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Articles 7321 - 7340 of 7340
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Balanced Needle Valves For Echo, Gibson, And Coolidge Dams, U.S. Department Of The Interior, Bureau Of Reclamation
Balanced Needle Valves For Echo, Gibson, And Coolidge Dams, U.S. Department Of The Interior, Bureau Of Reclamation
All U.S. Government Documents (Utah Regional Depository)
Invitations for bids, schedule specifications, and drawings for balanced needle valves for Echo, Gibson, and Coolidge Dams.
Echo Dam And Relocated Union Pacific Railroad And Relocated Lincoln Highway Around Echo Reservoir, U.S. Department Of The Interior, Bureau Of Reclamation
Echo Dam And Relocated Union Pacific Railroad And Relocated Lincoln Highway Around Echo Reservoir, U.S. Department Of The Interior, Bureau Of Reclamation
All U.S. Government Documents (Utah Regional Depository)
Specifications, schedules, and drawings from the Salt Lake Basin Project, Utah: Weber River Division. This record contains plans for the relocation of the Union Pacific Railroad and Lincoln Highway and its affect on Echo Dam.
High Pressure Emergency Gates For Echo Dam, U.S. Department Of The Interior, Bureau Of Reclamation
High Pressure Emergency Gates For Echo Dam, U.S. Department Of The Interior, Bureau Of Reclamation
All U.S. Government Documents (Utah Regional Depository)
Invitations for bids, schedule, specifications and drawings of high pressure emergency gates for Echo Dam.
Grazing Lands In Utah, Washington Government Printing Office
Grazing Lands In Utah, Washington Government Printing Office
Elusive Documents
No abstract provided.
Bulletin No. 139 - The Movement Of Soluble Salts With The Soil Moisture, F. S. Harris
Bulletin No. 139 - The Movement Of Soluble Salts With The Soil Moisture, F. S. Harris
UAES Bulletins
In irrigated districts, where excessive quantities of water are used, there is usually an accumulation of alkali salts in the soils of the lower lands. These salts are probably dissolved from the soils through which the percolating waters pass and are carried along until the water comes to the surface and is evaporated, when the salts are deposited as a crust at the surface. Many of the most fertile soils of the arid regions have been ruined by the bringing to the surface of soluble salts in such large quantities that the growth of crops is prohibited. The rapidity with …
Bulletin No. 134 - The Nitric Nitrogen Content In The Country Rock, Robert Stewart, William Peterson
Bulletin No. 134 - The Nitric Nitrogen Content In The Country Rock, Robert Stewart, William Peterson
UAES Bulletins
In many arid sections of Western America there have been reported marked accumulations of nitrates in the cultivated soil. Hilgard,(1) who was the first to observe these accumulations, believed that the nitrates are being formed at the present time by the rapid nitrification of the organic matter contained in the soil. In Colorado there has been considerable trouble with orchards dying; the death of the trees in some cases has been attributed to the excessive accumulations of nitrates in the cultivated soil. These accumulations are due, according to Dr. Headden,(2) to the fixation of atmospheric nitrogen by bacteria now at …
Bulletin No. 122 - The Nature Of The Dry Farm Soils Of Utah, John A. Widtsoe, Robert Stewart
Bulletin No. 122 - The Nature Of The Dry Farm Soils Of Utah, John A. Widtsoe, Robert Stewart
UAES Bulletins
Successful farming in Utah is dependent upon two main factors: First, the economic use of irrigation water upon the lands lying under the irrigation ditch, and second, upon the correct practice of the principles of dry farming upon those lands not susceptible to irrigation. Dry farming in Utah is, therefore, of great importance and it becomes essential to learn something of the nature of the dry farming soils of the State.
Bulletin No. 121 - The Soil Of The Southern Utah Experiment Station, John A. Widtsoe, Robert Stewart
Bulletin No. 121 - The Soil Of The Southern Utah Experiment Station, John A. Widtsoe, Robert Stewart
UAES Bulletins
The soil of the Southern Utah Experiment Farm is a very interesting type: it is highly charged with gypsum and thereby presents a condition unique in reported studies of the soils of America. Gypsiferous soils are characteristic of a large portion of Southern Utah; many of them are derived from shale, others from sandstone, impregnated with gypsum.
Bulletin No. 115 - The Movement Of Water In Irrigated Soils, J. A. Widtsoe, W. W. Mclaughlin
Bulletin No. 115 - The Movement Of Water In Irrigated Soils, J. A. Widtsoe, W. W. Mclaughlin
UAES Bulletins
This bulletin embodies a part of the data secured in the irrigation investigations of this Station. It aims to contribute something to our knowledge of the movement of water in irrigated soils . The science of irrigation can not well be built until the laws involved in the mutual relationships of waters, soils and crops are understood with fair accuracy. Much has been done by numerous investigators, during the last fifty years, to give a clearer comprehension of the movement of soil moisture; but the field experiments have dealt largely with saturated soils, and the laboratory experiments have seldom taken …
Bulletin No. 114 - The Movement Of Nitric Nitrogen In Soil And Its Relation To "Nitrogen Fixation", Robert Stewart, J. E. Greaves
Bulletin No. 114 - The Movement Of Nitric Nitrogen In Soil And Its Relation To "Nitrogen Fixation", Robert Stewart, J. E. Greaves
UAES Bulletins
In the spring of 1903, we commenced at the Utah Experiment Station a series of experiments, the purpose of which was to study the development and movement of nitrates in irrigated soil. The work was so outlined that it should give some very definite results, both as to the influence of water and the plant, upon the nitric nitrogen content of the soil.
