. Birman
1954, Circular 310
Stripping-coal reserves in an area of about 9.4 square miles extending from the Nenana River about 6 miles up the valley of Lignite Creek are estimated to amount to about 95, 000, 000 tons. The stripping-coal reserves are located in the lower and middle members of the Tertiary coal-bearing formation....
Water resources of the Pittsburgh area, Pennsylvania
Max Noecker, D.W. Greenman, N.H. Beamer
1954, Circular 315
The per capita use of water in the Pittsburgh area in 1951 was 2, 000 gallons per day fgpd) or twice the per capita use in Pennsylvania as a whole. An average of about 3, 040 million gallons of water was withdrawn from the streams and from the ground each...
Geology of the western Everglades area, southern Florida
Melvin C. Schroeder, Howard Klein
1954, Circular 314
IntroductionDuring 1950, a series of 43 test wells 30 feet deep were drilled by the United States Corps of Engineers along the western edge of the Everglades from the Tamiami Canal northward to the Caloosahatchee River. The cores obtained from the wells afford geologic data along a line from the...
Uranium-bearing copper deposits in the Coyote district, Mora County, New Mexico
H. D. Zeller, Elmer Harold Baltz
1954, Circular 334
Uranium-bearing copper deposits occur in steeply dipping beds of the Sangre de Cristo formation of Pennsylvanian and Permian(?) age south of Coyote, Mora County, N. Mex. Mapping and sampling of these deposits indicate that they are found in lenticular carbonaceous zones in shales and arkosic sandstones. Samples from these zones...
A reconnaissance for uranium in New Mexico, 1953
Roy Lee Griggs
1954, Circular 354
In the fall of 1953 a reconnaissance for uranium was made in the Datil area of west-central New Mexico, and in the Cerrillos mining district, the Glorieta and Tecolote districts, and the Las Vegas and Colfax sill areas of north-central to northeastern New Mexico. Traces of radioactive materials were detected...