Results 211 to 220 of about 102,567 (254)

San Joaquin Valley

AAPG Bulletin, 1951
Abstract The San Joaquin Valley lies between the Sierra Nevada Mountains and the Coast Ranges between North Latitudes 34° 54′ and 37° 50′ and West Longitudes 118° 36′ and 121°31′. It is a large synclinorium approximately 250 miles long and averaging between 50 and 60 miles wide. The main synclinal axis trends northwest and is on the west
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San Joaquin Clay, California

AAPG Bulletin, 1934
The post-Miocene sediments of the San Joaquin Valley, California, attaining a total thickness of nearly 14,000 feet, were deposited under varying conditions of marine, brackish, lacustrine, fluviatile, and subaerial sedimentation. Studies covering the southern end of the valley have demonstrated that these sediments may be divided into three main ...
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San Joaquin Valley: ABSTRACT

AAPG Bulletin, 1950
The San Joaquin Valley sedimentary basin is approximately 250 miles long and averages 50 miles in width, comprising an area of 14,100 square miles. Maximum depth to basement is close to 35,000 feet. Volume of sediments is estimated at 31,000 cubic miles of which about 85 per cent is marine. Acreage productive of oil and gas amounts to 369 square miles,
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The Tomato Queen of San Joaquin

Gastronomica, 2010
The life of Tillie Lewis exemplifies key moments in American food history from the rise of the canning industry to wartime rations to the craze for diet food. Her biography was consciously manipulated and fashioned through the years to make it a quintessential rags-to-riches story.
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Selenium in the San Joaquin Valley

Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, 1986
(1986). Selenium in the San Joaquin Valley. Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development: Vol. 28, No. 6, pp. 6-39.
Kenneth Tanji   +2 more
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