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Page 5937, results 148401 - 148425

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Why study impact cratering?
Eugene Merle Shoemaker
D. J. Roddy, R. O. Pepin, R. B. Merrill, editor(s)
1977, Conference Paper, Impact and explosion cratering: Planetary and terrestrial implications, proceedings of the Symposium on Planetary Cratering Mechanics
No abstract available....
Geochemical and petrological studies of a uraniferous granite from the Granite Mountains, Wyoming
John S. Stuckless, C. M. Bunker, C. A. Bush, W. P. Doering, J. H. Scott
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 61-81
Granite rocks from the Granite Mountains, Wyo. have been proposed as the source of uranium deposits in the Crooks Gap, Gas Hills and Shirley Basin uranium districts, Wyoming. We have divided these granitic rocks into four units: (1) a biotitic phase which forms the dominant unit at the western end...
Astronomically observable crater-forming projectiles
Eugene Merle Shoemaker
D. J. Roddy, R. O. Pepin, R. B. Merrill, editor(s)
1977, Conference Paper, Impact and explosion cratering: Planetary and terrestrial implications, proceedings of the Symposium on Planetary Cratering Mechanics
No abstract available....
Geochemistry of amphibolites from the central Beartooth Mountains, Montana-Wyoming
Theodore J. Armbrustmacher, Frank S. Simons
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 53-60
Trends of variation of major- and minor-element contents in amphibolites from the central Beartooth Mountains strongly suggest that these rocks of andesitic composition are derived from a tholeiitic, mafic igneous parent and not from a sedimentary parent. Discriminant functions based on minor-element content also indicate igneous parentage, whereas functions based...
Access routes to the United States Geological Survey's National Center, Reston, Virginia
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Report
The National Center: The U.S. Geological Survey, established in 1879 as a bureau in the Department of the Interior, is one of the Federal Government's major earth science research and fact-finding agencies. By 1960, the continued growth of the Survey's natural resources and environmental programs and activities led to the...
Wave propagation in soils
Roger D. Borcherdt
1977, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the sixth World Conference on Earthquake Engineering New Delhi, India, 1977
No abstract available....
Procedure for estimating the temperature of a hot-water component in a mixed water by using a plot of dissolved silica versus enthalpy
A. H. Truesdell, R.O. Fournier
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 49-52
A graphical method using a plot of dissolved silica versus enthalpy allows quick determination of the temperature of the hot-water component of a nonboiling thermal spring. The method is applicable to warm spring waters that either have not lost heat before mixing or have lost heat by separation of steam...
Application of a hydrometeorological model to the south-central Sierra Nevada of California
Wendell V. Tangborn, Lowell A. Rasmussen
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 33-48
A hydrometeorological streamflow-prediction model (HM model) developed for the North Cascades of Washington has been tested in the south-central Sierra Nevada of California. Twenty-four drainages ranging in mean altitude from 770 to 3,160 metres, including several of the major ones such as those of the Kern, Kings, and Merced Rivers,...
Coal movement by water, 1974
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Report, National atlas of the United States
No abstract available....
Beach cusps
A. H. Sallenger Jr.
1977, Conference Paper, Coastal processes and resulting forms of sediment accumulations, Currituck Spit, Virginia-North Carolina: field trip guidebook
Dating and recurrence frequency of prehistoric mudflows near Big Sur, Monterey County, California
Lionel E. Jackson Jr.
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 17-32
Botanical evidence based on the dendrochronology and root horizons of redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens) and radiocarbon dating were used to date prehistoric mudflows near Big Sur, Calif. At least three periods of mudflow activity were delineated for the approximate prehistoric period 1370-1800. Two historic periods of mudflow activity have occurred, 1908-10...
Muscle scars of late Paleozoic freshwater ostracodes from West Virginia
I. G. Sohn
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 135-141
Different adductor muscle attachment scar patterns of the three ostracode genera Darwinula Brady and Robertson, 1885, Gutschickia Scott, 1944, and Whipplella Holland, 1934, from Pennsylvanian and Permian rocks of 'West Virginia are illustrated for the first time. Gutschickia and Whipplella have been considered as junior synonyms of Carbonita Strand, 1928,...
Radiate shell structures in Paleozoic Myodocopid and Palaeocopid ostracodes are epigenetic
I. G. Sohn
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 125-133
The radiate structures in the shell of Paleozoic ostracodes are interpreted to be epigenetic in origin. On the basis of this interpretation, the genus Radiicypridina Bless, 1973, is a junior synonym of Eocypridina Kesling and Ploch, 1960. The type-series of Eocypridina radiata (Jones, Kirkby, and Brady, 1874), from the Coal...
Transverse mixing in the Mobile River, Alabama
William Meyer
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 11-16
Transverse dispersion in the Mobile River was measured by (1) ground-based techniques using water samples and a fluorometer and (2) by aerial photography. Magnitude of the transverse mixing coefficient obtained by the two methods was 6.2 feet squared per second (0.58 metre squared per second) and 5.0 feet squared...