Water quality of streams tributary to Lakes Superior and Michigan
Jerome W. Zimmerman
1968, Special Scientific Report - Fisheries 559
Water quality of streams tributary to Lakes Superior and Michigan was analyzed for 142 stations on 99 streams tributary to Lake Superior and 83 stations on 56 streams tributary to Lake Michigan during 1962-65. Concentrations of aluminum, copper, and iron were not affected greatly by flow or season. Magnesium, calcium,...
Histopathology of mallards dosed with lead and selected substitute shot
L. N. Locke, H.D. Irby, George E. Bagley
1967, Bulletin of the Wildlife Disease Association (3) 143-147
The histopathological response of male game farm mallards fed lead, three types of plastic-coated lead, two lead-magnesium alloys, iron, copper, zinc-coated iron, and molybdenum-coated iron shot was studied. Mallards fed lead, plastic-coated lead, or lead-magnesium alloy shot developed a similar pathological response, including the formation of acid-fast intranuclear inclusion bodies...
Effects of the March 1964 Alaska earthquake on glaciers
Austin Post
1967, Professional Paper 544-D
The 1964 Alaska earthquake occurred in a region where there are many hundreds of glaciers, large and small. Aerial photographic investigations indicate that no snow and ice avalanches of large size occurred on glaciers despite the violent shaking. Rockslide avalanches extended onto the glaciers in many localities, seven very large...
Geology and petrology of the Greenville quadrangle, Piscataquis and Somerset Counties, Maine
Gilbert H. Espenshade, Eugene L. Boudette
1967, Bulletin 1241-F
In the Greenville quadrangle, west-central Maine, slate, siltstone, and sandstone (calcareous and noncalcareous) of probable Silurian to Early Devonian age are intruded by a large mafic pluton and two granitic stocks of probable Early Devonian age. Ages of the sedimentary rocks are based upon tentative correlations with fossiliferous beds in...
Mineral investigations in northeastern Thailand
Herbert Samuel Jacobson, C. T. Pierson, Thawisak Danusawad, Thawar Japakasetr, Boonmai Inthuputi, Charlie Siriratanamongkol, Saner Prapassornkul, Narin Pholphan
1967, Open-File Report 67-121
Fifty-eight mineral prospects of base metals (copper, lead, zinc), iron, manganese, gold, limestone (cement grade), barite, gypsum, and salt were investigated by geological, geophysical, and geochemical surveys, and by pitting, exploratory mining, and diamond drilling from January 1963 to May 1966. Fifty-six of the prospects are in the Loei-Chiengkarn area...
Copper analysis of selected samples, southwest Brooks Range, Alaska
W. P. Brosge, H. N. Reiser, I.L. Tailleur
1967, Open-File Report 67-29
No abstract available....
The Ore Knob copper deposit, North Carolina, and other massive sulfide deposits of the Appalachians
Arthur R. Kinkel Jr.
1967, Professional Paper 558
No abstract available....
Copper mosses as indicators of metal concentrations
Hansford T. Shacklette
1967, Bulletin 1198-G
Relative toxicity of lead and selected substitute shot types to game farm mallards
Harold D. Irby, Louis N. Locke, George E. Bagley
1967, Journal of Wildlife Management (31) 253-257
The acute toxicity of lead, three types of plastic-coated lead, two lead-magnesium alloys, iron, copper, zinc-coated iron, and molybdenum-coated iron shot were tested in year-old male game farm mallards. Mallards (Anus platyrhynchos) were fed eight number 6 shot of each type and observed for a period of 60 days. Ducks...
The porphyry copper deposit exposed in the Liberty open-pit mine near Ely, Nevada; Part 2, The formation of hydrothermal alteration zones
Robert O. Fournier
1967, Economic Geology (62) 207-227
In the southwest part of the Liberty pit a large porphyry body exhibits a zonal alteration pattern related to fissures and pyrite-bearing veins. The outermost zone contains unaltered K-feldspar, kaolinite after plagioclase, and black biotite after hornblende. An intermediate zone contains reconstituted K-feldspar, phlogopitic biotite, and muscovite or muscovite plus...
Hydrologic and climatologic data, 1966, Salt Lake County, Utah
A. G. Hely, Reed W. Mower, C. A. Horr
1967, Utah Basic-Data Release 13
An investigation of the water resources of Salt Lake County, Utah, was undertaken by the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey in July 1963. This investigation is a cooperative project financed equally by the State of Utah and the Federal Government in accordance with an agreement between the...
U.S. Geological Survey silicate rock standards
F.J. Flanagan
1967, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (31) 289-308
The U.S. Geological Survey has processed six silicate rocks to provide new reference samples to supplement G-1 and W-1. Complete conventional, rapid rock, and spectrochemical analyses by the U.S. Geological Survey are reported for a granite (replacement for G-1), a granodiorite, an andesite,...
Clinostomum marginatum in steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri) and cutthroat trout (Salmo clarki) in a western Washington lake
J. R. Uzmann, J. Douglas
1966, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (95) 35-38
Clinostomum marginatum (Trematoda: Clinostomatidae), the yellow grub parasite, was recorded in epizootic proportions from Lynch Lake, King County, Washington, in 1961 and 1962. The parasite larvae occurred principally in steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri); cutthroat trout (S. clarki) were infected to a relatively minor degree. Fish and snail host populations were...
Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, in the Copper River Basin area, Alaska
Oscar J. Ferrians Jr.
1966, Professional Paper 543-E
The Copper River Basin area is in south-central Alaska and covers 17,800 square miles. It includes most of the Copper River Basin and parts of the surrounding Alaska Range and the Talkeetna, Chugach, and Wrangell Mountains. On March 27, 1964, shortly after 5:36 p.m. Alaska standard time, a great earthquake having...
Aeromagnetic map of parts of the Mother Lode gold and Sierra Foothills copper mining districts, California, and its geologic interpretation
J. R. Henderson Jr., A. A. Stromquist, Anna Jespersen
1966, Geophysical Investigations Map 561
Methods for analysis of selected metals in water by atomic absorption
Marvin J. Fishman, Sanford C. Downs
1966, Water Supply Paper 1540-C
This manual describes atomic-absorption-spectroscopy methods for determining calcium, copper, lithium, magnesium, manganese, potassium, sodium, strontium and zinc in atmospheric precipitation, fresh waters, and brines. The procedures are intended to be used by water quality laboratories of the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey. Detailed procedures, calculations, and methods...
Mines and prospects, Idaho Springs district, Clear Creek and Gilpin counties, Colorado -- Descriptions and maps
Robert Hadley Moench, Avery Drake Jr.
1966, Open-File Report 66-87
The Idaho Springs mining district forms an important segment of the Front Range mineral belt, a northeast-trending zone of coextensive intrusive rocks and hydrothermal ore deposits of early Tertiary age. This belt, which is about 50 miles long, extends from the region just west of Boulder southwestward across the Front...
Geomorphic effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964 in the Martin-Bering Rivers area, Alaska
Samuel J. Tuthill, Wilson M. Laird
1966, Professional Paper 543-B
The Alaska earthquake of March 27, 1964, caused widespread geomorphic changes in the Martin-Bering Rivers area-900 square miles of uninhabited mountains, alluvial flatlands, and marshes north of the Gulf of Alaska, and east of the Copper River. This area is at lat 60°30’ N. and long 144°22’ W., 32 miles...
Sulfide-mineral zoning in the basal nonesuch shale, Northern Michigan
W. S. White, J.C. Wright
1966, Economic Geology (61) 171-1190
A zone, 1 to 50 feet thick, at the base of the Nonesuch Shale, is relatively rich in copper, chiefly as chalcocite. Pyrite is the characteristic sulfide mineral of the overlying 400 to 600 feet of the formation. The boundary of the cupriferous zone with the pyrite zone regionally transgresses both stratigraphic layering and fades gradations indicative...
Hydrologic and climatologic data, 1965, Salt Lake County, Utah
W.V. Iorns, Reed W. Mower, C. A. Horr
1966, Utah Basic-Data Release 12
An investigation of the water resources of Salt Lake County, Utah, was undertaken by the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey in July 1963. This investigation is a cooperative project financed equally by the State of Utah and the Federal Government in accordance with an agreement between the...
Hydrologic and climatologic data collected through 1964, Salt Lake County, Utah
W.V. Iorns, Reed W. Mower, C. A. Horr
1966, Utah Basic-Data Release 11
An investigation of the water resources of Salt Lake County, Utah, was undertaken by the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey in July 1963. This investigation is a cooperative project financed equally by the State of Utah and the Federal Government in accordance with an agreement between the...
Copper artifacts from prehistoric archeological sites in the dakotas
W.E. Hill Jr., R.W. Neuman
1966, Science (154) 1171-1173
Abstract. Thirteen archeological specimens were analyzed spectrographically, and within defined limits they were determined to be native copper. Twelve of the specimens show close elemental homogeneity and are believed to be of Lake Superior ore; the origin of the other specimen is devious....
Shattuckite and plancheite: A crystal chemical study
Howard T. Evans Jr., Mary E. Mrose
1966, Science (154) 506-507
The orthorhombic crystal structures of shattuckite, Cu5( SiO3)4(OH)2 and planchétite, Cu8(Si4011)2(OH)4 H2O, have been solved. Shattuckite contains silicate chains similar to pyroxene in a complex association with copper atoms, while the closely related planchéite contains silicate chains similar to amphibole....
The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: regional effects
David S. McCulloch, Samuel J. Tuthill, Wilson M. Laird, J. E. Case, D.F. Barnes, George Plafker, S. L. Robbins, Reuben Kachadoorian, Oscar J. Ferrians Jr., Helen L. Foster, Thor N. V. Karlstrom, M. J. Kirkby, Anne V. Kirkby, Kirk W. Stanley
1966, Professional Paper 543
This is the third in a series of six reports that the U.S. Geological Survey published on the results of a comprehensive geologic study that began, as a reconnaissance survey, within 24 hours after the March 27, 1964, Magnitude 9.2 Great Alaska Earthquake and extended, as detailed investigations, through several...
Geochemical prospecting investigations in the Copper Belt of Vermont
Frank Cogswell Canney
1965, Bulletin 1198-B