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Articles 26671 - 26700 of 26829

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

A Geographic Interpretation Of Some Of The Factors Effective In The Location And Development Of Lincoln, Nebraska., Ruth Mcdill May 1925

A Geographic Interpretation Of Some Of The Factors Effective In The Location And Development Of Lincoln, Nebraska., Ruth Mcdill

School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

No abstract provided.


Prosthennops Xiphodonticus, Sp. Nov. A New Fossil Peccary From Nebraska, Erwin H. Barbour Apr 1925

Prosthennops Xiphodonticus, Sp. Nov. A New Fossil Peccary From Nebraska, Erwin H. Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

During the field season of 1915, while collecting, a mile or two west of Valentine, Cherry County, Nebraska, Messrs. A. C. Whitford and J. B. Burnett secured for the Morrill-Maiben Palaeontological Collections, The Nebraska State Museum, The University of Nebraska, a finely preserved jaw of a small fossil hog, or peccary, belonging to the genus Frosthennops, accessioned No. 85-11-8-15B. & W.

The mandible under consideration was preserved in fine sand and is without blemish save that the condyle and coronoid are wanting. The dentition is perfect. In allusion to the sword-like tusks, which are unduly large, the species name xiphodonticus …


An American Fossil Giraffe, W. D. Matthew, E. H. Barbour Apr 1925

An American Fossil Giraffe, W. D. Matthew, E. H. Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

A fragment of the lower jaw of a large fossil mammal with two well-worn teeth was dug up in June 1918, at a depth of 20 feet, while digging a cess pool at Bradshaw, York County, Nebraska. This unique specimen, accessioned 7-7-18, was brought to the Nebraska State Museum by A. Archie Dorsey, and was donated by C. B. Palmet, both of Bradshaw. It undoubtedly occurred in loess, which is thickly as well. as extensively developed in this region. It is a ruminant jaw, the teeth preserved being P4 and m1. The characteristic pattern of the premolar excludes reference to …


Notes On Nebraska Fulgurites, Erwin Hinckley Barbour Jan 1925

Notes On Nebraska Fulgurites, Erwin Hinckley Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

Some six or eight years ago the writer contemplated a study of Nebraska fulgurites, both in the field and in the laboratory. In the meantime however, it proves to be superfluous for, after supplying Mr. A. E. Anderson, of the American Museum of Natural History, with certain material and data he proceeded in a masterful way on a technical inquiry, and it is with pleasure that, although delayed in publication, his findings follow in Bulletin 7 of the Nebraska State Museum. The present paper will deal as briefly as possible with the mode of occurrence and gross structure.


Sand Fulgurites From Nebraska Their Structure And Formative Factors, Abram E. Anderson Jan 1925

Sand Fulgurites From Nebraska Their Structure And Formative Factors, Abram E. Anderson

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

So much has been written during the past century on the origin, structure and occurrence of fulgurites, or lightning tubes, found in many parts of the world that it would seem as though little remains to be added to the literature on the subject; but the discovery of a considerable number of unusually large and complete specimens in Holt and Stanton Counties, Nebraska, which exhibit remarkable definition of the particular features that have occasioned so much controversy regarding their formative processes, has added an important type to the representatives of this phenomenon and afforded clearer interpretation of the origin of …


Skeletal Parts Of The Columbian Mammoth Elephas Maibeni, Sp. Nov., Erwin Hinckley Barbour Jan 1925

Skeletal Parts Of The Columbian Mammoth Elephas Maibeni, Sp. Nov., Erwin Hinckley Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

The skeletal parts of Elephas columbi are said to be unknown, although teeth, jaws, and skulls are common enough. Columbi is a mammoth of southern adaptation, hence its parts are found from Nebraska southward. Elephas columbi occurs abundantly throughout the State and many examples are preserved in the Nebraska State Museum, as will be seen in an accompanying list.


