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Page 6442, results 161026 - 161050

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Quality of water of the Colorado River in 1928-1930
C. S. Howard
1932, Water Supply Paper 638-D
This report gives the results obtained in the continuation of a study of the Colorado River begun in 1925.1 The analyses represent composites of daily samples collected by the observers at the gaging stations on the Colorado River at Cisco, Utah, and Lees Ferry and Grand Canyon, Ariz.; on the...
A method of estimating ground-water supplies based on discharge by plants and evaporation from soil: Results of investigations in Escalante Valley, Utah
Walter N. White
1932, Water Supply Paper 659-A
Fluctuations of water levels in wells, if critically studied, may give much information as to the occurrence, movement, and quantity of available ground water. In some localities the ground-water level has been observed to decline during the day and to rise at night, the decline beginning at about the same...
The crystal cavities of the New Jersey zeolite region
Waldemar Theodore Schaller
1932, Bulletin 832
The crystal cavities present in the mineral complex of the New Jersey traprock region have long excited the interest of mineralogists. In 1914 Fenner made the first detailed and comprehensive study of these cavities and suggested that babingtonite was the original mineral. Soon after this anhydrite was found occupying parts...
Mineralogy of drill cores from the potash field of New Mexico and Texas
Waldemar Theodore Schaller, Edward Porter Henderson
1932, Bulletin 833
The potash field of southeastern New Mexico and adjacent parts of Texas is confined to the southern part of the Permian salt basin, covering about 40,000 square miles. The potash and associated minerals lie in a body of Permian halite, whose top is at least several hundred feet below the...