Ground water in Cedar Rapids Division of Lower Platte River basin, Nebraska
James B. Hyland, Charles Franklin Keech, Philip G. Rosene
1964, Water Supply Paper 1779-H
No abstract available....
Geology of the Montpelier quadrangle, Kentucky
Richard Q. Lewis, Robert E. Thaden
1964, Geologic Quadrangle 337
Aeromagnetic map of parts of the Hackensack and Paterson quadrangles, Bergen and Passaic Counties, New Jersey
P. W. Philbin, J.R. Kirby
1964, Geophysical Investigations Map 492
No abstract available....
Ground-water resources of southern New Castle County, Delaware
Donald Robert Rima, O. J. Coskery, P.W. Anderson
1964, Water Supply Paper 1756
Southern New Castle County has a land area of 190 square miles in northcentral Delaware. It is predominantly a rural area with a population of about 9,500 people who are engaged chiefly in agriculture. By and large, the residents are dependent upon ground water as a source of potable water....
Geology and ground-water resources of Uvalde County, Texas
F.A. Welder, R.D. Reeves
1964, Water Supply Paper 1584
The principal aquifer in Uvalde County is the Edwards and associated limestones of Cretaceous age. The aquifer underlies an extensive area in south-central Texas extending along the Balcones fault zone from Kinney County eastward to San Antonio, and thence northeastward to Hays County. The hydrologic unit making up the Edwards...
Ground-water levels in observation wells in Oklahoma, 1961-62
P.R. Wood, M.D. Moeller
1964, Open-File Report 64-169
The investigation of the ground-water resources of Oklahoma by the U. S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Oklahoma Water Resources Board includes a continuing program to collect records of water levels in selected observation wells on a systematic basis. These water-level records: (1) provide an index to available ground-water...
Preliminary geologic map and sections of the Hogan 4 Northeast quadrangle, Lewis and Clark and Cascade Counties, Montana
R. G. Schmidt, D. A. Swanson, Peter Zubovic
1964, IMAP 409
Bikini and nearby atolls, Marshall Islands
Ruth Todd, John West Wells, D.A. Brown, G. Arthur Cooper, Porter M. Kier, Henry B. Roberts
1964, Professional Paper 260-CC-HH
Hydrogeology of a part of the Grand Prairie Region, Arkansas
Richard T. Sniegocki
1964, Water Supply Paper 1615-B
Surface-water hydrology of coastal basins of northern California
S. E. Rantz
1964, Water Supply Paper 1758
Geology and ground water in the Farmington-Granby area, Connecticut
Allan D. Randall
1964, Water Supply Paper 1661
No abstract available....
Floods in Oklahoma: magnitude and frequency
A.O. Westfall, J.L. Patterson
1964, Open-File Report 64-170
This report presents methods by which the magnitude and frequency of expected floods for most streams in Oklahoma can be determined. Flood data were used to define flood-frequency curves applicable to the State. Composite frequency curves were drawn showing the relation of mean annual floods to floods having recurrence intervals...
Geology, structure, and uranium deposits of the Moab quadrangle, Colorado and Utah
P. L. Williams (compiler)
1964, IMAP 360
Gravity map of Eureka County and adjoining areas, Nevada
D. R. Mabey
1964, Geophysical Investigations Map 415
No abstract available....
Reconnaissance geologic map of Baranof and Kruzof Islands, Alaska
R. A. Loney, J. S. Pomeroy, D. A. Brew, L.J.P. Muffler
1964, IMAP 411
Principal facts for gravity stations along the central and southern Wasatch Front, Utah
Kenneth L. Cook, Joseph Wilbur Berg Jr.
1964, Open-File Report 64-40
Flow characteristics of Wisconsin streams: Flow-duration, Hhgh-flow, and low-flow tables for selected streams through water-year 1960
K.B. Young
1964, Open-File Report 64-167
The collection of data on the flow of rivers in Wisconsin started on a continuing basis in 1913. A few streamflow records were started in the late 1800's, one as early as 1888 (Chippewa River at Chippewa Falls). Much of the work has been done under cooperative arrangements between the...
Chemical composition of snow in the northern Sierra Nevada and other areas
John Henry Frederick Feth, S. M. Rogers, Charles Elmer Roberson
1964, Water Supply Paper 1535-J
Melting snow provides a large part of the water used throughout the western conterminous United States for agriculture, industry, and domestic supply. It is an active agent in chemical weathering, supplies moisture for forest growth, and sustains fish and wildlife. Despite its importance, virtually nothing has been known of the...
Hydrology of aquifer systems in the Memphis area, Tennessee
James H. Criner, P-C. P. Sun, Dale J. Nyman
1964, Water Supply Paper 1779-O
The Memphis area as described in .this report comprises about 1,300 square miles of the Mississippi embayment part of the Gulf Coastal Plain. The area is underlain by as much as 3,000 feet of sediments ranging in age from Cretaceous through Quaternary. In 1960, 150 mgd (million gallons per day)...
Cenomanian-Turonian aquifer of central Israel, its development and possible use as a storage reservoir
Robert Schneider
1964, Water Supply Paper 1608-F
The Cenomanian-Turonian formations constitute a highly permeable dolomite and limestone aquifer in central Israel. The aquifer is on the west limb of an anticlinorium that trends north-northeast. In places it may be as much as 800 meters thick, but in the report area, largely the foothills of the Judean-Ephraim Mountains...
Hydrologic studies of small watersheds, Honey Creek basin, Collin and Grayson Counties, Texas, 1953-1959
Clarence R. Gilbert, G.G. Commons, G. E. Koberg, F.W. Kennon
1964, Water Supply Paper 1779-F
This report presents the results of an investigation into the effects of floodwaterretarding structures in the 39 square miles of the Honey Creek basin above the stream-gaging station near McKinney, during the period October 1952 to September 1959. The number of such structures in the study area was increased from...
Chemical quality of surface waters in the Brazos River basin in Texas
Burdge Irelan, H.B. Mendieta
1964, Water Supply Paper 1779-K
The Brazos River basin, which makes up 15 percent of the land area of Texas, extends from the High Plains, where altitudes reach 4,200 feet and the average precipitation ranges from 15 to 20 inches a year, to the Gulf of Mexico where the annual rainfall is 45-^50 inches. Large...
California Carboniferous cephalopods
Mackenzie Gordon Jr.
1964, Professional Paper 483-A
Water-supply characteristics of North Carolina streams
Grover Cleveland Goddard
1964, Water Supply Paper 1761
Ground-water resources of north-central Connecticut
Robert Vittum Cushman
1964, Water Supply Paper 1752
The term 'north-central Connecticut' in this report refers to an area of about 640 square miles within the central lowland of the Connecticut River basin north of Middletown. The area is mostly a broad valley floor underlain by unconsolidated deposits of Pleistocene and Recent age which mantle an erosional surface...