Latrobe folio, Pennsylvania
Marius R. Campbell
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 110
The natural features and economic development of the Sandusky, Maumee, Muskingum, and Miami drainage areas in Ohio
Benjamin H. Flynn, Margaret S. Flynn
1904, Water Supply Paper 91
Preliminary report on the geology of the Arbuckle and Wichita mountains in Indian Territory and Oklahoma
J. A. Taff, H. F. Bain
1904, Professional Paper 31
The Arbuckle Mountains consist of a moderately elevated table -land or plateau in the east-central part of the Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory. The plateau ranges in elevation from 1,300 feet above sea, in its contracted western part, to 750 feet, at the east end, where it coalesces with the bordering...
Zinc and lead deposits of northern Arkansas
George I. Adams, A. H. Purdue, E. F. Burchard, E. O. Ulrich
1904, Professional Paper 24
The field work on which this report is based was carried on during the months of July, August, and September, 1902. The writer was assisted by Prof. A. H. Purdue, of the University of Arkansas, and Mr. Ernest F. Burchard. The larger portion of the time was used in the...
Gypsum deposits in the United States
George Irving Adams
1904, Bulletin 223
No abstract available....
A reconnaissance in northern Alaska across the Rocky Mountains, along Koyukuk, John, Anaktuvuk, and Colville Rivers, and the Arctic coast to Cape Lisburne, in 1901, with notes
F. C. Schrader, W. J. Peters
1904, Professional Paper 20
Since 1898 the United States Geological Survey has been carrying on systematic topographic and geologic surveys in Alaska under an appropriation made for the investigation of the mineral resources of the Territory. This work has included not only areal surveys of regions already being developed by the miner and prospector,...
Patoka folio, Indiana-Illinois
Myron L. Fuller, Frederick G. Clapp
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 105
Huron folio, South Dakota
James Edward Todd
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 113
Forest conditions in the Little Belt Mountains Forest Reserve, Montana, and the Little Belt Mountains quadrangle
J. B. Leiberg
1904, Professional Paper 30
No abstract available....
Silver City folio, Idaho
Waldemar Lindgren, N.F. Drake
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 104
Forest conditions in the Absaroka division of the Yellowstone Forest Reserve, Montana and the Livingston and Big Timber quadrangles
J. B. Leiberg
1904, Professional Paper 29
The tract of land here designated the Absaroka division of the Yellowstone Forest Reserve was originally the Absaroka Forest Reserve. By proclamation of January 29, 1903, this reserve was merged with the Teton and the Yellowstone forest reserves, the whole taking the name of the Yellowstone Forest Reserve. The western,...
The copper deposits of the Encampment District, Wyoming
A.C. Spencer
1904, Professional Paper 25
During the last few years prospecting in the Medicine Bow and Park ranges in northern Colorado and southern Wyoming has proved that copper-bearing minerals occur frequently and are very generally distributed over a wide region in this portion of the Rocky Mountains. This has gradually become known through the discovery...
Mount Stuart folio, Washington
George Otis Smith
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 106
Nampa folio, Idaho-Oregon
Waldemar Lindgren, N.F. Drake
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 103
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...
Contributions to economic geology, 1903
Samuel Franklin Emmons, C. W. Hayes
1904, Bulletin 225
San Luis folio, California
Harold Wellman Fairbanks
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 101
The United States Geological Survey, its origin, development, organization, and operations
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1904, Bulletin 227
The United States Geological Survey, in the Department of the Interior, was created by act of Congress approved March 3, 1879, so that March 3, 1904, marks the completion of the twenty-fifth year of its existence. The quarter-century anniversary happens to fall near the date set for the opening of...
Water powers of Alabama, with an Appendix on stream measurements in Mississippi
Benjamin Mortimer Hall
1904, Water Supply Paper 107
A geological reconnaissance across the Cascade range near the forty-ninth parallel
George Otis Smith, Frank C. Calkins
1904, Bulletin 235
Water resources of the Philadelphia district
Florence Bascom
1904, Water Supply Paper 106
The area included in the Philadelphia district lies between 39° 45' and 40° 15' north latitude and 75° and 75° 30' west longitude. It has a length of 34.50 miles from north to south and a width of 26.53 miles from east to west, and covers one-fourth of a square...
Contributions to the hydrology of eastern United States, 1903
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1904, Water Supply Paper 102
Proceedings of first conference of engineers of the Reclamation Service, with accompanying papers
Frederick Haynes Newell
1904, Water Supply Paper 93
Asheville folio, North Carolina-Tennessee
Arthur Keith
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 116
Newcastle folio, Wyoming-South Dakota
N.H. Darton
1904, Folios of the Geologic Atlas 107
The Newcastle quadrangle embraces the quarter of a square degree which lies between parallels 43° 30' and 44° north latitude and meridians 104° and 104° 30' west longitude. It measures approximately 34 1/2 miles from north to south and 25 1/8 from east to west, and its area is 863...