Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

164582 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 6316, results 157876 - 157900

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Determination of fluorine in organic compounds: Microcombustion method
H. S. Clark
1951, Analytical Chemistry (23) 659-661
A reliable and widely applicable means of determining fluorine in organic compounds has long been needed. Increased interest in this field of research in recent years has intensified the need. Fluorine in organic combinations may be determined by combustion at 900° C. in a quartz tube with a platinum catalyst,...
Vegetation of Southwestern watersheds in the nineteenth century
Luna Bergere Leopold
1951, Geographical Review (41) 295-316
The recollections of many old-timers who tell of grass “stirrup high” have given rise to the idea that vegetation in the Southwest was uniformly better in the middle of the last century than it is at present. The change is usually attributed to overgrazing, which timed if it did not...
Cooperative investigation of precision and accuracy in chemical analysis of silicate rocks
W.G. Schlecht
1951, Analytical Chemistry (23) 1568-1571
This is the preliminary report of the first extensive program ever organized to study the analysis of igneous rocks, a study sponsored by the United States Geological Survey, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Large samples of two typical igneous rocks,...
Ground-water situation in Oregon
R. C. Newcomb
1951, Report
The water that occurs beneath the land surface follows definite and well-known rules of hydraulics, the same as water on the surface. However, ground water must be studied by methods, some of which are unique to that type of water occurrence, in order to evaluate the part it plays in...
Conservation: Where we stand: Review of Water, land, and people
Luna Bergere Leopold
1951, The Living Wilderness (36)
A distinguished conservationist, just returned from more than a year in those Pacific islands held in trust by the United States, reports that representatives of the government there are nearly completely concerned with the maintenance of an administrative organization. Actual advances in matters of land use, of maintaining the material...
Rainfall frequency: An aspect of climatic variation
Luna Bergere Leopold
1951, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (32) 347-357
Analyses which have been made in the past have shown no significant trend in annual values of rainfall during the period of rainfall records in the southwestern United States. In the present study, frequency of daily rains of various sizes are analyzed for four long-record stations in New Mexico. It...
Determination of molybenum in soils and rocks: A geochemical semimicro field method
F. N. Ward
1951, Analytical Chemistry (23) 788-790
Reconnaissance work in geochemical prospecting requires a simple, rapid, and moderately accurate method for the determination of small amounts of molybdenum in soils and rocks. The useful range of the suggested procedure is from 1 to 32 p.p.m. of molybdenum, but the upper limit can be extended. Duplicate determinations on...
Downstream movement of recently transformed sea lampreys, Petromyzon marinus, in Carp Lake River, Michigan
Vernon C. Applegate, Clifford L. Brynildson
1951, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (81) 275-290
In order to obtain more precise information concerning the downstream movement of recently transformed sea lampreys, a trapping device was operated in the Carp Lake River, Emmet County, Michigan, from October, 1948, to July, 1951. The period of downstream migration typically extends from the latter part of October to...
The quantitative determination of calcite associated with the carbonate-bearing apatites
Sol R. Silverman, Ruth K. Fuyat, Jeanne D. Weiser
1951, Trace Elements Investigations 118
The CO2 combined as calcite in carbonate-bearing apatites as been distinguished from that combined as carbonate-apatite, or present in some form other than calcite, by use of X-ray powder patterns, differential thermal analyses, and differential solubility tests. These methods were applied to several pure apatite minerals, to one fossil bone,...
A state‐wide program of periodic measurements of ground‐water level In Nebraska
L.K. Wenzel
1951, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (16) 495-498
The precipitation in Nebraska has been considerably less than normal in the last four years, and in consequence the ground‐water level in many parts of the State has declined to a marked extent. Moreover, in some parts of Nebraska the ground‐water level has declined as the result of land‐drainage, and in other parts it has risen as the result of irrigation with water diverted from streams. These changes in ground‐water level produced by drainage, irrigation, and decreased precipitation have caused...
Ground water in the Escalante Valley, Beaver, Iron, and Washington Counties, Utah
Philip F. Fix, W.B. Nelson, B. E. Lofgren, R.G. Butler
1950, Technical Publication 6
Escalante Valley in southwestern Utah is one of the largest and most important ground-water areas of the State, with 1,300 square miles of arid land and an additional 1,500 square miles in its tributary drainage basin. Ground water is obtained from gravel and sand beds in the unconsolidated valley fill....