Water resources of the Guanica area, Puerto Rico: A preliminary appraisal, 1963
Neal E. McClymonds
1967, Report
Guánica and the lower Rio Loco valley lie between the extensive agricultural development in Lajas Valley to the west and the industrial development at Guayanilla to the east. Having a protected deep-water port, the Guánica area is particularly well suited to further development. The economic growth of the area depends,...
Critique of the principle of uniformity
M. King Hubbert
1967, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (89) 3-33
No abstract available. ...
Devonian of the Northern Rocky Mountains and plains
Charles A. Sandberg, William J. Mapel
1967, Conference Paper, International symposium on the Devonian system
The Devonian System, represented predominantly by shallow-water marine carbonate, is widespread in Montana, Wyoming, eastern Idaho, North Dakota, South Dakota, and northwestern Nebraska. It comprises cratonic rocks in the east and miogeosynclinal rocks in the west. The cratonic rocks thicken generally northward from their southern limit in Wyoming across...
Devonian of the Southwestern United States
F. G. Poole, D.L. Baars, H. Drewes, P. T. Hayes, K. B. Ketner, E. D. McKee, C. Teichert, J. S. Williams
1967, Conference Paper, International symposium on the Devonian system
The structural framework that controlled Devonian deposition consisted of, from west to east: (1) a eugeosynclinal area in northern California and western Nevada; (2) a miogeosynclinal area in southeastern California, eastern Nevada, and western Utah; and (3) a cratonic area in Arizona, eastern Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and western...
U.S. Geological Survey silicate rock standards
F.J. Flanagan
1967, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (31) 289-308
The U.S. Geological Survey has processed six silicate rocks to provide new reference samples to supplement G-1 and W-1. Complete conventional, rapid rock, and spectrochemical analyses by the U.S. Geological Survey are reported for a granite (replacement for G-1), a granodiorite, an andesite,...
Devonian of the Appalachian Basin, United States
William A. Oliver, Wallace De Witt, John M. Dennison, D.M. Hoskins, John W. Huddle
1967, Conference Paper, International symposium on the Devonian system
Although Devonian rocks in the Appalachians have been studied for more than 150 years, they are poorly known in most of the area. The nearly complete Devonian sequence in New York has been established as the North American standard of reference. The structural belt that includes unmetamorphosed Devonian geosynclinal...
Availability of ground water in the Cayce quadrangle, Jackson Purchase region, Kentucky-Tennessee
Arnold J. Hansen
1967, Hydrologic Atlas 180
No abstract available....
Controlled large-scale explosions; a valuable seismological tool
W. V. Mickey
1967, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (1) 11-11
ESSA’s National Earthquake Information Center is one year old
J.F. Lander
1967, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (1) 10-12
Potassium-argon ages of recent rhyolites of the Mono and Inyo craters, California
G. Brent Dalrymple
1967, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (3) 289-298
Twenty-two KAr ages were determined for sanidine samples from 10 rhyolite domes of the Mono and Inyo Craters to test the applicability of KAr dating to volcanic rocks of Recent age. Comparison of the results with ‘blank’ and dosed analyses shows...
The occurrence and origin of lamellar troilite in iron meteorites
R. Brett, E.P. Henderson
1967, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (31) 721-730
A number of iron meteorites contain elongated inclusions consisting predominantly of troilite, which have been termed Reichenbach lamellae. Two types of inclusions exist, the first up to 6 cm long and 0·2 mm wide, the second up to 2 cm long and 3 mm wide. The first type contains troilite...
Hydrology of the Valley-fill and carbonate-rock reservoirs, Pahrump Valley, Nevada-California
Glenn T. Malmberg
1967, Water Supply Paper 1832
This is the second appraisal of the water supply of Pahrump Valley, made 15 years after the first cooperative study. In the first report the average recharge was estimated to be 23,000 acre-feet per year, only 1,000 acre-feet more than the estimate made in this report. All this recharge was...
Dechlorination of 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane by Aerobacter aerogenes: I. Metabolic products
Gary Wedemeyer
1967, Applied Microbiology (15) 569-574
Whole cells or cell-free extracts of Aerobacter aerogenes catalyze the degradation of 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (DDT) in vitro to at least seven metabolites: 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethylene (DDE); 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (DDD); 1-chloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethylene (DDMU); 1-chloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (DDMS); unsym-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethylene (DDNU); 2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)acetate (DDA); and 4,4′-dichlorobenzophenone (DBP). The use of metabolic inhibitors together with pH and temperature studies indicated that discrete enzymes are involved....
