Publications
The following list of California Water Science Center publications includes both official USGS publications and journal articles authored by our scientists.
Filter Total Items: 1829
Ground water in the San Jacinto and Temecula basins, California Ground water in the San Jacinto and Temecula basins, California
No abstract available.
Authors
Gerald Ashley Waring
Southern California floods of January, 1916 Southern California floods of January, 1916
No abstract available.
Authors
Harry Deyoe McGlashan, Fred Charles Ebert
Surface water supply of the United States, 1916 : Part 11, Pacific slope basins in California Surface water supply of the United States, 1916 : Part 11, Pacific slope basins in California
No abstract available.
Authors
Water Resources Division U.S. Geological Survey
Surface water supply of the United States, 1914 : Part 11, Pacific slope basins in California Surface water supply of the United States, 1914 : Part 11, Pacific slope basins in California
No abstract available.
Authors
Nathan Clifford Grover, Harry Deyoe McGlashan, Fred Forbes Henshaw
Ground water for irrigation in the Morgan Hill area, California Ground water for irrigation in the Morgan Hill area, California
No abstract available.
Authors
William O. Clark
Hydraulic-mining debris in the Sierra Nevada Hydraulic-mining debris in the Sierra Nevada
No abstract available.
Authors
G. K. Gilbert
Evaporation of brine from Searles Lake, California Evaporation of brine from Searles Lake, California
The bed of crystalline salts known as Searles Lake, in southeastern California, contains the most valuable potash-bearing brine known in the United States. This salt body has an exposed surface area estimated at 11 or 12 square miles and an average depth of about 70 feet. For the most part it is firm and compact enough to support a wagon and team even during wet seasons, when it is'...
Authors
W.B. Hicks
Colorado River and its utilization Colorado River and its utilization
The region traversed by the Colorado and its tributaries is for many reasons of intense interest to the people of the United States. Here was the home of that forgotten people of which there is almost no record except the hieroglyphics on the rocks, the ruins of their irrigation systems, and the cliff dwellings by which they are most widely known; here were Spanish missions whose history...
Authors
Eugene Clyde La Rue, Nathan C. Grover
Ground water for irrigation in the Sacramento Valley, California Ground water for irrigation in the Sacramento Valley, California
No abstract available.
Authors
Kirk Bryan
Stream-gaging stations and publications relating to water sources, 1885-1913; Part IX: Colorado River basin Stream-gaging stations and publications relating to water sources, 1885-1913; Part IX: Colorado River basin
Investigation of water resources by the United States Geological Survey has consisted in large part of measurements of the volume of flow of streams and studies of the conditions affecting that flow, but it has comprised also investigation of such closely allied subjects as irrigation, water storage, water powers, underground waters, and quality of waters. Most of the results of these