Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

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: 171223

Mineral resources of the United States, 1911: Part II - Nonmetals

No abstract available.
Authors

Mineralogical notes, series 2

No abstract available.
Authors
Waldemar Theodore Schaller

Murphysboro-Herrin folio, Illinois

No abstract available.
Authors
Eugene Wesley Shaw, Thomas Edmund Savage

Nitrate deposits

No abstract available.
Authors
Hoyt Stoddard Gale

Pawpaw-Hancock folio, Maryland-West Virginia-Pennsylvania

The Pawpaw and Hancock quadrangles embrace parts of eastern West Virginia, western Maryland, and southern Pennsylvania between parallels 39° 30' abd 39° 45' and meridians 78° and 78° 30', and contain 460 square miles.  (See fig. 1.)  Parts of eight counties are included in the area, Morgan, Berkeley, and Hampshire in West Virginia, Washington and Allegany in Maryland, and Bedford, Fulton, and Fran
Authors
G. W. Stose, C. K. Swartz

Petroleum and natural gas in Alabama

No abstract available.
Authors

Petroleum and natural gas in California

No abstract available.
Authors

Petroleum and natural gas in Kentucky

No abstract available.
Authors

Petroleum and natural gas in Utah

No abstract available.
Authors

Petroleum and natural gas in Wyoming

No abstract available.
Authors

Pliocene and Pleistocene Foraminifera from southern California

No abstract available.
Authors
Rufus Mather Bagg

Potash-bearing rocks of the Leucite Hills, Sweetwater County, Wyoming

The purpose of the present paper is to give a brief description of the rocks in the Leucite Hills, Wyo., with an estimate of the amount of leucite-bearing rock available and of the approximate amount of potash that these rocks may yield as soon as a process is discovered by which the potash may be dissociated from the rock cheaply enough for commercial use.
Authors
Alfred Reginald Schultz, Whitman Cross