AFTER careful investigation the writer stands ready to announce his belief in the occurrence of human remains in the loess of this state, and for this primitive type he has proposed the name Nebraska loess man. Such importance attaches to the discovery as to warrant a paper devoted to the geological facts connected therewith
During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual ow...
The speaker commented on the common discrepancies in the use of the name loess, which are due to t...
THE PROBLEM OF OUR SOILS AND SOIL MOISTURE. The soil survey of the state, which was begun by the aut...
AFTER careful investigation the writer stands ready to announce his belief in the occurrence of huma...
About ten miles north of Omaha, or three miles north of Florence, Nebraska, on a hill weathered out ...
While exploring Adair County in the interest of the Iowa State Geological Survey, the writer made so...
The literature concerning the Pleistocene deposits of Iowa does not mention the presence of a loess ...
Reports on the antiquity of man in Europe and on both the American continents, contain frequent refe...
There has been much discussion recently relative to the geologic age of Yuma and Folsom artifacts. T...
Loess is one of the most extensive surficial geologic deposits in midcontinental North America, part...
One cannot work in the Iowan Drift area and in adjacent areas of older drift without confronting the...
Nebraska has long been a collecting ground famous for its fossil mammals, but as yet no dinosaurian ...
During the past four years the Nebraska State Museum, under the directorship of Dr. Erwin Hinckley B...
Under the auspices of the State Board of Agriculture the Geologist of the Board undertook, in 1892, ...
It is exceedingly unfortunate and disturbing that the loess deposits of our state should ever have b...
During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual ow...
The speaker commented on the common discrepancies in the use of the name loess, which are due to t...
THE PROBLEM OF OUR SOILS AND SOIL MOISTURE. The soil survey of the state, which was begun by the aut...
AFTER careful investigation the writer stands ready to announce his belief in the occurrence of huma...
About ten miles north of Omaha, or three miles north of Florence, Nebraska, on a hill weathered out ...
While exploring Adair County in the interest of the Iowa State Geological Survey, the writer made so...
The literature concerning the Pleistocene deposits of Iowa does not mention the presence of a loess ...
Reports on the antiquity of man in Europe and on both the American continents, contain frequent refe...
There has been much discussion recently relative to the geologic age of Yuma and Folsom artifacts. T...
Loess is one of the most extensive surficial geologic deposits in midcontinental North America, part...
One cannot work in the Iowan Drift area and in adjacent areas of older drift without confronting the...
Nebraska has long been a collecting ground famous for its fossil mammals, but as yet no dinosaurian ...
During the past four years the Nebraska State Museum, under the directorship of Dr. Erwin Hinckley B...
Under the auspices of the State Board of Agriculture the Geologist of the Board undertook, in 1892, ...
It is exceedingly unfortunate and disturbing that the loess deposits of our state should ever have b...
During the season of 1914, field work in the fossil regions was pushed less vigorously than usual ow...
The speaker commented on the common discrepancies in the use of the name loess, which are due to t...
THE PROBLEM OF OUR SOILS AND SOIL MOISTURE. The soil survey of the state, which was begun by the aut...