Portal:United States Geological Survey

bureau of the U.S. Department of the Interior

The Seal of the United States Geological Survey. The central element is a crossed pick and hammer, a traditional symbol of mining, over a stylized symbol of a mountain and water.
Seal of the United States Geological Survey

Annual Reports

Monographs

There were 55 Monographs published by the USGS between 1882 and 1929.

Bulletins

There have been over 4,600 Bulletins prepared since 1883

  • No. 1 "On hypersthene andesite and on triclinic pyroxene in augitic rocks" by Whitman Cross and Samuel Franklin Emmons, 1883
  • "Gold and silver conversion tables, giving the coining values of troy ounces of fine metal, and the weights of fine metal represented by given sums of United States money: by Albert Williams, Jr., 1883
  • No. 3 "On the fossil faunas of the Upper Devonian, along the meridian of 76 degrees 30', from Tompkins County, New York, to Bradford County, Pennsylvania" by Henry Shaler Williams, 1884
  • No. 4 "On Mesozoic fossils" by Charles A. White, 1884
  • No. 5 "A dictionary of altitudes in the United States" by Henry Gannett, 1884
  • No. 6 "Elevations in the dominion of Canada" by J.W. Spencer, 1884
  • No. 7 "Mapoteca geologica americana, a catalogue of geological maps of America (North and South), 1752-1881" by Jules Marcou and John Belknap Marcou, 1884
  • No. 8 "On secondary enlargements of mineral fragments in certain rocks" by Roland Duer Irving and Charles Richard Van Hise, 1884
  • No. 9 "A report of work done in the Washington laboratory during the fiscal year 1883-84" by Frank Wigglesworth Clarke and Thomas Marean Chatard, 1884
  • No. 10 "On the Cambrian faunas of North America (preliminary studies)" by Charles D. Walcott, 1884
  • No. 322 "Geology and oil resources of the Santa Maria oil district, Santa Barbara County, California" by Ralph Arnold and Robert van Vleck Anderson, 1907. 161 p.
  • No. 664 "The Nenana coal field, Alaska" by George Curtis Martin, 1919. 54 p.

Professional Papers

There have been over 3,000 Professional Papers published since 1902

General Interest Publications

Frequently Asked Questions

Other

Works About the Bureau


Some or all works listed in this portal are in the public domain in the United States because they are works of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse