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Page 6924, results 173076 - 173100

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Water requirements of the aluminum industry
Howard L. Conklin
1956, Water Supply Paper 1330-C
Aluminum is unique among metals in the way it is obtained from its ore. The first step is to produce alumina, a white powder that bears no resemblance to the bauxite from which it is derived or to the metallic aluminum to which it is reduced by electrolytic action in...
Ground-water resources of the Ainsworth unit, Cherry and Brown Counties, Nebraska
James G. Cronin, Thomas G. Newport, R. A. Krieger
1956, Water Supply Paper 1371
The Ainsworth unit, so named by the U. S. Bureau of Reclamation, is in north-central Nebraska and is in the drainage basin of the Niobrara River. It is an area of about 1,000 square miles in the east-central part of Cherry County and northern part of Brown County. The east-west...
Water requirements of the carbon-black industry
Howard L. Conklin
1956, Water Supply Paper 1330-B
Carbon blacks include an important group of industrial carbons used chiefly as a reinforcing agent in rubber tires. In 1953 more than 1,610 million pounds of carbon black was produced, of which approximately 1,134 million pounds was consumed by the rubber industry. The carbon-black industry uses small quantities of water...
Water resources of the Mobile area, Alabama, with a section on salinity of the Mobile River
W.H. Robinson, William J. Powell, Eugene Brown, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
1956, Circular 373
Water is an abundant resource of the Mobile area. The Mobile River has an estimated average flow of 60, 000 cubic feet per second (cfs), or about 39,000 million gallons per day (mgd). It is the largest single source of water. Water is available in substantial quantities from the many...
Geology and ore deposits of the Monument Valley area, Apache and Navajo Counties, Arizona
Irving Jerome Witkind
1956, Open-File Report 57-124
In 1951 the U.S. Geological Survey undertook a program of uranium investigations in Apache and Navajo Counties, northeastern Arizona. The work had three major objectives. The first was to accumulate data basic to an understanding of the regional geology. The second was to appraise the Triassic strata as host rocks...