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Page 6646, results 166126 - 166150

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Photointerpretation of Alaskan post-earthquake photography
R.J. Hackman
1965, Photogrammetric Engineering (31) 604-610
Aerial photographs taken after the March 27, 1964, Good Friday, Alaskan earthquake were examined stereoscopically to determine effects of the earthquake in areas remote from the towns, highways, and the railroad. The two thousand black and white photographs used in this study were taking in April, after the earthquake,...
Geological exploration from orbital altitudes
Peter C. Badgley, William A. Fischer, Ronald J. P. Lyon
1965, Geotimes (10) 11-14
The National Aeronautics & Space Administration is planning geologic exploration from orbiting spacecraft. For that purpose it is evaluating new and refined exploration tools, often called remote sensors, including devices that are sensitive to force fields, such as gravity gradient systems, and devices that record the reflection or emission of...
Water resources data for Indiana, 1965
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1965, Water Data Report IN-65-1
The surface-water records for the 1965 water year for gaging stations, partial-record stations, and miscellaneous sites within the State of Indiana are given in this report. For convenience there are also included records for a few pertinent gaging stations in bordering States. The records were collected and computed by the...
Osmotic equilibrium and overthrust faulting
B.B. Hanshaw, E-An Zen
1965, Geological Society of America Bulletin (76) 1379-1385
The two principal suggested modes of facilitating overthrust faulting are (1) lubrication at the sole by evaporite beds or micaceous shales and (2) flotation due to anomalously high (> hydrostatic) pore-water pressures. Past rapid sedimentation and tectonic compression have been suggested as important causes of anomalously high water pressure (Hubbert...
Late quaternary geologic history of the lower Chippewa Valley, Wisconsin
George W. Andrews
1965, Bulletin of the Geological Society of America (76) 113-124
The lower Chippewa Valley in west-central Wisconsin extends 65 miles from the Cary terminal moraine in Chippewa County to the Mississippi River Valley. The Chippewa Valley and its tributaries were filled with a valley train of sand and gravel during the maximum stand of the Cary ice, and entrenchment of...
Ordovician, Silurian, and Devonian biostratigraphy of east-central Alaska
Michael Churkin Jr., Earl E. Brabb
1965, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (49) 172-185
A predominantly shale and chert sequence has been mapped from the Canadian border at Latitude 65°00′ N. to the Nation River about 25 miles northwest. It has Ordovician and Silurian graptolites in the lower half, and Middle Devonian corals and Upper Devonian spores in the upper half.The lower half of...
Artifact from deposits of mid-Wisconsin age in Illinois
P.J. Munson, J.C. Frye
1965, Science (150) 1722-1723
Discovery of an artifact of human manufacture imbedded in Roxana loess, classed as Altonian substage of the Wisconsin stage of the Pleistocene, of an age of 35,000 to 40,000 years, contributes to the determination of the age of man in the New World....
Vertical density currents
W. H. Bradley
1965, Science (150) 1423-1428
These currents seem to carry particles downward much more rapidly than settling according to Stokes's law....
Solubility measurements in the system CaSO4-NaCL-H2O at 35°, 50°, and 70°cand one atmosphere pressure
E-An Zen
1965, Journal of Petrology (6) 124-164
The solubilities in the system CaSO4-NaCl-H2O, at 1 atm pressure and 35°, 50°, and 70°C, have been determined by approaching the solubility curves from both the undersaturation and supersaturation sides. The experimental runs are of long duration, as much as 3 months; these rates should be commensurate with those of the appropriate geological processes, and so the results should be directly applicable...
Titanium dioxide in pyroclastic layers from volcanoes in the Cascade Range
G.K. Czamanske, S.C. Porter
1965, Science (150) 1022-1025
Rapid determinations of titanium dioxide have been made by x-ray emission techniques to evaluate the potentiality of using the TiO2 content of samples for checking field correlations and assisting in identification of pyroclastic units from Cascade volcanoes. Preliminary data suggest that the two most widespread units have characteristic ranges of TiO2 content...
Report on S.E.G. Symposium on the chemistry of the ore-forming fluids August-September,1964
E. Roedder
1965, Economic Geology (60) 1380-1403
Sessions included presentations and discussions of the following topics: mineral stability and phase assemblages at ore-forming temperatures and pressures; high-temperature solution chemistry of sulfides, carbonates, and silicates, with consideration of complexing and stability, and the generation of ore fluids; hydrothermal fluids as deduced from wallrock alteration, from fluid inclusions and hot springs, from isotopic studies, and from mine studies, zoning,...
A simple animal support for convenient weighing
H.P. Pan, J.W. Caslick, D.T. Harke, D.G. Decker
1965, Journal of Wildlife Management (29) 890-891
A simple animal support constructed of web belts to hold skittish pigs for weighing was developed. The support is easily made, noninjurious to the pigs, and compact, facilitating rapid, accurate weighing. With minor modifications, the support can probably be used in weighing other animals....
Epizootiologic studies on filarioids of the raccoon
C. M. Herman, D.L. Price
1965, Journal of Wildlife Management (29) 694-699
Filarioid worms (Dirofilaria immitis, D. tenuis, Dipetalonema procyonis, and D. llewellyni) were discovered in raccoons (Procyon lotar) in Maryland. Raccoons were trapped in lowland, upland, and agricultural-residential areas, which were further classified as stream borders, poorly drained, and well drained. Data on incidence of D. llewellyni were analyzed on basis...
Structure, metamorphism, and plutonism in the south-central Klamath Mountains, California
Gregory A. Davis, M. J. Holdaway, Peter W. Lipman, W. D. Romey
1965, Geological Society of America Bulletin (76) 933-966
In the south-central Klamath Mountains 50 miles of the the north-trending central metamorphic belt and adjacent parts of the eastern Paleozoic and western Paleozoic and Triassic belts have been mapped and studied in detail. Within the central metamorphic belt a sequence of three lithologically distinctive metamorphic units has been recognized...
Relations of fresh and salty ground water along the southeastern U. S. Atlantic Coast
R. L. Wait, J.T. Callahan
1965, Groundwater (3) 3-17
Studies of the hydrogeologic environments and the dynamic and equilibrium relations of fresh and salt water in aquifers have been intensified at several places along the southeastern Atlantic Coast. Some salt-water problems involve the coastal water-table aquifer, and others involve parts of the artesian system.On the sandy coastal islands of...
Tracing the continuity of pleistocene aquifers in northern New Jersey by seismic methods
H.E. Gill, John Vecchioli, W.E. Bonini
1965, Groundwater (3) 33-35
Seismic refraction measurements were used to draw a new bedrock contour map in Morris County, New Jersey, where the major ground‐water supplies are found in Quaternary sand and gravel deposits filling pre‐Pleistocene channels. Aquifer performance tests aided in tracing the continuity of the Quaternary aquifers in these channels. In one case, the lack of continuity between two wells substantiated the seismic prediction that two separate channels were involved. The success of the seismic exploration emphasizes the value of...
Diuron, fenuron, monuron, neburon, and TCA mixtures as aquatic herbicides in fish habitats
C.R. Walker
1965, Weeds (13) 297-301
The substituted urea herbicides were rated according to their effectiveness as aquatic herbicides in this order: diuron [3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea], monuron [3-(p-chlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea], neburon [1-butyl-3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1-methlyurea] and TCA(trichloroacetic acid) mixtures with them. They showed greatest potential in controlling certain aquatic plants in pre-emergence and early postemergence applications. However, relatively high concentrations were required to...