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Page 6580, results 164476 - 164500

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The Fe-Pb-S system
R. Bret, G. Kullerud
1967, Economic Geology (52) 354-369
The phase relations in the ternary system Fe-Pb-S were determined by quenching and differential thermal analysis experiments in rigid silica-glass tubes. The solubilities of FeS in galena and in liquid Pb and the extent of solid solution of PbS in pyrite and pyrrhotite at 700° C are too small to be determined by the methods...
Sulfides associated with the Salton Sea geothermal brine
Brian J. Skinner, Donald E. White, Harry J. Rose, Robert E. Mays
1967, Economic Geology (62) 316-330
Concentrated saline brine tapped by a deep well drilled for geothermal power near the Salton Sea, California, deposited metal-rich siliceous scale at the rate of 2 to 3 tons per month. The iron-rich opaline scale contains an average of 20% Cu and up to 6% Ag present in bornite, digenite,...
Standards for water quality
Luna B. Leopold
1967, Conference Paper, World petroleum congress proceedings
The quality which is necessary depends on the use to which the water will be put. Because uses vary, so also must quality standards. Maintaining any level of quality presents a problem of cost and depends on variations in natural water characteristics, in time and space, and variations in volume...
Rapid methods of determining cooling rates of iron and stony iron meteorites
J.M. Short, J.I. Goldstein
1967, Science (156) 59-61
Two rapid and simple methods have been developed for determining the approximate cooling rates of iron and stony-iron meteorites in which kamacite formed by diffusion-controlled growth along planar fronts. The first method requires only measurements of the mean kamacite bandwidth and the bulk nickel content. The second method requires the...
Stump and tree nesting by mallards and black ducks
Lewis M. Cowardin, G.E. Cummings, P.B. Reed Jr.
1967, Journal of Wildlife Management (31) 229-235
Studies conducted 1961-65 at the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in New York demonstrated that mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) and black ducks (Anas rubripes) make extensive use of stumps and dead snags for nest sites. Nest densities in timbered habitats compared favorably with those in untimbered habitats. Nest success was generally higher...
Relative toxicity of lead and selected substitute shot types to game farm mallards
Harold D. Irby, Louis N. Locke, George E. Bagley
1967, Journal of Wildlife Management (31) 253-257
The acute toxicity of lead, three types of plastic-coated lead, two lead-magnesium alloys, iron, copper, zinc-coated iron, and molybdenum-coated iron shot were tested in year-old male game farm mallards. Mallards (Anus platyrhynchos) were fed eight number 6 shot of each type and observed for a period of 60 days. Ducks...
Insecticide residues in big game mammals of South Dakota
Raymond J. Greenwood, Y.A. Greichus, E.J. Hugghins
1967, Journal of Wildlife Management (31) 288-292
An analysis was made of eight insecticide residues in the renal fat tissue of 23 white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), 13 mule deer (O. hemionus), 9 pronghorns (Antilocapra americana), and 2 elk (Cervus canadensis) collected in South Dakota during the fall of 1964. Identification and quantitative analysis of the insecticide residues...
Plans of the U.S.Geological Survey, water resources division for research, investigations, and data collection in ground water
J. E. Upson
1967, Groundwater (5) 13-19
The Geological Survey has been the foremost agency in the investigation of ground‐water resources in the United States beginning about 1910. Most of the basic principles of modern ground‐water hydrology were developed in the Survey's program of cooperative investigations. Use of ground water in the United States in 1960 was about 17½ percent of all water uses, excluding water power. The use will probably increase, though at a decreasing rate. Although amount of use may level off, the...
Plans of the U.S.Geological Survey, water resources division for research, investigations, and data collection in ground water
J. E. Upson
1967, Groundwater (5) 13-19
The Geological Survey has been the foremost agency in the investigation of ground‐water resources in the United States beginning about 1910. Most of the basic principles of modern ground‐water hydrology were developed in the Survey's program of cooperative investigations. Use of ground water in the United States in 1960 was about 17½ percent of all water uses, excluding water power. The use will probably increase, though at a decreasing rate. Although amount of use may level off, the...
Post-paleozoic radiometric ages and their relevance to fault movements, Northern Southeastern Alaska
R. A. Loney, David A. Brew, Marvin A. Lanphere
1967, GSA Bulletin (78) 511-526
Recently determined lead-alpha and potassium-argon ages from northern southeastern Alaska indicate major plutonic events in the Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Tertiary; in contrast, previous studies suggested that only one complex Jurassic and Cretaceous event occurred. The ages presented in this paper indicate the following Mesozoic and Tertiary plutonic events: Middle or...
Artificial Recharge at Valley City, North Dakota, 1932 to 1965
T. E. Kelly
1967, Groundwater (5) 20-25
Valley City, North Dakota, has an average daily water use of 750,000 gallons, which is obtained from wells tapping pattly confined gravel deposits in the Sheyenne River valley. These deposits at Valley City have a maximum thickness of more than 50 feet and an areal extent of approximately 1 square...
