Tuscaloosa formation in Tennessee
M.V. Marcher, R. G. Stearns
1962, Geological Society of America Bulletin (73) 1365-1386
Late Cretaceous Tuscaloosa Formation occurs as discontinuous remnants that cap many of the ridges in the Western Highland Rim. Typically the formation consists of well-rounded, poorly sorted chert gravel which is trimodal in size distribution. The gravel fraction (mode 15 to 40+ mm) consists of Devonian and Mississippian chert and a small percentage of...
Flume studies of the transport of pebbles and cobbles on a sand bed
Robert K. Fahnestock, W.L. Haushild
1962, Geological Society of America Bulletin (73) 1431-1436
During experiments on sediment transport and resistance to flow with a uniform 0.33-mm sand, data were recorded on the movement of individual rocks having intermediate diameters from about 0.1 to 0.5 foot. The experiments were conducted in a flume 2 feet wide by 60 feet long and for most runs, depth was held...
Studies of fluid inclusions I: Low temperature application of a dual-purpose freezing and heating stage
E. Roedder
1962, Economic Geology (57) 1045-1061
The design and operation of a microscope freezing stage developed for use at magnifications up to 500X are described. It makes possible studies of low-temperature phase changes such as the freezing of a saline water phase, and hence an estimate of the total salt concentration, in fluid inclusions as small as 10 microns (10-6 milligram in...
Observations on the pyrite deposits of the huelva district, Spain, and their relation to volcanism
A.R. Kinkel Jr.
1962, Economic Geology (57) 1071-1080
The felsitic porphyritic rocks that occur with Lower Carboniferous shale or slate in the Huelva district, Spain, were examined at the Rio Tinto, Tharsis, and La Zarza mines. Most of the bodies of porphyry are not intrusive into the shale, but instead consist of rhyolite flows overlain by variable thicknesses...
The ore knob massive sulfide copper deposit, North Carolina: An example of recrystallized ore
A.R. Kinkel Jr.
1962, Economic Geology (57) 1116-1121
Massive and disseminated pyrrhotite-chalcopyrite-pyrite ore replaced a fault zone in Precambrian Carolina Gneiss of Keith (1). Closely following sulfide deposition, vein sulfides and silicates in the wall rock were recrystallized under a rising temperature gradient to coarse-grained unoriented aggregates that contain late pyrite porphyroblasts in pyrrhotite. Boudinage, dilation, and flow structures are common....
Trace element distribution in the searchlight, Nevada quartz monzonite stock
J.N. Shrivastava, P.D. Proctor
1962, Economic Geology (57) 1062-1070
Gold, silver, copper, and lead-bearing veins, non-radially zoned, occur just beyond the southern and western margins of the Searchlight, Nevada, quartz monzonite stock. Seven samples of the quartz monzonite and purified individual constituent minerals of the rock, representing apophyses and marginal and interior parts of the intrusive mass, were analyzed petrographically...
Pollen sequence at Kirchner Marsh, Minnesota
T. C. Winter
1962, Science (138) 526-528
A pollen diagram from Kirchner Marsh, southeastern Minnesota, records a continuous vegetation sequence from the time of Late Wisconsin ice retreat from the region. The late-glacial and early postglacial portions of the diagram are correlated with a radiocarbon-dated diagram from Madelia, Minnesota. Both diagrams show a series of maxima of...
1962 address list of refuge managers
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
1962, Wildlife Leaflet 448
No abstract available....
A new medium for isolation and presumptive identification of Aeromonas salmonicida
G. L. Bullock
1962, Progressive Fish-Culturist (24) 184-184
No abstract available. ...
Evaluation of some heparinized capillaries for microhematocrit determinations of warm-water fishes
D.F. Mairs, T.E. Kennedy
1962, Progressive Fish-Culturist (24) 188-189
No abstract available. ...
Unit-cell dimensions of natural and synthetic scapolites
H.P. Eugster, H.J. Prostka, D.E. Appleman
1962, Science (137) 853-854
In natural scapolites the cell dimension a shows a regular increase from marialite to meionite composition, while c remains constant. Both a and c of synthetic meionite are larger than the corresponding dimensions of synthetic marialite. The cell volume of both natural and synthetic scapolites is a nearly linear function of composition. Variations in cell...
