Phosphate rock in Colombia - a preliminary report, with a section on the phosphate occurrence at Turmeque
James Bachelder Cathcart, Francisco Zambrano O., Mojica G. Pedro E.
1969, Bulletin 1272-A
Surficial Geology of Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
Dwight Raymond Crandell
1969, Bulletin 1288
Much of the ground surface around Mount Rainier volcano is directly underlain by loose geologic deposits that veneer the hard rock formations. Examples of these deposits are sand and gravel bars along the rivers, ridges of loose rock debris beside the glaciers, and sloping aprons of rock fragments beneath almost...
Progress Report III: Descriptions and analyses of pyritic core from drill holes and 7, Wadi Wassat area, Saudi Arabia
W.C. Overstreet, Elno Rasainen, M.A. Fourati, K.H. Shahwan, Ibrahim Baradja
1969, Open-File Report 69-190
No abstract available....
Floods of August 1967 in Maryland and Delaware
D.H. Carpenter, R.H. Simmons
1969, Open-File Report 69-32
No abstract available....
Relation of water quality to striped bass mortalities in the Corquinez Strait of California
W. D. Silvey, G. A. Irwin
1969, Open-File Report 69-253
Water-resources appraisal of Crater Lake National Park, Oregon
F. J. Frank, A.B. Harris
1969, Open-File Report 69-95
Crater Lake National Park is on the crest of the Cascade Range in southwestern Oregon. Except for small areas of glacial deposits, the area is underlain by volcanic rocks of Tertiary and Quaternary age. The principal rock types are andesitic and basaltic lavas, pumiceous volcanic flow breccias, tuffs, and airborne...
Species of Aquilapollenites and Fibulapollis from two Upper Cretaceous localities in Alaska
B.D. Tschudy
1969, Professional Paper 643-A
Bouguer gravity map of the Cripple Creek mining district, Teller County, Colorado
M. Dean Kleinkopf, Donald L. Peterson
1969, Open-File Report 69-138
No abstract available....
Reconnaissance of the ground-water resources of the Missouri River alluvium between Jefferson City and Miami, Missouri
Leo F. Emmett, H. G. Jeffery
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 340
Water resources of the Salmon Falls Creek basin, Idaho-Nevada
E. G. Crosthwaite
1969, Water Supply Paper 1879-D
The northern part of the Salmon Falls Creek basin, referred to as the Salmon Falls tract, contains a large acreage of good agricultural land, but the surface-water supply is inadequate to develop the area fully. Attempts to develop ground water for irrigation have been successful only locally. Specific capacities of...
Reconnaissance of the ground-water resources of the Missouri River alluvium between Kansas City, Missouri and the Iowa border
L. F. Emmett, H. G. Jeffery
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 336
Photogrammetric calibration of Apollo film cameras
W.T. Borgeson, Raymond M. Batson
1969, Open-File Report 69-21
No abstract available....
Hydrogeologic data related to establishment of a pumping station in the Everglades National Park, Florida
C.A. Appel, Howard Klein
1969, Open-File Report 69-11
Estuarine studies in upper Grays Harbor, Washington
Joseph P. Beverage, Milton N. Swecker
1969, Water Supply Paper 1873-B
Improved management of the water resources of Grays Harbor, Wash., requires more data on the water quality of the harbor and a better understanding of the influences of industrial and domestic wastes on the local fisheries resources. To provide a more comprehensive understanding of these influences, the U.S. Geological Survey...
Woodcock research and management programs 1967 and 1968
William H. Goudy (compiler)
1969, Special Scientific Report - Wildlife 123
Fur catch in the United States, 1968.
Division Of Wildlife Research
1969, Wildlife Leaflet 488
The talc, soapstone, and asbestos deposits of Massachusetts
Newton Earl Chute
1969, Open-File Report 69-39
Several talc and soapstone deposits were worked in Massachusetts from about 1810 to 1922. Most of these deposits are in the Chester Amphibolite, or in serpentine lenses in or adjacent to the amphibolite along a belt that extends north-south across the State from Rowe to West Granville; it appears...
Recent surface movements in the Baldwin Hills, Los Angeles County, California
Robert O. Castle, R. F. Yerkes
1969, Open-File Report 69-36
The Baldwin Hills are located in the northwest part of the densely populated Los Angeles basin. They comprise one of several groups of isolated hills that extend along the northwest-trending Newport-Inglewood zone of folds and faults, a structural lineament identified with a series of very productive oil fields. In addition...
Maps showing locations of holes drilled in 1952 to 1954 by U.S. Geological Survey, La Sal Creek area, Paradox district, Montrose County, Colorado
William Douglas Carter, James Louis Gualtieri
1969, Open-File Report 69-35
No abstract available....
Review of waterpower classifications and withdrawals, Deschutes River basin, Oregon
Jesse Lane Colbert, Loyd L. Young
1969, Open-File Report 69-54
Chemical quality of surface water in the Umpqua River Basin, Oregon
D. A. Curtiss
1969, Open-File Report 69-67
In July 1967, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with Douglas County, began a 2-year study of the chemical quality of surface water in the Umpqua River basin. The purpose of this report is to present an interpretive summary of the data collected, which will provide answers to the following...
A system of regional agricultural land use mapping tested against small scale Apollo 9 color infrared photography of the Imperial Valley (California)
Claude W. Johnson, Leonard W. Browden, Robert W. Pease
1969, Open-File Report 71-158
Interpretation results of the small scale ClR photography of the Imperial Valley (California) taken on March 12, 1969 by the Apollo 9 earth orbiting satellite have shown that world wide agricultural land use mapping can be accomplished from satellite ClR imagery if sufficient a priori information is available for the...
Hydrogeologic information on the Glorieta Sandstone and the Ogallala Formation in the Oklahoma Panhandle and adjoining areas as related to underground waste disposal
James Haskell Irwin, Robert B. Morton
1969, Circular 630
The Oklahoma Panhandle and adjacent areas in Texas, Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico have prospered because of the development of supplies of fresh water and of oil and gas. The Ogallala and, in places, Cretaceous rocks produce fresh water for irrigation, public supply, and domestic and stock use through approximately...
Metallic mineral resources map of the Hagemeister Island Quadrangle, Alaska
1969, Open-File Report 69-47
No abstract available. ...
A descriptive catalog of selected aerial photographs of geologic features in areas outside the United States
C.R. Warren, D. L. Schmidt, C. S. Denny, W.J. Dale
1969, Professional Paper 591