Geophysical abstracts 148-151 January-December 1952: (Numbers 13284-14183)
M.C. Rabbitt, S.T. Vesselowsky
1953, Bulletin 991
Abstracts of world literature contained in periodicals, books, and patents....
Geology of the Anderson Mesa quadrangle, Colorado
Fred W. Cater Jr., C. F. Withington
1953, Trace Elements Memorandum 690
The Anderson Mesa quadrangle is one of the eighteen 7 1/2-minute quadrangles covering the principal carnotite-producing area of the southwestern Colorado. The geology of these quadrangles was mapped by the U.S. Geological Survey for the Atomic Energy Commission as part of a comprehensive study of carnotite deposits. The...
The uranium-bearing nickel-cobalt-native silver deposits in the Black Hawk district, Grant County, New Mexico
Elliot Gillerman, Donald H. Whitebread
1953, Trace Elements Investigations 261
The Black Hawk (Bullard Peak) district, Grant County, N. Mex., is 21 miles by road west of Silver City. From 1881 to 1893 more than $1,000,000.00 of high-grade silver ore is reported to have been shipped from the district. Since 1893 there has been no mining in the district except...
Radioactive source materials in Los Estados Unidos de Venezuela
Donald G. Wyant, William N. Sharp, Carlos Ponte Rodriguez
1953, Trace Elements Investigations 222
This report summarizes the data available on radioactive source materials in Los Estados Unidos de Venezuela accumulated by geologists of the Direccions Tecnica de Geolgia and antecedent agencies prior to June 1951, and the writers from June to November 1951. The investigation comprised preliminary study, field examination, office studies, and the...
Airborne radioactivity survey of the Gulf of Mexico beach between Sanibel Island and Caladesi Island, Florida
J. L. Meuschke, R.M. Moxham, T.E. Bortner
1953, Trace Elements Memorandum 678
The accompanying map shows the results of an airborne radioactivity survey along the Gulf of Mexico beach between Sanibel Island and Caladesi Island in Florida. This survey was made May 4, 1953, as part of a cooperative program with the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. The survey was made with...
Preliminary reconnaissance survey for thorium, uranium, and rare-earth oxides, Bear Lodge Mountains, Crook County, Wyoming
V.R. Wilmarth, Douglas H. Johnson
1953, Trace Elements Investigations 172
An area about 6 miles north of Sundance, in the Bear Lodge Mountains, in Crook County, Wyo., was examined during August 1950 for thorium, uranium, and rare-earth oxides and samples were collected. Uranium is known to occur in fluorite veins and iron-manganese veins and in the igneous rocks of Tertiary age...
Airborne radioactivity survey of parts of Atlantic Ocean beach, Virginia to Florida
R.M. Moxham, R.W. Johnson
1953, Trace Elements Memorandum 644
The accompanying maps show the results of an airborne radioactivity survey along the Atlantic Ocean beach from Cape Henry, Virginia to Cape Fear, North Carolina and from Savannah Bach Georgia to Miami Beach, Florida. The survey was made March 23-24, 1953, as part of a cooperative program with the U.S....
Distribution of coarse- and fire-grained rocks in the Wasatch formation and their relationship to uranium deposits, Powder River Basin, Wyoming
David F. Davidson
1953, Trace Elements Memorandum 676
A brief study of the areal distribution of the various rock types of the Wasatch formation in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming, was made during the summer of 1952. In the south and central parts if the basin, the Wasatch formation appears to contain coarser-grained rocks in contrast to...
Photogeologic map, Tidwell-5 quadrangle, Emery county, Utah
P. P. Orkild
1953, Trace Elements Memorandum 642
No abstract available....
United States base map
U.S. Geological Survey
1953, Report
No abstract available....
Mica deposits of the southeastern Piedmont, Part 3, Ridgeway-Sandy Ridge district, Virginia and North Carolina; Part 4, Outlying deposits in Virginia
W. R. Griffitts, R. H. Jahns, R. W. Lemke
1953, Professional Paper 248-C
No abstract available....
Mica deposits of the southeastern Piedmont, Part 7, Hartwell district, Georgia and South Carolina; Part 8, Outlying deposits in South Carolina
W. R. Griffitts, J. C. Olson
1953, Professional Paper 248-E
No abstract available....
