DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES
Joe D. Tanner, Commissioner Charles M. Parrish, Ill, Executive Assistant
Office of the Commissioner J. Clayton Fisher, Jr., Director Office of Planning and Research
James R. Wilson, Chief Resource Planning Section
Compiled by J. Steven Storey Resource Planning Section
This work was partially financed under a grant provided by the United States Water Resources Council.
The Department of Natural Resources is an Equal Opportunity employer, and employs without regard to race, color, sex, religion, or national origin.
mot ~L ~r
COMMISSIONER
270 WASHINGTON ST S.W. ATLANTA. GEORGIA 30334
( 404) 656-3500
September 23, 1976
Dear Researcher:
I have the honor to submit herewith a unique reference work entitled Resource Index. This very useful book is a guide to books and articles pertaining to Georgia's natural resources.
I believe it will save thousands of hours of research time and eliminate much duplication of research effort. It should encourage comprehensive approaches to natural resource problems by identifying factors that might otherwise be overlooked.
It is one of the most helpful and valuable of this Department's publications.
Sincerely,
~~ --~~Is2 slonere~
JDT:sss
Enclosure
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1 1 1 1
1 1 1 1
1 1 1 1
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1
INTRODUCTION
This book is designed to assist researchers of three types: (1) those who know virtually nothing about Georgia's natural resources; (2) those who know a great deal about one or two resource areas; and (3) those who know a little about all or most resource areas. It is anticipated that those who know a great deal about everything can fend for themselves.
The scope is therefore wide. Included are not only geology, wildlife, forestry, and other basic resource areas
but also energy, land use, population growth, and other subjects closely related to natural resources. Every subject
that could reasonably be included was included. This broadening of coverage, however, brought a proportional
decrease in potential depth, or detail, within the individual categories since time and manpower were fixed. In
the trade-off between scope and depth, scope "won", but an effort was made to have both.
Some general rules relative to scope and detail were formulated:
1.
Works pertaining exclusively or chiefly to other states were not included.
2.
Works of national or international scope not having specific information on Georgia were not
included.
3.
General works such as textbooks were not included.
4.
Works of probable interest only to specialists were not included.
5.
Legal works, editorials, and newspaper stories were not included.
6.
Abstracts were not included.
7.
Unpublished works were not included.
8.
Biographies and autobiographies were not included in the History section.
Most of these rules were violated once or twice. Rule 7 was more frequently overlooked because in several areas unpublished materials provided the only information available.
Following are suggestions to the researcher for the most efficient use of this book:
Scan the Table of Contents to familiarize yourself with the classification system. Notice that several categories are very closely related to others and some could be merged or otherwise rearranged. For example, GAME AND FISH could be a subsection of either ANIMALS or RECREATION.-
Check all categories that are closely related to the one in which you are interested. Cross-references have been avoided because the high degree of interrelatedness among the categories would require an excessively complicated cross-reference system.
Notice that two of the first-level categories are geographical in nature (i.e., COAST and HIGHLANDS) and that geographical classifications are used extensively in the lower-level categories.
Use the author index to check for additional sources in a given subject area. Often two similar works by one author may be placed in different categories because of a difference in emphasis.
In a work of this scope errors of omission are to be expected. All notifications of errors and suggestions for improvement will be appreciated.
v
------
SUBDIVISIONS OF GEORGIA
UsED IN THIS BooK
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CONTENTS
Page 1 1 1
6
12
11
19 19 20 20 21
AGRICULTURE AIR QUALITY ANIMALS
1 MAMMALS 2 BIRDS
General North Georgia Middle and South Georgia Okefenokee Swamp Coastal Georgia Miscellaneous
4 REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS 4 FISH
Freshwater Coastal
5 MOLLUSKS 5 INSECTS 5 MISCELLANEOUS
ARCHAEOLOGY
6 GENERAL 8 ETOWAH MOUNDS 8 OCMULGEE 9 KOLOMOKI 9 COUNTIES 12 BIBLIOGRAPHIES
COAST
12 GENERAL 12 THE ISLANDS 13 THE MARSHES 13 PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT 14 USE OF COASTAL RESOURCES 14 ECOLOGY
General Studies Specific Studies
16 COASTAL WATERS 17 MISCELLANEOUS 17 BIBLIOGRAPHIES
COMMERCIAL FISHERIES
17 GENERAL 18 BLUE CRABS 18 CLAMS 18 OYSTERS 18 SHAD 18 SHRIMP 18 MISCELLANEOUS
ECOLOGY ENDANGERED SPECIES ENERGY ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT FLOODS
21 GENERAL 21 LOCAL STUDIES 22 PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT 22 MISCELLANEOUS
vii
Contents
22 FORESTRY
22 GENERAL 23 APPALACHIAN FORESTS 23 MANAGEMENT ON FEDERAL FORESTS 23 COMMERCIAL FORESTS 24 HARDWOODS 25 INSECTS AND DISEASES 25 PRESCRIBED BURNING 25 CLEARCUTTING 25 HYDROLOGY 25 WILDLIFE 26 URBAN FORESTRY 26 MISCELLANEOUS
26 GAME AND FISH
26 GENERAL 27 HUNTING
General Mammals Birds Wildlife Management Areas
28 FISHING
General Freshwater Saltwater
29 MISCELLANEOUS
29 GEOLOGY
30 GENERAL 30 TOPOGRAPHY 30 MINERALS
General Specific
34 WATER
Supply and Use Chemical Character Reservoirs and Hydropower Ground Water
35 MISCELLANEOUS
Caves Earthquakes Fossil Hunting Other Bibliographies
36 COASTAL PLAIN
General Stratigraphy Structural Features Minerals
GENERAL KAOLIN, BAUXITE, FULLERS EARTH, AND ATTAPULGITE PETROLEUM MISCELLANEOUS Groundwater GENERAL DECLINE OF ARTESIAN PRESSURE MISCELLANEOUS Geophysical Investigations Carolina Bays Coast and Lower Coastal Plain Geologic History Continental Shelf Coastal Sediments GENERAL CONTINENTAL SHELF ESTUARIES AND SALT MARSHES BEACHES AND ESTUARY ENTRANCES
viii
Contents
29 GEOLOGY (continued)
44 HIGHLANDS 44 NORTHWEST GEORGIA 45 PIEDMONT 47 COUNTIES
53 HIGHLANDS
54 HIGHWAYS, AIRPORTS, and INDUSTRIAL SITES
55 HISTORY
55 GENERAL
56 AGRICULTURE 56 ARCHITECTURE 57 CIVIL WAR
General Atlanta Campaign March to the Sea Andrews Raid Records Miscellaneous
57 COAST 58 COLONIAL FRONTIER IN THE SOUTH 58 COLONIAL GEORGIA 59 COVERED BRIDGES 59 DEAD TOWNS 59 EDUCATION 59 FOLKLORE 60 FORTS 60 GAZETTEERS AND GUIDEBOOKS 60 GRIST MILLS 60 HISTORIC PRESERVATION: THE STATE 61 HISTORIC SITES: LISTINGS AND SURVEYS 61 HISTORIC SITES: MISCELLANEOUS 61 INDIANS
General Cherokee Creek
62 MAPS, LAND SURVEYS, AND BOUNDARIES 63 NATURALIST EXPLORERS 63 PLACE NAMES 65 RAILROADS 65 RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD 65 RELIGION 66 REVOLUTIONARY WAR 66 RIVERS AND RIVER TRAVEL 66 ROADS, TRAILS, AND TRAVELLERS 67 SETTLEMENT PATTERNS
67 MISCELLANEOUS 68 BIBLIOGRAPHIES
68 COUNTIES
90 LAND TAXATION
90 LAND USE
91 NATURAL AREAS
91 GENERAL 91 INDIVIDUAL AREAS
92 PESTICIDES
ix
Ccntents
92 PLANTS
93 GENERAL 93 REGIONS
Highlands Northwest Piedmont Coastal Plain
94 ALGAE 94 AQUATIC PLANTS. 94 BRYOPHYTES 95 FERNS 95 FUNGI 95 GARDENING AND LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE 95 GRANITE OUTCROP PLANTS 96 MEDICINAL AND POISONOUS PLANTS AND WILD FOODS 96 ORIGINAL VEGETATION 96 TREES 96 _WEEDS 96 WILDFLOWERS 97 MISCELLANEOUS
97 POPULATION AND GROWTH
97 POPULATION 97 GROWTH
98 RECLAMATION 98 RECREATION
98 GENERAL 98 BICYCLING 99 CANOEING AND RAFTING 99 HIKING 100 LAKES AND RESERVOIRS 100 PARKS 101 TOURISM 101 MISCELLANEOUS
101 REMOTE SENSING 102 SOILS AND SOIL EROSION 103 SOLID WASTE 104 SWAMPS
104 GENERAL 104 CHANNELIZATION 104 ALCOVY SWAMPS 104 OKEFENOKEE
General History Recreation and Education Natural Environments
105 WATER POLLUTION
105 GENERAL 105 SPECIFIC
108 WATER RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT
108 GENERAL 108 SPECIFIC
109 WATER RESOURCE PLANNING
109 GENERAL 109 METROPOLITAN ATLANTA WATER RESOURCES STUDY
110 WATER: MISCELLANEOUS
X
110 WATERWAYS AND PORTS
110 COASTAL 110 INLAND
111 WEATHER
111 GENERAL 111 LOCAL STUDIES 111 HURRICANES 111 TORNADOES 111 MISCELLANEOUS
112 MISCELLANEOUS 112 AIDS TO FURTHER RESEARCH 114 INDEX OF AUTHORS 121 APPENDIX
Contents
xi
AGRICULTURE
0001 Georgia Agricultural Handbook. 4th ed. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. [1969] 1 vol. loose-leaf.
0002 Georgia Agricultural Facts: 1973-1974. Georgia Crop Reporting Service. Athens. October 1975. [iv] + 92 pp.
0003 Georgia Agricultural Facts: 1964-1972. Georgia Crop Reporting Service. Athens, Ga. 1973. [iv] + 152 pp. Farm products data by county and by state as whole. Production distribution maps are included.
0004 Pastures In Georgia. W. H. Sell and J. R. Johnson. Bulletin 573. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. 1972, revised ed. 58 pp.
0005 Range Resources of the South. Revised ed. Clifford E. Lewis et al. Bulletin N.S. 9. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. May 1974. 33 pp.
0006 "Returns from Southern Forest Grazing". H. A. Pearson and L. B. Whitaker. Journal of Range Management 26 (2) : 85-87. March 1973.
0007 The South's Livestock Industry In Perspective. Joseph C. Purcell. Research Bulletin 78. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1970.30 pp.
0008 "Irrigation in the South". Arthur J. Hawley and David W. Bunn. Southeastern Geographer 10 (2): 39-46. November 1970.
0009 Irrigation In the Piedmont. John R. Carreker and Carlisle Cobb, Jr. Technical Bulletin N. S. 29. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. October 1963. 65 pp.
0010 Cotton Irrigation Potential In Georgia. John R. Allison. Research Bulletin 111. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1972.39 pp.
0011 Irrigating Georgia Crops. Willis E. Huston. Bulletin 597. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Extension Service. Athens. 1957. 20 pp.
0012 Front Porch Farmer. Channing Cope. Turner E. Smith & Co. Atlanta. 1949. xxvii + 171 pp. Principles of all-year weatherproof pastures for erosion control and reclamation of worn-
out land using kudzu, Kentucky 31 Fescue, /espfldeza sericea, Coastal Bermuda grass,
and ladino, crimson, and manganese clovers.
0013 "Acres of Catfish". Virgil Adams. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 24, 1969. Pp. 10-11, 17-18. Catfish farming .supplements farmers' incomes in south Georgia. Many of the state's 60,000 farm ponds are being converted to catfish culture pools.
0014 Proceedings of Conference on Commercial Fish Farming, January 27-28, 1969, University of Georgia. University of Georgia, Cooperative Extension Service and Institute of Community and Area Development, sponsors. University of Georgia Center for Continuing Education. Athens. 1969. vi+ 85 pp.
0015 Proceedings of Conference on High Density Fish Culture, February 27, 1975. James W. Andrews. Skidaway institute Publication No. 1. Skidaway Institute of Oceanography. Savan~ah. 1970. [ii] + 86 pp. A conference on intensive culture of catfish.
0016 A Synopsis of Catfish Farming. E. Evan Brown, M. G. La Plante, and L. H. Covey. Research Bulletin 69. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. September 1969. 50 pp.
0017 Pollution Aspects of Catfish Production; Review and Projections. EPA-660-2-74064. James C. Barker, Jerry L. Chesness, and Ralph E. Smith. University of Georgia, Department of Agricultural Engineering. Athens. July 1974. 131 pp. NTIS number: PB244 943.
0018 A Study of the Nutritional, Physiological, and Economical Requirements for the Production of Channel Catfish in an Intensive Running Water Culture. James W. Andrews. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. June 1972. 82 pp. NTIS number: COM72-11160.
0019 An Author and Subject Index to the Publications of the Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station and the Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station, 1888-1946. Mrs. James D. Matthews (comp.) and Jane Oliver (ed.) University of Georgia, University Libraries. Athens. 1948. [ii] + 138 pp. GUide to the technical publications of the two Experiment Stations.
0020 Supplement to "An Author and Subject Index to the Publications of the Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station and the Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station, 18881946" For the Years 1947 - June 1954.. Virginia Michaelis. University of Georgia, University Libraries. Athens. 1956. [iv] + 77 pp.
0021 Bibliography of Published Contributions to Agriculture from the Coastal Plain Ex-
periment Station, 1920 to 1963. Joseph E. Cheek and Mrs. J. L. Stephens. Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station. Tifton, Georgia. April 1964. [iii] + 103 + xi pp.
0022 Index to New Series of Publications of Georgia Agricultural Experiment Stations, 1954-1966. Virginia Michaelis. University of Georgia, University Libraries. 1969. 107 pp. Gu1de to authors and subjects covered in the new series of publications which began in July 1954.
AIR QUALITY
0023 Implementation Plan For Attainment of State and National Ambient Air Standards. Georgia Department of Public Health, Air Quality Control Branch. Atlanta. January 1972. 494 pp.
0024 Updated Summary of State Implementation Plan for Attainment of State and National Ambient Air Standards. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. January 1976. 148 pp. [Limited distribution].
0025 Implementation Plan Review for Georgia as Required by the Energy Supply and Environmental Coordination Act. EPA-450-3-75-042. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards. Research Triangle Park, N. C. April 1975. 24 pp. NTIS number: PB-242 017.
0026 Rules and Regulations for Air Quality Control. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. 1975 [Revised]. 50 pp:
0027 Air Pollution in Georgia: A Cooperative Statewide Survey. Georgia Department of Public Health. Atlanta. 1962. 35 pp.
0028 Atlanta Air Pollutant Emission Inventory. National Air Pollution Control Administration. Raleigh, N.C. October 1969. 57 pp. NTIS number: PB-207 686. Estimates of total em1ssions of each type of pollutant. Delineated with respect to source type, season, and geographical distribution. Concerns the following counties: Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Douglas, Fulton, Gwinnett, Henry.
0029 Report For Consultation on the Metropolitan Atlanta Interstate Air Quality Control Region (Georgia). National Air Pollution Control Administration. Washington, D. C. January 1970. 72 pp. NTIS number: PB-214 957.
0030 ""The Air That Sustains Life Now Threatens It". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 27, 1970. Pp. 8-9, 26-29. The air pollution problem in Atlanta and Georgia is examined. The automobile is found to be the major culprit.
0031 Chattanooga Interstate Air Quality Control Region. National Air Pollution Control Admmistration. Washington, D. C. June 1970. 16 pp. NTIS number: PB-209 717. Information on emissions and plans for abatement.
0032 "Prescribed Burning and Air Quality - Current Research in the South". D. E. Ward and R. C. Lamb. Proceedings Annual Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference 10: 129-140. 1970.
0033 "Old Smokey is Going - A New Promise". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine January 4, 1970. Pp. 8-9, 11. Atlanta promises to bring its two incinerators into compliance with emission standards.
ANIMALS
MAMMALS BIRDS REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS FISH MOLLUSKS INSECTS MISCELLANEOUS
MAMMALS
0034 Mammals of Georgia. Frank B. Golley. University of Georgia Press. Athens, 1962. 218 pp.
1
Animals
0035 "The Land Mammals of Peninsular Florida and the Coast Region of Georgia". Outram Bangs. Proceedings Boston Society of Natural History 28(7) : 157-235. 1898.
0036 ''The Mammals of the Okefinokee Swamp Region of Georgia". Francis Harper. Proceedings Boston Society of Natural History 38(7): [191]-396. 1927.
0037 "Relative Abundance of Twelve Southeastern Mammals in Six Vegetative Types". Sturgis McKeever. American Midland Naturalist 62 : 222-226. 1959.
0038 "The Distribution of Fox Populations in Relation to Vegetation in Southern Georgia.. John E. Wood. David E. Davis, and E. V. Komarek. Ecology 39(1): 160-162. January 1958.
0039 The Wolf in the Southeastern United States: A Bibliography. Beth Fodor. Department of the Interior, Office of Library Services. Washington, D. C. August 1970. iii + 29 pp. NTIS number: PB-194 355.
0040 "Log Cabin Bears". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 2(2) : 14-17. February 1973. Description of a black bear study in Georgia.
0041 "Beneficial Bobcat". Marvin Tye. Georgia Game and Fish 4(9) : 4-6. September 1969. The bobcat (sometimes called wildcat) still inhabits parts of Georgia despite trapping, poisoning and overhunting. The spotted predator is useful in controlling rodents and is not harmful to wild game populations.
0042 "Beneficient Bobcats". T. Craig Martin. Outdoors in Georgia 2(2) : 2-6. February 1973. Myths and facts concerning Georgia's bobcats.
0043 .. Aspects of the Reproductive Biology of the Cottontail Rabbit in Georgia". Michael R. Pelton. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 27(4): 195-199. September 1969.
0044 "Ecology of the Swamp Rabbit in Georgia". Charles E. Lowe. Journal of Mammafogy 39(1) 116-127. 1958.
0045 "Distribution of the Red Squirrel in Georgia". Charles H. Wharton. Journal of Mammalogy 49(1) 153-155. 1968.
0046 "The Squirrel Migration Mystery". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 12, 1969. Pp. 12, 14, 48-49. Why did the gray squirrels of north Georgia begin a migration unseen since the 1800's? Several plausible but uncertain explanations are given.
0047 "Feral Swine in the Southeastern United States". R. P. Hanson and Lars Karstad. Journal of Wildlife Management 23(1): 64-74. January 1959. Preliminary information on the distribution and numbers of wild pigs in the Southeast, especially in the Coastal Plain region of Georgia and South Carolina.
0048 "Our Winter Sleepers". Malcolm Edwards. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 19, 1969. Pp. 8 If. Seven furry animals of Georgia woods spend the winter in sleep. These are bear, raccoon, skunk, woodchuck, chipmunk, bat, and the jumping mouse.
0041 "Ecological Observations on Lasiurine Bats in Georgia". Denny G. Constantine. Journal of Mammalogy 39(1): 64-70. February 1958.
0050 "The Geographic Range of the Historic Bison in the Southeast". Erhard Rostlund. Anna.. of the Aaaoclatlon of American Geographers 50(4) : 395-407. December 1960. Reports of historic, archeologic, and toponymic (place-name) studies jointly support the following: (1) In 1500 A.D. the buffalo had not yet entered the Southeast; (2) A migration in the region began after the middle of the sixteenth century; and (3) The bison range at its maximum extended to the Gulf coast and the Georgia coast.
0051 "Marine Mammals From the Coast of Georgia to Cape Hatteras". David K. Caldwell and Frank B. Galley. Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Science Society 81(1) : 24-32. May 1965.
0052 "Pigmy Sperm Whale in Georgia". A. E. Smalley. Journal of Mammalogy 40(3) : 452. 1959. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
0053 "A Georgia Specimen of the Manatee". Ivan R. Tomkins. Journal of Mammaiogy 39 : 154. 1958.
0054 "The Manatee along the Georgia Coast". Ivan R. Tomkins. Journal of Mammalogy 37 : 288-289. 1956.
BIRDS
General North Georgia Middle and South Georgia Okefenokee Swamp Coastal Georgia Miscellaneous
General
0055 Georgia Birds. Thomas D. Burleigh. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman, Okla.. 1958. 775 pp.
0058 Birds of Georgia: A Preliminary Check-List and Bibliography of Georgia Ornithology. Earl R. Greene, William W. Griffin, Eugene P. Odum, Herbert L. Stoddard, and Ivan R. Tomkins. Occasional Publication No. 2. Georgia Ornithological Society. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1945. 111 pp.
0057 Pocket List of Georgia Birds. Ivan R. Tomkins. Georgia Ornithological Society. Atlanta. 1960. 57 pp.
0058 Pocket Check-List, Georgia Birds. J. Fred Denton and Milton Hopkins, Jr. [Revision of 1st edition by Ivan R. Tompkins, April 1960]. Georgia Ornithological Society. N.p. January 1969. 57 pp.
0051 Some Helptul Georgia Birds. Georgia State Board of Game and Fish. Atlanta. 1928. 55 pp. Guide to study of common Georgia birds.
0080 "Folk Names of Georgia Birds". W. L. McAfee. Oriole 20(1) : 1-14. March 1955.
