Eastern Mineral Resources Team
Publications and Products
The Mineral
Resources Program External Research Program final reports
can be accessed at http://minerals.usgs.gov/mrerp/reports.html .
Bibliography of Publications by the USGS
Eastern Mineral Resources team, 1996 - 1997
Bibliography of Publications by the USGS
Eastern Mineral Resources team, 1998 - 1999
Bibliography of Publications by the
USGS Eastern Mineral Resources team, 2000 - 2001
Bibliography of Publications by the
USGS Eastern Mineral Resources team, 2002 - 2003
Bibliography of Publications by the
USGS Eastern Mineral Resources team, 2004 - 2005
Bibliography of Publications
by the USGS Eastern Mineral Resources team, 2006 - 2007
On-line publications: Selected publications || Informal
publications || General interest publications ||
Other publications of interest
Selected publications
US
Eastern U.S.
Upper Midwest
Central and Western U.S., and Alaska
International
Other
Informal publications
- The Geologic Story of the Ocoee
River - Cherokee National Forest of southeastern Tennessee
- Frank, Dave, Galloway, John, and Assmus, Ken, 2005, The life cycle of a mineral deposit--A teacher's guide for hands-on mineral education activities: U.S. Geological Survey General Information Product 17 [available online at http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/2005/17/ ].
- Geology of the Ocoee Whitewater
Center, Cherokee National Forest
- Volcanic Fire and
Glacial Ice: Geologic Wonders of the George Washington and Jefferson National
Forests: No. 4 in a series, by US Geological Survey
in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (Forest Service, Southern
Region), 2007
- Glimpses of the Ice Age from I-81
- remnants of the Ice Age on the mountains between Strasburg and Harrisonburg,
Virginia
- The Mountain That Moved
- the largest known landslides in eastern North America and among the largest
in the world, Montgomery and Craig Counties, Virginia
- A Central Appalachian Rock
Band - A rock band that helps explain about the changing earth -- but
not the kind of rock band you might expect. These are the rocks that make
up the Central Appalachian Mountains.
- A Southern Appalachian Rock
Band - This rock band is composed of the rocks that make up the Southern
Appalachian Mountains.
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