Mineral resources of the United States, 1904
David T. Day
1905, Report
No abstract available....
Piedmont district of Pennsylvania
Florence Bascom
1905, Bulletin of the Geological Society of America (16) 289-328
No abstract available....
Tonopah mining district
J. E. Spurr
1905, Journal of the Franklin Institute (160) 1-20
No abstract available....
Calcium sulphate in ammonium sulphate solution
E.C. Sullivan
1905, Journal of the American Chemical Society (27) 529-539
No abstract available....
Preliminary announcement concerning a new mercury mineral from Terlingua, Texas
W. F. Hillebrand
1905, Science (22) 844
No abstract available....
The water of the Yukon
F. W. Clarke
1905, Journal of the American Chemical Society (27) 111-113
No abstract available....
The plasticity of clays
F. F. Group
1905, Journal of the American Chemical Society (27) 1037-1049
No abstract available....
Discovery of the Comanche Formation in southeastern Colorado
N. H. Darton
1905, Science (22) 120
No abstract available....
Analysis of the Mississippi River
C. H. Stone
1905, Science (22) 472-473
No abstract available....
Proposed international phonetic conference to adopt a universal alphabet
R. Stein
1905, Science (21) 112-114
No abstract available....
The chemistry of ore deposition - Precipitation of copper by natural silicates
E.C. Sullivan
1905, Journal of the American Chemical Society (27) 976-979
[No abstract available]...
Nampa folio, Idaho-Oregon
Waldemar Lindgren, N.F. Drake
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 103
Mount Stuart folio, Washington
George Otis Smith
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 106
Cottonwood Falls folio, Kansas
Charles Smith Prosser, Joshua William Beede
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 109
The Cottonwood Falls quadrangle lies between parallels 38° and 38° 30' and meridians 96° 30' and 97°, and therefore constitutes a quarter of a square degree of the earth's surface. It is 34.35 miles long and 26.75 miles wide, and contains about 938 square miles. It is located east...
Catalogue and index of the publications of the Hayden, King, Powell, and Wheeler surveys
Laurence Frederick Schmeckebier
1904, Bulletin 222
Geology and water resources of part of the lower James River Valley, South Dakota
J. E. Todd, Charles M. Hall
1904, Water Supply Paper 90
No abstract available....
Geology of the Hudson Valley between the Hoosic and the Kinderhook
T. Nelson Dale
1904, Bulletin 242
Boundaries of the United States and of the several States and Territories, with an outline of the history of all important changes of territory (third edition)
Henry Gannett
1904, Bulletin 226
The Delavan lobe of the Lake Michigan glacier of the Wisconsin stage of glaciation and associated phenomena
W. C. Alden
1904, Professional Paper 34
The purpose of this paper is to throw, if possible, some further light on the relations which existed during the later stages of the Glacial epoch between the glaciers of southeastern Wisconsin, which have been so ably discussed by Dr. T.C. Chamberlin and other writers in various publications, and the...
Forest conditions in the Lincoln Forest Reserve, New Mexico
F. G. Plummer, M.G. Gowsell
1904, Professional Paper 33
Analyses of rocks from the laboratory of the United States Geological Survey, 1880-1903
F. W. Clarke
1904, Bulletin 228
The present Geological Survey of the United States was organized in 1879. In 1880 a chemical laboratory was established at Denver, in connection with the Colorado work, in charge of Dr. W. F. Hillebrand, with whom were associated Mr. Antony Guyard and, later, Mr. L. G. Eakins. In 1882 Dr....
Destructive floods of the United States in 1903
E.C. Murphy
1904, Water Supply Paper 96
Accuracy of stream measurements
Edward C. Murphy
1904, Water Supply Paper 95
Proceedings of first conference of engineers of the Reclamation Service, with accompanying papers
Frederick Haynes Newell
1904, Water Supply Paper 93
Bisbee folio, Arizona
F. L. Ransome
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 112