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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ground-water resources of the Wind River Indian Reservation, Wyoming
Laurence J. McGreevy, Warren Gayler Hodson, Samuel J. Rucker IV
1969, Water Supply Paper 1576-I
The area of this investigation is in the western part of the Wind River Basin and includes parts of the Absaroka, Washakie, Wind River, and Owl Creek Mountains. The purposes of the study were to determine the general hydrologic properties of the rocks in the area and the occurrence and...
Water resources of the Buffalo River Watershed, West-central Minnesota
Robert W. Maclay, L. E. Bidwell, Thomas C. Winter
1969, Hydrologic Atlas 307
The Buffalo River watershed includes two general physiographic areas – a glacial lake plain and an glacial moraine. The lake plain, which was formed by Glacial lake Agassiz more than 9,000 years ago, is extremely flat – sloping only a few feet per mile westward near the Red River of the...
Ancient lavas in Shenandoah National Park near Luray, Virginia
John Calvin Reed Jr.
1969, Bulletin 1265
In the Blue Ridge Province of northern Virginia, Maryland, and southern Pennsylvania, Lower Cambrian beds are underlain by a thick sequence of greenstone and interbedded sedimentary rocks known as the Catoctin Formation. An area near Luray, Va., was studied to determine the thickness of the formation, its relationship to overlying...
Revision of some of Girty's invertebrate fossils from the Fayetteville Shale (Mississippian) of Arkansas and Oklahoma
Mackenzie Gordon Jr., William J. Sando, John Pojeta Jr., Ellis L. Yochelson, I. G. Sohn
1969, Professional Paper 606
J.n 1910, G. H. Girty published a paper on the fauna of the Fayetteville Shale of northern Arkansas and northeastern Oklahoma in which he described 110 new taxa of fossil invertebrates. He did not, however, designate any type specimens or divulge the localities at which •the fossils were collected, nor...