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Page 6305, results 157601 - 157625

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Runoff characteristics of California streams
S. E. Rantz
1972, Water Supply Paper 2009-A
California streams exhibit a wide range of runoff characteristics that are related to the climatologic, topographic, and geologic characteristics of the basins they drain. The annual volume of runoff of a stream, expressed in inches, may be large or small, and daily discharge rates may be highly variable or relatively...
Map showing landslides and areas of potential landsliding in the Salina quadrangle, Utah
Paul L. Williams
1972, IMAP 591-L
The term “landslide” is broadly defined as any “downward and outward movement of slope-forming materials composed of natural rock, soils, artificial fills, or combinations of these materials. The moving mass may proceed by any one of three principal types of movement: falling, sliding, or flossing, or by their combinations” (Varnes,...
Map Showing Areas Containing Swelling Clay in the Morrison Quadrangle, Jefferson County, Colorado
Glenn R. Scott
1972, IMAP 790-C
Formations that contain clays having swelling pressures higher than 2,500 pounds per square foot (as measured by the Potential Volume Change meter) are listed in order of decreasing swelling pressure: Denver Formation, Pierre Shale, Laramie Formation, Green Mountain Conglomerate, Fox Hills Sandstone, and Arapahoe Formation. Some landslides derived from these...
Water resources of the Minnesota River-Hawk Creek watershed, southwestern Minnesota
Wayne A. Van Voast, W.L. Broussard, D.E. Wheat
1972, Hydrologic Atlas 391
The Minnesota River – Hawk Creek watershed is located in southwestern Minnesota. The watershed has an area of 1,479 square miles and is drained along its southwestern edge by the Minnesota River (Minnesota Division of Waters, 1959). The major watercourse within the watershed is Hawk Creek, having a drainage area...