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Estimated use of water in the United States, 1965

Estimates of water use in the United States for 1965 indicate that an average of about 310 bgd (billion gallons per day) were withdrawn for public-supply, rural domestic and livestock, irrigation, and industrial (including thermoelectric power)uses--that is, about 1,600 gallons per capita per day. This represents an increase of 15 percent over the withdrawal of 270 bgd reported for 1960. Fresh wat
Authors
Charles Richard Murray

Chemical quality of surface waters in Devils Lake basin North Dakota, 1952-60

Above-normal precipitation in 1954, 1956, and 1957 caused the water surface of Devils Lake to rise to an altitude of 1,419.3 feet, its highest in 40 years. Nearly all the water entering the lake flowed through Big Coulee, and about three-fourths of that inflow was at rates greater than 100 cubic feet per second. At these rates, the inflow contained less than 600 ppm (parts per million) dissolved s
Authors
Hugh T. Mitten, C.H. Scott, Philip G. Rosene

Design and construction of a dual recharge system at Minot, North Dakota

In 1965, a ground-water recharge facility was constructed and placed in operation to forestall an impending water shortage at Minot, North Dakota. The facility is unique in that the rate of recharge to a buried sand and gravel aquifer is augmented by perforating an overlying bed of clay using hydraulic connectors (gravel-filled bored holes) in conjunction with an open-pit excavation. The connector
Authors
Wayne A. Pettyjohn

A preliminary report of a recently discovered aquifer at Sioux Falls, South Dakota

A hydrologic study of the Big Sioux aquifer system was begun July 1, 1966, by the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the City of Sioux Falls and the East Dakota Conservancy Sub-District.   Test drilling being done in the search for a southern outlet to the Big Sioux aquifer has led to the discovery of the outlet and of a deeper aquifer than was previously know to exist in this area.  This
Authors
Kenneth D. Vaughan, Earl A. Ackroyd

Evapotranspiration and the water budget of prairie potholes in North Dakota

The mass-transfer method was used to study the hydrologic behavior of 10 prairie potholes in central North Dakota during the 5-year period 1960-64. Many of the potholes went dry when precipitation was low. The average evapotranspiration during the May to October period each year was 2.11 feet, and the average seepage was 0.60 foot. These averages remained nearly constant for both wet and dry year
Authors
J.B. Shjeflo

Geological Survey research 1968, Chapter D

This collection of 48 short papers is the third published chapter of "Geological Survey Research 1968." The papers report on scientific and economic results of current work by members of the Geologic and Water Resources Divisions of the U.S. Geological Survey.
Authors

Geological Survey research 1968: Chapter C

Refractory flint clay and semiflint clay layers, totaling as much as 7% feet in thickness, occur in the lower part of the Allegheny Formation of Pennsylvanian age in north-central Randolph County, W.Va. The deposit seems to be a lens in a widespread bed of plastic clay and may underlie an area of 1-2 square miles. Refractory tests of three samples indicate a pyrometric cone equivalent of cone 30-3
Authors

Geology and ground water resources of Eddy and Foster Counties, North Dakota

Eddy and Foster Counties are in east-central North Dakota, high on the eastern flank of the Williston Basin. They are underlain by 3200 to 4300 feet of Paleozoic and Mesozoic rocks that dip gently to the west. The uppermost formation, the Cretaceous Pierre Shale, lies directly beneath the glacial drift and crops out in the valleys of the James and Sheyenne Rivers. Glacial drift that covers the ent
Authors
John P. Bluemle, Henry Trapp

Geology and ground water resources of Cass County, North Dakota

Cass County comprises an area of 1,749 square miles in the southeastern corner of North Dakota. About one-fourth of the county is in the Drift Prairie physiographic province; the rest is in the Red River Valley (Lake Agassiz basin) physiographic division.
Authors
Robert L. Klausing

Artificial Recharge at Valley City, North Dakota, 1932 to 1965

Valley City, North Dakota, has an average daily water use of 750,000 gallons, which is obtained from wells tapping pattly confined gravel deposits in the Sheyenne River valley. These deposits at Valley City have a maximum thickness of more than 50 feet and an areal extent of approximately 1 square mile. The aquifer has been artificially recharged successfully since 1932 by diversion of water from
Authors
T. E. Kelly

Hydrologic applications of lithofacies clastic-ratio maps

No abstract available.
Authors
Wayne A. Pettyjohn, Phillip G. Randich