University of Wyoming, Department of Geology
Label
University of Wyoming, Department of Geology
Name
University of Wyoming
Subordinate unit
Department of Geology
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Contributor of16
- Hydrocarbons in thermal areas, northwestern Wyoming, by J.D. Love and John M. Good
- Paleozoic formations in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming, by W. R. Keefer and J. A. Van Lieu; prepared in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Wyoming and the Department of Geology of the University of Wyoming as part of a program of the Department of the Interior for development of the Missouri River basin
- Tertiary geology of the Beaver Rim area, Fremont and Natrona Counties, Wyoming, by Franklyn B. Van Houten
- New stratigraphic subdivisions and redefinition of subdivisions of late Archean and early Proterozoic metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks of the Sierra Madre and Medicine Bow Mountains, southern Wyoming, by Robert S. Houston [and three others]; prepared in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Energy, Wyoming Geological Survey, and Geology Department of the University of Wyoming
- Harebell Formation (Upper Cretaceous) and Pinyon Conglomerate (Uppermost Cretaceous and Paleocene), northwestern Wyoming, by J.D. Love; prepared in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Wyoming and the Department of Geology of the University of Wyoming
- Structural geology of the Wind River Basin, Wyoming, by William R. Keefer; prepared in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Wyoming and the Department of Geology of the University of Wyoming as part of a program of the Department of the Interiro for development of the Missouri River basin
- Geology of the Fort Laramie Area, Platte and Goshen Counties, Wyoming, Laura W. McGrew
- Cenozoic geology of the Granite Mountains area, central Wyoming, by J. D. Love
- Leidy Formation--new name for a Pleistocene glacio-fluviatile-lacustrine sequence in northwestern Wyoming, by J.D. Love; prepared in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Wyoming and the Department of Geology of the University of Wyoming
- Uraniferous phosphatic lake beds of Eocene age in intermontane basins of Wyoming and Utah, by J. D. Love; prepared in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Wyoming and the Department of Geology, University of Wyoming, and partly on behalf of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
- Eocene rocks, fossils, and geologic history, Teton Range, northwestern Wyoming, by J.D. Love, Estella B. Leopold, and D.W. Love; prepared in cooperation with the National Park Service, the Geological Survey of Wyoming, and the Department of Geology of the University of Wyoming
- Eocene, Oligocene, and Miocene rocks and vertebrate fossils at the Emerald Lake locality, 3 miles south of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, by J.D. Love, Malcolm C. McKenna, and Mary R. Dawson
- Geology of the Du Noir area, Fremont County, Wyoming, by William R. Keefer
- Geology of sedimentary rocks in southern Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, by J. D. Love and W. R. Keefer; prepared in cooperation with the National Park Service, the Geological Survey of Wyoming, and the Department of Geology of the University of Wyoming
- Stratigraphy and geologic history of the uppermost Cretaceous, Paleocene, and lower Eocene rocks in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming, by William R. Keefer
- Frontier, Cody, and Mesaverde Formations in the Wind River and southern Bighorn Basins, Wyoming, by William R. Keefer; prepared in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Wyoming and the Department of Geology of the University of Wyoming as part of a program of the Department of the Interior for development of the Missouri River Basin
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