0011 "Comments on the Distribution of Certain Georgia Birds". Henry M. Stevenson. Oriole 13(4) : 32-33. October 1948.
0012 The Winter Distribution of Land Birds In the Southeastern States. Henry M. Stevenson. Doctoral dissertation, 1943, Cornell University.
North Georgia
0013 Birds of the Southern Appalachians. [E. Burnham Chamberlain et aJ.]. USDA Forest
Service, Southern Region. [Atlanta, 1968]. 36 pp. An annotated checklist.
0014 "Summer Birds of the Lake Conasauga - Grassy Mountain Area in Georgia". J. Fred Denton. Oriole 23(3): 26-31. September 1958.
0065 "Late Summer Observations [of Birds] From Rabun County, Georgia". David W. Johnston. Oriole 24(3&4) : 32-36. September- December 1959.
0068 "Checklist of the Birds of the Dalton, Georgia Area with Occurrence Extremes". Anne Hamilton and R. E. Hamilton. Oriole 25(2) : 13-23. July 1960.
0017 "The Summer Birds of Lookout Mountain, Georgia - Alabama". J. Fred Denton. Oriole 18(3) : 25-31. September 1953.
0068 "Additions to the Summer Birds of Lookout Mountain". Henry M. Stevenson. Oriole 22(3) : 25-26. September 1957.
0019 "Birds of Chickamauga Park, Georgia". L. Otley Pindar. Oologlst 43 : 88-93. 1926.
0070 "The Birds of Chickamauga National Military Park at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia". Adele H. West. Oriole 21(2): 13-16. June 1956.
0071 "Breeding Birds of the Rome, Georgia, Area". Harold C. Jones. Orlole12(2): 15-17. April1947.
0072 "Observations and Comments upon Waterfowl Present In Bartow County, Northwest Georgia". George W. Seiple. Oriole 16(4) : 33-38. December 1951.
0073 The Niche Hyperspace Concept and Habitat Selection of Winter Frlnglllldsln Northem Georgia. Herman Henry Shugart, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia. 103 pp.
Middle and South Georgia
0074 Birds of the Atlanta, Georgia Area; Distribution, Migration and Nesting. Earle R. Greene. Bulletin No. 2. Georgia Society of Naturalists. Atlanta. 1933. 46 pp.
0075 "Shorebirds in Man-Made Habitats Near Atlanta". William W. Griffin. Oriole 16(1): 1-5. March 1951. Sewage disposal plants and airports in the Atlanta area have served as habitats for migrating shorebirds. These man-made features exhibit many of the conditions of coastal areas that are attractive to shorebirds.
0078 "Supplemental Notes on Birds of the Athens Area". David W. Johnston. Oriole 19(1) : 1-3. March 1954.
0077 "The Migration and Abundance of Blackbirds, Tanagers, and Fringillids in Richmond County, Georgia". J. Fred Denton. Oriole 31 (4) : 43-46. December 1968.
0078 "Birds at a Middle Georgia Pond". Nathaniel R. Whitney. Oriole 20(3&4) : 29-30. September- December 1955. Table shows species of birds observed during May and June, 1953 at a pond in Houston County.
2
Animals
0079 "Migration of Birds in Ben Hill, Tift, and Irwin Counties, Georgia". Robert A. Norris and Milton N. Hopkins, Jr. Oriole 18(1): 1-9. March 1953. This preliminary list indicates permanent resident species and migratory species with extreme dates of occurrence given for the latter.
0080 "Relative Frequency of Shore and Water Birds at the Tifton Experimental Station Pond, January 1932- March 1934." Robert A. Norris. Oriole 16(1): 5-8. March 1951.
0081 "An Aerial Search for Rookeries in South Central Georgia". Milton N. Hopkins, Jr. and C. William Dopson, Jr. Oriole 32(4) : 39-45. December 1967. All or portions of nine counties (Ben Hill, Coffee, Irwin, Turner, Wilcox, Pulaski, Dodge, Telfair and Wheeler) were searched for rookeries. Four previously unknown rookeries were located and censused.
0082 Ob1ervatlon on the Bird Life of the Middle Savannah Valley, 1890- 1937. Eugene Edmund Murphey. Contributions from the Charleston Museum IX. Charleston, S.C. 1937. vii+ 61 pp.
0083 "Notes on the Birds of Screven County, Georgia". Anne P. Hamilton. Oriole 29(1) : 1-16. March t964.
0084 "Additions to the Birds of Screven County, Georgia". Grace P. Boddiford and Laura R. Boddiford. Oriole 31(1): 1-4. March 1972.
0085 "Bird Life of the Camp Stewart, Georgia, Region". William C. Grimm. Oriole 11 (2) : 27-42. April 1946.
0088 "Notes on the Birdlife at Fort Benning, Georgia". Richard M. Straw. Oriole 12(4) : 41-45. October 1947.
0087 Distribution and Populations of Summer Birds In Southwe1tern Georgia. Robert A. Norris. Occasional Publication No.3, Georgia Ornithological Society. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1951. [iv] + 67 pp.
0088 "Observations of the Bird Life of Southwest Georgia During 1950". Milton Hopkins, Jr. Oriole 16(2): 13-16. June 1951.
0089 "Birds of Thomas County, Georgia". Robert L. Crawford and D. Jack Dozier. Oriole 38 (2&3) : 13-27. June - September 1973.
0090 "The McKinney's Pond Heronry". Eugene P. Odum and Robert L. Humphries. Oriole 19(1): 3-4. March 1954. Notes on a heronry in the northern part of Emanuel County.
0091 "Flocking Together in Fantasy Land". Keit~ Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine July 21, 1974. Pp. 14-16, 18-19, 22. Nobody knows where they came from, but African cattle egrets have taken over a threeacre Carolina bay swamp near Twin City establishing a unique rookery.
0092 "The Cattle Egret in Georgia". J. M. Teal. Oriole 21 : 33. 1956. Reprint in Collected Reprlnll - Volume 2, University of Georgia, Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
0093 "Further Notes on the Cattle Egret in Georgia". J. M. Teal. Oriole 23: 8. 1958. Reprint in Collected Reprints - Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
Okefenokee Swamp
0094 "A Biological Reconnaissance of Okefinokee Swamp; The Birds". Albert H. Wright and Francis Harper. Auk 30(4) : 477-505. October 1913.
0095 Winter Birds of the Okellnokee and Coleraine, A Preliminary Check-Lilt of the Winter Birds of the Interior of Southeastern Georgia. Frederick V. Hebard. Bulletin No. 3. Georgia Society of Naturalists. Atlanta. 1941. 84 pp.
0096 Birds of Okefenokee. Refuge Leaflet 181-R3. U. S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. Washington, D. C. July 1969. Lists 210 species and notes abundance and seasonal occurrence of each.
0097 "Some Nesting Season Observations in the Okefenokee". James S. Jenkins. Oriole 18(3) : 25-31. September 1953.
0098 "Okefenokee Birdlife after the Fires of 1954 and 1955." Frederick V. Hebard. Oriole 22(1) : 1-2. March 1957.
0099 "The Relation of Water Level to Populations of Common Egrets in the Okefenokee Swamp". Eugene Cypert. Oriole 23(1): 9. March 1958.
Coastal Georgia
0100 "Summer Birds of Sapelo Island, Georgia: A Preliminary List". Herbert C. Robert, John M. Teal, and Eugene P. Odum. Oriole 21 (4) : 37-45. December 1956.
0101 "Additions to the Breeding Birds of Sapelo Island". J. M. Teal. Oriole 23: 8. 1958. Reprint in Collected Reprlnll- Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo
Island, Georgia, 1962.
0102 "Birds of Sapelo Island and Vicinity". John M. Teal. Oriole 24(1) : 1-4 and 24(2) : 17-20. March 1959. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
0103 "Additions to the Birds of Sapelo Island and Vicinity" Herbert W. Kale II and Peter A. Hyypio. Oriole 31 : 1-11. 1966. Reprints in Collected Reprint- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
0104 "Birds of the Sea Island, Georgia, Region". Barbara Woodward. Oriole 14(1 &2) : 1-9. January- April 1949.
0105 "Birds of St. Simons". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Joumaland Con1Hiullon Magazine January 12, 1975. Pp. 10-12.
0106 "Bird Observations From Coastal Mcintosh County, Georgia". David W. Johnston and James C. Major. Oriole 15(4) : 37-39. December 1950.
0107 "The Royal Tern Colony of Little Egg Island, Georgia". Herbert W. Kale II, G. W. Seiple, and I. R. Tomkins. Bird-Banding 36(1) : 21-27. January 1965. Reprints in Collected Reprints - Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
0108 The Blrdllle of the Savannah River Delta, Gaviiformu Through Characlriiformu. Ivan R. Tomkins. Occasional Publication No. 4. Georgia Ornithological Society. 1958. 68 pp.
Miscellaneous
0109 "Introduction of Exotic Game Birds in Georgia". Robert A. Norris. Oriole 21(1) : 1-16. March 1956. Attempts to introduce game birds from the Eastern Hemisphere, Central America, and Mexico are examined. Only one has been successful: The chachalaca from Mexico was established as a breeding resident of Sapelo Island.
0110 "The Invaders: Our Unwanted Wildlife". Gib Johnston. Outdooraln Georgia 4(12) : 18-21. December 1975. A look at introduced or "exotic" birds in Georgia such as the starling, the house or "English" sparrow, and the cattle egret.
0111 "Southward Invasion in Georgia". Eugene P. Odum and Thomas D. Burleigh. Auk 63(3): 388-401. July 1946. Discussion of three examples of bird breeding range extension in Georgia. Lists other species that may bear watching in the future.
0112 "Breeding Bird Populations in Relation to Plant Succession on the Piedmont of Georgia". David W. Johnston and Eugene P. Odum. Ecology 37(1): 50-62. January 1956.
0113 "Land Usage and Birds". Milton N. Hopkins. Oriole 23(1): 1-2. March 1958. Land usage changes in the Fitzgerald area have brought about sizeable changes in composition and population of birdlife. The large increase in number of farm ponds and the change from row crops to pasture and tree-farming have been two major factors.
0114 "Breeding Bird Census of Two Pine Forest~ With Special Reference to the Pine Warbler". Allan Roberts. Oriole 28(4) : 63-71. December 1963. Man-made pine forests were compared to natural pine forests as habitat for pine warblers and associated bird species. The behavior of pine warblers in pine forests with and without hard wood undergrowth was studied. It was found that removal of diversity in pine forests brings a decrease in the number of birds.
0115 "Mass Bird Mortality in Georgia, October 1954". David W. Johnston. Oriole 20(2) : 17-26. June 1955. Deaths of migrating birds from collision with buildings and towers as a result of disorientation from powerful lights are studied.
0116 "Those Strange Yellow Birds". Maibelle Dickey Hodgins. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine February 10, 1974. Pp. 32, 34. In winter, special visitors from the North visit Georgia- the beautiful yellow and black evening grosbeak.
0117 A Lifetime With the Bird.: An Omlthologlcal Logbook. Earle R. Greene. Edwards Brothers, Inc. Ann Arbor. 1966 x + 404 pp. Includes accounts of the author's work in the Okefenokee and with the Georgia Society of Naturalists, the Georgia Ornithological Society, and the Atlanta Bird Club.
0118 "Every New Bird is a Thrill". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Joumal and Con1Htutlon Magazine December 24, 1972. Pp. 5, 12-13. Earl Greene, a St. Simons ornithologist, has spotted 662 of North America's approximately 750 bird species, has written ten books and many papers on birds, and is Georgia's senior birdwatcher.
0119 Memolra of a Naturell1t. Herbert L. Stoddard, Sr. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1969. xix + 303 pp. Stoddard is the author of Birds of Georgia: A Preliminary Checkll1t and Bibliography of Georgia Ornithology (Athens, 1945) and the definitive The Bobwhite Quail: 111 Heblll, Pre1ervatlon and Increase (New York, 1931 ). His work in Georgia, Florida and other areas is described.
3
Animals
REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS
0120 Amphlblllne end Replllee of Georgia - A Guide. Bernard S. Martol. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1956. 102 pp.
0121 "The Lizards of Georgia". W. T. Neill. Herpetologlca 4(4) : 153-158. 1948.
0122 "Amphibians and Reptiles of a Fifteen-Acre Tract in Georgia". Wilfred T. Neill. Amerlcen Mlcllend Netudlllt 45(1): 241-244. January 1951. Amphibians and reptiles from a site in Richmond County are listed.
0123 "A Biological Reconnaissance of the Okefenokee Swamp in Georgia. The Reptiles". A. H. Wright, W. D. Funkhouser, and S. C. Bishop. Proceeding. Academy of Netudl Sclenc:H of Phlledelphla 67 : 107-192. 1915.
0124 "Some Observations on the Herpetolauna of Sapelo Island, Georgia". Bernard S. Martol. Herpetologlce 19(1) : 70-72. 1963. Reprint in CoUected Reprtnts - Volume 3, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1964.
0125 "Mysteries of the Loggerheads". John Pennington. Atlanta Joumal end Conatltutlon Magutne August 19, 1973. Pp. 8-9, 14, 16, 18.
University of Georgia researchers are studying the population and nesting habits of the loggerhead sea turtle to lind how the species may be protected. The turtle now nests on Cumberland and Blackbeard Island beaches and other undeveloped a!'d unpolluted beaches on the southeastern coast.
0121 "The Loggerheads of Blackbeard Island". Michael D. Spanel. Defenders of Wildlife News 47(3) : 273 H. 1972.
0127 "Growth of Green and Loggerhead Sea Turtles in Georgia on Natural and Artificial Diets". Robert R. Stickney, David B. White, and Daniel Perlmutter. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 31(1): 37-44. January 1973.
0121 "Mortality of Loggerhead Turtle Eggs From Excessive Rainfall". Robert A. Ragotzkie. Ecology 40(2) : 303-305. April 1959. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, February 1962.
0121 "Endangered Species: The American Alligator". F. Wayne King. Netlonel Parka and Conee"etlon 46(5) : 15-18. May 1972.
0130 "Gator Aid". Ron Odum. Outdoors In Georgia 1(2): 11-15. August 1972. Proper protection and management can save the American alligator, an endangered species. Preservation efforts in Georgia and other southeastern states are briefly summarized.
0131 "The Reluctant Dragons".'Donald G. Schueler. Georgia Review 4(1) : 53-58. Spring 1950. On the cypress swamp's most interesting resident- the alligator.
0132 Llfe-HialorleS of the Froga of Oketenokee Swemp, Georgia Albert Hazen Wright. Macmillan. New York. 1931. xv + 497 pp.
0133 "A Voice From the Pines". Francis Harper. Netural Hlatory 32 (3) : 280-288. MayJune'1932. The pine-woods tree-frog of the Okefenokee Swamp is investigated.
0134 "Georgia's Poisonous Snakes". Aaron Pass. Georgia Geme and Flah 7(6) ;6-9. June 1972. A look at the state's lour varieties: the copperhead, the cottonmouth, the coral snake, and the rattlesnakes (eastern diamondback, pigmy, and timber species).
0135 Georgia Snake Trtbe. Revised ed.. Charles H. Wharton. Georgia State Museum of Science and Industry. Atlanta. 1963. 22 pp. Checklist of Georgia snakes with basic information and drawings lor each species or subspecies.
0138 "Georgia's Snake Tribe". Charles H. Wharton. Georgie Mineral Society Newaletter 2(7) : 27-36. 1949. The first complete listing of Georgia snakes.
0137 "Snakes Alive". Nelle Edwards Smith. Georgie Magazine 10(6) : 24-27. April- May
1967.
Various items of information on Georgia's snakes (especially the poisonous varieties)
are imparted.
'
0138 "Snakes of the Southern Appalachians". John MacGregor. Beckpecker 3(4) : 44-45, 47, 74-75. Spring 1975.
0131 "A Biological Reconnaissance of the Okefenokee Swamp in Georgia. II. Snakes". A. H. Wright and S. C. Bishop. Proceedinga. Academy of Natudl Sclencea of Philadelphia 67 : 139-192. 1915.
0140 "The Food of Some Colubrid Snakes from Fort Benning, Georgia." W. J. Hamilton, Jr. and Joseph A. Pollack. Ecology 37(3) : 519-526. July 1956.
0141 "The Occurrence of Amphibians and. Reptiles in Sell-Water Areas, and a Bibliog-
raphy". W. T. Neill. Bulletin of Martne Science of the Gulf and Certbbean 8(1) : 1-97. 1958.
FISH
Freshwater
0142 "The Freshwater Fishes of Georgia". Michael D. Dahlberg and Donald C. Scott. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 29(1) : 1-64. January 1971.
0143 "Introductions of Freshwater Fishes in Georgia". Michael D. Dahlberg and Donald C. Scott. Bulletin of the Georgie Academy of Science 29(4) : 245-252. September 1971.
0144 A Study of the Flahea of the Southem Piedmont and Coutel Plain. Henry W. Fowler. Monograph No. 7. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Philadelphia, Penn.. 1945. viii + 408 pp + 73 plates.
0145 A Study of the Dlatrlbullon of Flahea In the Heedwaters of Streema In Northam Georgie. James D. Setterfield. Masters thesis, 1961, University of Georgia. 61 pp.
0148 Zoogeographic Studlee on the Freahweter Flah Fauna of Rivers Draining the Southem Appalechlen Region. John Scott Ramsey. Doctoral dissertation, 1965, Tulane University. 135 pp. "The strictly freshwater fish faunas of six river systems of southeastern United States are compared on the basis of average faunal resemblance at the species level. Faunal regions included are the Mississippi Valley (Tennessee River), eastern Gulf drainages (Alabama and Apalachicola rivers), and southern Atlantic slope drainages (Aitamaha, Savannah, and Sentee rivers). The geologic history of each system is reviewed. The species in each drainage are listed and compared to other faunas."
0147 The Dlatrtbutlon ot Flahea In the Central Chettahoochee Rl- Dralnege. Ronald J. Gilbert. Masters thesis, 1969, Auburn University.
0148 The Dlatrtbullon of Flahu In the Dog River Dralnege. Jerry Lawson McCollum. Masters thesis, 1975, West Georgia College. ix +51 pp.
0141 The Dlatrtbutlon of Flahea In the Flint River Drainage, Georgia. Dwight David Martin. Masters thesis, 1973, Auburn University. 195 pp.
0150 Ute Hlatory end Texonomy of the Flint River Racleye Bau (Micropterus coosae Hubba end Belley). Stephen E. Wright. Masters thesis, 1967, University of Georgia. 51 pp.
0151 "New Distribution Records lor Fishes of the Savannah River Basin, South Carolina". H. W. Freeman. Copela 4: 269. 1952.
0152 "An Annotated List of Fishes from the Coosa River System of Alabama [and Georgia]". Herbert T. Boschung, Jr. Amerlcen Midland Naturallat 66(2) : 257-285. October 1961.
0153 Studlee on the Flaheo of the Tallapoou River Syatem In Alabama end Georgia. James D. Williams. Masters thesis, 1965, University of Alabama.
0154 "A Biological Reconnaissance of the Okefenokee Swamp in Georgia: The Fishes". E. L. Palmer and A. H. Wright. Proceeding of the Iowa Academy of Science 27: 353-377. 1920.
0155 "A Study of Fish Movement from the Okefenokee Swamp into the Suwannee River". Daniel R. Holder. In: Proceeding of the T-nty-Fourth Annual Conference, Southeutern Auoclatlon of Game end Flah Commluloners, September 27-30, 1970, Atlanta, Georgia, pp. 591-607.
0156 "Into the Swamp For Baby Bowfin". Keith Coulbourn. Atlente Joumal and Conatltutlon Magazine June 16, 1974. Pp. 10, 12, 14, 28. A rough, mean, ugly fish, this exotic freshwater native is taken from Ocmuigee River floodplains for sale as a pet.
0157 Notu on the Dlatrtbutlon, Relative Abundence, and Growth of Juvenile Anedromoua
Flah In the Altemeha River System, Georgia, with Specific Reference to the Strtped
a - . Larry D. Smith. Contribution Series, No. 1. Georgia Game and Fish Commission,
Sport Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. 1968. 22 pp.
Coastal
0156 Guide to Co_..l Flahea of Georgia end Nurby Slatea. Michael D. Dahlberg. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1975. xviii + 186 pp.
0159 "An Ecological Study of Georgia Coastal Fishes". Michael D. Dahlberg. Flahery Bulletin 70(2) : 323-353. 1972. "Aspects of fish ecology [studied are] (1) distribution of fishes in relation to recognizable habitats, salinity, and temperature, (2) size frequencies and spawning seasons of many abundant species, (3) diversity of fishes in each of nine habitats, and (4) types of life cycles".
0180 "Annual Cycles of Species Occurrence, Abundance, and Diversity in Georgia Estaurine Fish Populations". Michael D. Dahlberg and Eugene P. Odum. Amerlcen Midland Natudllst 83(2) : 382-392. 1970. Reprint in Collected Reprints - Volume 7, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1969.
4
ADi.tnels,
0181 "Frequencies of Abnormalities in Georgia Estuarine Fishes". Michael D. Dahlberg. Tranuctlona olthe American Fllherles Society 99(1) : 95-97. January 1970. The frequency of abnormalities in a fish community within an undisturbed estuary was surveyed to establish a basis for pollution detection.
0182 Fillies Taken During Shrimp Trawling Along the South Atlantic Coaot ollhe United Sleleo, 1831-35. William W. Anderson. Special Scientific Report - Fisheries, No. 570. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. July 1968. iv + 60 pp. Date on relative and seasonal abundance of fishes associated with shrimp on the shrimping grounds. Organized under four basic areas: South Carolina Outside, Georgia Outside, Georgia Inside, and Florida Outside ("Inside" being salt-water rivers, creeks, and sounds and "Outside" being between the shoreline and about 6 nautical miles offshore).
0183 "A Trawl Study of Nearshore Fishes and Invertebrates of the Georgia Coast". H. Dickson Hoese. Contrlbutlono In Marine Science 17 : 63-96. 1973.
0184 Flohes Taken During Commercial Shrimp Flohlngln Georgia' Clooe lnohore Ocean Walen. Clifford J. Knowlton. Contribution Series, No. 21. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Coastal Fisheries Office. Brunswick, Georgia. January 1972. 42 pp. NTIS number: COM-73-10418.
0185 Length-Weight Relatlonohlpolor Several Floheo and lnverlebrateo In Georgia Coaotal Walen wtth Condition Fecton lor Floh Species. Robert A. Stickney. Technical Report Series, No. 72-3. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. April 1972. 23 pp.
0186 Length Relation ol Some Marine Flohes lrom Coaotel Georgia. Sherrell C. Jorgenson and Grant L. Miller. Special Scientific Report- Fisheries, No. 575. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. November 1968. iv + 16 pp.
0167 Seslonal Abundance and Length Frequency DlstrlbuUon of Some Marine Fllheo In Coeotel Georgie. Grant L. Miller and Sherrell C. Jorgenson. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Washington, D.C. 1969. 104 pp. NTIS number: PB-183 550.
0188 "Fat Cycles and Condition Factors of Altamaha River Shads". Richard J. Perkins and Michael D. Dahlberg. Ecology 52(2) : 359-362. Early Spring 1971.
0188 "Observations on Elasmobranchs from Georgia". Michael D. Dahlberg and A. W. Heard Ill. Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 32(1) : 21-25. March 1969. Observations on life histories of several species of sharks and sting rays.
0170 "Young Common Snook on the Coast of Georgia". Thomas L. Linton and William L. Rickards. Quarterly Journal of the Florlde Academy of Science 28(2): 185-189. 1965. Reprint in Collected Reprlnte- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo lslan<;l, Georgia.
0171 "The Occurrence and Food Habits of Two Species of Hake, Urophycis regius and
U. floridanus in Georgia Estuaries". W. B. Sikora, A. W. Heard, and M. D. Dahlberg.
Tranuctlono of the American Fleherles Society 101 : 513-525. 1972.
0172 A Survey of the Aquatic Orgenlom Population of the Savannah and Ogeechee River Eotuarleo and Their Relationship In the Diet of the Striped Beu, Morons saxatilis (Walbeum). Robert Arthur Rees. Masters thesis, 1972, University of Georgia.
0173 The Movemento of Striped Beu In the Lower Savannah River During the Spawning Seeoon. Anthony Wayne Mullis. Masters thesis, 1975, University of Georgia. x + 103 pp.
MOLLUSKS
0174 "Notes on Mollusks Ostrea and Siphonaria from Georgia (U.S.A.)". John N. Kraeuter. Neutlluo 87(3) : 75-77. 1973.
0175 "Freshwater Mollusks of Alabama, Georgia, and Florida from the Escambia to the Suwannee River". William J. Clench and Ruth D. Turner. Bulletin of the Florida State Muoeum, Biological Science 1(3): 98-239. 1956.
0178 "A Brief Field Guide to the Fresh-Water Mussels (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Unionacea) of the Savannah River System". Samuel L. H. Fuller. ASB Bulletin 18(4) : 139-146. October 1971.
0177 "Some Opisthobranchs from Sapelo Island, Georgia, U.S.A." Eveline Marcus and Ernst Marcus. Melecologle 6(1-2) : 199-222. 1967. Reprint in Collected Reprlnll- Volume 8, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
0178 "Certain Mollusks of the Ogeechee River, Georgia". Calvin Goodrich. Nautilus 52: 129-131. 1938.
0178 "The Spiny Shells of the Altamaha". Sam Fuller. Fronllen: A Magazine of Natural Hlotory (Phila.) 37: 14 fl. Summer 1973.
0180 Syotemellco end Zoogeography of the Unloneceen Mollusk of the Coooa River Drainage of Alabama, Georgia, and Tenneuee. John C. Hurd. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, Auburn University. 259 pp.
0181 "Certain Operculates of the Coosa River". Calvin Goodrich. Naullluo 58(1) : 1-10. 1944.
0182 "Pulmonates of the Coosa River". Calvin Goodrich. Nautlluo 58(1): 11-15. 1944.
0183 "Pieuroceridae of the Coosa River Basin". Calvin Goodrich. Naullluo 58 : 40-48. 1944.
0184 "Sphaeriidae of the Coosa River Basin". Calvin Goodrich. Nautlluo 58 : 48-52. 1944.
0185 "The Mollusks of Warm Springs, Georgia". Margaret Teskey. NauUiul 69(2) 69-71. 1955.
0186 "Georgia Sea Shells". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(2) : 7D-76. 1954.
0187 ''The Land Snails of Georgia". Leslie Hubricht. Sterklana 16: 5-10. 1964.
INSECTS
0188 Studlel on Southesotem Aquatic lnoecll. James B. Wallace. University of Georgia, Department of Entomology. Athens. May 1974. 131 pp. NTIS number: PB-232 183.
0189 Butlertllel of Georgie. Lucien Harris, Jr. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1972. xxii + 326 pp. All species known to occur in the state are listed and illustrated. Information regarding distribution, life history, food plants, and habitat is given. Records of locality and date of captures are detailed. Includes a distribution chart that indicates months and regions of occurrence for each species.
0190 The Mooqulloes of the Southeaolern States [Rev. ed.]. W. V. King, G. H. Bradley and T. E. McNeel. Miscellaneous Publication No. 336. U. S. Department of Agriculture. [1944]. 96 pp.
0191 "Flies, Ticks and Redbugs". Gib Johnston, Jr. Ouldoon In Georgie 4(6) : 6-8. June 1975. On some insect and arachnid pests in Georgia including eye gnats, chiggers, ticks, and several varieties of flies.
0192 The Armored Scale lnoecll (Homoptera: Dleopldldee) of Georgia and Their Hooll. Ramona J. Beshear, H. H. Tippins, and James 0. Howell. Research Bulletin 148. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. September 1973. 15 pp. One hundred species are reported from Georgia and other southern states. The minute insects attack fruit and nut trees and woody ornamental plants and pose a threat to commercial forest trees.
0183 "Big Noise of the Locusts". Leonard Foote. Atiante Journal end Conolftutlon Magazine July 7, 1970. Pp. 12-13. The periodical cicada emerges from the ground during the summer of 1970 following its 17-year period underground.
0194 "The Imported Fire Ant in the Southern United States". Howard G. Adkins. Annalo of the Auoclellon of American Geogrephen 60(3) : 578-592. September 1970. In the fifty years since its entry into the United States, the imported fire ant has become a serious economic pest, infesting an estimated 115,360,000 acres in the South. Distribution and spread of the ant and area of quarantine are shown on maps. Control and eradication measures are discussed, including use of the controversial toxin Mirex.
0195 "History of the Imported Fire Ant in the Southeast". Ralph H. Allen, Jr. In: ProceedIng of the Twelfth Annual Conference, Southeeolern Alooclatlon of Game end Floh Commlulonen, October, 19-22, 1959, Louisville, Kentucky, pp. 227-233. Includes bibliography, pages 230-233.
0196 Journal of the Geol'gla Entomological Society. Georgia Entomological Society. Athens, Georgia. Quarterly.
MISCELLANEOUS
0197 Handbook on the Common Marlneloopod Cruotecea of Georgia. Robert J. Menzies and Dirk Frankenberg. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1968. viii+ 93 pp.
0198 "Distribution of Fiddler Crabs in Georgia Salt Marshes". John M. Teal. Ecology 39(2) : 185-193. April 1958.
0199 "Ecology of an Aquatic Isopod, Lirceus fontinalis Rat. Emphasizing Radiation Effects". C. E. Styron and W. D. Burbanck. American Midland Naturallot 78(2) : 389-415. October 1967.
0200 "Ecology of Two Populations of an Aquatic Isopod, Lirceus fontinalis Rat.". C. E. Styron. Ecology 49(4) : 629-636. 1968. Two populations of Lirceus fontinalis Rafinesque in DeKalb County are isolated in separate river drainages and are subject to different environmental stresses. Compariscms are made between the population on Mount Arabia, a granite outcrop in the Altemaha basin, and that of Lullwater Creek, a physiographically young stream within the Apalachicola basin.
0201 "Mortality of Estuarine Animals Due to Cold on the Georgia Coast". Michael D. Dahlberg and Frederick G. Smith. Ecology 51(5): 931-933. 1970.
5
Archaeology
0202 "The Invertebrate Cave Fauna of Georgia". John R. Holsinger and Stewart B. Peck. NSS Bulletin [National Speleological Society] 33(1) : 23-44. January 1971.
0203 "The Distribution and Abundance of the Macrobenthos of Lake Burton, Georgia". J. E. Schindler, Lynn Raulerson and R. W. Miller. BulleUn of the Georgia Ac8clemy of
aca- 29(3): 201-207. June 1971.
"A survey of the macrobenthos in Lake Burton, Georgia, was conducted in August, 1970. Oligochaetes were the dominant macrobenthos with densities up to 20,000/m'. Although the density of oligochaetes was correlated with depth, deposition of organic material may also influence distribution and abundance".
0204 "Pycnogonida From Georgia". John N. Kraeuter. Joumal of Natural H'-tory 7 : 493-498. 1973.
ARCHAEOLOGY
GENERAL ETOWAH MOUNDS OCMULGEE KOLOMOKI COUNTIES BIBLIOGRAPHIES
GENERAL (Chronologically)
0205 Monum1111tal Remains of Qeorgla. Charles C. Jones, Jr. John M. Cooper and Company. Savannah. 1861. Reprinted 1973 by Kraus Reprint Co., Millwood, N.Y. 119 pp. Indian mounds on the Etowah and Oostanaula Rivers and an Indian settlement near Augusta are studied.
0206 "Account of Ancient Mounds in Georgia". M. F. Stephenson. In: Annual Report of the Smllhaontan lnatHutlon For 1870, Washington, D. C., 1871, pp. 380-381. On several mounds including Etowah, Ocmulgee, and Nacoochee.
0207 Antlqultlea of the Southem Indiana, Particularly of the Georgia Trlbeo. Charles C. Jones, Jr. D. Appleton and Company. New York. 1873. xvi + 532 pp. + 30 pis.
0208 "Aboriginal Structures in Georgia". Charles C. Jones, Jr. In: Annual Report of the Smllhaontan lnaUtutlon For 1877, 1878, Washington, D.C., pp. 278-289. On a bird-shaped mound (Rock Eagle Mound) near Eatonton and ancient tumuli on the Savannah and Oconee Rivers.
0209 "Report on the Mound Explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology". Cyrus Thomas. In: Twelfth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology 1800-91, Washington, 1894, 742 pp. Chapter on Georgia, pp. 292-326, includes reports on Etowah and other mounds of Bartow County, Rembert Mounds in Elbert County, Hollywood Mound in Richmond County, and a mound in Habersham County.
0210 Certain Aboriginal Mounda of the Georgia Coat. Clarence B. Moore. Joumal oltha Ac8clemy of Natural Sclencea of Philadelphia (second series) Vol. 11. pp. 4-138. 1897. Reprinted 1897 by P. C. Stockhausen, Philadelphia, 144 pp. + 16 endplates.
0211 "Certain Aboriginal Mounds of the Altamaha River". Clarence B. Moore. Joumal of the Ac8clemy of Natural Scl1111ca1 of Philadelphia (second series) Vol. 11, Part 2. 1898.
0212 "Certain Aboriginal Mounds of the Savannah River". Clarence B. Moore. Joumal of the Academy of Natural Sclencaa of Philadelphia, (second series) Vol. 11, Pt. 2. pp. 167-172. 1898.
0213 "Mounds of the Lower Chattahoochee and Lower Flint Rivers". Clarence B. Moore.
Joumal of the Academy of Natural Sclencea of Philadelphia (second series) Vol. 13, Pt.
3, pp. 426-456. 1907.
0214 "Aboriginal Remains in the Middle Chattahoochee Valley of Alabama and Georgia". Peter A. Brannon. American Anthropologlat 11(2): 186-198. April- June 1909. On archaeological sites in Harris, Muscogee, and Chattahoochee Counties, Georgia and Lee and Russell Counties, Alabama.
0215 "Georgia Archaeology and Georgia History". Walter A. Harris. Proceeding of the Society For Georgia Archaeology 1(1): 10-21. March 1938.
0218 "Time Studies: Pottery and Trees in Georgia". Gordon R. Willey. Procaedlnga of the Society For Georgia Archaeology 1(2) : 15-22. September 1938. Archaeological dating with pottery and tree-ring methods is discussed.
0217 "Georgia Archaeology with Especial Reference to Recent Investigations in the In-
terior and on the Coast". Charles C. Harrold. Georgia Historical Quarterly 23(1) : 55-76. March 1939. An address on the history of and possibilities lor archaeology in Georgia by a president of the Society lor Georgia Archaeology.
0218 "Hunting 500 Years Ago; To Georgia Indians It Was a Business". Charles H. Fairbanks. Regional Revtaw (National Park Service Region I, Richmond) 6(1&2) : 2-6. 1941.
0219 "Early Horizons in the Southeast". William G. Haag. American Antiquity 7 : 209-222, 311-318. 1942.
0220 "A Prehistoric Ceremonial Complex in the Southeastern United States". Antonio J. Waring, Jr. and Preston Holder. American Anlhropologlat 47 : 1-34. 1945. Reprint in The Waring Papera- The Collected Workl of Antonio J. Waring, Jr., Stephen Williams, ed., Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, and University of Georgia Press, Athens, 1965, pp. 9-29.
0221 "An Inquiry into Supposed Mexican Influences on a Prehistoric 'Cult' in the Southern United States". Alex D. Krieger. American Anthropologlat47(4) : 483-515. 1945.
0222 "Recent Trends in Georgia Archeology". Arthur R. Kelly. Georgia Review 1(3) : 347-357. Fall, 1947. A review of archaeological work in Georgia from 1933 to 1947.
0223 "The Ceramic Sequence in the Etowah Drainage, Northwest Georgia". Robert Wauchope. American Antiquity 13(3) : 201-209. January 1948.
0224 "A General Survey of Southeastern Prehistory". Charles H. Fairbanks. In: The Florida Indian and hla Nelghbora, John W. Griffin, ed., Winter Park, Fla., 1949, pp. 55-75.
0225 "Survey of the Lower Flint and Chattahoochee Rivers." A. R. Kelly. Early Georgia 1(1) : 26-33. 1950.
0228 "Early Cultural Horizons in the Southeastern United States". Carl F. Miller. American Antiquity 15(4) : 273-288. 1950.
0227 "Changes in Basis of Subsistence Among Prehistoric Georgia Populations". Arthur R. Kelly. In: Short Contribution to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia, Bulletin No. 56, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1950, pp. 154-160.
0228 "Hunting Petroglyphs in North Georgia". Margaret Perryman. Early Georgia 1(2) : 6-17. 1950.
0229 "The Evolution and Persistence of Ceramic Motifs in Northern Georgia". Robert Wauchope. American Antiquity 16(1) : 16-22. July 1950.
0230 "A Preliminary Segregation of Etowah, Savannah, and Lamar". Charles H. Fairbanks. American Antiquity 16(2) : 142-151. October 1950. The commonly used divisions of later complicated stamped pottery types as found in the South Appalachian Province are Etowah, Savannah and Lamar. These are named lor major archaeological complexes in Bartow, Chatham and Bibb Counties, respectively. The author attempts a partial statement of the resemblances and differences among these three types.
0231 "The Archeology of Eastern Georgia and South Carolina". Joseph R. Caldwell. In: Archeology of the Eutern United States, James B. Griffin, ed., University of Chicago Press, 1952, pp. 312-321.
0232 "Creek and Pre-Creek". Charles H. Fairbanks. In: Archaeology of the Eutem United Statal, James B. Griffin, ed., University of Chicago Press, 1952, pp. 285-300, figs. 154161. Outlines Georgia archaeological periods with emphasis on the historic and prehistoric remains of the Creek Indians.
0233 "Ceramic Development in the South Appalachian Province". William H. Sears. American Antiquity 18(2) : 101-110. October 1952.
0234 "The Pre-History of Georgia". William H. Sears. Georgia Review 6(4) : 397-409. Winter 1952.
0235 "The Protohistoric Creek of Georgia". Charles H. Fairbanks. Southeastern Archaeological Conference Newaletter 3(3) : 21-22. 1953.
0236 "Mid-Coastal Archaic in Georgia". A. R. Kelly. Southern Indian Studies [6) : 14-27. 1954.
0237 "The Old Quartz Industry of Piedmont Georgia and South Carolina". Joseph R. Caldwell. Southam Indian Studies [6] : 37-39. October 1954.
0236 "Archeological Reconnaissance of the Middle Chattahoochee River Valley". David W. Chase. Early Georgia 2(1) : 20-21 + 1 Fig. 1955.
0239 "Unusual Figurine From the Georgia Coast". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. Florida Anlhropologlat 8(3) : 76-81. 1955.
0240 "The European and the Indian; European -Indian Contacts in Georgia and Florida". Hale G. Smith. Florida Anthropological Society Publications, No. 4. Gainesville, Florida. 1956. iv + 150 pp.
6
Archaeology
0241 "Patination and Age Relationship in South Georgia Flint". A. R. Kelly and Vernon J. Hurst. American Antiquity 22(2) : 193-194. October 1956.
0242 Sun Clrc... and Hu11111n Hands, The Southeastern Indians Arland Industries. Emma Lila Fundaburk and Mary Douglass Fundaburk Foreman. Published by Emma Lila Fundaburk. Luverne, Alabama. 1957. 232 p. A pictorial survey of Indian arlifacts found in the Southeastern United States.
0243 Trend and Tradition In the Prehistory of the Eastern United States. Joseph R. Caldwell. Memoirs, No. 88. of the American Anthropological Association. Scientific Papers, Vol. 10 of the Illinois State Museum. 1958. xiv + 88 pp.
0244 "Burial Mounds on the Gulf Coastal Plain". William H. Sears. American Antiquity 23(3) : 274-284. January 1958. Three distinct kinds of burial mounds were built on the Gulf Coastal Plain in the states of Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas. These are the Pottery Deposit type, the Mass Burial type and the Continuous Use type.
0245 "Southern Cult Manifestations on the Georgia Coast". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. American Antiquity 23(4) : 426-430. April 1958. A prehistoric cult on the Georgia coast is examined in relation to southeastern cults previously defined.
0246 "Towards the Estimation of Prehistoric Populations". Edward V. McMichael. Indiana Academy of Science Proceedings 69: 78-82. 1959. A method for estimating prehistoric populations based on the author's archaeological data from the Oliver basin of the Chattahoochee River is explained.
0247 The Anatomy of a Tradition: A Study of Southeastern Stamped Pottery. Edward V. McMichael. Doctoral dissertation, 1960, Indiana University. 244 pp.
0246 "Cherokee Archeology". Joffre L. Coe. In: Bulletin 180, Symposium on Cherokee and Iroquois Culture. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington. 1961. Pp. 53-60. Comment by Charles H. Fairbanks, pp. 61-65.
0249 "Sculptured Monoliths of Georgia". Margaret Perryman. Tenneuee Archaeologist 17(1) : 1-9. Spring 1961. Description and illustrations of three large stones of archaeological interest. The first is a petroglyph-covered monolith in Forsyth County, possibly a sculptured owl effigy. The second, in Fulton County, is known locally as Owl Rock because it resembles that creature. However, no petroglyphic symbols are evident on this massive, upright stone. The third was found in Douglas County near the Chattahoochee River. A carving on its side depicts a human figure with arms upraised.
0250 "Sculptured Monoliths of Georgia - Part 2". Margaret Perryman. Tennessee Archaeologist 18(1): 14-22. Spring 1962. Petroglyphs (rock carvings) of Union, White, and Stephens Counties are described and illustrated. The Union County carvings are at a site known as Track Rock Gap. The Stephens County petroglyphs are in the rear yard of historic Jarrett Manor. The carved stone of White County was removed to the campus of the University of Georgia around 1948.
0251 "Sculptured Monoliths of Georgia - Part 3". Margaret Perryman. Tennessee Archaeologist 18(2) : 75-84. Autumn 1962. Described and illustrated are petroglyphs (rock carvings) from Cherokee County. One, located on the campus of Reinhardt College at Waleska, was transported twelve miles from its original site near Keithsburg. Others remain unmoved at Shoal Creek and at Salacoa. Many petroglyphs have been destroyed and their sites disturbed by people who believe them to be indicators of buried treasure.
0252 "Archaic and Transitional Woodland Cultures in Northeast Georgia". A. R. Kelly. BulleU'n of the Eastem States Archaeological Federation 21 : 13-14. 1962.
0253 "Recent Survey of Transitional Archaic Woodland Sites in the Middle Chattahoochee". David W. Chase. Eastem States Archeological Federation Bulletin 22 : 10-11. 1963.
0254 "Sculptured Monoliths of Georgia - Part 4". Margaret Perryman. Tennessee Archaeologist 19(1) : 13-19. Spring 1963. Petroglyphs at three sites, each in a different county (Union, Barrow, and Carroll) are discussed. The designs are circles and "nut holes". In Barrow County an unusual branched tree design is found. The Union County stone came originally from Track Rock Gap and is almost identical to other stones at that site. Erosion and vandalism have brought deterioration and destruction to all three sites.
0255 "Sculptured Monoliths of Georgia - Part 5". Margaret Perryman. Tennessee Archaeologist 20(1) : 6-10. Spring 1984. Three petroglyphs in Georgia are illustrated and described. One is in Fishers Creek in Murray County and the other two are reported to be near Long Swamp Creek in Pickens County. The latter two have not been located. It is noted that prehistoric stone walls may be found at some petroglyph sites.
0258 "The Southeastern United States". William H. Sears. In: Prehistoric Man In the New World, J.D. Jennings and E. Norbeck, eds., University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1984, pp. 259-287.
0257 "Georgia Petroglyphs". Margaret Perryman. Archaeology 17(1): 54-56. 1964.
0258 The Waring Papers - The Collected Works of Antonio J. Waring, Jr., Stephen Williams, ed. Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge and University of Georgia Press, Athens. [1965). xviii + 345 pp.
Various published and unpublished papers deal with the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex, the archaeology of the Savannah locality, South Atlantic coastal archaeology and other areas of Georgia and southeastern archaeology and ethnography. Several bibliographies are included.
0259 "A History of Georgia Archaeology to World War II". Antonio J. Waring, Jr. In: The Waring Papers, Stephen Williams, ed., Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, and University of Georgia Press, Athens, 1965, pp. 288-299.
0260 An Introduction to American Archaeology, Volume One, North and Middle America. Gordon R. Willey. Prentice-Hall, Inc. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1966. xiv + 526 pp. A recommended starting point for the non-professional. Southeastern U.S. archaeology is well covered.
0261 Archaeological Survey of Northem Georgia. Robert Wauchope. American Antiquity 32(5, Part 2). Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology, No. 21. July 1966. xxxii + 482 pp. + figures 204-258 appended and unpaged.
0262 "Early Formative Cultures in Georgia and Florida". James A. Ford. American Antiquity 31 (6) : 781-799. October 1966.
0263 Indian Cultural Traditions and European Conquest of the Georgia - South Carolina Coastal Plain, 3000 B.C. - 1733 A.D.: A Combined Archaeological and Historical Investigation. Alan Royse Calmes. Doctoral dissertation, 1967, University of South Carolina.
0284 "A Stone Pipe from Georgia". [Margaret Perryman]. Tennessee Archaeologist 23(2): 82-83. Autumn 1967. Description and illustration of a well made stone pipe in the shape of an eagle. The relic was found in 1927 on a Fulton County farm near Camp Creek. This area was once rich in Indian artifacts and features what is locally considered to be an Indian mound.
0265 "Sculptured Monoliths of Georgia". Margaret Perryman. Tennessee Archaeologist 24(1): 1-7. 1968. Three petroglyph-bearing stones are described and illustrated. One is from Cobb County, a second from Muscogee County, and a third from Murray County.
0266 "Archaeology and History of Coastal Georgia". Charles H. Fairbanks. In: Conference on the Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia, October 1968, Sea Island, Georgia, David S. Maney, Frederick C. Marland, and Clifford B. West, eds., University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission, Brunswick, Georgia, pp. 35-45.
0267 "Thorn's Creek Ceramics in the Central Savannah River Locality". David Sutton Phelps. Florida Anthropologist 21 (1) : 17-30. March 1968. A description of the Thorn's Creek ceramic series and a discussion of the temporal and spatial relationships of the Thorn's Creek phase of Southeastern prehistory.
0268 "Hills. Bluffs and a Georgia Clovis Point". Frank Manley. Archaeology 21 (2) :
138-139. April 1968.
On a fluted point found near the Coosawattee River and the possibility that others may lie
on the hills and bluffs overlooking the flood plains. The author suggests that archaeolo-
gists have been looking in the wrong places (the flood plains) for these Palaeo-Indian
artifacts.
0269 "Notes on Indian Artifacts". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Magazine 12(3): 30-31. October- November 1968.
0270 "The Southeast". In: Discovering Man's Past In the Amerlcea, George E. Stuart and GeneS. Stuart, National Geographic Society, Washington, D. C., 1969, pp. 132-155.
0271 Aboriginal Subsistence Technology on the Southeastern Coastal Plain During the Late Prehistoric Period (Volumes I and II). Lewis H. Larson, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1970, University of Mic'higan.
0272 An Archaeological Survey of the State of Georgia: Method and Theory. Frank Theodore Schnell. Masters thesis, 1970, University of Georgia.
0273 The Pisgah Culture and Its Place In the Prehistory of the Southem Appelachlans.
Roy s. Dickens, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1970, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill.
0274 South Appelachlan Mlsslulpplan. Leland Greer Ferguson. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill. Analysis of the development of the South Appalachian Mississippian cultural system.
0275 "A Study of Aboriginal Trade: A Petrographic Analysis of Certain Ceramic Types from Florida and Georgia". Donald L. Crusoe. Florida Anthropologlst24(1) : 31-43. March 1971. On a trading system that extended from the area of Darien, Georgia, down the Atlantic coast to the Miami area.
0276 Aboriginal Stone Constructions In the Southern Piedmont. Philip E. Smith. University of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series, No. 4, Part 2. University of Georgia. Athens. 1972. 47 pp. Eight sites in Georgia are investigated: (1) Fort Mountain, Murray County; (2) Alec Mountain, Habersham County; (3) Sand Mountain, Catoosa County; (4) Ladd Mountain, Bartow County: (5) Rocky Face Mountain, Whitfield County; (6) Kensington Wall, Dade County; (7) Mount Alto, Floyd County; and (8) Brown's Mount, Bibb County.
7
Archaeology
02n "The Late Archaic in the Savannah River Region". James B. Stoltman. In: FiberTempered Pottery In Southeastern United States and Northern Colombia: Its Origins, Contaxt, and Significance, Ripley P. Bullen and James B. Stoltman, eds., Florida Anthropological Society Publications No. 6. Florida Anthropologist 25(2) part 2, 1972, pp. 3772.
0278 Toward Urbanism: The Cultural Dynamics of the Prehistoric and Historic Societies of the American Southeast. Marion Johnson Mochon. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, 224 pp.
0279 "Diggers Have a Busy Season". Marilyn Pennington, Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine November 12, 1972. Pp. 64-66,68-69, 71. Archaeological excavations in various parts of Georgia are described.
0280 "Archaeologist's $200,000 Four-Wheeled Time Machine". John Pennington. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine September 9, 1973. Pp. 10-11, 24-26. A new Mobile Archaeological Environmental Laboratory assists state archaeological investigations out "in the field".
0281 Archeology and Archeological Resources - A Guide for Those Planning to Use, AHect, or Alter the Land's Surface. Charles R. McGimsey Ill. Society for American Archaeology. Washington, D. C. No date. 24 pp.
ETOWAH MOUNDS STATE HISTORIC SITE
0282 "The Great Mound on the Etowah River, near Cartersville, Georgia". Charles Whittlesey. American Naturalist 5(8&9) : 542-544. September 1871.
0283 "The Great Mound on the Etowah River, Georgia". Charles Whittlesey. Proceeding of the American Aleociation for the Advancement of Science 20 : 400-405. 1872 [Proceedings of Twentieth Meeting, Indianapolis, August 1871].
0284 "Mounds in Bartow County, near Cartersville, Georgia". M. F. Stephenson. In: Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution For 1872, Washington, D. C., 1873, pp. 421-422.
0285 "The Great Mound on the Etowah River, Georgia". Charles Whittlesey. In: Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution for 1881. Washington, D. C., 1883, pp. 624-630.
0286 "The Etowah Mounds". Cyrus Thomas. Science 3(73) : 779-785. June 27, 1884.
0287 "The Etowah Mound Group". Hubert H. S. Aimes. American Anthropologist 21 94-98. 1919.
0288 Exploration of the Etowah Site in Georgia. Warren King Moorehead. Etowah Papers, No.1. Published for Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts by Yale University Press. New Haven. 1932. 190 pp.
0289 "Etowah: Ancient Cult Center in Georgia". Arthur R. Kelly. Archaeology 7(1): 22-27. March 1954.
0290 "Georgia Historical Commission Excavations at Etowah, Summer 1954". Lewis Larson, Jr. Early Georgia 1(3), 5 pp. 1954.
0291 "Explorations at Etowah, Georgia 1954 - 1956". A. R. Kelly and Lewis Larson, Jr. Archaeology 10(1): 39-48. 1957. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(2): 60-67. 1957.
0292 "An Unusual Wooden Rattle From the Etowah Site". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. Missouri Archaeologist 19(4): 6-11. 1957.
0293 "On the Source of Copper at the Etowah Site". Vernon J. Hurst and Lewis H. Larson, Jr. American Antiquity 24(2) : 177-181. October 1958. A trace element comparison of Etowah celt with specimens of native copper from several localities in the Southeast and Michigan indicate that the copper in the celt was probably derived from a local source, thus attacking the notion that most or all of the pre-Columbian copper artifacts found in the eastern United States were made from native copper of the Great Lakes region.
0294 "A Mississippian Headdress From Etowah, Georgia". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. American Antiquity 25(1): 109-112. July 1959.
0295 "Animal Remains From the Etowah Site, Mound C, Bartow County, Georgia". Henry van der Schalie and Paul W. Parmalee. Florida Anthropologist 13(2-3) : 37-54. September 1960.
0298 "Etowah Mounds Yield Treasures of Indian Artifacts". Georgia Magazine 5(3) : 17-19. October-November 1961.
0297 "The Restoration and Preservation of Some Objects From Etowah". Douglas S. Byers. American Antiquity 28(2) : 206-216. October 1962.
0298 "Stone Effigy Figures From Georgia". Margaret Perryman. Tennessee Archaeologist 22(1) : 40-42. 1966. Description of a pair of figures found at the Etowah Mounds in 1885.
0299 "Archaeological Implications of Social Stratification at the Etowah Site, Georgia". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. American Antiquity 36(3, Part 2) : 58-67. Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology, No. 25. July 1971.
0300 "Functional Considerations of Warfare in the Southeast during the Mississippi Period". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. American Antiquity 37(3) : 383-392. July 1972. "During the last purely aboriginal period in the southeastern United States, most, if not all, of the settlements in the interior areas were fortified, implying a cultural pattern of extensive warfare. This paper examines the nature and function of defensive works protecting the sites and advances the hypothesis that warfare at this time resulted from competition for arable land". The Etowah site in Bartow County is observed as an example from Georgia.
OCMULGEE NATIONAL MONUMENT
0301 "Exploring Prehistoric Georgia". A. R. Kelly. Scientific American 152(2) : 117-120; (3) : 184-187; (4) : 244-246. March; April; May; 1935. Description of archaeological work at Ocmulgee prior to its establishment as a national monument.
0302 "Smithsonian Archaeological Projects Conducted Under the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, 1933-34". Matthew W. Stirling. In: Annual Report of Smithsonian Institution for the Year Ending June 30, 1934, Washington, D.C., 1935, pp. 370-400 + 10 plates. Pages 389-392 contain a report on studies at the Lamar and Macon (Ocmulgee) sites in Bibb County.
0303 A Preliminary Report on Archaeological Explorations at Macon, Georgia. A. R. Kelly. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 119, Anthropological Papers, No. 1. Washington, D.C. 1938. 68 pp. + 12 pis. + 7 Figs.
0304 "Recent Excavations at the Lamar Site, Ocmulgee National Monument, Macon, Georgia". Jesse D. Jennings. Proceeding of the Society For Georgia Archaeology 2(2) : 45-55. May 1939.
0305 "The Macon Trading Post, An Historical Foundling". A. R. Kelly. American Antiquity 4(4) : 328-333. April 1939. A European-built trading post site on the Ocmulgee River, near Macon, is described.
0306 "Ocmulgee's Trading Post Riddle". Roy Edgar Appleman. Regional Review (National Park Service Region I, Richmond) 2 : 3-11. 1939. On the mysterious Macon Trading Post.
0307 Prehistoric Culturee of the Southeaet. Popular Study Series - History, No. 4. National Park Service. Washington, D.C. 1941. [iv] + 32 pp. Consists of three reprints from The Regional Review (National Park Service, Region One, Richmond, Va.) pertaining chiefly to Ocmulgee National Monument.
0308 "A Dated Silt Deposit in the Ocmulgee River Valley, Georgia". Karl Schmitt. American Antiquity 8(3) : 296-297. January 1943. At the Lamar archaeological investigations site in Bibb County is a heavy silt deposit, with associated heavy erosion, which is correlated with intensive cultivation by late prehistoric Indians.
0308 "Jessup's Bluff: A New Early Stamped Pottery Site at Ocmulgee National Monument". A. R. Kelly. American Antiquity 11: 134-135. 1945.
0310 "The Macon Earth Lodge". Charles H. Fairbanks. American Antiquity 12 (2) : 94108. October 1948.
0311 The Excavation of Mound C, Ocmulgee National Monument, Macon, Georgia. Charles H. Fairbanks. Doctoral dissertation, 1954, University of Michigan. 253 pp.
0312 Archeology of the Funeral Mound, Ocmulgee National Monument, Georgia. Charles H. Fairbanks. Archaeological Research Series, No. 3. U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Washington, D.C. 1956. v + 95 pp.
0313 Ocmulgee National Monument, Georgia. G. D. Pope, Jr. Historical Handbook Series, No. 24. United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Washington, D. C. 1956. Reprinted 1961. [vi]+ 58 pp.
0314 The Archaeology of Ocmulgee Old Fields, Macon, Georgia. Carol Ann Irwin Mason. Doctoral dissertation, 1963, University of Michigan. 383 pp.
0315 "A Radiocarbon Date for the Macon Earthlodge". Rex L. Wilson. American Antiquity 30(2) : 202-203. October 1964. A radiocarbon date of A.D. 1015 for the Macon Earth lodge at Ocmulgee National Monument in Bibb County has been obtained.
0316 "Gunflints From the Macon Plateau". Lee H. Hanson, Jr. Historical Archaeology 4: 51-58. 1970.
0317 "Gunflints and Chronology at Ocmulgee National Monument". Carol Mason. Historical Archaeology 5: 106-109. 1971.
0318 "A Reply to Gunflints and Chronology at Ocmulgee National Monument". Lee H. Hanson, Jr. Hietorical Archaeology 5: 109-111. 1971.
0319 Stratigraphy of an Archeological Site, Ocmulgee Flood Plain, Macon, Georgia [Ocmulgee National Monument]. Oliver J. Cosner. Water-Resources Investigations 54-73. U. S. Geological Survey. November 1973 (1974). 35 pp. Available only from National Technical Information Service, Springfield, Va. as report no. PB-232 763.
8
Archaeology
KOLOMOKI MOUNDS STATE PARK
0320 "The Kolomoki Mound Group, Early County, Georgia". Charles H. Fairbanks. Americ.n Antiquity 11 (4) : 258-260. April 1946.
0321 "Kolomoki''. William H. Sears. Early Georgia 1(1): 22-25. 1950.
0322 The Prehletoric Cultural Position In the Southeast of Kolomokl, Early County, Georgia. William H. Sears. Doctoral dissertation, 1950, University of Michigan. Ann Arbor.
0323 Excavation at Kolomokl. William H. Sears. University of Georgia Series in Anthropology, Nos. 2-5. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1951-1956. 4 vols.
0324 "An Archaeological Manifestation of a Natchez-Type Burial Ceremony". William H. Sears. Florida Anthropologlet 5(1-2) : 1-7. May 1952. On "the existence of a generic relationship between the mortuary ceremonialism as expressed archaeologically in a burial mound at Kolomoki and that described as having taken place among the Natchez Indians and their neighbors in the seventeenth century".
0325 "Kolomoki Burial Mounds and the Weeden Island Mortuary Complex". William H. Sears. Amerlc.n Antiquity 18(3) : 223-229. January 1953.
COUNTIES
Bartow (See also Etowah)
0326 "The Leake Mounds, Bartow County, Georgia" Charles H. Fairbanks, A. R. Kelly, Gordon R. Willey and Pat Wofford. Jr. American Antiquity 12(2): 126-127. October 1946.
0327 " 'Hopewellian' Elements in Northern Georgia". A. J. Waring. American Antiquity 11(2): 119-120. October 1945. An investigation of a mound two miles west of Cartersville in Bartow County turned up evidence relating Ohio Hopewell culture to Southeastern culture.
0328 "A Sketch of the Pine Log Indian Cave". Corra Harris. Early Georgia 1(1) : 41-42. 1950.
03H Appraisal of the Archeological Resources, Allatoona Reservoir In Bartow, Cobb and Cherokee Countlee, Georgia. Joseph R. Caldwell. River Basin Surveys, [Appraisal of the Archeological Resources... no. 1). Smithsonian Institution. [Washington, D.C.]. June 1947. 31 leaves.
0330 "The Archaeological Survey at the Allatoona Reservoir, Georgia". Joseph R. Caldwell. Amerlc.n Antiquity 12: 223-224. April 1947.
0331 "A Preliminary Report on Excavations in the Allatoona Reservoir". Joseph R. Caldwell. Early Georgia 1(1): [4-21). 1950.
Berrien
0332 "New River Mounds, Berrien County, Georgia". William J. Taylor. In: Annual Report of the Smltheonlan Institution For 1881, Washington, D.C.. 1883, p. 631.
0333 "Mounds in Berrien County, Georgia". William J. Taylor. In: Annual Report of the Smllh~onlan lnetltutlon For 1883, Washington, D.C., 1885, pp. 853-854.
Bibb (See also Ocmulgee)
0334 "Ceramic Stratigraphy in a Georgia Village Site". Gordon R. Willey. American Antiquity 5(2) : 140-147. October 1939. An archaeological investigation is described. The site is in Bibb County near the TobesOTkee Creek - Ocmulgee River junction.
0335 "Exploratory Excavations at Fort Hawkins, Macon, Georgia". Richard F. Carrillo. In: Conference on Hlotoric Site Archaeology- Papers, Vol. 6, Part 1 [1971]. Stanley A. South, ed., Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 1971.
Camden
0336 "Salvaging an Aboriginal Dug-Out Canoe, Cumberland Island, Georgia". F. M. Setzler. In: Smlthoonlan lnotltutlon Explorations and Field Work... In 1932, Washington, D.C., 1933, pp. 57-60.
0337 "Excavation of a Slave Cabin: Georgia, U.S.A.". Robert Ascher and Charles H. Fairbanks. HlotoriC81 Archaeology 5: 3-17. 1971. An archaeological and historical survey of the cabin, located on Cumberland Island in Camden County, is described.
0336 "A Deptford Phase House Structure, Cumberland Island, Georgia". Jerald T. Milanich. Florida Anthropologlet 26(3): 105-118. September 1973. Excavations reveal a substantial house occupied during the first century A.D., probably by a group of Deptford hunter-gatherers.
0339 "Cultural Relationships Between the Northern St. Johns Area and the Georgia Coast". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. Florida Anthropologist 11(1): 11-22. February 1958. On the extension of the Northern St. Johns Culture northward into today's Camden County, Georgia.
Carroll
0340 "Curious Stone Pipe from Georgia". Mrs. Francis C. Smith. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 10(1&2): 34-35. 1964. Description of an artifact found on the bank of the Chattahoochee River in Carroll County.
Chatham
0341 W.P.A. Excavations at Irene Mound. Vladimir J. Fewkes. Savannah Chamber of Commerce. Savannah, Georgia. 1938. 22 pp.
0342 "Irene Mound Excavations, Savannah, Georgia". Vladimir J. Fewkes. Proceedings of the Society For Georgia Archaeology 1(2) : 24-31. September 1938.
0343 "Recent Finds at Irene Mound, Savannah". Claude E. Shaeffer. Proceedings of the Society for Georgia Archaeology 2(1): 27-30. February 1939.
0344 "Recent Discoveries at Irene Mound, Savannah". Joseph R. Caldwell. Proceeding of the Society For Georgia Archaeology 2(2) : 31-35. May 1939.
0345 Irene Mound Site, Chatham County, Georgia. Joseph Caldwell and Catherine McCann. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1941. 120 pp.
0348 New Yamacraw and the Indian Mound Irena. Dolores Boisfeuillet Floyd. Review Printing Co. Savannah. [c1936). 26 pp.
0347 "The Bilbo Site, Chatham County, Georgia". Antonio J. Waring, Jr. In: The Waring Papers, Stephen Williams, ed., Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, and University of Georgia Press, Athens, 1965, pp. 152-197.
0348 "Shell-Heap in Georgia [Ossabaw Island)". D. Brown. In: Annual Report of the Smllheonlan lnotltutlon for 1871, Washington, D.C.. 1873, p. 423.
Chattahoochee
0349 "Cassita of the Lower Creeks". Peter A. Brannon. Arrow Points 10 : 44-45. March 1925.
0350 "The Kasita Site". Gordon R. Willey and William H. Sears. Southern Indian Studies 4: 3-18. 1952. The site is on the Fort Benning Military Reservation in Chattahoochee County.
Cherokee
0351 The Wilbanks Site (9 Ck-5), Georgia. William H. Sears. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 169. River Basin Surveys Papers, No. 12. Washington, D.C. 1958. 63 pp. + 9 pis. + 5 figs. + 1 map. Archaeological investigations at a site on the Etowah River in Cherokee County are described. The site is now inundated by the Allatoona Reservoir.
0352 "Preliminary Report on the Excavation of an Etowah Valley Site". William H. Sears. American Antiquity 16(2) : 137-142. October 1950. The site is located in Cherokee County and is known as the Wilbanks site (9 CK-5). II is now under the waters of the Allatoona Reservoir.
0353 "Chunky". Frank Manley. Archaeology 23(3) : 212-216. June 1970. Chunky, or Chungke, was a game played by Southeastern Indians using a perfectly round flat disk carved of stone. The game and the author'sfind of a chunky stone, in Cherokee County near the Etowah River, are described.
Clay
0354 "The Mandeville Site in Southwest Georgia". James H. Kellar, A. R. Kelly and Edward V. McMichael. AmeriC8n Antiquity 27(3] : 336-355. January 1962. The three major components of this prehistoric site in Clay County are described.
0355 "Excavations at the Mandeville Site, Clay County, Georgia". James H. Kellar. In: Proceedings of the Southatm Archaeologlc.l Conference, Macon, Georgia Volume 8, May 1962.
0358 Survey of Archaeologlc.l SIIH In Clay and Quitman Counllao, Georgia, 9 Cia 2, 9 Cia 7, 9 Cia 15, 8 Cia 28, 9 Cia 36, 9 Cia 51, 9 Qu 25. A. R. Kelly, Richard Nonas, Bettye Broyles, Clemens de Baillou, David W. Chase, Frank T. Schnell, Jr. University of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series, No. 5, University of Georgia. Athens. [October 1962 cover date; January 1963 title page date]. iii + 36 pp. + 25 pis. + 6 maps.
0357 Summary Deecrlptlon of Certain Archaaologlc.l Sllee In Clay County and Quitman County, Georgia. Harold Huscher. Smithsonian Institution, River Basin Surveys. Washington, 1960.
9
Archaeology
0358 Appr8l88l of the An:hHol~c:.l Aeeourcee of the Walllr F. G80rge A-rvolr Area, Chellllloocllee AI-, Allbama and G80rgla, o-mbar, 1959. [Harold A. Huscher]. River Basin Surveys, [Appraisal of the Archaeological Resources... no. 65]. Smithsonian Institution. [Washington, D.C.]. 1959. 121 leaves+ 2 fold. maps.
0358 "The Archaic of the Walter F. George Reservoir Area". Harold A. Huscher. ProceedIng of lha 11th Southeaetam Archa80ioglcal Conference, 1962, Bulletin No.1, 1964, pp. 36-41.
DeKalb
0374 "The Stone Mountain Salvage Project, DeKalb and Gwinnett Counties, Georgia, Parts HI". Roy Dickens, Jr. Journal of Allbama Archaeology 10(1&2): 43-49, 11(2): 123-132. 1964.
0375 "Contrasting Woodland and Archaic Environmental Adaptations at Stone Mountain, Georgia". Roy S. Dickens. Eaetern Slllle Archeological Federation Bulletin 22: 10. 1963.
Cobb
0380 "Learning History with a Trowel". Marilyn Pennington. Atlanll Joumal and Conetllutlon Magazine August 16, 1970. Pp. 8-10, 12, 14. The Pebblebrook site (9-Co-50) in Cobb County, discovered on the grounds of a high school, was excavated by some of the school's students under the direction of Dr. A. R. Kelly.
Douglas
0376 "Unusual Georgia Petroglyph". Margaret Perryman Smith. Amerlc:.n Antiquity 18(4) : 392. April1953. A petroglyph from the banks of Sweetwater Creek near its end at the Chattahoochee River in Douglas County, Georgia is described. The existence of uninvestigated mounds in the area is noted.
Columbia
0381 The stalling' leland Mound, Columbia County, Gaorgla. William H. Claflin, Jr. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Vol. 14 - No. 1. Published by the Museum. Cambridge, Mass. 1931. 54 pp. + 72 figs.
0382 "An Historic Indian Burial From Columbia County, Georgia". Wilfred T. Neill. Southam Indian Studies 7; 3-9. October 1955. An archaeological investigation on Stallings Island, or Indian Island, north of Augusta, is described..
0383 "The Taxonomic Position of Stalling's Island, Georgia". Charles H. Fairbanks. Amerlc:.n AnUqulty 7(3) : 223-231. January 1942.
038' "A Late Archaic Horizon on the Atlantic Coastal Plain". William H. Sears. Southern Indian StudiH [6] : 28-36. October 1954. On the Stallings Island site in Columbia County.
0385 "Stratigraphic Tests at Stalling's Island, Georgia". Ripley P. Bullen and H. Bruce Greene. Florida Anthropologlet 23(1) : 8-28. March 1970. Summary of results of excavations and detailed description of pottery found at the site.
0318 "Westo Bluff, A Site of the Old Quartz Culture in Georgia". Wilfred T. Neill. Florida Anthropologlet 19(1) : 1-10. April 1968. Westo Bluff, a field site overlooking the Savannah River in Columbus County, yielded much material typical of the Old Quartz Culture. The site is regarded as transitional between Old Quartz and preceramic Stallings Island.
0387 "Prehistoric Settlement, Big Kiokee Creek, Columbia County, Georgia". Robert Steiner. Proceadlnge Amerlc:.n Alsoclatlon For the Advancement of Science 1899, pp. 379-382. 1899.
0318 "The Lake Spring Site, Columbia County, Georgia". Carl F. Miller. Amerlc:.n An Uqulty 15(1) : 38-51. July 1949. An archaeological investigation is described. The site is now inundated by the Clark Hill Reservoir.
0381 Appralul of the Arch80I~c:.l A"ourcee of the Clark Hill A...rvolr Area, South C.rollna and Gaorgla. Carl F. Miller. River Basin Surveys, [Appraisal of the Archeological Resources... no. 18]. Smithsonian Institution. Washington, D.C. December 1948. 14 pp.
Dade
0370 "Tunacunnhee: A Hopewellian Burial Complex in Northwest Georgia". Richard W. Jefferies. T e n - Archaeologlet 31(1): 13-32. Spring 1975. The Tunacunnhee Site (9 Dd 25) in Dade County "represents the only well documented Hopewell ian site in north Georgia and contains the greatest variety and quantity of Hopewell ian artifacts reported from the southeast".
Decatur
0371 A Weeden Island Burial Mound In Decatur County, Gaorgla and Related SltH on lha Lower Flint River. Arthur Randolph Kelly. University of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series, No.1. University of Georgia. Athens. 1960. iii+ 46 pp.
0372 "An Early Flint Industry in Southwest Georgia". Arthur R. Kelly. In: Short Contrl butlon1 to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of G80rgla, Bulletin No. 56, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1950, pp. 146-153. Description of prehistoric flint tools found at the Lane Springs site in Decatur County. The author suggests that this early flint industry belongs to the same cultural category and time as the Macon Plateau flint industry.
0373 Six Sllll near the Chatllhoochae River In the Jim Woodruff A8Hrvolr Area, Florida. Ripley P. Bullen. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 169, River Basin Surveys Papers, No. 14. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1958. Pp. 315-356 + 18 pis.+ 2 figs.+ 1 map.
Early (See also Kolomokl)
0377 Appralul of the Archaaologlc:.l Ae1ource1 of the Columbia Dam and Lock Area, Chatllhoochee River, Alabama and Gaorgla, November 1959. Harold A. Huscher. River Basin Surveys, [Appraisal of the Archaeological Resources... no. 64]. Smithsonian Institution. [Washington, D.C.]. 1959. 20 pp. +map.
Elbert
0378 The Rembert Mounde, Elbert County, G80rgla. Joseph R. Caldwell. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 154, River Basin Surveys Papers, No.6, Washington D. C. 1953. 18 pp. + 2 pis.+ 5 figs. These Indian mounds, now covered by the waters of Clark Hill Reservoir, are briefly described and analyzed.
Floyd
0379 "The Mystery of the 'Cemetery Field' ". A"earch Reporter (Univ. of Ga.) 8(2) : 8-9. Fall 1974. Brief description of archaeological investigations at the "King Site" on the Coosa River in Floyd County.
0380 The King Site (9 Fl-5) Exc:.vatlons, April 1971 Through August 1973: Collected Papera. Patrick H. Garrow and Marvin T. Smith. Published by Patrick H. Garrow. Rome, Georgia. 1973.
0381 "An Ancient Mystery". John Pennington. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine January 2, 1972. Pp. 8, 18. An archaeological investigation near the Coosa River in western Floyd County has turned up evidence of an ancient brutal execution.
0382 "Horseleg Mountain: A Transitional Palaeo-Indian Site". Frank Manley. Archaeology 21 (1) : 54-60. January 1968.
Forsyth
0383 "Cherokee Pottery From Northern Georgia". Joseph K. Caldwell. Amerlc:.n Anti qulty 20(3) : 277-280. January 1955. Cherokee pottery from a site in Forsyth County is examined.
Fulton
0384 "Digging Up 2000 Years Ago". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Conetltutlon Magazine January 11,1970. Pp. 14-17,22. Salvage archaeology at a Chattahoochee River site in Fulton County (9 Fu 14) has revealed much about the Woodland period.
0385 "Early Villages on the Chattahoochee River, Georgia". A. R. Kelly. Archaeology 26(1) : 32-37. January 1973. On two sites near the Chattahoochee River west of Atlanta: 9 Fu 14, Great Southwest Atlanta Corporation industrial park, and 9 Co 50, Pebblebrook High School. The former is in Fulton County, the latter across the river in Cobb.
0386 "Standing Peach Tree". Wilbur G. Kurtz. Early Gaorgla 1(2), 13 pp. 1950.
0387 Archaaologlc:.l Salvage In the Morgan Faile Baeln. Clemens de Baillou, University of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series, No.4 (Part 1). University of Georgia. Athens. 1972. 18 pp. + 5 pis.+ 3 figs.
0388 Archaologlc:.l Survey and lnVHtlgatlon In the Metro Atlanta Region and Related Areal of Gaorgla. Archeological Survey of Cobb-Fulton Counties (Sponsored by Boards of Commissioners of Cobb and Fulton Counties). [Marietta and Atlanta]. 1974. 14 pp. + 3 pp. appendix.
10
Glynn
0381 "Excavations on Saint Simons Island and Vicinity (Winter 1936-1937)". Preston Holder. Proceedings of the Society lor Georgia Archaeology 1(1) : 8-9. March 1938.
0380 "Puzzle of the Oyster Shell Rings". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 18, 1974, Pp. 41-44. On St. Simons Island archaeologists are digging into two periods of history 1,000 years apart.
Gordon
0391 "A Preliminary Report on 9-Go-507: The Williams Site, Gordon County, Georgia". Dan Morse and Phyllis Morse. Florida Anthropologlot 13(4): 81-91. December 1960.
0382 "Stone Bowls From North Georgia". Margaret Perryman. Tenneooee Archaeologlot 21(1): 25-27. 1965. On two unusual stone bowls found in Gordon County, Georgia.
0393 "New Echola, Birthplace of the American Indian Press'". Hugh A. Awtrey. Regional Review (National Park Service Region I, Richmond) 4: 24-35. 1940.
0314 "New Echola - Capital of the Cherokee Nation". Henry T. Malone. Early Georgia 1(4), 8 pp. 1955.
0395 "Excavations at New Echola in 1954". Clemens de Baillou. Early Georgia 1(4) : 18-29. 1955.
0396 "Notes on Cherokee Architecture". Clemens de Baillou. Southern Indian Studies 19: 25-33. October 1967. On houses and other buildings of the Cherokee Indians, especially those of New Echola.
Hall
0387 "The Booger Bottom Mound: A Forsyth Period Site in Hall County, Georgia". Joseph A. Caldwell, Charles E. Thompson and Sheila K. Caldwell. American Antiquity 17(4) : 319-328. April 1952.
0388 "1953 Excavations at Site 9HL69, Buford Reservoir, Georgia". Charles H. Fairbanks. Florida State Unlve,..ty Studleo 16: 1-26. 1954. Excavations at site 9HL64, or "Booger Bottom", are summarized.
0388 Appraloal of the Archaeological Resources, Buford Rel8rvolr In Hall, Forsyth, Dawoon and Gwlnnett CounUeo, Northern Georgia. Joseph A. Caldwell. River Basin Surveys, [Survey and Appraisal. .. no. 60. Smithsonian Institution. Washington, D.C. 1953]. 25 leaves.
Liberty
0400 "Puzzles on an Island -Home of Ancient Indians". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and ConoUtullon Magazine September 21, 1969. Pp. 28-29, 31, 33-34, 54-55. Archaeology and history on St. Catherines Island are studied.
Mcintosh
0401 ArUiecll From tha Slte1 of Three Nineteenth Century HOU181 and Dltcheo at Darien BluH, Georgia. C. Malcolm Watkins [Sheila Kelly Caldwell, ed.]. University of Georgia Laboratory in Archaeology Series, Report No. 9. University of Georgia. Athens. November 1970. xii + 83 pp.
0402 Excavation at tha Fort King George Hlotorlcal Site, Darien, Georgia, The 1967 Survay. William M. Kelso. Archaeological Research Series, No. 1. Georgia Historical Commission. Atlanta. 1968.
0403 "A Spanish Mission Site Near Darien". Sheila K. Caldwell. Early Georgia 1(3) : 13-17. 1954. The site, designated 9 Me 10, is at Fort King George in Mcintosh County.
0404 "Excavations at a Spanish Mission Site in Georgia". Sheila K. Caldwell. Southeutern Archaeological Conference Newoletter 3(3) : 31-33. 1953. The site, designated 9 Me 10, is at Fort King George in Mcintosh County.
0405 "The Norman Mound, Mcintosh County, Georgia". Lewis H. Larson, Jr. Florida Anthropologlot 10(1-2) : 37-52. 1957.
0406 "The Shell Ring on Sapelo Island". Antonio J. Waring and Lewis H. Larson, Jr. In: Tha Waring Papers, Stephen Williams, ed., Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, and University of Georgia Press, Athens, 1965, pp. 263-278.
0407 "Mounds in Georgia". William McKinley. In: Annual Report of the Smlthoonlan lnoUtuUon For 1872, Washington, D.C., 1873, pp. 422-428. Report of mounds on Sapelo Island, on "Kolee Mokee Creek" (Kolomoki) and on "Dry Creek in Sacred Grove, Early County, Ga.".
Archaeology
Murray
0408 "Ethnohistory and Archaeology at the Carters Dam Site". Carole E. Hill and A. R.
Kelley. In: Working Papers In Sociology and Anthropology, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Georgia, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 91-98. December 1968. Deals primarily with the Bell Field Mound, a section of the Carters Dam Site in Murray County. Tentative chronology is delineated, the nature of the protohistoric inhabitants is hypothesized, and relationships between archaeological components and historic tribes are suggested.
0409 Archaeological Investigation of the Pott'l Tract Site (9 Mu 103), Carters Dam, Murray County, Georgia. David J. Hally. University of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series, Report No. 6, University of Georgia. Athens. 1970.
0410 9 Mu 100, XUK: A Stratified Old Quartz Site, Murray County, Northern Georgia. William Dana Beasley. Masters thesis, 1972, University of Georgia. 129 pp.
0411 "Fort Mountain". Robert Shackleton, Jr. American Antiquarian and Oriental Journal 15(5) : 295-304. September 1893.
0412 "Silver Crosses From an Indian Grave-Mound at Coosawattee Old Town, Murray County, Georgia". Charles C. Jones, Jr. In: Annual Report of tha Smithsonian lnsUtuUon For 1881, Washington, D. C., 1883, pp. 619-624.
Muscogee
0413 The Avarett Culture. David W. Chase. Coweta Memorial Association Papers, No. 1. Coweta Memorial Association. Columbus, Georgia. 1959. The Averett site in Muscogee County is investigated.
0414 "A Reappraisal of the Averett Complex". David W. Chase. Journal of Alabama Archaeology 9(2) : 49-61. December 1963. The Averett Cultural Complex was originally described by the author in 1959 after excavations at the Averett site (9 Me 15) in Muscogee County. In this paper new evidence is examined which places this Middle Chattahoochee Valley complex closer to Mississippian complexes than Woodland, as previously thought.
0415 "Notes on the Exploration of the Bull Creek Site, Columbus, Georgia". Mrs. Wayne Patterson. Early Georgia 1(1) : 34-40. 1950.
0416 "Some Indications of Indian Occupancy along Bull Creek, near Columbus, Georgia". Frank J. Mulvihill. Arrow Polnll (Montgomery, Ala.) 10:36-41. March 1925.
0417 Appraisal of tha Archeological Resources of the Ollvar Buln, Chattahoochee River, Alabama and Georgia. Harold A. Huscher. River Basin Surveys, [Appraisal of the Archaeological Resources... no. 63]. Smithsonian Institution. [Washington, D.C.]. 1959. 17 leaves.
0418 Archaeological Salvage In tha Ollvar Baoln. Edward V. McMichael and James H. Kellar. University of Georgia, Laboratory of Archaeology Series, No. 2, University of Georgia, Athens. November 1960. iii + 221 pp. + 5 pis. + 1 map.
0419 "The Standing Boy Flint Industry: An Early Archaic Manifestation on the Chattahoochee River in Alabama and Georgia". Harold A. Huscher. Southam Indian Studlas 16: 3-20. 1964. On an Early Archaic assemblage described by McMichael and Keller in 1959 in "Archaeological Salvage in the Oliver Basin" (above).
0420 "A Creek Site in Georgia". Margaret E. (Ashley) Towle. Indian Notes 4(3): 221-226. July 1927.
0421 "Columbus Museum of Arts and Crafts". Georgia Magazine 6(5) : 25-33. FebruaryMarch 1963.
0422 "'The Yuchi Indian Museum in Columbus". Frank Schnell. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(1): 12-17,35. Winter 1972-73. The Yuchi museum is part of the Columbus Museum of Arts and Crafts.
0423 "Mystery of Georgia's Ancient Carved Rock". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Conotltutlon Magazine March 2, 1969. Pp. 8-10, 25, 27-28. The Metcalf Stone, a rock with carved symbols similar to those used by the ancient Minoans of Crete, is examined. Found in the foundation of an old grist mill which stood on the Fort Benning reservation, the stone is one of the most valuable items of Columbus' Museum of Arts and Crafts.
Polk
0424 "Effigy Figure Found in Georgia". Margaret Perryman. Tennesoee Archaeologist 25(2): 59-61. Autumn 1969. Description and illustrations of a marble carving found in Polk County, Georgia.
Putnam
0425 "Mounds in Putnam County, Georgia" Benjamin W. Kent. In: Annual Report of the Smlthoonlan Institution For 1882, Washington, D. C., 1884, pp. 770..771.
11
Coast
0421"Rock Eagle". Patty Carpenter Almy. Georgia Magazine 6(1): 22-23. June-July 1962. Rock Eagle Mound, a prehistoric structure in Putnam County is today a part of a center for Georgia 4-H Clubs.
0427 "Bird-Shaped Mounds in Putnam County, Georgia, U.S.A." Charles C. Jones. Journal of the AnthropologiCIIIInatltute ot New York 8(1): 92-96. 1878...
0428 "The Eatonton Effigy Eagle Mounds and Related Stone Structures in Putnam County, Georgia". Arthur L. Kelly. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(2) : 82-86. 1954.
Quitman
0421 "Thecool Branch Site, 9 Qu 5, Quitman County, Georgia; A Fortified Mississippian Town with Tower Bastions". Harold A. Huscher. Bulletin of the Eastern Stetes ArchaeologiCIII Federation 23. June 1964.
0430 "Two Mississippian Mounds in Quitman County, Georgia". Harold A. Huscher. In: Southeutem ArchaeologiCIII Conference, Macon, Georgia, November 1971.
Rabun
0431 "The Use of Beveled Discoidals in Northern Georgia". William B. Colburn. Papers of the Michigan ACIIdemy of Science 21 : 1-6. 1936. On implements for bowling from a site near Dillard.
Richmond
0432 "A Test Excavation of the Hollywood Mound (9 Ri 1), Georgia". Clemens de Baillou. Southern Indian Studies 17:3-11. October 1965. The site is in Richmond County, Georgia.
0433 "A Comparative Statement on Ceramics From the Hollywood and Town Creek Mounds". J. Jefferson Reid. Southam Indian Studies 17: 12-25. 1965. On similarities between ceramics from the Hollywood Mound in Richmond County, Georgia and the Town Creek Mounds of North Carolina.
0434 "A Possible Case of Cannibalism in the Early Woodland Period of Eastern Georgia". David Sutton Phelps and Rebekah Burgess. Amertc:~~n Antiquity 30 (2) : 199-202. October 1964. Preliminary archaeological investigations at White's Mound, Richmond County, Georgia revealed evidence of possible cannibalism in the form of redeposited fragmentary bones, most of them cooked and a few calcined. An alternative explanation is redeposited cremation.
Spalding
0435 "Antiquities of Spalding County, Georgia". W.B.F. Bailey. In: Annual Report of the Smithson..., Institution lor 1877, Washington, D.C., 1878, pp. 289-290.
Stephens
0438 "Physical Structure of Rock Mound at 9 St 3, Georgia". Carl F. Miller. Southern Indian Studles11 : 16-19. 1959. Investigations at the Estatoe site (9 St 3) in Stephens County.
0437 "Excavation of the Presumptive Site of Estatoe". A. R. Kelly and Clemens de Baillou. Southern Indian Studies 12: 3-30. 1960. The site (9 St 3) is on the west bank of the Tugaloo River in Stephens County.
Stewart
0438 "Investigations at Rood's Landing, Stewart County, Georgia". Joseph R. Caldwell. Early Georgia 2(1): 22-49 + 7 Figs. 1955. An archaeological survey is described. The site was a prehistoric settlement at the junction of the Chattahoochee River and Rood's Creek. Eight large artificial earth mounds are described and analyzed.
White
0439 "The Nacoochee Mound in Georgia". George G. Heye, Frederick W. Hodge and George W. Pepper. Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye FoundaUon 4(3), 1918, New York, 103 pp.
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
0440 "A Bibliography of Georgia Archaeology to 1942". Stephen Williams, comp. In: The Waring Papers, Stephen Williams, ed., Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, and University of Georgia Press, Athens, 1965, pp. 306-311.
0441 Bibliography of Salvage Archeology In the United States. Jerome E. Petsche. Publications in Salvage Archeology, No. 10. Smithsonian Institution, Museum of Natural History, River Basin Surveys. Lincoln, Nebraska. 1968. iv + 162 pp. Lists published and unpublished works, by author and state (Georgia: pp. 50-52).
COAST
GENERAL THE ISLANDS THE MARSHES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT USE OF COASTAL RESOURCES ECOLOGY
General Studies Specific Studies
COASTAL WATERS MISCELLANEOUS BIBLIOGRAPHIES
GENERAL
0442 "Georgia's Golden Isles". Bill Schemmel. Georgia 16(1): 21-31. August 1972. Jekyll, St. Simons, and Sea Islands are described.
0443 "Sea Islands: Adventuring Along the South's Surprising Coast". James Cerruti. National Geographic 139(3): 366-393. March 1971. Description and illustrations of the islands of the coasts of Georgia and South Carolina.
0444 "The Golden Isles of Guale". W. Robert Moore. National Geographic 65(1): 235-264. February 1934. Georgia's coastal islands are described and illustrated.
0445 Guale, the Golden Coast ol Georgia. Robert Hanie [text] and James Valentine [photographs]. with introduction by Eugene Odum and John P. Milton; Kenneth Brower, ed. The Earth's Wild Places [Series of] F(iends of the Earth, San Francisco. Seabury Press. New York. 1974. 143 pp. Photographs of the Georgia Sea Islands with selections from the writings of Rachel Carson, William Bartram, John and Mildred Teal and others. Includes descriptions of the beaches, the marsh, and the natural and cultural history of the coast.
0448 Guale: Observations Regarding A Natural History and Human Ecology ol the Georgia Coast. Robert Edward Hanie. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, Emory University. 167 pp. A "distinctly expanded and analytical version" of the book Guale: The Golden Coast of Georgia [see above]. Includes: lyrical statement of the nature of the coast; examination of the islands, marshes, and aboriginals as "one continuous being"; remarks on the fourteen coastal rivers and efforts to dam and/or channelize them; summary of human habitation and human interaction with the environment; and observations on present and possible societies as they relate to the Georgia coast.
0447 "A Naturalist's View of the Golden Coast". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 18, 1973. Pp. 12-14, 17. The natural beauty of Georgia's Golden Isles is experienced through an exhibition of photographs.
THE ISLANDS
0448 "Is Ossabaw on Death Row?". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine July 16, 1972. Pp. 6-7, 18-20. Ossabaw Island is proposed for inclusion in the World Heritage Trust. The island's unspoiled beauty is threatened by increased taxes and other costs of operating nonprofit programs.
0449 "Our New National Seashore". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine January 21, 1974. Pp. 20-22, 24-26. National Park Service plans for Cumberland Island National Seashore are described.
0450 "The Georgia Sea Island That Slumbers Like a Time Capsule". Betsy Fancher. Holiday 47(5) :56-59, 76. May 1970. On Cumberland Island.
0451 Carrying Capacity lor Cumberland Island National Seashore. Albert F. Ike and James I. Richardson. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. April 1974, revised September 1975.
0452 "Exploring Ossabaw". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 18, 1969. Pp. 6-8, 40-42, 44, 47. The biology of Ossabaw Island is examined.
0453 "Live Oaks and Cumberland Island". William Voigt, Jr. American Forests 78(8) : 32-35, 63. August 1972. A look at Cumberland Island, where live oak forests, almost all destroyed on the mainland, still stand.
0454 The Economic Impact ol Recreational Land-Use In an Island Environment: A Case Study of Jekyll Island, Georgia. Charles F. Floyd and Clemen F. Sirmans. Technical Re-
12
port Series, No. 75-7. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1975. XV+ 184 pp.
0455 Jekyll leland Land UM Study. [Jekyll Island State Park Authority. Atlanta}. No date. 18 pp. + fold. map. "This plan is based on a study prepared for the Jekyll Island Authority in 1973 by Robert and Company, Associates. The study was directed by Andrew E. Steiner".
04541 "Jekyll at the Cn~ssroads". Margaret Shannon. Atlenlll Journal end Conetltutlon Megulne June 18, 1972. Pp. 1Q-11, 24, 26, 29-30,32. Pressures of development are requiring a reanalysis of state-owned Jekyll Island.
0457 "Sapelo Island". Bjorn Kjerlve. Ocuna 3(2) : 7-17. March-April 1970. "Festooned with oak, pine and marsh grasses, this ten-mile-long island has become a mecca for marine scientists... and a battleground for conservationists and industry".
04541 "An Island Called Cumberland". Jim Morrison. Georgia Gema end Flah 3(9): 11-14. September 1968.
0458 "A Tide of Change for Cumberland". Andrew Sparks. Atlanlll Joumel end Conatltullon Megulne March 9, 1969. Pp. 14-16, 18, 2Q-24. Developer Charles Fraser's plans for Cumberland Island are described.
0480 Economic lmpec:t of tile PropoHCI Cumberland lalend Netlonal Seeahore. Travel Research Study No. 5. University of Georgia, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Prepared for U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Athens. 1968. 84 pp.
0451 We-lalencl Study. Wayne Francisco, Leerie T. Jenkins, Jr. Melinda McWilliams, and James Rathmann. University of Georgia, School of Environmental Design. Athens. 1970. vi + 129 pp. Analysis of various possibilities for development of the island and the environmental effects of each. Recommends continued use of the island as a natural area and wildlife refuge.
0452 Cumbarland lalend - A Challenge In the Golden lalea. U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Washington, D. C. June 1966. 45 pp.
0483 "Battle for a Georgia Island". Bualn"a WHk No. 2088 : 128-129. September 6, 1969. Developer clashes with Carnegie heirs for control of Cumberland Island.
0484 "One More Ecosystem on Death Row?" Allison Wade and Kathryn Wade. Cellllyat for Envtronmenllll Quality 2(4) : 16-19. 1972. On Ossabaw Island and Its preservation.
0485 "Coastsaving: Last Sea Island is Up For Grabs". Constance Stallings. Audubon 76(3) : 95-96. May 1974. Ossabaw, Georgia's last undeveloped coastal island, faces an uncertain future.
0416 "Cumberland Island: Sandy Treasure of the Golden Isles". Maxine A. Rock. Nellonel Perkto I ConHrvetlon 47(8) : 4-7. August 1973. Description, illustrations, summary of preservation effort, historical sketch.
0457 Porlrelt of en lalend. Mildred Teal and John Teal. Atheneum. New York. 1984. [vi} + 167 pp. The natural environments of Sapelo Island - the land, the marsh, and the beach - are described by two members of the original research team at the Marine Institute of the University of Georgia.
0416 "Exploring Wassaw Island". Dick Murless. Brown'a Guide to Georgia 2(5) : 26-31. Novell)ber-December 1974.
11418 "The Farthest Island". Gene Moore. Georgie 16(1) : 47-49, 56. August 1972. Cumberland Island is explored.
0470 "Sapelo Joins the Fold - But What of Cumberland?". C. P. Scruggs. Georgie Magazine 13(5) : 31-32. February-March 1970. Georgia has acquired Sapelo Island for protection but the future of Cumberland Island is seen to be in doubt.
0471 "Jekyll Island - Georgia's Own Vacation Land". Burnette Vanstory. Georgie Magazine 2(2) : 16-20. August-September 1958.
0472 "Cumberland Island". Wayne Parker. Outdoora In Georgie 4(9) : 14-19. September 1975.
0473 "Housewife Saves an Island". Andrew Sparks. Atlenlll Joumel end Conetltutlon Magazine November 2, 1969. Pp. 16-17, 2Q-24. Egg Island, at the mouth of the Altamaha River, has been acquired for preservation due to the efforts of Jane Yarn and the Nature Conservancy.
0474 "A Day in the Life of Cumberland Island". Andrew Sparks. Atlente Joumel end Conetltutlon Megazlne January 18, 1970. Pp. 6-7, 25-26, 28. Diverse opinions regarding the future of Georgia's coastal islands are aired at a legislative hearing.
THE MARSHES
0475 "The Role of Tidal Marshes in Estuarine Production". Eugene P. Odum. New York
Coast
Sllllll ConHrvellonlat 15(6): 12-15,35. 1961. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Voluma 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, February 1962.
0478 "Marine Marsh". Robert A. Ragotzkie. In: McGrew-Hill Encyclopedle ol Science end Technology, McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 1960, pp. 217-218. Reprint in Collec:led Reprints- Volume 3, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1964.
04n Life end Deeth of 11M Sell Merah. John Teal and Mildred Teal. Little, Brown and
Company. Boston and Toronto. 1969. 286 pp. Also published paperbound 1969 by Bal-
lantine, New York, 274 pp.
On the ecology and conservation of the salt marshes of the east coast of the United States
and Canada. Much of the authors' work was done at the University of Georgia Marine
Institute on Sapelo Island.
0478 "Marsh Walk". Philip F. C. Greear. Brown Guide to Georgie 2(3) : 32-37. Summer 1974. The most productive ecosystem, the coastal salt marsh, is explored.
04711 "Coastal Marshlands - A Vital Link". Bob Wilson. Georgie Geme end Flah 5(7) : 12-14. July 1970. The economic and natural values of Georgia's coastal marshlands are summarjzed. The Coastal Marshlands Protection Act of 1970 is explained.
0480 "Georgia's Unspoiled Child of Nature". H. E. Van Orden and Fred Marland. Outdoora In Georgia 2(9) : 16-22. September 1973. Georgia's saltmarsh-estuarine system is described. The natural values of the area are summarized.
0481 "The Marshes of Mcintosh". Andrew Sparks. AU.nlll Joumel end C(!natltutlon
Magazine July 20, 1969. Pp. 10-11, 14, 18-19.
Mcintosh County's portion of Georgia's coastal marshlands is explored. The author finds
a vast food factory essential to many forms of life.
0482 "The Wonderful Marshes of Glynn". Count D. Gibson. Emory Unlveralty Quarterly 3(2): 116-121. June 1947. A geologist explains the marshes of coastal Georgia. (Subsequent research has proved some of the author's findings inaccurate, especially his statement that the marsh has no specific economic value).
0483" 'The Length and the Breadth and the Sweep of the Marshes of Glynn'." LU. 67(20): 88-93. November 14, 1969. The fight to save Georgia's coastal marshlands from resort developers and industry is described.
0484 "Islanders Fight to Save St. Simons". Margaret Shannon. Atlenlll Joumel end Conatltutlon Megazlne January 7, 1973. Pp. 8-9, 24, 26, 3o-31. Overdevelopment threatens the Glynn County island, but a citizens' organization is making waves to stop the worst exploitation.
PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
0485 "A Resource Planning Process for Georgia's Coast". Lillian F. Dean. In: The Value end Vulnereblllty of Coallll Reaourcea, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 1-7. NTIS number: PB-247 693.
11418 CZM NewaleHer. Georgia Office of Planning and Budget. Atlanta. Began November 1975. Reports activities and progress of the Coastal Zone Management Program in Georgia.
0457 "The Georgia COast: Problems and Potential". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Joumel end Conetltutlon Magazine December 14, 1975. Pp. 12-13, 16-19. A public forum initiated by the Coastal .z;one Management Program of the State is described. The participants discussed th~ problems of planning for the coastal region, especially the problem of encouraging economic development without also bringing more degradation of the area's natural features.
0458 Conference on tiM Future of the Marahlenda end See lalenda of Georgie; October 13 end 14, 11188, The Clolalllr, Sea laland, Georgia. DavidS. Maney, Frederick C. Marland, and Clifford B. West, eds. University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission, Brunswick, Georgia. 1969. 137 pp. Several plans of action for the preservation of the islands and marshes are proposed. Summaries of the region's geology, ecology, archaeology, history, and aesthetics are included. Participants discuss the threat of phosphate mining, the decline of wilderness habitat, and problems of coastal water quality.
04811 Report of the Govemora' Conference on Merlne Reaourc.., D-mber 17-18, 1973, Cherleaton, South Caroline. Phillip G. Hill, ed. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1974. v + 74 pp. Critical coastal areas of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina and their management by state and local authority are the subjects of concern. Policies for offshore ports, oil refineries and power plants are considered; priorities tor industrial development are similarly discussed. Fishery resources are also examined.
0490 Report of the Conference on Merlne R..ourcea of the Coullll Plein Slllt.., o-m-
13
Coast
ber 5-8, 1874, Wilmington, North Carolina. [Philip G. Hill, comp.]. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1975. vi+ 73 pp. Seabed minerals, sport fishing, marine-based recreation and tourism, seafood market development, and coastal zone management planning in Georgia and the Carolinas are examined.
0481 Proceecllnga of the Ma.., and Eetuary Management Sympoelum Held at Loulelana State Unlvenlty, Baton Rouge, Loulelana, July 19-20, 1967. John D. Newsom, ed. Louisiana State University, Division of Continuing Education, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. 1968. 250 pp. Values, vulnerability, and management of the U.S. South Atlantic and Gulf Coast marshes and estuaries are discussed.
0482 Proceecllnga of the Coaetal Marah and Eetuary Management Sympoelum Held at Loulllana State Unlverelty, Baton Rouge, Loulelana, July 17-18, 1972. Robert H. Chabreck, ed. Louisiana State University, Division of Continuing Education. Baton Rouge, Louisiana. 1973.
0483 Proceecllnga of Samlnar on Planning and Engineering In the Coaetal Zone, June 8-9, 1172, Charlelton, South Carolina. [Beverly C. Snow, Jr., ed.]. Seminar Series, No. 2. Coastal Plains Center For Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1972. vi + 141 pp. + 4 fold. maps.
0484 Proceecllnge of the Southeutem Conference on Water Supply and Waetewater In Coaetal Area. James M. Stewart, ed. North Carolina State University, Water Resources Research Institute. Raleigh. 1975. 187 pp.
04115 Methode for Be.ch and Sand Dune Protection: Tri-State Conference Report; March 31-Aprll 2, 1874, Sand Dollar Motel, Jekyll leland, Georgia. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section. Atlanta. [1974]. 48 pp. NTIS number: PB-243 854. Basic ecological principles are discussed in relation to alternative methods for beach and dune protection. Recommendations pertain to (1) the role of citizens in beach and dunes protection, (2) criteria for workable beach erosion control projects, and (3) inter-governmental cooperation for protection measures. The conference was a cooperative project of the States of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia.
0496 Glynn County Be.ch and Dune Study. Glynn County Beach and Dune Study Commission. Brunswick, Georgia. June 1973. 37 pp. The study recommends three legal provisions for protection of the shoreline in the county: (1) a beach and dune protection district, (2) an amendment to the county building code, and (3) a vegetation and dune disturbance ordinance.
0497 The Propoead Marahbank Program For Coaetal Georgia. Robert A. Hammond, Resource Development Internship Project. Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission. Brunswick, Georgia. August 1969. 40 pp. An overall perspective of the marshland area is presented including environmental, political, and economic considerations. The feasibility of various programs to stimulate public interest in the preservation of the marshlands is discussed.
0488 The Golden telae of Georgia, Declelon Time lor Public Polley. Charles E. Fraser, Thomas W. Richards, H. B. Masters and John W. Bright. Unpublished. 1969. 70 pp. (approx.). Six viewpoints are compiled: "Decision Time for the Golden Isles of Georgia: Notes on the Evolution of Public Policy" by Charles E. Fraser; "Program Comments on the Proposed Outdoor Recreation Experiment Station for Cumberland Island" by Or. H. B. Masters; "Challenge in the Golden Isles" by John W. Bright, National Park Service; "The Need for Rapid Expansion of Recreational Facilities" by Conway Research, Inc.; "Protecting the Giant Paper Companies' Woods from Recreational Pressures" by Gary A. Soucie, The Sierra Club, and "The Public Now Served by the National Parks" by Mike Frome.
0498 NaUonal Eetuary Study. U. S. Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service. Washington, D.C. January 1970. 7 vols. A comprehensive study of the nation's estuaries and means to restore and protect them.
0500 The Georgia Coni: luuee and Optlonelor Recreation. Charles D. Clement. University of Georgia, College of Business Administration, Division of Research. Athens. January 1971. xxii + [170] pp.
0501 "Recreation on the Georgia Coast - An Ecological Approach". Charles Clement and James Richardson. Georgia Buelneu 30(11) : 1-21. May 1971.
0502 Coaetal Georgia: Ill Reeourcee and Development. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. August 1964. 69 pp.
USE OF COASTAL RESOURCES
0503 AcUviU.. In Georgia' Coaetal Walera: Put Trende and Future Prospecle. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section. Atlanta. May 1975. [xiv] + 210 pp. + 6 maps. NTIS number: PB-247 694. Prepared as background information for the Coastal Zone Management Program in Georgia. Individual chapters review commercial fishing, navigation and waterborne commerce, recreation, mineral potential, and environmental quality. Compatibility of these uses is discussed.
0504 "Effects of Water Use Activities in Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic Estuarine Areas". Spencer H. Smith. In: A Sympoelum on Eetuarlne Fleherles, Atlantic City, N.J., September 1964, Publication No. 3, American Fisheries Society, 1966, pp. 93-101.
0505 Handbook: Building In the Coaetal Environment. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resources Planning Section. Atlanta. 1975. [iv] + 119 pp.
0508 An EvaluaUon of Environmental Impact, LIHie Cumberland leland, Georgia. Joanne Sheldon Worthington. University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mass. December 1972. viii+ 94 pp. "This research was undertaken for the purpose of analyzing and evaluating the effects which the residential development approach of the Little Cumberland Island Association has had on the environment of a Georgia coastal island".
0507 "A House Designed for the Dunes". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 11, 1973. Pp. 10-11, 18. The Seiple house on Little Cumberland Island occupies one of nature's most fragile sites, the sand dune of a barrier island.
0508 A Petroleum Refinery lor Brunewlck, Georgia; A Feaelblllly Analyele. Ernst W. Swanson et a/. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Division. Atlanta. June 1958. xi + 103 pp.
0509 Proceedlnga of the Admlnletrallve Hearing, Georgia Refining Company, Jekyll leland, Georgia, May 30, 1973. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division and U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 4. Atlanta. 1973. 250 pp. Record of a hearing concerning a proposal to build an oil refinery on Colonel's Island in Glynn County.
0510 Interim Report on Reuarch Concemlng Propoeal to Conetruct an 011 Refinery on Colone1'1 leland, Glynn County, Georgia by Georgia Refining Company. Mrs. Edward J. McNamara. Coastal Georgia Audubon Society. Brunswick, Georgia. September 1973. [64 pp.].
0511 "Environmental Aspects of Dredging in Estuaries". H. L. Windom. Joumal of the Waterwaye, Harbora and Coaetal Engineering Dlvlelon ASCE 98 (WW4) : 475-487. 1972.
0512 "Effects of Hydraulic Dredging on Estuarine Animals Studied". Robert Stickney. World Dredging and Marine Conetructlon 9(9) : 34-37. July 1973.
0513 Effecll of lnlracoutal Waterway Dredging on lchlhyolauna and Benthic Macrolnvertabralee. Robert R. Stickney. Technical Report Series, No. 72-4. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. July 1972. 60 pp.
0514 Reuarch to Determine the Environmental Response to the Deposition of Spoil on Salt Ma..,.. Uelng Diked and Undlked Techniques - Firat Annual Progreu Report. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District in cooperation with Skidaway Institute of Oceanography. Savannah. April 1972. 373 pp. +appendices.
ECOLOGY
General Studies
0515 An Ecological Survey of the Coaetal Region of Georgia. A. Sydney Johnson eta/. National Park Service Scientific Monograph Series. No. 3. U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. 1974. xvi + 233 pp. + 12 fold. maps. Plants, animals, physical features, and their interrelationships are described and the influences of man on the region are examined in this summary of information on coastal ecology. Three basic units are identified: the islands, the marshes, and the open marine and estuarine waters. Subunits are specific habitat types within each of the basic three units.
0518 The Ecology of the Cumberland leland National Saaehore, Camden County, Georgia. Hilburn 0. Hillestad, John R. Bozeman. A. Sydney Johnson, C. Wayne Berisford and J. I. Richardson. Technical Report Series, No. 75-5. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. May 1975. xv + 299 pp. Sections: Historical occupation; Geology; Soils and nutrients; Water resources; Vegetation; Fauna; Management issues and considerations. Appendices: Vascular plants; Summary tables of vegetation analysis; Mammals; Birds; Amphibians and reptiles; Insects and spiders.
0517 Coaetal Ecological Syeteme of the United Stales. H. T. Odum, B. J. Copeland, and E. A. McMahan, eds. Conservation Foundation. Washington. June 1974. 4 vols. Volume 4 is bibliography and place index. A comprehensive survey of scientific information through 1969. Originally prepared as part of the National Estuarine Pollution Survey conducted 1968-69.
Specific Studies (Chronologically)
0518 "Ecological Processes and Vegetation of the Maritime Strand in the Southeastern United States". H. J. Oosting. Botanical Review 20(4) : 226-262. 1954.
0519 "Studies on the Nutritive Value of Spartina Grass Growing in the Marsh Areas of Coastal Georgia". Paul R. Burkholder. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 83(5) : 327334. September 1956.
0520 "Decomposition of Marsh Grass by Aerobic Marine Bacteria." Paul R. Burkholder and George H. Bornside. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 84(5) : 366-383. September 1957.
14
Coast
0521 The Role of Two Invertebrate Populations, Littorina irrorata and Orchelimum fidicinium, in the Energy Flow of a Salt Marsh Ecosystem. Alfred E. Smalley. Doctoral dissertation, 1958, University of Georgia. 135 pp. "Energy relationships of three components of a salt marsh on the Georgia coast were studied: (1) Spertina alterniflora, the only higher plant occurring on the marsh, (2) Littorina irrorata, a snail and (3) Orchelimum fidicinium, a grasshopper."
0522 "Algal Productivity in Salt Marshes of Georgia". Lawrence R. Pomeroy. Llmn.ology d Oceenogqphy 4 : 386-397. 1959. Reprint in Collected Raprlnta- Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Ga., 1962.
0523 "Plankton Productivity in Estuarine Waters of Georgia". Robert A. Ragotzkie. PubIICIIIIona of the lnalltuta of Marina Science, Unlveralty of Texaa 6: 146-158. 1959. Reprint in Collecled Reprlnta - Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
0524 The Plloaphorua Budget of a Munal Population and Ita Effect on a SeltMarah Ecoayatem. Edward J. Kuenzler. Doctoral dissertation, 1959, University of Georgia. 109 pp.
0525 Proceedlnp - Sell Marah Conference held at the Marine lnatltute of the Unlveralty of Georgia, Sapelo leland, Georgia, March 25-28, 1958. University of Georgia, Marine Institute. Athens. 1959. xi + 133 pp. Twenty-two papers on four aspects of the salt marsh: (1) as land forms, (2) as vegetation, (3) as an ecosystem, and (4) as historical records.
0528 "Respiration of Crabs in Georgia Salt Marshes and Its Relation to their Ecology". John M. Teal. Phyalologlcal Zoology 32(1): 1-14. January 1959.
0527 "Comparison of Population Energy Flow of a Herbivorous and a Deposit-Feeding Invertebrate in a Salt Marsh Ecosystem". Eugene P. Odum and Alfred E. Smalley. Proceeding of the National Academy of Science 45(4) : 617-622 April 1959. Reprint in Collecled Reprlnll, Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, 1962. Studies of the energy flow of Littorina irrorata, a snail, and Orchelimum fidicinium, a grasshopper, permit valid comparisons of the roles of the two populations in the community.
0528 "Energy Flow of a Salt Marsh Grasshopper Population." Alfred E. Smalley. Ecology 41 (4) : 673-677. October 1960. Energy flow, the sum of production and respiration in organisms, is useful in measuring the significance of a species in a community. The energy flow of a natural population of a grasshopper, Orche/imum fidicinium, in Georgia salt marshes is investigated.
05211 "Structure and Energy Flow of a Mussel Population in a Georgia Salt Marsh". Ed-. ward J. Kuenzler. Umnology and Oceanography 6(2) : 191-204. April 1961. Reprint in Collecled Rprlnll - Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
0530 "Gas Exchange in a Georgia Salt Marsh". John M. Teal and John Kanwisher. Limnology and Oceenography 6(4): 388-399. October 1961. Reprint in Collected ReprlniiVolume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
0531 "Phosphorus Budget of a Mussel Population". Edward J. Kuenzler. Limnology and Oceanography 6(4) : 400-415. October 1961. Reprint in Collected Reprint- Volume 2, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1962.
0532 "Mechanisms Maintaining High Productivity in Georgia Estuaries". Claire L. Schelske and Eugene P. Odum. Procaedlnp of the Gulf and Caribbean Flaharlea lnatltute 14th Annual Sassion: 75-80. November 1961. Reprint in Collected Reprlnll- Volume 3, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1964.
0533 A Comparlaon of the Phyllology and Ecology of the Eatuarlne laopod Cyathura polita (SUmpeon) In Ma...chuHIII and Georgia. Dirk Frankenberg. Doctoral dissertation, 1962, Emory University. 100 pp.
0534 The Ecology of Diatom Population In a Georgia Sell Marah. Richard B. Williams. Doctoral dissertation, 1962, Harvard University.
0535 "Energy Flow in the Salt Marsh Ecosystem of Georgia". John M. Teal. Ecology 43(4) : 614-624. Autumn 1962. Reprint in Collected Reprlnta - Volume 3, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Ga.. Spring, 1964. The energy flow, or trophic level production, of the salt marsh ecosystem is traced and summarized. This paper brings together much of the work of others to enable a broader view of the salt marsh ecosystem.
Marshes of Sapelo Island, Georgia." Herbert W. Kale II. Oriole 29(4): 47-66. 1964. Reprint in Collected Reprlnll- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
0540 Ecology and Bloenergetlca of the Long-Billed Marah Wren Telmatodytes palustris griseus (Brewtller) In Georgia Sell Marahea. Herbert W. Kale. Publicatiops of the Null'!ll Ornithological Club, No.5. Published by the Club. Cambridge, Mass. 1965. 142 pp.
0541 "Ecology and Taxonomy of Ostracoda in the Vicinity of Sapelo Island, Georgia". David G. Darby. In: Four Reporla of Oatracod lnvlltlgetlona, National Science Foundation, Washington, D. C., 1965, 75 pp.
0542 "The Exchange of Phosphate Between Estuarine Water and Sediments". Lawrence R. Pomeroy, E. E. Smith, and Carol M. Grant. Limnology and Oceanography 10(2) : 167172. April 1965. Reprint in Collected Reprlnta - Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
0543 "Respiration and Phosphorus Excretion in Some Marine Populations", Masako Salomi and Lawrence R. Pomeroy. Ecology 46(6) : 877-881. Autumn 1965.
0544 A Study of Particulate Organic Datrltua In a Georgia Sell Marah - Eatuarlne Ecoeyatem. Armando A. de Ia Cruz. Doctoral dissertation, 1965, University of Georgia. 141 pp.
0545 "The Distribution and Ecology of Nematodes in a Georgia Salt Marsh". John M. Teal and Wolfgang Wieser. Limnology and Oceanography 11(2): 217-222. April1966.
0546 "The Effect of Intertidal Environment on the Composition of Calcareous Skeletal Material". Orrin H. Pilkey and Robert C. Harriss. Limnology and Oceanography 11 (3) : 381-385. 1966. Reprint in Collected Reprlnta- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
0547 Influence of the Altamaha River on Primary Production Beyond the Mouth of the River. James Pestles Thomas. Masters thesis, 1966, University of Georgia. 88 pp.
0548 "A Radionuclide Tracer Study of Arthropod Food Chains in a Spartina Salt Marsh Ecosystem". T. G. Marples. Ecology 47(2): 270-277. 1966. Reprint in. Collected ReprlntaVolume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
0549 "The Phosphorus and Zinc Cycles and Productivity of a Salt Marsh". Lawrence R. Pomeroy et at. In: Sympoalum on Radioecology, Procaedlnga., Daniel J. Nelson and F. C. Evans, eds., Ann Arbor, May 15-17, 1967, (Issuance date: March 1969), pp. 412419. Reprint in Collected Reprlnta - Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
0550 "Food Ecology of the Rice Rat, Oryzomys palustris (Harlan), in a Georgia Salt Marsh". Homer F. Sharp, Jr. Journal of Mammalogy 48(4) : 557-563. November 1967. Reprint in Collected Reprlnta- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
0551 "Water Sources of the Long-Billed Marsh Wren in Georgia Salt Marshes". Herbert W. Kale II. Auk 84(4) : 589-591. November 1967. Reprint in Collected Reprint- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968. Several species of birds living in coastal salt marshes have access to fresh water only during heavy rainstorms. Experiments conducted by the author with the long-billed marsh wren suggest that this species is able to obtain all the water needed from food with relatively high water content. .
0552 "Particulate Organic Detritus in a Georgia Salt Marsh - Estuarine Ecosystem". Eugene P. Odum and Armando A. de Ia Cruz. lri: Eatuarlea, George H. Lauff, ed., Publication No. 83, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, D.C., 1967, pp. 383-388. Reprint in Collected Reprlnta- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, 1968. Organic detritus is fhe main link between primary and secondary productivity in the Georgia salt marshes. Grazing of the marsh grass contributes only a small portion of the energy flow. Several aspects of detritus are being studied. The work and some of theresults are explained here.
0553 "Ecology and Growth of Juvenile Tarpon, Mega/ops at/anticus, in a Georgia Salt Marsh". William L. Rickards. Bulletin of Marina Science 18(1) : 220-239. 1968. Reprint in Collected Reprlnta - Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
0536 "Detritus as a Major Component of Ecosystems". Eugene P. Odum and Armando A. de Ia Cruz. AIBS Bulletin 13(3) : 39-40. 1963. Reprint in Collected Reprlnll - Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965. The role of particulate organic matter, or organic detritus, in ecosystems, particularly the coastal waters ecosystem of Georgia, is under study at the University of Georgia Marine Institute.
0537 Ovoid Poole In the Georgia Tldel Marahea. Carl Richard Hill. Masters thesis, 1963,
University of Georgia. 144 pp.
053e "A Comparison of the Physiology and Ecology of the Estuarine Isopod Cyathura po/ita in Massachusetts.11nd Georgia". Dirk Frankenburg and W. D. Burbanck. Biological BulleUn 125(1) : 81-95. August 1963. Reprint in Collected Reprlnll, Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
0539 "Food of the Long-Billed Marsh Wren, Telmatodytes palustris griseus, in the Salt
0554 "Total Energy Balance in Salt Marsh Grasses". John M. Teal and John W. Kenwisher. Ecology 51 (4) : 690-695. Summer 1970.
0555 "Remote Sensing of Salt Marsh Productivity". Robert J. Reimold. In: Proceedings of the Third Biennial Workahop on Color Aerial Photography in the Plant Sciences, March 2-4, 1971, Gainesville, Florida. Considers remote sensing of the salt marsh using color infrared photography. The study site is on the Duplin Estuary adjacent to Sapelo Island.
0556 composition of Phytoplankton off the Southeastern Coast of the United States". Harold G. Marshall. Bulletin of Marine Science 21 (4) : 806-825. 1971.
0557 "Competition for Urea Among Estuarine Microorganisms". Charles C. Remsen, E. J. Carpenter, and B. W. Schroeder. Ecology 53(5) : 921-926. Late Summer 1972. The roles of bacteria and phytoplankton in the decomposition of urea were studied in the heavily polluted Savannah estuary and the relatively unpolluted Ogeechee estuary.
15
Coast
0558 "Nutrient Flux in Estuaries". L. R. Pomeroy et al. In: Nutrients and Eutrophication, American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Special Symposia, Vol. 1, 1972, pp. 274-296.
0559 A Contribution to the Ecology of a Subtidal Oyster Bed In the Mackay River, St. Simons Island, Georgia. Mallory Sanford May Ill. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, Emory University. 198 pp.
0580 "Remote Sensing and Salt Marsh Productivity". John L. Gallagher, Robert J. Reimold, and Donald E. Thompson. In: Proceedings of the 38th Annual Meeting, American Society of Photogrammetry, Washington, D. C., 1972, pp. 338-348. The feasibility of using photography or thermal imagery from fixed wing aircraft for assessing salt marsh productivity is investigated. The study site is on the Duplin Estuary adjacent .to Sapelo Island.
0561 comparison of the Productivity of Spartina alterniflora and Spartina cynosuroides in Georgia Coastal Marshes. Eugene P. Odum and Marsha E. Fanning. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 31(1): 1-12. January 1973.
0562 "Iron-Scandium Budget in Sediments of Two Georgia Salt Marshes". Steven S. Barnes, T. F. Craft, and Herbert L. Windom. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 31 (1) 23-30. January 1973. The path of iron and scandium through a salt marsh was investigated. It was found that the marsh sediment is a sink for scandium and a reservoir for iron. Marsh grasses may take up iron through their root systems and release it as plant detritus.
0563 Remote Sensing of Tidal Marsh Primary Productivity". Robe"rt J. Reimold, J. L. Gallagher, and D. E. Thompson. Photogrammetric Engineering 39: 447-488. 1973.
0564 The Value of the Tidal Marsh. James G. Gosselink, Eugene P. Odum, and R. M. Pope. University of Georgia, Institute of Ecology. Athens. 1973.
0565 Aspects of the Structure and Function of the lnterlldal Oyster Reef Community In Georgia. Leonard Marion Bahr, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, University of Georgia. 180 pp.
0566 Community Plankton Respiration In a Saltmarsh Tidal Creek and Estuary and In the Continental Shelf Waters of Georgia. Robert Eugene Turner. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, University of Georgia. 125 pp.
0578 The Seasonal Cycle of Growth and Production In Three Salt Marshes Adjacant to the Savannah River. Greg L. Mcintire and William M. Dunstan. Technical Report Series, No. 75-2. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1975. 20 pp.
COASTAL WATERS: PHYSICAL, CHEMICAL, AND BIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES
0579 Physical and Chemical Properlles of the Coastal Waters of Georgia. R. Kuroda and F. C. Marland. Report No. ERC-0373. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. April 1973. 90 pp. NTIS number: PB-220 680.
0580 Physical Oceanographic, Biological, and Chemical Data; South Atlantic Coast of the United States: M. V. Theodore N. Gill Cruises 3-9. William W. Anderson and Jack W. Gehringer. Special Scientific Report- Fisheries Nos. 210, 234, 248, 265, 278, 303, 313. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 1957-1959. 7 vols.
0581 Oceanographic Observations In the Georgia Bight: Data Report for R. V, Eastward Cruises E-13-73 (4-11 September} and E-19-73 (89 Decamber 1973). Larry P. Atkinson. Technical Report Series, No. 75-6. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1975. ii + 156 pp. Biological, chemical, physical, and geological data for the offshore waters of Georgia are presented.
0582 An Environmental Inventory lor the Coastal Plain and Adjacant Atlantic Waters of the Southeastern States; Part It - An Index to Coastal Marine Observations off the Carolinas and Georgia. Publication No. 72-5. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1972. 75 pp.
0583 An Environmental Inventory lor the Coastal Plain and Adjacent Atlantic Waters of the Southeastern States; Part Ill - An Index to Hydrographic Surveys lor Coastal and Inshore Waters of the Carolinas and Georgia. Publication No. 72-6. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N. C. 1972. 191 pp.
0584 Chemical Anelysla of Biological, Water end Sediment Samples from the Altameha end e Control Eatuery. Herbert L. Windom. Technical Report Series, No. 71-1. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. September 1971. 20 pp.
0567 Ecology of Halophytes. Robert J. Reimold and William H. Queen, eds. Academic Press. New York, N.Y. 1974. xiv + 605 pp. The fundamentals of distribution, anatomy and physiology of halophytes (plants of saline wetlands) are reviewed.
0568 Proce11e1 Affecting Production in Georgia Coastal Waters. Evelyn Brown Haines. Doctoral dissertation. 1974, Duke University. Durham, N.C. 120 pp.
0569 Studies of Microbial Production and Utilization of Dissolved Organic Carbon In a Georgia Salt Marsh- Estuarine Ecosystem. WilliamS. Sottile. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, University of Georgia. 165 pp.
0570 'The Value and Vulnerability of Coastal Beaches, Sand Dunes, and Offshore Sand Bars". George F. Oertel. In: The Value and Vulnerability of Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 9-33, NTIS number: PB-247 693.
0571 ""Terrestrial Ecology of the Georgia Barrier Islands". James I. Richardson and Joanne S. Worthington. In: The Value and Vulnerability of Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 35-111. NTIS number: PB-247 693.
0572 The Value and Vulnerability of Fresh Water Ecosystems". David M. Gillespie. In: The Value and Vulnerability of Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 113-136. NTIS number: PB-247 693.
0573 A Summary of Ground Water Conditions [in] Coastal Georgia". David E. Swanson. In: The Value and Vulnerability of Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 137-170. NTIS number: PB-247 693.
0574 ""An Overview of Coastal Georgia Wildlife". Jerry L. McCollum. In: The Value and Vulnerability of Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 171-182. NTIS number: PB-247 693.
0575 "Soils Information for Coastal Georgia" Ronald D. Lybarger. In: The Value and Vulnerability of Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 201-211. NTIS number: PB-247 693.
0576 "Vegetation Information for Coastal Georgia". Ronald D. Lyberger. In: The Value and Vulnarablllty of Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta, May 1975, pp. 213222. NTIS number: PB-247 693.
0577 "The Distribution of and Relations of Particular Organic Material and Primary Productivity in the Georgia Bight, 1973-74". Evelyn B. Haines and William Dunstan. Estuarlna and Coastal Marsh Science 3: 431-441. 1975.
0585 Volume Transporl, Sellnlty Distribution, and Net Circulation In the Duplin Estuary, Georgia. Bjorn Kjerfve. Report No. ERC-0273. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. April 1973. 34 pp. NTIS number: PB-221 535.
0586 Chemical and Biological Survey of the Sevannah River Adjacent to Elba Island. Robert R. Stickney and David Miller. Technical Report Series, No. 73-3. Georgia Marine Sc1ence Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. February 1973. 68 pp.
0587 Sediment Water Interactions In Some Georgia Rivero and Estuaries. Kevin C. Beck. Report No. ERC-0872. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. July 1972.96 pp. NTIS number: PB-211 611.
0588 Biological and Physical Dynamics of a Georgia Tidal Creek. Courtney T. Hackney. Masters thesis, 1972, Emory University.
0589 ""Chemistry and Biology of the Lower Savannah River". Robert R. Stickney and David Miller. Journal Water Pollution Control Federation 46(10) : 2316-2326. October 1974. Temperature, salinity, pH, dissolved oxygen, and organisms-collected data are presented and discussed.
0590 Reporl on the Hydrologic and Sedimentologic Study of the Offshore Spoil Disposal Area, Savannah, Georgia. George F. Oertel. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. 1975. 101 pp.
0591 Model Tidal Datum Study, Duplin Estuary, Sapelo Island, Georgia. Robert J. Rei mold and Patrick C. Adams. Technical Report Series, No. 74-7. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1974. 113 pp.
0592 Coastal Currents Along the Atlantic Coast of the United States. F. J. Haight. Special Publication No. 230. U. S. Department of Commerce, Coast and Geodetic Survey. 1942. 73 pp.
0593 Currents In the St. Johns River, Savannah River and Intervening Waterways. F. J. Haight. Special Publication No. 211. U. S. Department of Commerce, Coast and Geodetic Survey. Washington, D. C. 1938. 21 pp.
0594 Tidal Flow Study of Delegal Creek In the Vicinity of Green Island, Chatham County, Georgia. James L. Harding and David Miller. Technical Report Series, No. 71-2. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1971.
0595 Hydrology of the Riceboro Area, Coastal Georgia. T. R. Dyar, G. D. Tasker, and R. L. Wait. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. 1972. 74 pp.
0591 "Hydrography of the Duplin River, Sapelo Island, Georgia". Robert A. Ragotzkie, and Reid A Bryson. Bulletin of Merlne Sctance of the Gull end C.rlbbean 5(4) : 297314. 1955.
0597 "Fluoride Concentration in Coastal and Estuarine Waters of Georgia". Herbert L. Windom. Limnology and Oceanography 16(5): 806-810. September 1971.
16
0598 C~emlcal Survey ol Waters Adjacent to Colonels Island, Glynn County, Georgia. William M. Dunstan and Robert R. Stickney. Technical Report Series. No. 74-1. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1974. 13 pp.
0599 "Diurnal Variations in the Chemical Characteristics of the Ogeechee Estuary in Georgia". Herbert L. Windom and K. C. Beck. Bulletin ol the Georgia Academy ol Science 29(1). 65-75. January 1971.
0600 Symposium on Direct Tracer Measurement ol the Reaeration Capacity ol Streams and Estuaries, 7-8 July 1970. Georgia Institute of Technology. Atlanta. January 1972. 200 pp. NTIS number: PB-218 478.
