1914
DOI: 10.3133/pp82
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The geology of Long Island, New York

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Cited by 99 publications
(107 citation statements)
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“…These deposits overlie a southward sloping surface of Precambrian and (or) Paleozoic-aged crystalline bedrock. The geology and hydrology of Long Island are discussed in detail in many reports, for example, Veatch and others (1906), Fuller (1914), Suter and others (1949), Cohen and others (1968), Jensen and Soren (1974), Soren and Simmons (1987), and Smolensky and others (1989).…”
Section: Hydrogeologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These deposits overlie a southward sloping surface of Precambrian and (or) Paleozoic-aged crystalline bedrock. The geology and hydrology of Long Island are discussed in detail in many reports, for example, Veatch and others (1906), Fuller (1914), Suter and others (1949), Cohen and others (1968), Jensen and Soren (1974), Soren and Simmons (1987), and Smolensky and others (1989).…”
Section: Hydrogeologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Values for silt and clay varied between 1 and 40 percent (Tanski 1981). Finer sediment quantities typically increased moving from west to east along the north shore coast (Fuller 1914;Tanski 1981). Davies (1972) presents a stepwise description of bluff erosion along the north shore of Long Island.…”
Section: Sediment Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fuller (1914) prepared a more detailed geologic report. An extensive compilation of well records and a detailed description of the subsurface geology of Long Island are given in a report by Suter, deLaguna, and Perlmutter (1949).…”
Section: Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%