Ground-water research in the U.S.A.
C. L. McGuinness
1967, Earth-Science Reviews (3) 181-202
Ground-water reservoirs and the overlying unsaturated zone-collectively, the "subsurface"-have an enormous capacity to supply water to wells and useful plants, to store water to meet future needs for the same purposes, and, under suitable precautions, to accept wastes. This capacity can be exploited on a maximum scale, however, only on...
An operational theory of laser-radar selenodesy
R.L. Wildey, R.E. Schlier, J. A. Hull, G. Larson
1967, Icarus (6) 315-347
A theory of the utilization of laser techniques for ranging from the Earth to the Moon for the purpose of providing control points on the lunar surface at which the figure of the Moon is measured to an accuracy at least an order of magnitude better than that of...
Molecular characteristics versus biological activity
Vernon C. Applegate, Manning A. Smith, Bennett R. Willeford
1967, Chemistry (40) 28-30
The molecular characteristics of mononitrophenols containing halogens not only play a key role in their biological activity but provide a novel example of selective toxicity among vertebrate animals. It has been reported that efforts to control the parasitic sea lamprey in the Great Lakes are directed at present to...
Toxicity of Bayer 73 to fish
L. L. Marking, J.W. Hogan
1967, Investigations in Fish Control 19
Abstract not submitted to date...
Geology of the Taunton quadrangle, Bristol and Plymouth Counties, Massachusetts
Joseph H. Hartshorn
1967, Bulletin 1163-D
No abstract available....
Geomagnetic polarity epochs: new data from Olduvai Gorge, Tanganyika
C. S. Grommé, R. L. Hay
1967, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (2) 111-115
The lower lava flow of Bed I in Olduvai Gorge, Tanganyika, carries natural remanent magnetization (NRM) having normal polarity. Thermal demagnetization experiments demonstrate the stability of this NRM. Thus the Olduvai geomagnetic polarity event, which was originally named from the upper lava...
Petrology of eucrites, howardites and mesosiderites
M.B. Duke, L. T. Silver
1967, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (31) 1637-1665
The eucrite and howardite calcium-rich achondrites and many mesosiderites are considered as a coherent meteorite assemblage, their silicates consisting essentially of calciumpoor monoclinic and orthorhombic pyroxenes and calcium-rich plagioclase feldspar. The achondrites can be grouped according to their brecciated structure as follows: eucrites—unbrecciated and monomict brecciated achondrites; howardites—polymict brecciated achondrites....
An unusual case of fish disease caused by Ophyroglena sp
G. L. Hoffman
1967, Bulletin of the Wildlife Disease Association (3) 111-112
No abstract available....
Complexometric determination of gallium with calcein blue as indicator
H.N. Elsheimer
1967, Talanta (14) 97-102
A metalfluorechromic indicator, Calcein Blue, has been used for the back-titration of milligram amounts of EDTA in presence of gallium complexes. The indicator was used in conjunction with an ultraviolet titration assembly equipped with a cadmium sulphide detector cell and a microammeter for enhanced end-point detection....
Mineral and chemical variations within an ash-flow sheet from Aso caldera, Southwestern Japan
P. W. Lipman
1967, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (16) 300-327
Although products of individual volcanic eruptions, especially voluminous ash-flow eruptions, have been considered among the best available samples of natural magmas, detailed petrographic and chemical study indicates that bulk compositions of unaltered Pleistocene ash-flow tuffs from Aso caldera, Japan, deviate significantly from original magmatic compositions. The last major ash-flow sheet...
Comparison of Macedon and Darwin glass
D.R. Chapman, Klaus Keil, C. Annell
1967, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (31) 1595-1603
Chemical analyses are presented for major and minor elements in two specimens of natural glass reported from Macedon, Victoria, and are compared with new analyses of glass from Mt. Darwin, Tasmania. One specimen of Macedon glass is dark, the other light; both are spongy with relatively large cavities of size...
Preliminary lead isotope investigations of brine from the Red Sea, Galena from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and galena from United Arab Republic (Egypt)
M.H. Delevaux, B. R. Doe, Glen F. Brown
1967, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (3) 139-144
The isotopic composition of lead in Red Sea chloride brine containing 0.5 ppm Pb is found to be similar to that of some Cenozoic ore leads such as galena at Rabigh in Saudi Arabia that may have formed during mineralization accompanying Tertiary...