Publications
Browse more than 150,000 publications authored by our scientists over the past 100+ year history of the USGS. Publications available are: USGS-authored journal articles, series reports, book chapters, other government publications, and more.
Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center Publications
Filter Total Items: 3223
Municipal water supplies on the Mesabi and Vermillion Iron Ranges, northeastern Minnesota
No abstract available.
Authors
R. D. Cotter, L.H. Young
An automatic-tracking device for visual-accumulation-tube analysis
No abstract available.
Authors
J. V. Skinner
Ground water in alluvial channel deposits, Nobles County, Minnesota
No abstract available.
Authors
R.F. Norvitch
Ground-water hydrology and glacial geology of the Kalamazoo area, Michigan
The Kalamazoo report area includes about 150 square miles of Kalamazoo County, Mich. The area is principally one of industry and commerce, although agriculture also is of considerable importance. It has a moderate and humid climate and lies within the Lake Michigan “snow belt”. Precipitation averages about 35 inches per year. Snowfall averages about 55 inches. The surface features of the area were
Authors
Morris Deutsch, K.E. Vanlier, P.R. Giroux
Basic geology and ground-water data for Clay County, Minnesota
No abstract available.
Authors
J.W. Bingham
Occurrence of ground waters of low hardness and of high chloride content in Lyon County, Minnesota
The ground water in Lyon County and elsewhere in southwestern Minnesota is generally hard and low in chloride. It is the purpose of this report to describe briefly the occurrence in Lyon County of waters of low hardness and of high chloride content. The waters are found largely in Cretaceous sandstone.
The data were collected in conjunction with a countywide study of the geology and groundwater re
Authors
Harry G. Rodis, Robert Schneider
Floods of May 1959 in the Au Gres and Rifle River basins, Michigan
The floods of May 1959 in the Au Gres and Rifle River basins, Michigan, resulted from heavy rainfall during the night of May 19-20. Peak unit discharges for small drainage areas (less than about 15 square miles) were the highest ever measured in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan, and for very small areas (about one square mile) were of the same order of magnitude as those for the record Ontonagon Ri
Authors
L.E. Stoimenoff
Ground-water exploration and test pumping in the Halma-Lake Bronson area, Kittson County, Minnesota
No abstract available.
Authors
G. R. Schiner
An outbreak of columnaris disease in stonerollers
Abstract has not been submitted
Authors
R.E. Lennon, P.S. Parker
The stoneroller, Campostoma anomalum (Rafinesque), in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
The stoneroller (Campostoma anomalum) is one of the more important fish in Great Smoky Mountains National Park because of its abundance and habits. Although esteemed locally as a food and a bait fish, the stoneroller is exploited but little since the fishing regulations which govern the utilization of game fishes afford it a large measure of protection. Distribution is controlled by gradient with
Authors
R.E. Lennon, P.S. Parker
Geology of the Lake Mary quadrangle, Iron County, Michigan
The Lake Mary quadrangle is in eastern Iron County, in the west part of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The quadrangle is underlain by Lower and Middle Precambrian rocks, formerly designated Archean and Algonkian rocks, and is extensively covered by Pleistocene glacial deposits. A few Upper Precambrian (Keweenawan) diabase dikes and two remnants of sandstone and dolomite of early Paleozoic age ar
Authors
Richard W. Bayley