Mineral resources of the United States, 1886
David T. Day
1887, Report
No abstract available....
On the organization of scientific work of the general government
John Wesley Powell
1886, Report
Extracts from the testimony taken by the Joint commission of the Senate and House of representatives to "consider the present organizations of the Signal service, Geological survey, Coast and geodetic survey, and the Hydrographic office of the Navy department, with the view to secure greater efficiency and economy of administration."...
The gabbros and associated hornblende rocks occurring in the neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland
George Huntington Williams
1886, Bulletin 28
Considerable attention has been devoted during late years to the metamorphism of igneous rocks, and it can now be regarded as placed beyond reasonable doubt that such rocks may be changed to more or less schistose masses, which often closely resemble crystallized sediments. This possibility has heretofore been largely ignored,...
Lists and analyses of the mineral springs of the United States: A preliminary study
Albert C. Peale
1886, Bulletin 32
In attempting the collection of data for the statement of the commercial value of the mineral waters of the country for publication in the report on the Mineral Resources of the United States, 1883 and 1884, it was necessary as a prerequisite to have a list of the springs from...
Physical properties of the iron-carburets (third paper)
Carl Barus, Vincent Strouhal
1886, Bulletin 35
Systematic review of our present knowledge of fossil insects, including myriapods and arachnids
Samuel Hubbard Scudder
1886, Bulletin 31
Notes on the geology of northern California
J. S. Diller
1886, Bulletin 33
Subsidence of fine solid particles in liquids
Carl Barus
1886, Bulletin 36
Report of work done in the division of chemistry and physics mainly during the fiscal year 1884-85
Frank Wigglesworth Clarke
1886, Bulletin 27
The present bulletin contains some of the more important results obtained in the chemical laboratory of the United States Geological Survey during the fiscal year 1884—'85. It also contains two physical papers representing work which was mainly done during previous fiscal years, but completed during the one for which this...
Geology and mining industry of Leadville, Colorado, with atlas
Samuel Franklin Emmons
1886, Monograph 12
The present work was undertaken at the instance of the Ron. Clarence King, first Director of the United States Geological Survey, in 1879. Itwas his intention that it should form part of a series of monographs which would in time include all the important mining districts of the country, and thus furnish...
Dinocerata: a monograph of an extinct order of gigantic mammals
Othiel Charles Marsh
1886, Monograph 10
On the fresh-water invertebrates of the North American Jurassic
Charles A. White
1886, Bulletin 29
Important additions having lately been made to our knowledge of the fresh-water invertebrates of the North American Jurassic strata, I have thought it desirable to present not only descriptions and figures of the new forms in this bulletin, but to make the publication an illustrated synopsis of all the forms...
Second contribution to the studies on the Cambrian faunas of North America
Charles D. Walcott
1886, Bulletin 30
Herewith I have the honor to transmit the Second of my preliminary studies on the Cambrian Faunas of North America. The larger portion of the report was ready for publication July 7, 1885, but, having visited a number of localities in Utah and Nevada during the season of 1885, numerous...
On the relation of the Laramie molluscan fauna to that of the succeeding fresh-water Eocene, and other groups
Charles A. White
1886, Bulletin 34
Mineral resources of the United States, 1885
U.S. Geological Survey
1886, Report
No abstract available. ...
Tables of geographic positions, azimuths, and distances, together with lists of barometric altitudes, magnetic declinations, and itineraries of important routes
Montgomery Meigs Macomb, George Montague Wheeler
1885, Report
Tables of geographic positions, azimuths, and distances, together with lists of barometric altituudes, magnetic declinations, and itineraries of important routes, from data gathered by parties of the United States Geographical Surveys west of the 100th meridian, operating in the States and Territories of California, Colorado, Nebraska, Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, and Wyoming, 1883
Montgomery Meigs Macomb, George Montague Wheeler
1885, Report
Through the following tables there are presented, in accessible form, such portions of the more important numerical results of this Survey, from the year 1873 to 1879, inclusive, as it has been found neeessar, to compute pari passu with the plottings made from the field notes, together with such additional...
Sketch of paleobotany
Lester Frank Ward
1885, Report, Fifth Annual Report of the Director, 1883-'84
To understand the true force of the facts of paleobotany as arguments for geology it is essential that their full biologic significance be grasped. It has therefore been deemed proper, in this introduction to the several tabular and systematic statements which will make up the bulk of the volume and...
On Marine Eocene, fresh-water Miocene, and other fossil Mollusca of western North America
Charles A. White
1885, Bulletin 18
Contributions to the mineralogy of the Rocky Mountains
Whitman Cross, W. F. Hillebrand
1885, Bulletin 20
The electrical and magnetic properties of the iron-carburets
Carl Barus, Vincent Strouhal
1885, Bulletin 14
The present technical condition of the steel industry of the United States
Phineas Barnes
1885, Bulletin 25
On the Mesozoic and Cenozoic paleontology of California
Charles A. White
1885, Bulletin 15
Boundaries of the United States and of the several States and Territories, with a historical sketch of the territorial changes
Henry Gannett
1885, Bulletin 13
No abstract available....
Copper smelting
Henry Marion Howe
1885, Bulletin 26