BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TENNESSEE GEOLOGY. 59 



O. 



Omberg (J. A.) Jr. 



Artesian water supplies. 



Jour. Memphis Eng. Soc., vol. 2, pp. 212-220, 1902. 



Omberg (J. A.) Jr. 



See Hider (Arthur), et al. 



O'Neal (John S.). 



Phosphate rock in the South. 



Eng. Assn. of the South, Trans'., vol. 9, pp. 51-61, 1898. 



Ormsbee (J. J.). 



Some notes on mining operations in the Sewanee coal seam, Tennessee. 

 Eng. Assn. of the South, Pub. No. 4, pp. 5-12, 1891. 



Osgood (Samuel W.). 



Zinc mining in Tennessee. 



Tenn. Geol. Surv., Bull. No. 2, extract G, pp. 17, 1910. 



Overman (L. Cooper). 



Improvement of the Tennessee River above Chattanooga. 



Chief of Eng. Kept., 1871, pp. 502-507. 



Owen (D. D.). 



1. On the geology of the Western States of North America. 



Geol. Soc. Quart. Jour., vol. 2, pp. 433-437, plate (with a geological chart 



of the Ohio Valley), 1846. 

 The map republished by Byrem Lawrence, 1843, "a geological map of 



the western United States." 



2. On the geology of the Western States (Abstract). 



Am. Jour. Sci., vol. 45, pp. 151-152, 163-165, 1843. 

 Read to Am. Assoc. Geol. 



Abstract by R. I. Murchison, British Assoc., Report, vol. 12, Trans., pp. 

 44-45, (i/ 2 p.), 1848. 



Owen (Richard). 



Report of a geological examination made on certain lands and mines in 

 the counties of Haywood, Madison, Buncombe, Jackson and Macon, 

 North Carolina, and in Cocke County, Tennessee. 

 19 pp., SOO, Indianapolis, 1869. 



P. ' 



Page (L. W.). 



1. Progress reports of experiments with dust preventatives. 



Further report on experiments made at Jackson, Tenn., in 1905, with 

 tars and oils. V. S. Dept. Agr., Office of Public Roads, Circular No. 



89, p. 25. 



2. Tar and oil for road improvements. 



Report of progress of experiments at Jackson, Tenn., 8 pp., 1906. (Out 

 of print.) 



2. Progress reports of experiments in dust prevention, road preservation 

 and road construction. 



Further report on experiments made at Jackson, Tenn.. in 1905, with 

 tars and oils. U. S. Dept. Agr., Office of Public Roads, Circular No. 



90, p. 23. 



