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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: 171137

Aids for bird study

No abstract available.
Authors

Inheritance of degree of silvering in foxes

No abstract available.
Authors
Charles E. Kellogg

Horse meat for fur farms: its chemical composition

No abstract available.
Authors
Sedgwick E. Smith

Geophysical abstracts 100-103, January-December 1940

No abstract available.
Authors
W. Ayvazoglou

Eelgrass depletion on the Pacific coast and its effect upon black brant

No abstract available.
Authors
James Moffitt, C. Cottam

Animal and plant resources of Alaska

No abstract available.
Authors
L.J. Palmer

3,000 wild bird autopsies on western lake areas

No abstract available.
Authors
E. R. Quortrup, J.E. Shillinger

A nickel deposit near Gold Hill, Boulder County, Colorado

No abstract available.
Authors
E. N. Goddard, T. S. Lovering

Additions to the Wilcox flora from Kentucky and Texas

No abstract available.
Authors
E. W. Berry

Age and growth of the rock bass, Ambloplites rupestris (Rafinesque), in Nebish Lake, Wisconsin

The present study of the age and growth of the Nebish Lake rock bass is another in a series of papers that have been based wholly or in part on materials collected in the course of investigations on the fishes of the lakes of the northeastern highlands, Wisconsin, conducted cooperatively by the Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey and the United States Bureau of Fisheries over the perio
Authors
Ralph Hile

Age, growth, and production of the yellow perch, Perca flavescens (Mitchill), of Saginaw Bay

Ages were determined and individual growth histories computed from the examination and measurement of scales from 820 yellow perch collected in 1929 and 1930. Calculated lengths greater than 101 millimeters were computed on the assumption (supported by empirical data) that the ratio of body length to scale length is constant. Lengths below 101 millimeters were determined with the aid of an empiric
Authors
Ralph Hile, Frank W. Jobes