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Publications

Browse more than 160,000 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.

Filter Total Items: 171816

Application of Brianchon's theorem to construction of geologic profiles

Brianchon's theorem states that the three diagonals joining opposite vertices of a hexagon circumscribed about a conic are concurrent. A corollary of this theorem applies to a pentagon so that the points of tangency of an inscribed conic may be located. Any five non-concurrent straight lines in a plane, no three of which are parallel, will ordinarily form some kind of a pentagon; and if considered
Authors
J. B. Mertie

Preliminary report on the stratigraphy and structure of the area of the Ipnavik River, Alaska

Geological Survey Party 1 returned to Umiat from Wolf Creek on August 5. Plans for the field season of 1947 called for geologic reconnaissance along part of the Ipnavik River and along the Colville River between the Ipnavik and Kurupa Rivers, to be completed before the end of the season. Since not much time remained and the traverse was long--about 70 airline miles--it was decided that the work wo
Authors
Karl Stefansson

Organizations and officials concerned with wildlife protection: 1948

No abstract available.
Authors
Mary Louise Hommel

Abstract of fur laws, 1948-49

No abstract available.
Authors
Frank G. Ashbrook

Some solutional features of the limestone near Lexington, Kentucky

Field work on the Ordovician limestones and shales of the Lexington area, Kentucky, has shown that no appreciable quantity of ground water is transmitted through interstitial openings in these rocks. Ground-water movement is restricted to joint planes and, to a lesser extent, bedding planes that have been enlarged by solution. Studies of these planes indicate that solution has been effective only
Authors
D.K. Hamilton

Annual rainfall and runoff in New England 

This paper presents the results of studies of average rainfall and runoff, developed in the Office of the Division Engineer, New England Division, United States Corps of Engineers, in cooperation with the District Engineer, United States Geological Survey, and prepared in connection with flood‐control studies of the Connecticut and Merrimack River basins.
Authors
J.J. McAleer, C. E. Knox

Lava movement at Parícutin Volcano, Mexico 

The lava flows of Parícutin Volcano, Mexico, offer an exceptional opportunity to study details of lava movement, because many flows are accessible throughout their length and can be watched from their birth to the cessation of their movement. Petrographically the lavas show no significant difference from one flow to another or in different parts of the same flow. The maximum lava temperature obser
Authors
K.B. Krauskopf

Submarine geology of Bikini atoll 

The program of investigations made in connection with the atomic bomb tests in the summer of 1946 at Bikini Atoll provided a rare opportunity for obtaining information on the physiography and sediments of atolls. The outer slopes around Bikini Atoll rise from a depth of about 2500 fathoms in a long gradually steepening curve. Between 0 and 200 fathoms the average slope is 25°. On the windward side
Authors
K.O. Emery

Age of the Kingsbury conglomerate is Eocene 

The Kingsbury conglomerate and immediately overlying gravels on the east side of the Bighorn Mountains in Wyoming interfinger eastward with “Wasatch” strata. The latter contain Eocene vertebrates, species of which have been found in the Kingsbury conglomerate. In addition, the “Wasatch” strata contain an Eocene flora that includes the floating fern, Salvinia preauriculata Berry, which, because it
Authors
Roland W. Brown

Quality of water in the upper Colorado River basin

In a drainage area as large as the Colorado River Basin there are naturally large differences in the quality of the surface waters. The chemical character of the water at six gaging stations on the Colorado River from near the headwaters to near the mouth is shown by the analyses in Table 1.It will be seen that the concentration of dissolved solids increased from 64 ppm (0.09 tons per ac ft) in th
Authors
C. S. Howard
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