Activity coefficients of aqueous potassium chloride measured with a potassium-sensitive glass electrode
P. B. Hostetler, A.H. Truesdell, C. L. Christ
1967, Science (155) 1537-1539
Values of γ±KCl over temperature and molality ranges of 10° to 50°C and 0.01 to 1.0 molal were determined with an electromotive-force cell: potassium-sensitive glass electrode, KCl (molality), Ag-AgCl. A more satisfactory method than is commonly employed was devised for treating the experimental measurements of potential....
Mineral appraisal of the Harney Lake and Malheur Lake candidate areas of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, north-central Harney County, Oregon
George Walton Walker, Donald Swanson
1967, Open-File Report 890
The Harney Lake and Malheur Lake candidate areas are in the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, north-central Harney County, Oreg. The two areas occupy the shallow center of the Harney Basin, a broad structural and physiographic depression filled by several varieties of silicic to mafic volcanic rocks, sedimentary rocks, and unconsolidated...
Aurorite, argentian todorokite, and hydrous silver-bearing lead manganese oxide
Arthur S. Radtke, Charles M. Taylor, D. F. Hewett
1967, Economic Geology (62) 186-206
During a study of hypogene manganese minerals, three silver-bearing manganese oxides were identified in "black calcite" associated with silver ores at the Aurora mine (Treasure Hill), Hamilton, Nevada. Specifically these are: (1) argentian chalcophanite (aurorite) (Ag 2 Ba,Ca,Pb,-K 2 ,Cu,Mn (super +2) )Mn 3 (super +4) O 7 . 3H 2 O; (2) argentian todorokite (Ag 2 ,K 2 ,Ca,Ba,-Na 2 ,Cu,Pb)Mn 4 (super +4) O 9 . 5H 2 O; and...
The porphyry copper deposit exposed in the Liberty open-pit mine near Ely, Nevada; Part 2, The formation of hydrothermal alteration zones
Robert O. Fournier
1967, Economic Geology (62) 207-227
In the southwest part of the Liberty pit a large porphyry body exhibits a zonal alteration pattern related to fissures and pyrite-bearing veins. The outermost zone contains unaltered K-feldspar, kaolinite after plagioclase, and black biotite after hornblende. An intermediate zone contains reconstituted K-feldspar, phlogopitic biotite, and muscovite or muscovite plus...
Gravity increase at the South Pole
John C. Behrendt
1967, Science (155) 1017-1019
Measurements made between December 1957 and January 1966 of the gravity difference between the McMurdo Sound pendulum station, which is on bedrock, and the South Pole station, which is on the Antarctic ice sheet, show a gravity increase at the South Pole of 0.11 milligals per year. The most likely...
Rates of surficial rock creep on hillslopes in western Colorado
S. A. Schumm
1967, Science (155) 560-561
The average rate of downslope movement of rock fragments on shale hillslopes is directly proportional to the sine of the slope angle or that component of the gravitational force which acts parallel to the hillslope. The rates of surficial rock creep range from a few millimeters per year on a...
Belt of sigmoidal bending and right-lateral faulting in the western great basin
John P. Albers
1967, GSA Bulletin (78) 143-156
Betweeen the northwest-trending Sierra Nevada and the north-northeast-trending ranges that characterize most of the Great Basin section of the Basin and Range province is a belt of confused and divergent topographic forms, which is approximately 50 miles wide and 300 miles long. Along the eastern part of this belt is...
The role of olivine in the crystallization of the prehistoric Makaopuhi tholeiitic lava lake, Hawaii
James G. Moore, B.W. Evans
1967, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (15) 202-223
On eruption, the tholeiitic basalt lava of the prehistoric Makaopuhi lake contained nearly seven percent euhedral olivine phenocrysts of approximately Fa14 composition. In the center of the 225 foot vertical section of the lake, the lava became more than 90 percent solid at 1000° C after about 30 years. At the...
Elephant teeth from the Atlantic Continental Shelf
F.C. Whitmore Jr., K.O. Emery, H.B.S. Cooke, D.J.P. Swift
1967, Science (156) 1477-1481
Teeth of mastodons and mastodons have been recovered by fishermen from at least 40 sites on the continental shelf as deep as 120 meters. Also present are submerged shorelines, peat deposits, lagoonal shells, and relict sands. Evidently elephants and other large mammals ranged this region during the glacial stage of...
Temperature and water-quality conditions for the period July 1963 to December 1965, Patuxent River Estuary, Maryland
Robert L. Cory, Jon W. Nauman
1967, Report
Graphs and tables obtained from continuous records of surface-water temperature from five stations for the period july 1963 through December 1965 and of surface, salinity, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, tide-stage, wind data and bottom temperature from a single station are presented herein. Effects of powerplant cooling water on water temperature were...
Prospecting for gold in the United States
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1967, Report
Prospecting for gold is something that probably everyone dreams of trying at least once. To the person who is mainly concerned with this activity as a vacation diversion, prospecting offers a special excitement. There is a constant hope that the next pan of sediment may be "pay dirt," and no...