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Douglas County indicators

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Series: GSA Memoirs
Published: 01 January 1969
DOI: 10.1130/MEM111-p1
... in the western Gulf Coast region as the approximate latitude of Tampico, México (22° north latitude) and as far north as Brownstown, Sevier County, Arkansas (34° north latitude). At a given stratigraphic horizon, such as the Globotruncana elevata Subzone, there are few species of planktonic foraminifera...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1972
AAPG Bulletin (1972) 56 (3): 660.
... and wrote of the occurrence of “coral reefs” in many places. It was not until 1967, 128 years after Hall’s initial work, that the first hydrocarbon-productive Onondaga reef was entered in the subsurface with the drilling by the Wyckoff Development Company of the Douglas Cornell No. 1 well in Steuben County...
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 01 January 2016
EISBN: 9780813756448
... km (~9 mi) and exit south on Colorado Hwy. 85 (Santa Fe Dr.). Head south on Hwy. 85 for ~21 km (13 mi), look for the sign indicating a left turn for Daniels Park, and after the sign turn left (north) on Daniels Park Rd. (Douglas County Rd. [CR 29]). Drive north on CR 29 for ~5 km (3 mi), and turn...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1979
AAPG Bulletin (1979) 63 (9): 1582.
...Peter Lessing ABSTRACT The Bishop-Bradshaw Creek fault extends 22 mi (35.2 km) across McDowell County, West Virginia. Initially identified on side-looking airborne radar (SLAR) in 1974, the fault trace has since been confirmed as a distinct linear feature trending N60°W on Landsat, black and white...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1959
AAPG Bulletin (1959) 43 (12): 2770–2785.
... in Douglas County, Oregon, in which the plants occur are latest Jurassic rather than Middle Jurassic. One bit of evidence indicating that the plant species have a much longer range than the mollusk species is furnished by the presence of the same Jurassic flora in the Monte de Oro formation near Oroville...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2009
Rocky Mountain Geology (2009) 44 (2): 121–145.
...Jeffrey W. Bader Abstract The Douglas Creek arch is a north–south-trending faulted anticline that separates the Uinta basin of northeastern Utah from the Piceance basin of northwestern Colorado. Previous work indicates that the arch initially formed during the Laramide orogeny as part of a broad...
FIGURES | View All (16)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1957
AAPG Bulletin (1957) 41 (6): 1048–1056.
... at the end of the year. The best of the new pools appeared to be Bourbon, in Douglas County, which had 51 oil wells completed, but seemed to be about drilled up. Germantown East in Clinton County, discovered 3 months later than Bourbon, had 21 wells completed and development was slowing down. The other new...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1963
AAPG Bulletin (1963) 47 (10): 1873–1877.
....” The name is derived from Kiger Creek, Clark County, Kansas. 3 Douglas and Pedee Groups .—A comprehensive and detailed study of the stratigraphy of the Douglas and Pedee rocks throughout their outcrop area in Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Missouri, and Iowa, by Stanton M. Ball of the Kansas...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2024
Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (2024) 30 (1-2): 59–76.
... indications of further movement or instability. Although the NCGS uses limit equilibrium–based slope stability models for county-wide debris-flow susceptibility modeling ( Bauer et al., 2012 ; Wooten et al., 2016 ), site-specific slope stability analyses are beyond the scope and resources...
FIGURES | View All (17)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1995
AAPG Bulletin (1995) 79 (7): 1019–1042.
...) . Extent of Tonganoxie paleovalley based on Lins (1950) , Sanders (1959) , Griffith (1981) , and this study. Do = Douglas County, Gr = Greenwood County, Je = Jefferson County, Le = Leavenworth County, Pl = Platte County, Wy = Wyandotte County. The primary study area for analysis...
FIGURES | View All (16)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1965
AAPG Bulletin (1965) 49 (11): 1957–1973.
.... The eastern side of the basin is parallel with the trend of Mississippian isopachous lines. This may indicate that the upper, clastic section of the Mississippian pinches out on the western flank of the Douglas Creek arch. The stratigraphic trends in the Uinta basin were controlled by the tectonic...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2000
Environmental Geosciences (2000) 7 (1): 23–31.
...Francis A. Galgano; Bruce C. Douglas Abstract Beach erosion is ubiquitous along the U. S. East Coast— ∼80–90% of the beaches are eroding. Federal and state agencies thus expend a great deal of effort to determine erosion rates for establishment of construction setback lines. Historical shoreline...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2005
Rocky Mountain Geology (2005) 40 (2): 167–191.
... isopach. Thinning of these strata, particularly in Uintah County (Utah), indicates shoaling of a broad region to the west of the present Douglas Creek arch. An originally broad arch narrowed during the Paleocene, dividing the greater Uinta basin into the Uinta and Piceance Creek sub-basins. The isopach...
FIGURES | View All (10)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1950
AAPG Bulletin (1950) 34 (7): 1530–1539.
... development which delineated the Amarillo Mountains and the Hugoton trend which bound the basin on the south and west, respectively ( Fig. 1 ). This was due, of course, to the lack of deep well control, for, aside from four wells drilled to test a lower Douglas sand in Ochiltree and Roberts counties and five...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1957
AAPG Bulletin (1957) 41 (5): 894–905.
... are termed the Maroon formation. The formation is thin adjacent to the uplift, thickens abruptly, then thins gradually away from the uplift as it interfingers with, and wedges out, under the Weber ( Fig. 4 ). This is interpreted to indicate a sharp rise of the Uncompahgre, rapid erosion of sediments...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1949
AAPG Bulletin (1949) 33 (2): 131–152.
... in the cross sections. The samples from 720 to 730 feet in well No. 4 contain fusulinids identified as Cottonwood forms. The cross sections indicate considerable thickening in the Council Grove group in western Cowley County, Kansas, between wells 8 and 11. There the Eskridge shale, between the Cottonwood...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1958
AAPG Bulletin (1958) 42 (6): 1182–1189.
.... The distributional pattern of the new pools is shown on Figure 1 . All but one are located near the edges of the producing area of the state. One new pool, New Douglas South in Bond County, produces from a Pennsylvanian sandstone. The pool consisted of one small well at the end of the year. A new Pennsylvanian...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1961
AAPG Bulletin (1961) 45 (6): 938–947.
... being drilled. Four oil discoveries and 15 gas discoveries indicate a success ratio of 16.7%. Although the Cretaceous “D” & “J” sand play in the Denver basin of eastern Colorado and western Nebraska still contributed the largest drilling effort in the two states, exploratory and development...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1921
AAPG Bulletin (1921) 5 (2): 186–211.
... and there seems to be no reason for assuming that the two formations do not meet under the Powder river basin. The Guernsey formation, exposed near Guernsey, Platte county, in southeastern Wyoming, apparently represents the same time. Similarly, the basal portion of the Casper formation in the Douglas field...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1957
AAPG Bulletin (1957) 41 (9): 2012–2036.
...Halsey W. Miller; Ada Swineford ABSTRACT A paleoecological study was made of a phosphatic nodule zone at the base of the Robbins shale (lower Virgilian, Upper Pennsylvanian) in Douglas County, Kansas. The nodules formed in shallow marine basins or bays which are inferred to have been characterized...
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