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All Publications

Access all publications and filter by type, location, and search for keywords to find specific science and data information conducted by our scientists. 

Filter Total Items: 171156

The Nushagak district, Alaska

No abstract available.
Authors
John Beaver Mertie

The San Juan country, a geographic and geologic reconnaissance of southeastern Utah

No abstract available.
Authors
H. E. Gregory

The status of wildlife research: 1937.

No abstract available.
Authors
W.L. McAtee

The Valdez Creek mining district, Alaska, in 1936

No abstract available.
Authors
Ralph Tuck

Treat - think - and be wary, for tomorrow they may die

For some very strange reason it is easy to minimize the villian's role, played by disease-producing organisms, in the theater of modern fish culture. Much concern is felt over the food bills footed each month by the hatcheries, but very little is thought about the dead fish which are picked from the hatchery troughs during the same period.
Authors
F. F. Fish

Water levels and artesian pressures in observation wells in the United States in 1937

No abstract available.
Authors
O. E. Meinzer, L.K. Wenzel

Water utilization in the basin of the Chewaucan River, Oregon

No abstract available.
Authors
R.O. Helland

Sylvatic plague

No abstract available.
Authors
Albert M. Day

Resistivity‐studies of some salt‐water boundaries in the Hawaiian Islands

In the course of a systematic survey of the ground‐water resources of the Hawaiian Islands which is being made under the direction of H. T. Stearns of the United States Geological Survey in cooperation with the Territorial Government of Hawaii, it was found desirable to test the utility of geophysical methods in the solution of certain Hawaiian water‐supply problems. A cooperative geophysical surv
Authors
J.H. Swartz

Concerning fossil legumes

No  abstract available.

The use of resistivity‐methods in the location of salt‐water bodies in the El Paso, Texas, Area

During 1935 and 1936 the Ground‐Water Division of the United States Geological Survey made an investigation of the ground‐water resources of the El Paso, Texas, Area. Geological and hydrological studies comprised the principal part of the investigation, and these studies were supplemented by measurements of earth‐resistivity made largely by the Geophysical Section of the Geological Survey along tr
Authors
A.N. Sayre, E.L. Stephenson

Ground‐water in Utah

In common with many of the arid and semiarid States, the prosperity of Utah probably is more dependent upon the amount of water available than upon any other natural resource. Although only about four per cent of the State is irrigated, a shortage of water for irrigation becomes a major calamity. A large part of the water‐supply for the State is derived from surface‐streams, but a most valuable su
Authors
George H. Taylor