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Publications

This list of Water Resources Mission Area publications includes both official USGS publications and journal articles authored by our scientists. A searchable database of all USGS publications can be accessed at the USGS Publications Warehouse.

Filter Total Items: 18417

Sedimentation in small reservoirs on the San Rafael Swell, Utah

Movement of sediment from upland areas and eventually into main drainages and rivers is by no means through continuous transportation of material from the source to the delta. Instead it consists of a series of intermittent erosional and depositional phases that present a pulsating movement. Hence, sediment carried off upland areas may be deposited in lower reaches or along main drainages if an ex
Authors
Norman Julius King, Mervyn M. Mace

The use of water in Pennsylvania, 1951

No abstract available
Authors
John William Mangan, Jack Bennett Graham

Water resources of the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, Minnesota

The water supply of the Minneapolis-St. Paul area is adequate to satisfy present requirements and requirements for many years to come if the area continues to develop at about the present rate. The flow of -the Mississippi River at the Twin Cities is more than sufficient to meet the demands of the water-supply systems of Minneapolis and St. Paul. The lowest momentary flow during the period 1931-51
Authors
Charles Henry Prior, Robert Schneider, W. H. Durum

Irrigation and streamflow depletion in Columbia River basin above The Dalles, Oregon

The Columbia River is the largest stream in western United States. Above The Dalles, Oregon, it drains an area of 237,000 square miles, of which 39,000 square miles is in Canada. This area is largely mountainous and lies between the Rocky Mountains and the Cascade Range. The Kootenai, Pend Oreille, and Snake Rivers are the principal tributaries. Precipitation varies from 7 inches near Kennewick, W
Authors
Wilbur Douglas Simons

Ground-water conditions in the Milwaukee-Waukesha area, Wisconsin

Three major aquifers underlie the Milwaukee-Waukesha area: sandstones of Cambrian and Ordovician age, Niagara dolomite of Silurian age, and sand and gravel deposits of Pleistocene age. The Maquoketa shale of Ordovician age acts as a more or less effective seal between the Pleistocene deposits and Niagara dolomite above and the sandstone aquifer below. Crystalline rocks of pre-Cambrian age form an
Authors
Frank Clingan Foley, W.C. Walton, W.J. Drescher

Lake Bonneville: Geology of northern Utah Valley, Utah

Lake Bonneville was a vast Pleistocene lake that covered 20,000 square miles in northwestern Utah and had a maximum depth of about 1,000 feet. It was a body of water comparable in size to modern Lake Michigan.Surveys of the unconsolidated deposits in the Lake Bonneville basin utilize the same methods used in studies of hard rocks, namely: separation of the deposits into mappable units and contacts
Authors
C. B. Hunt, H.D. Varnes, H. E. Thomas

Geology and geography of the Henry Mountains region, Utah

The Henry Mountains region in southeastern Utah is one of the classic areas in geology because of the study made there by Grove Karl Gilbert in 1875 and 1876. His report on the geology of the mountains was the first to recognize that intrusive bodies may deform their host rocks and the first to show clearly the significance of the evenly eroded plains, now known as pediments, at the foot of desert
Authors
Charles B. Hunt, Paul Averitt, Ralph L. Miller

Ground water notes

No abstract available.
Authors

Record of wells in Suffolk County, New York, Supplement 2

No abstract available.
Authors
A. H. Johnson, W.G. Waterman, J.A. Saccareccia, R.J. O'Reilly