Publications
Scientific reports, journal articles, or general interest publications by USGS scientists in the Oklahoma-Texas Water Science Center are listed below. Publications span from 1898 to the present.
Filter Total Items: 1515
Ground-water discharge from the Edwards and associated limestones, San Antonio area, Texas, 1965
No abstract available.
Authors
Sergio Garza
Chemical analyses of water from observation wells in the Edwards and associated limestones, San Antonio area, Texas, 1965
No abstract available.
Authors
Sergio Garza
Ground-water recharge to the Edwards and associated limestones, San Antonio area, Texas, 1964
No abstract available.
Authors
Sergio Garza
Flood of October 8, 1962, on Bachman Branch and Joes Creek at Dallas, Texas
This report presents hydrologic data that enable the user to define areas susceptible to flooding and to evaluate the flood hazard along Bachman Branch and Joes Creek. The data provide a technical basis for making sound decisions concerning the use of flood-plain lands. The report will be useful for preparing building and zoning regulations, locating waste disposal facilities, purchasing unoccupie
Authors
Frederick H. Ruggles
Effect of the partial control of natural salinity on water quality in Possum Kingdom Reservoir, Texas
No abstract available.
Authors
L.S. Hughes
Some effects of urbanization on storm runoff, Waller Creek, Austin, Texas, 1955-62
No abstract available.
Authors
W.H. Espey
Floods on small streams in Texas
The first streamflow station in Texas was established on the Rio Grande at El Paso on May 10, 1889. Sip,ce that time the systematic collection of streamflow data. has expanded. In 1915 the Texas Board of Water Engineers (now the Texas Water Development Board) entered into a cooperative agreement with the U. S. Geological Survey for the purpose of expanding the network of stream-gaging stations in
Authors
Frederick H. Ruggles
Floods of April 28, 1966, in the northern part of Dallas, Texas
No abstract available.
Authors
W.B. Mills, E.E. Schroeder
Annual compilation and analysis of hydrologic data for urban studies in the Houston, Texas, metropolitan area, 1969
No abstract available.
Authors
S. L. Johnson
Preliminary report on investigation of salt springs and seeps in a portion of the Permian Basin in Texas
The Permian Basin (fig. 1) comprises a large area in the southern midcontinent region and includes major portions of Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Kansas. Within this basin brine springs and seeps discharge more than 20,000 tons per day of sodium chloride (common table salt). This brine contaminates many streams greatly impairing the utility of their waters. The water in some streams is of such
Authors
P. R. Stevens, W. F. Hardt
Freshwater inflow data for Corps of Engineers model study of Houston, Texas, ship channel
No abstract available.
Authors
R. E. Smith, E.G. Kaminski
Flood on Big Fossil Creek at Haltom City near Fort Worth, Texas, in 1962
The approximate area inundated near Fort Worth, Texas, by Big Fossil Creek, during the flood of September 7, 1962, is shown on a topographic map to record the flood hazard in graphic form. Big Fossil Creek, which drains an area of 74.7 square miles, flows generally southeastward along the northeast edge of Fort Worth through Richland Hills and Haltom City, into West Fork Trinity River. The flood o
Authors
John H. Montgomery, Frederick H. Ruggles, James Lee Patterson