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Page 6754, results 168826 - 168850

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A national network of hydrological benchmarks
Luna Bergere Leopold
1962, Circular 460-B
We are engaged in great national programs of water control and development. An expanding population demands ever-increasing supplies of the natural resources which are to be found in or upon the landscape soil, water, minerals, food, timber, and fiber. By his works, by his extractions, man's mark upon his environment...
Reconnaissance of ground-water resources in the Eastern Coal Field Region, Kentucky
William E. Price, D. S. Mull, Chabot Kilburn
1962, Water Supply Paper 1607
In the Eastern Coal Field region of Kentucky, water is obtained from consolidated sedimentary rocks ranging in age from Devonian to Pennsylvanian and from unconsolidated sediments of Quaternary age. About 95 percent of the area is underlain by shale, sandstone, and coal of Pennsylvanian age. Principal factors governing the availability...
Floods in Nebraska on small drainage areas, magnitude and frequency
Emil W. Beckman, Norman E. Hutchison
1962, Circular 458
Flood hazard information is needed for small streams as well as for large ones. This report explains methods of defining the magnitude and frequency of floods in Nebraska on uncontrolled and unregulated streams which have about 300 square miles or less of drainage area contributing to surface runoff. Composite frequency...
Manganese in the United States, exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii
Max D. Crittenden, Louis Pavlides
1962, Mineral Investigations Resource Map 23
The manganese deposits in the United States (exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii) are shown on the accompanying map. The deposits have been divided into several genetic types distinguished on the map by symbols. The principal distinction is between syngenetic deposits, in which the manganese was deposited contemporaneously with the enclosing...
Asbestos in the United States, exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii
A.H. Chidester, A. F. Shride
1962, Mineral Investigations Resource Map 17
The asbestos deposits in the United States (exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii) are shown on the accompanying map. The principal mineralogic types of asbestos (chrysotile and amphibole) are indicated by the shape of symbols, and the relative importance of the deposit is indicated by the size of symbols. The text...