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Publications

This list of Upper Midwest Water Science Center publications spans from 1899 to present. It includes both official USGS publications and journal articles authored by our scientists. To access the full, searchable catalog of USGS publications, please visit the USGS Publications Warehouse.

Filter Total Items: 2333

Availability of water in Kalamazoo County, southwestern Michigan Availability of water in Kalamazoo County, southwestern Michigan

Kalamazoo County comprises an area of 572 square miles in the southwestern part of Michigan. It includes parts of the Kalamazoo, St. Joseph, and Paw Paw River basins, which drain into Lake Michigan. The northern two-thirds of the county is drained by the Kalamazoo River and its tributaries. A small area in the western piart of the county is drained by the Paw Paw River, and the rest, by
Authors
William Burrows Allen, John B. Miller, Warren W. Wood

Water for cranberry culture in the Cranmoor area of central Wisconsin Water for cranberry culture in the Cranmoor area of central Wisconsin

The Cranmoor area of central Wisconsin is the principal cranberry producing area of the State. Cranberries are grown in only about 2.5 square miles of an 80-square-mile marsh and swamp in the Cranberry Creek basin. Cranberry growers have built reservoirs and ditches throughout 25 square miles of marsh for better management of the area's natural water supply. Additional water is diverted...
Authors
Louis J. Hamilton

Availability of ground water for irrigation from glacial outwash in the Perham area, Otter Tail County, Minnesota Availability of ground water for irrigation from glacial outwash in the Perham area, Otter Tail County, Minnesota

The Perham study area includes about 350 square miles of surficial deposits of glacial outwash in the central part of Otter Tail County in west-central Minnesota. The aquifer characteristics have a wide range, as follows: Transmissivity values range from nearly 0 along the perimeter of the area to more than 100,000 gallons per day per foot in the central parts of the area; storage...
Authors
Harold O. Reeder

Floods in Starkweather Creek basin, Madison, Wisconsin Floods in Starkweather Creek basin, Madison, Wisconsin

The city of Madison is establishing standards for flood-plain zoning and land-use planning. The evaluation of flood potential is a necessary factor to be considered before such standards are established and put into effect. Purpose and scope. The purposes of this report are to determine the magnitude and water surface elevations of the regional (100-year) flood for both existing and...
Authors
Carl L. Lawrence, Barry K. Holmstrom

Summary of floods in the United States during 1967 Summary of floods in the United States during 1967

This report describes the most outstanding floods in the United States during 1967. The two most destructive floods occurred in August in east-central Alaska and in September and October in southern Texas. In east-central Alaska, heavy rain on August 8-17 produced record-breaking floods near Fairbanks. Peak discharges on some streams in the area were from two to four times the 50-yea.r...
Authors
J.O. Rostvedt

Water for a rapidly growing urban community — Oakland County, Michigan Water for a rapidly growing urban community — Oakland County, Michigan

Oakland County, an area of 899 square miles, is in southeastern Michigan. The southern part of the county is overlapped by the suburbs of the city of Detroit. In 1970, about 850,000 people were living in the county and using about 100 million gallons of water a day. More than 80 percent of the water used for large industrial and municipal supplies came from Detroit's water system. The...
Authors
F. R. Twenter, R. L. Knutilla

Water resources of the Crow Wing River watershed, central Minnesota Water resources of the Crow Wing River watershed, central Minnesota

The Crow Wing River, a tributary of the Mississippi River, drains an area of about 3,760 square miles, essentially all of which is covered by glacial deposits. Topography of most of the watershed is slightly- to moderately-undulating and has local relief of up to about 50 feet. The margin of the watershed, particularly the southwestern and northwestern parts, is higher and has local...
Authors
Gerald F. Lindholm, E.L. Oakes, D.W. Ericson, J. O. Helgesen
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