Contamination of vegetation by tetraethyl lead
H.L. Cannon, J.M. Bowles
1962, Science (137) 765-766
Tetraethyl lead is a normal constituent of vegetation growing along our highways. Washed grass near Denver contained 3000 ppm (in ash) near major intersections and > 50 ppm for 500 feet downwind. Vegetables grown within 25 feet of a road in upstate New York and western Maryland averaged 80 to...
Big game inventory for 1961
U.S. Branch of Wildlife Research
1962, Wildlife Leaflet 446
No abstract available....
Late cretaceous and subsequent structural development of the northern Mississippi Embayment area
Richard G. Stearns, Melvin V. Marcher
1962, Geological Society of America Bulletin (73) 1387-1394
During early Late Cretaceous the area of the northern Mississippi Embayment was occupied by a structural and topographic dome standing nearly 1000 feet above sea level. Rocks as old as Cambrian were exposed on its crest. Downwarping of the dome, which commenced in Late Cretaceous time, resulted in the development of the Mississippi Embayment syncline, now filled...
Remanent magnetism as a contributor to some aeromagnetic anomalies
K. G. Books
1962, Geophysics (27) 359-375
An investigation of some aeromagnetic anomalies in north-central Montana shows that remanent magnetization is the dominant factor in anomalies over some rocks and a contributing factor in anomalies over others. In volcanic rocks, remanence is commonly south-seeking down and has an intensity approximately ten times the induced intensity of magnetization. Remanence is shown to be...
Perspective on problems of hydrogeology
H. E. LeGrand
1962, Geological Society of America Bulletin (73) 1147-1152
A trend toward increasing use of test drilling and subsurface exploration is resulting in a decreasing reliance on human experience in coping with problems in hydrogeology. Application of "observation and inference" and discreet abstraction of readily available data will solve more problems than is now realized. ...
The origin of jasperoid in limestone
T.G. Lovering
1962, Economic Geology (57) 861-889
The name jasperoid has been applied to rocks that consist mainly of silica and that have formed by replacement. This paper considers only those jasperoids formed by replacement of limestone. Major problems involved in the origin of such jasperoid include: source of the silica; nature of solutions that dissolve, transport, and precipitate silica; and...
Isolation of a pigment-producing strain of Aeromonas liquefaciens from silver salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch)
A. J. Ross
1962, Journal of Bacteriology (84) 590-591
No abstract available. ...
Water Research by the Geological Survey
Thomas B. Nolan
1962, Science (137) 571-573
No abstract available....
The nutria in the United States
Richard Hyde Manville
1962, Wildlife Leaflet 445
No abstract available....
Controlled induced recharge tests at Kalamazoo, Mich
Morris Deutsch
1962, Journal - American Water Works Association (54) 181-196
This article discusses the results of a controlled field testing program, which indicated that definite hydraulic and other advantages may be gained from induced recharging as practiced at Kalamazoo, Michigan. Results include the following: water levels and artesian pressures can be maintained at high stages, the results are lower pumping...
Preliminary results of recent deep drilling on Cape Cod, Massachusetts
C. Koteff, J. E. Cotton
1962, Science (137) 34-34
In 1961 a 1000-foot drill hole near Harwich on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, penetrated 435 feet of Pleistocene deposits above 50 to 60 feet of crystalline limestone and phyllitic schist, and more than 500 feet of phyllitic schist with abundant quartz veins. Similar rock is known in the Pennsylvanian and Precambrian...
Distribution and composition of sulfide minerals at Balmat, New York
Bruce R. Doe
1962, Geological Society of America Bulletin (73) 833-854
In the Balmat area in northern New York, tabular deposits of sulfide minerals parallel the layering in folded, siliceous magnesian marbles of a metamorphic complex commonly referred to as the Precambrian Granville Series. Sphalerite, pyrite, and, locally, pyrrhotite and galena have replaced the carbonate minerals in parts of the marble units. The contacts...
The cultivation and drug sensitivity of myxobacteria isolated from diseased fish
J.W. Kinchelow
1962, Progressive Fish-Culturist (24) 119-126
No abstract available. ...
Observations of birds feeding on overwintering corn borer
Don Fankhauser
1962, Wilson Bulletin (74) 191
No abstract available....