Report on airborne radioactivity surveys and the uranium deposits in the Red River region of Texas and Oklahoma (open access)

Report on airborne radioactivity surveys and the uranium deposits in the Red River region of Texas and Oklahoma

The U. S. Atomic Energy Commission conducted an airborne radioactivity survey of the Red River region of Texas and Oklahoma beginning in December 1955 and ending in May 1956. All or parts of Archer, Clay, and Montague Counties in northern Texas and Carter, Cotton, Jefferson, and Stephens Counties in southern Oklahoma were surveyed. Particular attention was paid to those areas where exposures are found of red beds of the Permian Wichita Group. Field examinations were conducted of anomalies discovered by airborne reconnaissance as well as those reported by private individuals. Forty localities were examined, the majority in sandstones, siltstones, or conglomerates. Uranium and copper minerals were identified at several localities. Ferruginous staining, bleaching of the sandstone color, calcium carbonate cement, and carbonized plant remains are common to the deposits
Date: November 1973
Creator: Blair, Robert G.; Stehle, Frederick T. & Levich, Robert A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
770MWe Central Station Power Plants Investment Cost Study: Volume 5, High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor Plant (open access)

770MWe Central Station Power Plants Investment Cost Study: Volume 5, High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor Plant

From introduction and summary: This report is the latest in a series of investment cost studies performed for the AEC covering detailed cost and unit quantities.
Date: December 1973
Creator: United Engineers & Constructors, inc.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Potential Radiological Implications of Nuclear Facilities in the Upper Mississippi River Basin in the Year 2000: The Year 2000 Study (open access)

The Potential Radiological Implications of Nuclear Facilities in the Upper Mississippi River Basin in the Year 2000: The Year 2000 Study

From introduction: This study considered the region comprising the Upper Mississippi and Lower Missouri River basins and to assess the contributions to the radiation potentially received by the populace from airborne radionuclides originating in adjacent areas, an "air envelope" zone, some 200 miles wide.
Date: January 1973
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library