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Filter Total Items: 669

A proposed streamflow-data program for North Dakota A proposed streamflow-data program for North Dakota

An evaluation of the streamflow data available in North Dakota was made to provide guidelines for planning future programs. The basic steps in the evaluation procedure were (1) definition of the long-term goals of the streamflow data program in quantitative form, (2) examination and analysis of all available data to determine which goals have already been met, and (3) consideration of...
Authors
O.A. Crosby

Hydrologic implications of solid-water disposal Hydrologic implications of solid-water disposal

The disposal of more than 1,400 million pounds of solid wastes in the United States each day is a major problem. This disposal in turn often leads to serious health, esthetic, and environmental problems. Among these is the pollution of vital ground-water resources. Of the six principal methods of solid-waste disposal in general use today, four methods-open dumps, sanitary landfill...
Authors
William Joseph Schneider

Water as an urban resource and nuisance Water as an urban resource and nuisance

Generally, when people speak of water as a resource, they are considering its good aspects and recognizing that it is essential for life and living. Sometimes or at some places or to some people, the same water may be annoying or unpleasant and thus a nuisance-for example, rain at a picnic, snow at any time except Christmas Eve, ground water in a basement, floodwater inundating personal...
Authors
H. E. Thomas, William Joseph Schneider

Streamflow from the United States into the Atlantic Ocean during 1931-1960 Streamflow from the United States into the Atlantic Ocean during 1931-1960

Streamflow from the United States into the Atlantic Ocean, between the international stream St. Croix River, inclusive, and Cape Sable, Fla., averaged about 355,000 cfs (cubic feet per second) during the 30-year period 1931-60, or roughly 20 percent of the water that, on the average flows out of the conterminous United States. The area drained by streams flowing into the Atlantic Ocean...
Authors
Conrad D. Bue

Study and interpretation of the chemical characteristics of natural water Study and interpretation of the chemical characteristics of natural water

The chemical composition of natural water is derived from many different sources of solutes, including gases and aerosols from the atmosphere, weathering and erosion of rocks and soil, solution or precipitation reactions occurring below the land surface, and cultural effects resulting from activities of man. Some of the processes of solution or precipitation of minerals can be closely...
Authors
John David Hem

Hydrology of a part of the Big Sioux drainage basin, eastern South Dakota Hydrology of a part of the Big Sioux drainage basin, eastern South Dakota

In 1960 the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Dakota State Water Resources Commission and the South Dakota State Geological Survey, started a program for the hydrogeologic investigation of glacial drift in selected drainage basins in eastern South Dakota. This program was designed to delineate water-bearing deposits of glacial-outwash sand and gravel, and to determine...
Authors
Michael J. Ellis, Donald G. Adolphson, Robert E. West

Disposal of liquid wastes by injection underground--Neither myth nor millennium Disposal of liquid wastes by injection underground--Neither myth nor millennium

Injecting liquid wastes deep underground is an attractive but not necessarily practical means for disposing of them. For decades, impressive volumes of unwanted oil-field brine have been injected, currently about 10,000 acre-feet yearly. Recently, liquid industrial wastes are being injected in ever-increasing quantity. Dimensions of industrial injection wells range widely but the...
Authors
Arthur M. Piper

Water for the cities - The outlook Water for the cities - The outlook

Except perhaps for the arid Southwest, water resources are generally sufficient to meet the needs of cities for the foreseeable future. Cities will continue to expand and additional rural areas will be converted to urban and suburban complexes. Demands for urban water will continue to rise and this will place a heavy strain on existing systems. Cities have always faced water problems...
Authors
William Joseph Schneider, Andrew Maute Spieker

Relation of water loss to moisture content of hydrophytes in a natural pond Relation of water loss to moisture content of hydrophytes in a natural pond

Hydrophytes growing in natural ponds on the Coteau du Missouri in North Dakota have been studied. Previous studies in the same region showed how transpiration by hydrophytes could be separated from the total water loss from a natural pond, during the period that vegetation was growing in height, on the basis of a correlation between the height of vegetation and a mass‐transfer...
Authors
W. S. Eisenlohr

Geology and ground water resources of Cass County, North Dakota Geology and ground water resources of Cass County, North Dakota

Cass County comprises an area of 1,749 square miles in the southeastern corner of North Dakota. About one-fourth of the county is in the Drift Prairie physiographic province; the rest is in the Red River Valley (Lake Agassiz basin) physiographic division.
Authors
Robert L. Klausing

Chemical quality of surface waters in Devils Lake basin North Dakota, 1952-60 Chemical quality of surface waters in Devils Lake basin North Dakota, 1952-60

Above-normal precipitation in 1954, 1956, and 1957 caused the water surface of Devils Lake to rise to an altitude of 1,419.3 feet, its highest in 40 years. Nearly all the water entering the lake flowed through Big Coulee, and about three-fourths of that inflow was at rates greater than 100 cubic feet per second. At these rates, the inflow contained less than 600 ppm (parts per million)...
Authors
Hugh T. Mitten, C.H. Scott, Philip G. Rosene

Generalized hydrology of prairie potholes on the Coteau du Missouri, North Dakota Generalized hydrology of prairie potholes on the Coteau du Missouri, North Dakota

This report presents all the information, obtained during the investigation, that lends itself to generalization. It describes conditions on that part of the Coteau du Missouri where there is little integration of drainage systems. The surface of the glacial drift in this region is dotted with shallow depressions known as prairie potholes that hold water for varying lengths of time...
Authors
William Stewart Eisenlohr, Charles E. Sloan
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