Tetrabelodon Abell, Sp. Nov., Erwin Hinckley Barbour Jan 1925

Tetrabelodon Abell, Sp. Nov., Erwin Hinckley Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

Brown County, Nebraska, which has been so prolific of long-jawed mastodons, has yielded another form which seems to be new and which may throw light on certain small tusks that occur where Tetrabelodon bones abound. Heretofore, we have considered these to be embryonic, but they show apparent wear, and in other respects they are enigmatic, and at best, atypical. Tetrabelodon tusks proper, however young, are typical, and are obviously tusks in miniature. The tusks in doubt are of varying lengths and about the diameter of one's thumb, but taper backwards, are worn to a bluntly oblique point, and are slightly …


Sand Fulgurites From Nebraska Their Structure And Formative Factors, Abram E. Anderson Jan 1925

Sand Fulgurites From Nebraska Their Structure And Formative Factors, Abram E. Anderson

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

So much has been written during the past century on the origin, structure and occurrence of fulgurites, or lightning tubes, found in many parts of the world that it would seem as though little remains to be added to the literature on the subject; but the discovery of a considerable number of unusually large and complete specimens in Holt and Stanton Counties, Nebraska, which exhibit remarkable definition of the particular features that have occasioned so much controversy regarding their formative processes, has added an important type to the representatives of this phenomenon and afforded clearer interpretation of the origin of …


An American Fossil Giraffe Giraffa Nebrascensis, Sp. Nov., W. D. Matthew, E. H. Barbour Jan 1925

An American Fossil Giraffe Giraffa Nebrascensis, Sp. Nov., W. D. Matthew, E. H. Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

A fragment of the lower jaw of a large fossil mammal with two well-worn teeth was dug up in June 1918, at a depth of 20 feet, while digging a cess pool at Bradshaw, York County, Nebraska.


Elephas Scotti A New Primitive Mammoth From Nebraska, Erwin Hinckley Barbour Jan 1925

Elephas Scotti A New Primitive Mammoth From Nebraska, Erwin Hinckley Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

On February 18,1922, the mandible of an unusually primitive mammoth was secured for the palaeontological collections of Mr. Hector Maiben by Mr. E. T. Engle. The specimen was found in Aftonian gravel on the farm of Mr. E. J. Hartman, five miles south of Staplehurst, Seward County, Nebraska. It is numbered 18-2-22 in the accession book of the Nebraska State' Museum.


Elephas Scotti A New Primitive Mammoth From Nebraska, Erwin Hinckley Barbour Jan 1925

Elephas Scotti A New Primitive Mammoth From Nebraska, Erwin Hinckley Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

On February 18,1922, the mandible of an unusually primitive mammoth was secured for the palaeontological collections of Mr. Hector Maiben by Mr. E. T. Engle. The specimen was found in Aftonian gravel on the farm of Mr. E. J. Hartman, five miles south of Staplehurst, Seward County, Nebraska. It is numbered 18-2-22 in the accession book of the Nebraska State' Museum.


Tragedy Of Sand Cave, Department Of Library Special Collections Jan 1925

Tragedy Of Sand Cave, Department Of Library Special Collections

Research Collections

No abstract provided.


Hackberry Conglomerate A New Nebraska Rock, Erwin Hinckey Barbour Jan 1925

Hackberry Conglomerate A New Nebraska Rock, Erwin Hinckey Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

In the cabinets of the Nebraska State Museum are several excellent rock specimens, which at first sight pass for pisolite, which they simulate. Scrutiny shows that they are hackberry seeds in sand, cemented by lime and clay into a firm, compact rock. The term hackberry conglomerate seems apropos.


Manganese Fulgurites, Harold J. Cook Jan 1925

Manganese Fulgurites, Harold J. Cook

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

During August, 1924, while doing reconnaisance work near the head of Chugwater Creek, Wyoming, on the ranch of Mr. J. L. Jordon, the writer's attention was called to some unusual and interesting specimens found in a limited area, perhaps an acre or so, on the slope of the small butte flanking the Chugwater Valley. The hills of the region are of Tertiary age, the particular spot under consideration being Oligocene, the Brule stage, or Oreodon beds.


Nebraska Beautiful, G. E. Condra Jan 1925

Nebraska Beautiful, G. E. Condra

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


A Preliminary Report On The Nebraska State Museum, Erwin H. Barbour Jan 1924

A Preliminary Report On The Nebraska State Museum, Erwin H. Barbour

Bulletin of the University of Nebraska State Museum

The Nebraska State Museum has been established a sufficient number of years to make it widely known throughout the state, both by reputation and by personal visits. Incident to a growing clientele and an expanding correspondence, it is expedient that a concise circular letter be issued in bulletin form. Such a pamphlet can be promptly forwarded to inquirers and will offer obvious advantages over individual replies.