Bulletin No. 109 - The Nitrogen And Humus Problem In Dry-Land Farming, Robert Stewart
Bulletin No. 109 - The Nitrogen And Humus Problem In Dry-Land Farming, Robert Stewart
UAES Bulletins
The effect of cultivation and the growth of crops upon the nitrogen and humus content of soils has been studied by various investigators, both in America and Europe. In general, the results of the various investigations indicate that cropping and cultivation are very destructive of the organic. matter and the nitrogen of the surface soil.
Bulletin No. 106 - A Study Of The Production And Movement Of Nitric Nitrogen In An Irrigated Soil, Robert Stewart, J. E. Greaves
Bulletin No. 106 - A Study Of The Production And Movement Of Nitric Nitrogen In An Irrigated Soil, Robert Stewart, J. E. Greaves
UAES Bulletins
The problem of maintaining the nitrogen content in our agricultural soils is one of vital importance to the development of a permanent system of agriculture. Any investigation, therefore, which tends to throw any light on the conditions which are necessary for maintaining the maximum supply of nitrogen in our soils needs no apology for its institution.
Bulletin No. 104 - The Storage Of Winter Precipitation In Soils, John A. Widtsoe
Bulletin No. 104 - The Storage Of Winter Precipitation In Soils, John A. Widtsoe
UAES Bulletins
It has been found that the production of one pound of dry plant substance on soils of average fertility, requires in humid districts not more than five hundred pounds of water, and in arid districts like Utah about seven hundred and fifty pounds. This indicates that the average rainfall of Utah, which is about twelve inches, if properly conserved in the soil, is sufficient to produce annually, without irrigation, from thirty to forty-five bushels of wheat to the acre, or corresponding yields of other crops. The realization of this truth has changed greatly our views of irrigation practices. The beginning …
Bulletin No. 89 - A New Centrifugal Soil Elutriator, P. A. Yoder
Bulletin No. 89 - A New Centrifugal Soil Elutriator, P. A. Yoder
UAES Bulletins
Within recent years much has been done toward determining the agricultural significance of certain physical properties of the soil. The grade of fineness is the most important of these physical properties, in that it determines, to a large extent, other properties. The· mechanical analysis of soils has thus come to be considered of primary importance in soil investigations. Any improvements in the methods or apparatus for mechanical analysis will, therefore, doubtless be welcomed by agricultural investigators. Though this is a very recent line of work, still many devices have been introduced for the separation of soil on the basis of …
Bulletin No. 52 - The Chemical Composition Of Utah Soils (Cache And Sanpete Counties), John A. Widtsoe
Bulletin No. 52 - The Chemical Composition Of Utah Soils (Cache And Sanpete Counties), John A. Widtsoe
UAES Bulletins
The soils of the State [Utah], as found by the Mormon pioneers of 1847, were virgin in the fullest sense of the word. As far as man knows, only a few patches in Southern Utah had ever been cultivated. For untold centuries the atmospheric forces, unhindered by man's intervention, had been allowed to weather and make fit for agricultural purposes the rock fragments that, washed down into the valleys from the mountain ranges, constitute the soils of the State. For a long period, also, long before human tradition begins, there had not been enough water in the Utah valleys to …
Bulletin No. 48 - Alfalfa Or Lucern: Its Chemical Life History, John A. Widtsoe
Bulletin No. 48 - Alfalfa Or Lucern: Its Chemical Life History, John A. Widtsoe
UAES Bulletins
No abstract provided.
Bulletin No. 47 - The Climate Of Utah, James Dryden
Bulletin No. 47 - The Climate Of Utah, James Dryden
UAES Bulletins
In reporting the meteorological observations of the Station for the years 1895 and 1896, it has been thought well to include for purposes of comparison records of temperature and precipitation at several other Utah points, as well as other data of climatological importance. The bringing together of all the known facts of our climate is a work of necessity that has been too long neglected. Observers have been patiently collecting data, some of them for a quarter of a century or more, and of the mass that has been collected very little is known outside of the periodical records of …
Bulletin No. 46 - Earthen Dams, Samuel Fortier
Bulletin No. 46 - Earthen Dams, Samuel Fortier
UAES Bulletins
According to the last census, 92 1/2 per cent of the Utah farms are irrigated. The advancement of agriculture in this State mainly depends upon the water, the available supply of which, in many of the older settled localities of the State, is already wholly utilized during the irrigation period. The future reclamation of new lands in such localities must, therefore, wait on the development of new sources of supply from storage reservoirs, sub-surface supplies, or from a more economical use of the summer flow of the available streams.
From estimates and measurements made by the hydrographers. of the United …
Bulletin No. 38 - Preliminary Report On Seepage Water And The Underflow Of Rivers, Samuel Fortier
Bulletin No. 38 - Preliminary Report On Seepage Water And The Underflow Of Rivers, Samuel Fortier
UAES Bulletins
Into a box holding one cubic foot, or seven and one-half gallons of dry sand, one can usually pour from two to three gallons of water without causing any overflow. If the particles of sand were of the same size and cubical in form, they could be packed into a solid mass; and a cubic foot, instead of weighing about 100 pounds--the average weight of dry quartz sand--would then weigh about 165 pounds. But sand grains are irregular in form, and come in contact with adjacent grains only at particular points, thus enclosing spaces or voids, which in dry sand …
Sixth Annual Report Of The United States Geological Survey Of The Territories, Embracing Portions Of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, And Utah; Being A Report Of Progress Of The Explorations For The Year 1872, F. V. Hayden
All U.S. Government Documents (Utah Regional Depository)
Congress report of geological features and species discover for the territories of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah.