-
Erosion Hazard Areas: An Alternative for Shore Management
Open-file report; contains unpublished data that has not yet been peer-reviewed. -
Geology of Wisconsin - Outcrop Descriptions
These descriptions illustrate various geologic formations, features, and characteristics. Individual descriptions are one to ten pages long, and include a map with specific location, a description of geologic features, and a discussion of the geologic significance.-
Adams County: Upper Wisconsin Dells (T14N R6E Sec28)
Report: 3 p.
-
Adams County: Friendship Mound (T17N R6E Sec5)
Report: 2 p.
-
Adams County: Hamilton Mound (T20N R6E Sec36)
Report: 4 p.
-
Ashland County: Mt. Whittelsey (T44N R2W Sec9A)
Report: 3 p.
-
Ashland County: Mellen Gabbro (T45N R2W Sec30)
Report: 3 p.
-
Ashland County: Mellen Granite (T45N R2W Sec31)
Report: 3 p.
-
Ashland County: White River (T46N R4W Sec6)
Report: 2 p.
-
Bayfield County: South Fish Creek (T47N R5W Sec20)
Report: 2 p.
- 123 more...
-
-
Ground-Water Resources and Geology of Columbia County, Wisconsin
-
Water-Table Map of Columbia County, Wisconsin, 1974 [plate 1]
1978
Map: 24 in x 18 in, scale 1:24,000
-
Effects of Irrigation on Water Quality in the Sand Plain of Central Wisconsin
-
Water-Table Maps of the Kellner, Meehan, and Bancroft Subareas, Wisconsin [plate 1]
1978
Map: 32.5 in x 24 in, scale 1:24,000
-
Lithostratigraphy, Petrology, and Sedimentology of Late Cambrian--Early Ordovician Rocks near Madison, Wisconsin
Prepared for 8th Annual Meeting, Great Lakes Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists. -
Precambrian Inliers in South-Central Wisconsin
Companion volume to Geoscience Wisconsin, vol. 2. Prepared for 24th Annual Meeting, Institute on Lake Superior Geology. -
Upper Mississippi Valley Base-Metal District
Companion volume to Information Circular 16 (third edition). Prepared for 24th Annual Meeting, Institute on Lake Superior Geology. -
Wisconsin Lakes Levels--Their Ups and Downs
This booklet examines lake-level fluctuations by lake type for 28 Wisconsin lakes. Records span a period of 20 years or longer.