A Study Of The Vegetation Of Northeastern Arizona, Herbert Christian Hanson Jan 1924

A Study Of The Vegetation Of Northeastern Arizona, Herbert Christian Hanson

Papers from the University Studies series (University of Nebraska)

The State of Arizona is marked by a great series of cliffs that extend from the mouth of the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River in the northwestern part of the state southeastward into New Mexico. This line of cliffs, rising 1000 to 4000 feet above the desert plains forms the southwestern and southern boundary of the great physiographic province called the Colorado Plateaus. It is roughly circular and includes northeastern Arizona, northwestern New Mexico, western Colorado, and a large part of Utah. This province is subdivided by a number of deep canyons and high cliffs into numerous plateaus. The …


Nebraska Resources And Industries 1923 Jan 1923

Nebraska Resources And Industries 1923

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


Agate Anticline, Sioux County, Nebraska, E. F. Schramm, H. J. Cook Jul 1921

Agate Anticline, Sioux County, Nebraska, E. F. Schramm, H. J. Cook

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


The Diatoms (Bacillarioideae) Of Nebraska, Clarence J. Elmore Jan 1921

The Diatoms (Bacillarioideae) Of Nebraska, Clarence J. Elmore

Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

Class BACILLARIOIDEAE
One-celled aquatic plants living in filaments, or more commonly broken into single cells ; free, attached to the substratum, epiphytic on other plants, or enclosed in gelatinous tubes ; cell wall of cellulose infiltrated with silica; the wall of each cell (frustule) consisting of two plates (valves) which form the ends of the cell and are connected by two or more girdles, the one fitting outside the other like the cover of a box. Protoplasm parietal and forming a large mass in the center of the cell in which the nucleus is located and which separates the central …


Nebraska's Resources And Industries 1920 Jan 1920

Nebraska's Resources And Industries 1920

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


The Soil Resources Of Nebraska, G. E. Condra Jan 1920

The Soil Resources Of Nebraska, G. E. Condra

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


Topographic Regions Of Nebraska, G. E. Condra Jan 1920

Topographic Regions Of Nebraska, G. E. Condra

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


Classification Of Springs, Kirk Bryan Jan 1919

Classification Of Springs, Kirk Bryan

United States Geological Survey: Staff Publications

Among the common phenomena of nature, springs are notable because of their high usefulness. Since the earliest times the homes of men have clustered around them. In arid regions their number and size may limit the population. In many humid regions springs are so numerous and similar that distinctions between them are not recognized, yet they may be caused by so many principal and minor factors or by so many combinations of these factors as to make the origin of any one spring exceedingly complex or obscure. An interesting account of the many erroneous notions held by the ancients regarding …


Blue Sky Vs. Square Dealing In Land And Oil Business, G. E. Condra Jan 1919

Blue Sky Vs. Square Dealing In Land And Oil Business, G. E. Condra

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


Road Materials Of Nebraska, Part 3, Soil And Subsoil, G. E. Condra Jan 1919

Road Materials Of Nebraska, Part 3, Soil And Subsoil, G. E. Condra

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


Nebraska's Game Resources And Their Conservation, Robert H. Wolcott, Frank H. Shoemaker Jan 1919

Nebraska's Game Resources And Their Conservation, Robert H. Wolcott, Frank H. Shoemaker

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


Soils Of Nebraska As Road Materials-Naming, Routing, Marking Of Nebraska Highways, G. E. Condra Jan 1919

Soils Of Nebraska As Road Materials-Naming, Routing, Marking Of Nebraska Highways, G. E. Condra

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


Conservation Survey Of Nemaha County, Nebraska, G. E. Condra Jan 1918

Conservation Survey Of Nemaha County, Nebraska, G. E. Condra

Conservation and Survey Division

No abstract provided.


The Potash Industry Of Nebraska, George E. Condra Jan 1917

The Potash Industry Of Nebraska, George E. Condra

George E. Condra Publications

No abstract provided.