Lake fisheries need lamprey control and research
James W. Moffett
1953, The Fisherman (21) 10-11
Since 1921, when the first sea lamprey was recorded from Lake Erie, concern about this parasite in the Great Lakes above Niagara Falls, where previously it had never occurred, grew successively. At first, the concern was shared only in scientific circles, but as the parasite continued its persistent and...
The effects of DDT upon the survival and growth of nestling songbirds
Robert T. Mitchell, H.P. Blagbrough, R.C. VanEtten
1953, Journal of Wildlife Management (17) 45-54
No abstract available. ...
Field method for determination of traces of arsenic in soils: Confined spot procedure using a modified Gutzeit apparatus
H. Almond
1953, Analytical Chemistry (25) 1766-1767
[No abstract available]...
Analysis of mixed-layer clay mineral structures
W. F. Bradley
1953, Conference Paper, Analytical Chemistry
Among the enormously abundant natural occurrences of clay minerals, many examples are encountered in which no single specific crystallization scheme extends through a single ultimate grain. The characterization of such assemblages becomes an analysis of the distribution of matter within such grains, rather than the simple identification of mineral species....
War on lampreys
James W. Moffett
1953, Philadelphia Enquirer, 23 August 1953 16-17
Vampire-like sea lampreys look somewhat like short sections of garden hose, swim like eels, and live solely on the blood of fishes. Their voracious appetites have been especially harmful to fish in the Great Lakes, and it is there that methods of underwater electrocution are being applied in their...
Mica deposits of the southeastern Piedmont, Part 11, Alabama district
E. W. Heinrich, J. C. Olson
1953, Professional Paper 248-G
No abstract available....
Native and contaminated ground waters in the Long Beach-Santa Ana area, California
Arthur M. Piper, A. A. Garrett
1953, Water Supply Paper 1136
No abstract available....
Geology and water resources of Smith Valley, Lyon and Douglas Counties, Nevada
Omar J. Loeltz, Thomas E. Eakin
1953, Water Supply Paper 1228
No abstract available....
The movement of tagged lake trout in Lake Superior, 1950-52
Paul H. Eschmeyer, Russell Daly, Leo F. Erkkila
1953, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (82) 68-77
A total of 733 native lake trout was tagged at two widely separated localities in Lake Superior; subsequent recaptures numbered 155 fish (21.1 percent) during the year following marking. In October 1950, 116 large lake trout (average total length, 27.3 inches) were tagged near Keweenaw Point, Michigan. Fifteen (12.9 percent)...
A more comprehensive description of Bacterium salmonicida
P. J. Griffin, S. F. Snieszko, S. B. Friddle
1953, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (82) 129-138
The purpose of this study was to establish a set of descriptive data which could be used as a reference or a standard in the identification of Bacterium salmonicida, the cause of furunculosis in fish. Since a complete description of B. salmonicida was not available, bacteriologists were not in...
Fluctuations in the fisheries of State of Michigan waters of Green Bay
Ralph Hile, George F. Lunger, Howard J. Buettner
1953, Fishery Bulletin of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (54) 1-34
Green Bay, traditionally a major center of production, has assumed in recent years a position of overwhelming dominance in the commercial fisheries of the State of Michigan waters of Lake Michigan. Within the 4-year period 1945-1948 the commercial take in State of Michigan waters of Green Bay increased from 3,317,000...
Lake Bonneville: Geology of northern Utah Valley, Utah
C. B. Hunt, H.D. Varnes, H. E. Thomas
1953, Professional Paper 257-A
Lake Bonneville was a vast Pleistocene lake that covered 20,000 square miles in northwestern Utah and had a maximum depth of about 1,000 feet. It was a body of water comparable in size to modern Lake Michigan.Surveys of the unconsolidated deposits in the Lake Bonneville basin utilize the same methods...
Interpreting geologic maps for engineering purposes: Hollidaysburg quadrangle, Pennsylvania
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1953, Report
This set of maps has been prepared to show the kinds of information, useful to engineers, that can be derived from ordinary geologic maps. A few additional bits of information, drawn from other sources, are mentioned below. Some of the uses of such maps are well known; they are indispensable...