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Page 6284, results 157076 - 157100

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The industrial utility of public water supplies in the Mountain States, 1952
E. W. Lohr, C. S. Howard, R.T. Kiser, J.D. Hem, H. A. Swenson
1952, Circular 203
The location of industrial plants is dependent on an ample water supply of suitable quality. Information relating to the chemical characteristics of the water supplies is not only essential to the location of many plants but also is an aid in the manufacture and distribution of many commodities.Public water supplies...
The industrial utility of public water supplies in the east south central states, 1952
E. W. Lohr, G. A. Billingsley, J.W. Geurin, W.L. Lamar
1952, Circular 197
The location of industrial plants is dependent on an ample water supply of suitable quality. Information relating to the chemical characteristics of the water supplies is not only essential to the location of many plants but also is an aid in the manufacture and distribution of many commodities. Public water...
Magnetite deposits and magnetic anomalies of the Brandy Brook and Silver Pond belts, St. Lawrence County, New York
B. F. Leonard
1952, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 6
This report sets forth the geology and economic possibilities of the Brandy Brook and Silver Pond belts of magnetic anomalies, Cranberry Lake quadrangle, St. Lawrence County, northwestern New York.  each belt contains a known magnetite deposit, partly explored through diamond drilling by the U.S. Bureau of Mines.  The Brandy Brook...
Water resources of the Detroit area, Michigan
Chester Owen Wisler, G.J. Stramel, Leslie Bostwick Laird
1952, Circular 183
The water used for all purposes in the Detroit area is obtained from three sources: Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River, their tributary streams and inland lakes, and ground water. During 1950 Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River provided 2,896 million gallons per day (mgd), or 98.3 percent...
Water resources of the Lake Erie shore region in Pennsylvania
John William Mangan, Donald W. Van Tuyl, Walter F. White
1952, Circular 174
An abundant supply of water is available to the Lake Erie Shore region in Pennsylvania. Lake i£rie furnishes an almost inexhaustible supply of water of satisfactory chemical quality. Small quantities of water are available from small streams in the area and from the ground. A satisfactory water supply is one...
Uranium-bearing coal and carbonaceous rocks in the Fall Creek area, Bonneville County, Idaho
James D. Vine, George Winfred Moore
1952, Circular 212
Uraniferous coal, carbonaceous shale, and carbonaceous limestone occur in the Bear River formation of Early Cretaceous age at the Fall Creek prospect, in the Fall Creek area, Bonneville County, Idaho. The uranium compounds are believed to have been derived from mildly radioactive silicic volcanic rocks of Tertiary age that rest...
Industrial clays, other than potential sources of alumina of the Columbia Basin
I. G. Sohn
1952, Circular 158
During World War II, the Columbia Basin in Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and the western portion of Montana developed into an important industrial area because of the abundance of hydroelectric ,Power and industrial raw materials. The industries that were established led to a substantial increase in Population, and additional industrial and...
Evaluation of streamflow records in Rogue River basin, Oregon
Donald Richardson
1952, Circular 187
This report presents data which are, in general, supplementary to those the surface-water investigations made in the past by the U. S. Geological Survey. Those have been essentially investigations of the operation of the many gaging stations on the Rogue River and tributaries. The data presented were obtained from a...