0601 "Oxygen Demand and Oxygen Depletion Capacity of Sediments from Wassaw Sound. Georgia" Dirk Frankenberg and Charles W. Westerfield. Jr. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy ol Science 26(4) 160-172. September 1968. A proposal by the Kerr-McGee Corporation to lease state-owned subtidal lands to mine phosphate deposits prompted this study of the oxygen relationships of water and sediments from Wassaw Sound. It was anticipated that the mining would cause oxygen depletion in the waters of the salt marsh- estuarine system. ReSults confirm this assumption al)d indicate that severe oxygen depletion may result from the proposed mining.
MISCELLANEOUS
0602 A Socio-Economic Environmental Baseline Summary for the South Atlantic Region Between Cape Hatteras, North Carolina and Cape Canaveral, Florida. Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, Virginia for U. S. Bureau of Land Management. September 1974. 5 vols. A data base for preparation of environmental 1m pact statements and similar studies covering the area. In five volumes: (1) Physical Oceanography; (2) Climatology; (3) Chemical and Biological Studies; (4) Geological Oceanography; and (5) Socio-Economic Studies.
0603 Environmental Inventory: Lower Coastal Plain Drainage Area Between the Ogeechee and Altamaha Rivers, Georgia. Mallory S. May Ill. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah. April 1974. x + 220 pp. Concerns primarily Bryan. Liberty, and Mcintosh counties. Inventories: geology, topography. soils. minerals. drainage and irrigation. hydrology, ground water. tidal hydraulics, flooding, sedimentation, water quality, water and sewer service, air quality, climate, plant and animal life, endangered species, population, land use, historical and archaeological resources, and economy.
0604 Savannah and Its Region: A Guide to Environmental Quality. University of Georgia. "Prepared by Muriel T. Fitzgerald, James R. Cothran. Dan M. Fuchs, and John C. Waters. Graduate Students. LAR 702-703, under the direction of Professor Robert P. Nicholls. D1vision of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Design". June 1968. [iv] + 83 pp.
0605 Pilot Study for Determining the Esthetic Landscape Quality of Coastal Georgia's U.S. Route 17 Corridor. David MacLeod and William We1ss Ill. "A Terminal Pro;ect [p]resented to the School of Environmental Design, Un1versity of Georgia in partial fulfillment of requ1rements for the Degree of Bachelor of Landscape Architecture". Athens. August 1974. vi 74 pp.
0606 "The Un;vers1ty System's Larger Role on the Georg1a Coast". Lee Beasley.lnterface: The University System of Georgia Magazine 2(1) 2-31. Summer-Fall 1974. The Coastal Resources Program of the Un1vers1ty System of Georgia IS described. The act1vit1es of the program are m three areas: education, research, and extension (advisory services).
0607 "Tech Oceanographers Discover the Sea" Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution. Magazine Apnl 15, 1973. Pp. 36, 39-40. Research at the Ocean Sc1ence Center of the Unrversrty of Georgia is described. The faCIlity is located on Skidaway Island near Savannah.
0608 Sea Island and St. Simons Island, Georgia; Survey Report. U. S. Army Corps of Engmeers. Savannah D1strict. Savannah. November 1970. 61 pp.
0609 Coastal Areas, Georgia, Survey Report. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah D1strict. Savannah. 1963. 37 pp.
0610 Legal Aspects of Ownership and Use of Estuarine Areas in Georgia and South Carolina. Carroll Leavell. Un1versity of Georgia. lnst1tute of Government. Athens. 1971. 111 pp
0611 "Who Owns the Beaches?"" Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 7, 1975. Pp. 24-26. 29-31 Does the state own the area of the ocean shore that l1es between the high and low water marks? The controversy over the quest1on 1s descnbed.
0612 .. Public Rights in Georgia's Tidelands" J. Owens Smith and Jack L. Sammons. Georgia Law Review 9(1) 79-114. Fa111974.
BIBLIOGRAPHIES AND OTHER AIDS
0613 The Georgia Coastal Environment: A Compilation of Resource Materials Covering the Coastal Plain Estuaries and Offshore Waters. Harold W. Dubach, comp. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Wilmington Distnct. Wilmmgton, N.C. 1975. ix + 154 pp. A bibliography of the natural features and resources of the Georgia coastal region. With autnor. geographic. and subject mdexes.
Commercial Fisherie.s
0614 A Directory of Bibliographies Relevant to the Environment and Activit~ of the
Coastal Plains Region. Publication No. 72-3. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Develop-
ment Services. Wilmington. N.C. June 1972.
Lists bibliographies in the following subject areas: (1) geology; (2) biology; (3) oceanogra-
phy; (4) climate; (5) coasts and estuaries; (6) f1sh; (7) remote sensing; and (8) water and
(8) water and air pollution.
0615 A Preliminary Bibliography with KWIC Index on the Ecology of Estuaries and Coastal Areas of the Eastern United States. Robert Livingstone. Jr. Special Scientific Report:_ Fisheries no. 507. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. May 1965. iv + 352 pp.
0616 Publications of the Skldaway Institute of Oceanography, University of Georgia Marine Institute and Marine Extension Service 1970-1972. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island. Georgia. March 1973. 12 pp.
0617 Publications of the Skldaway Institute of Oceanography, Unlverslty of Georgia Marine Institute Marine Resources Extensions: Savannah and Brunswick 1973-1974. Ann Atkinson. comp. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. July 1975. 13 pp.
0618 Collected Reprints. University of Georgia Marine Institute. Sapelo Island, Georgia. Vols. 1-7. 1963-1969. Selected contributions to professional journals by members of the staff of the Institute are reprinted. These deal with the biology, geography, geology, or oceanography of the Georg1a coastal region.
0619 The Marine Newsletter. Coastal Plams Center for Marine Development Services. Wlimmgton, N.C. Bi-monthly. Manne developments of interest to the Coastal Plains Region of Georgia, the Cai-olfnas, Flonda. and Vlfgm1a are reported.
COMMERCIAL FISHERIES
GENERAL BLUE CRABS CLAMS OYSTERS SHAD SHRIMP MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL
0620 An Economic Analysis of the Commercial Fishery Industry of Georgia. D. H. Carley. Research Bulletin 37. University of Georgia. College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1968. 92 pp.
0621 The Commercial Fishing Industry of Georgia- An Economic Evaluation. D. H. Carley and C. M. Frisbie. Contribution Series. No. 7. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick. Georgia. July 1968. 13 pp. NTIS number: COM72-10289.
0622 Georgia Landings. Current Fisheries Statistics. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service. Washington. D. C. Monthly, with annual 'Summary.
0623 The Blue Crab, Oyster, and Flnllsti Fisheries of Georgia -An Economic Evaluation. D. H. Carley and C. M. Frisbie. Contribution Series. No. 12. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick. Georgia. November 1968. 13 pp. NTIS number: COM-72-10187.
0624 Survey of the Fisheries Resources In Georgia's Estuarine and Inshore Ocean Waters. Robert K. Mahood et a/. Contnbution Series. Nos. 22-25. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Game and Fish Division, Coastal Fisheries Office. Brun~wick, Georgia. 1974.4 vols. NTIS numbers: COM-75-10202 through COM-75-10205.
0625 "Demersal Fish Resources: Composition. Distribution, and Commercial Potential of the Continental Shelf Stocks of Southeastern United States". P. Struhsaker. Fishery Industrial Research (U.S. Bureau of Commercial Fisheries) 4 :. 261-300. 1969.
0626 Locationallnventory of Docks and Shrimp Trawlers on the Coast of Georgia. Harold L. Nix, Steve Glenn. and James Whitted. Technical Report Series. No. 75-8. Georgia Marine Science Center. Sapelo Island, Georgia. July 1975. 25 pp.
0627 Factors Affecting Coat and Income From Shrimp Vessels. D. H. Carley. Contribution Series, No. 11. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fis.heriesOivision. Brunswick. November 1968. 14 pp.
17
Commercial Fisheries
0828 Ve~rete Aqueculture Reerch Under the Sea Grant Program at Skldaway Institute of Oceanogrephy During 1971. Robert R. Stickney and David B. White. Technical Report Series, No. 72-1. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. January 1972. 22 pp.
0829 Sea Water System for Aquaculture of Estuarine Organisms at the Skldaway Institute of Ocunography. David B. White, Robert R. Stickney, David Miller, and Lee Knight. Teehnical Report Series, No. 73-1. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. January 1973. 18 pp.
0830 "Mariculture: A New Ocean Use". J. Owens Smith and David L. Marshall. Georgia Joumal of lntematlonal and Comparetlve Law 4(2): 307-342. 1974. NTIS number: COM75-10106. "A discussion on the international legal framework within which mariculture and other uses must develop is reported. The primary focus of the paper is the State of Georgia and its ability to authorize mariculture...."
BLUE CRABS
0631 Studies on the Blue Crab (Callinectes sapidus) In Georgia. Bobby A. Palmer. Contribution Series, No. 29. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Game and Fish Division, Coastal Fisheries Office, Brunswick, Georgia. October 1974. iii+ 59 pp. The blue crab, though commercially second to shrimp, represents only about 10 per cent of the total value of all fish and shellfish landed in Georgia. Low value per pound is the major reason. Data on distribution, seasonal abundance, size composition, maturity stages, sex ratios, total numbers, total weight, and other aspects of the blue crab are presented.
0632 A Report on the Cooperative Blue Crab Study- South Atlantic Stet. Robert K. Mahood et a/. Contribuiion Series, No. 19. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Coastal Fisheries Office. Brunswick. February 1970. ii + 32 pp. + 1 fold. map. "The cooperative blue crab study was designed to determine the cause(s) of blue crab mortalities and to delineate significant factors affecting the relative abundance of marketable crabs".
0833 "Blue Crab Trawl Fishery of Georgia". Robert Cummins, Jr. and Joachim B. Rivers. Commercial Flsherl Review 24(3): 1-6. March 1962.
CLAMS
0834 Preliminary Survey of a Potential Hard Clam Fishery. Walter F. Godwin. Contribution Series, No. 1. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. August 1967. 24 pp.
0635 The Distribution and Density of the Hard-Clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, on the Georgia Coast. Walter F. Godwin. Contribution Series, No. 10. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. September 1968. 31 pp.
0838 The Growth and Survival of Planted Clams, Mercenaria mercenaria, on the Georgia Coast. Walter F. Godwin. Contribution Series, No. 9. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. September 1968. 17 pp.
0637 The Distribution and Density of the Brackish Water Clam, Rangia cuneata, In the Allamaha River, Georgia. Walter F. Godwin. Contribution Series No. 5. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. April 1968. 11 pp.
OYSTERS
0838 "Oysters". Jingle Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 4(8) : 20-23. August 1975. The Oyster Restoration Project of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources is described.
0639 Feasibility Study of Methods lor Improving Oyster Production In Georgia, Final Report. Thomas L. Linton, ed. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division and University of Georgia Marine Institute. [1968]. [179] pp. NTIS number: COM72-11239.
0640 Proceedings of the Oyster Culture Workshop, July 11-13, 1967. Thomas L. Linton. Contribution Series, No. 6. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. June 1968. ii + 83 pp.
0841 "Oyster Investigations in Georgia". Paul S. Galtsoff and R. H. Luce. U. S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Fisheries Doc. 1077: 61-100. 1930.
0842 "On the Sounds and Estuaries of Georgia, With Reference to Oyster Culture". James C. Drake. Bulletin, U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey 19: 179-209. 1891.
0643 "Distribution of Iron, Magnesium, Copper, Zinc, and Silver in Oysters Along the Georgia Coast". H. L. Windom and K. G. Smith. Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada 29(4) : 450-452. April 1972.
SHAD
0844 Shad Fishery of the Ogeechee River, Georgia, In 1954. James E. Sykes. Special Scientific Report- Fisheries, No. 191. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. November 1956.
v + 11 pp.
0645 The Shad Fishery of the Altamaha River, Georgia. W. F. Godwin. Contribution Series. No. 8. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. August 1968. 42 pp. NTIS number: COM-72-10192.
0846 Fecundity of the American Shad In the Allamaha River System. Thomas L. Vaughn. Contribution Series, No. 3. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. September 1967. 9 pp. NTIS number: COM-72-10190.
0647 Preliminary Studies of the Shad Fishery of the Altamaha River, Georgia. W. F. Godwin and L. G. McBay. Contribution Series, No. 2. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. September 1967. 28 pp. NTIS number: COM-72-10193.
0648 Biology and Management of the American Shad and Status of the Fisheries, Atlantic Coast of the United States, 1960. Charles H. Walburg and Paul R. Nichols. Special Scientific Report- Fisheries, No. 550. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. August 1967. iv + 105 pp. Chapter "Shad Fisheries of Georgia" on pages 22-27.
0649 Fecundity of the Hickory Shad In the Allamaha River, Georgia. Michael W. Street. Contribution Series, No. 14. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. August 1969. 11 pp.
0650 Some Aspects of the Life Histories of Hickory Shad, A/osa mediocris (Mitchill) and Blueback Herring, Alosa aestivalis (Mitchill) in the Altamaha River, Georgia. Michael Wolff Street. Masters thesis, 1970, University of Georgia. 85 pp.
0651 Aging of Hickory Shad and Blueback Herring In Georgia by the Scale Method. Michael W. Street and John G. Adams. Contribution Series, No. 18. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. October 1969. 14 pp.
SHRIMP
0652 The Shrimp Fishery of Georgia - An Economic Evaluation. D. H. Carley and C. M. Frisbie. Contribution Series, No. 13. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. December 1968. 14 pp. NTIS number: COM-72-10193.
0653 The Shrimp Fishery of the South Atlantic United States: A Regional Management Plan. Peter J. Eldridge and Steven A. Goldstein, eds. South Carolina Wildlife and Marine Resources Department. Charleston, S. C. 1975. 66 pp.
0654 The Shrimp Fishery of the Southeastern United States: A Management Planning Profile. Dale R. Calder, Peter J. Eldridge, and Edwin B. Joseph. Technical Report No. 5. South Carolina Wildlife and Marine Resources Department, Marine Resources Center. Charleston. S. C. September 1974. vi + 229 pp.
0655 "Georgia Shrimpers Gamble for High Stakes". John Pennington. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine July 18, 1971. Pp. 16-18, 21-22. Shrimping in Georgia is big business, despite wide fluctuations in annual catches. Each year the shrimpers begin a new try with the traditional "Blessing of the Fleet" at every major port on Georgia's coast.
0656 Preliminary Studies of the Seasonal Abundance and Biological Stability of the Commercial Shrimp of Georgia. Charles M. Frisbie. Contribution Series, No.4. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. November 1967. 19 pp. NTIS number: COM-72-10347.
0657 Observations on the While Shrimp (Panaeus setiferus) In Georgia. C. Duane Harris. Contribution Series, No. 27. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Game and Fish Division, Coastal Fisheries Office. Brunswick. October 1974. iv +54 pp.
0658 Contributions to the Life Histories of Several Penaeld Shrimps (Penaeldae) Along the South Atlantic Coast of the United States. William W. Anderson. Special Scientific Report- Fisheries, No. 605. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. May 1970. iv + 24 pp.
MISCELLANEOUS
0659 Young Clupelds of the Allamaha River, Georgia. W. F. Godwin and J. G. Adams. Contribution Series, No. 15. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Maiine Fisheries Division. Brunswick. August 1969.33 pp. NTIS number: COM-72-10181.
0660 Clupeids In the Aitamaha River, Georgia. John G. Adams. Contribution Series No. 20. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Coastal Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. June 1970. 27 pp.
0661 Fecundity of the Blueback Herring In Georgia. Michael W. Street. Contribution Series, No. 17. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Marine Fisheries Division. Brunswick, Georgia. September 1969. 16 pp.
0662 Notes on the Spawning and Embryological Development of Blueback Herring, (Alosa aestavalis Mllchlll), In the Allamaha River, Georgia. John G. Adams and Michael W. Street. Contribution Series, No. 16. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Coastal Fisheries Office. Brunswick, Georgia. August 1969. 15 pp.
0663 Seatrout of the Genus Cynoscion In Coastal Waters of Georgia. Robert K. Mahood.
18
Endangered Species
Contribution Series. No. 26. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Game and Fish D1vis1on. Coastal Fisheries Office. Brunswick. October 1974. 36 pp.
0664 Observations on the Spot (Leiostomus xanthurus) In Georgia's Estuarine and Close Inshore Ocean Waters. James L. Music, Jr. Contribution Series. No. 28. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Game and Fish DivisiOn, Coastal Fisheries Office. Brunswick. October 1974. iii+ 29 pp.
ECOLOGY (See also ANIMALS, PLANTS, FORESTS, NATURAL AREAS, SWAMPS, COAST and
other related headings.)
0665 Fundamentals of Ecology 3rd ed. Eugene P. Odum. W. B. Saunders Co. Philadelphia. 1971. xiv + 574 pp. Standard textbook and comprehensive reference work. Designed for use by concerned citizens as well as college students and specialists. Much of the information is from research in Georgia.
0688 The Ecology of Southam Foreota. Norwin E. Linnartz, ed. Louisiana State University Press. Baton Rouge. [1969]. vi+ 203 pp.
0667 Deciduous Forests of Eastern North America. E. Lucy Braun. Blakiston Company. Philadelphia. 1950. xiv + 596 pp.
0668 "An Ecosystematic Study of the Fauna and Flora of the Savannah River". Ruth Patrick, John Cairns. and Selwyn S. Roback. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 118(5) 109-407. 1967.
0669 "The Flint - Chattahoochee - Apalachicola Region and its Environments". T. H. Hubbell, A. M. Laessle and J. C. Dickinson. Florida State Museum Bulletin. Biological Sciences 1(1). 1-72 pp. 1956.
0670 Environmental Studies at the Savannah River Plant and Immediate Environs: A Bibliography. TID-3353. U. S. Energy Research and Development Administration, Technical Information Center. Oak Ridge, Tenn. July 1975. 99 pp. NTIS number: TID-3353. Studies conducted at the Savannah River Plant include radiation monitoring investigations, geologic and hydrologic surveys, analyses of radioactive waste disposals, and studies of the effects of thermal effluents on certain ecosystems.
0671 "Thermal Alterations of Aquatic Ecosystems". J. Whitfield Gibbons and Rebecca R. Sharitz. American Scientist 62(5) : 660-670. November-December 1974. "Effluents from nuclear production reactors on the AEC's ?50-square-kilometer Savannah River Plant have created a unique opportunity to study the effects of heat on aquatic communities" (author). This article summarizes five years of research at the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory of the University of Georgia.
0672 Savannah River Biological Survey, South Carolina and Georgia, May and August 1968, for the E. I. duPont de Nemours & Company. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. April 1970. 130 pp. TID-25393. U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, Division of Technical Information. NTIS number: TID-25393. Report of surveys in the vicinity of the Savannah River Plant for purposes of determining whether any physical, chemical, or biological changes had occurred since previous surveys in 1951-52, 1955-56, 1960, and 1965. The surveys included investigations of algae. plankton, and protozoa; insects; fishes; and major macroinvertebrate groups. A species list 1S included as an appendix.
0673 Respiration of the Planktonic Community of a Georgia Farm Pond. Jean Pantell Sikora. Doctoral dissertation, 1975, University of Georgia. 148 pp.
0674 "Observations on Surface-Water Temperatures in Limesink Ponds and Evaporation Pans in Southwestern Georgia". E. L. Hendricks and Melvin H. Goodwin, Jr. Ecology 33(3) 385-397. July 1952.
ENDANGERED SPECIES
0675 Endangered Species of Georgia; Proceedlnga of the 1974 Conference, May 3-4, 1974, Fembank Science Center, Atlanta, Georgia. Jerry L. McCollum, ed. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Atlanta. [1975]. [vi] + 88 pp.
0676 "Our Endangered Wildlife" Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 5, 1969. Pp. 26-28, 37-38.
0677 "Georgia's New Concern for the Wild". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 30, 1974. Pp. 6-7, 18, 21-22, 24. The State now has greater authority to protect animals and plants from exploitation and extinction.
0678 "A Clearly Present Danger". Aaron Pass and Ron Odum. Outdoors in Georgia 4(3). 20-23. March 1975. Describes the endangered species program in Georgia.
0679 Threatened Wildlife of the United States. 1973 edition. Resource Publication No. 114. [Revision of Resource Publication No. 34]. U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, Office of Endangered Species and International Activities. Washington. D. C. March 1973. xiv + 289 pp. On the status of species or subspecies of vertebrates whose existence is threatened in the United States. Intended as a reference for compiling the official list of Endangered Native Fish and Wildlife of the U. S. Department of the Interior.
0680 Report on Endangered and Threatened Plant Species of the United States. Presented to the Congress of the United States of America by the Secretary, Smithsonian Institution, 15 December 1974. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1975, iv + 200 pp.
0681 [U.S. Lists of Endangered and Threatened Fish, Wildlife, and Plants]. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Federal Register [See monthly, quarterly, and annual Index-Federal Register for current information on these lists].
0682 Endangered, Threatened and Unique Mammals of the Southern National Forests. George Edgar Lowman. USDA Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. 1975. 132 pp.
0683 Protecting Endangered Wildlife on your Southern National Forests. USDA Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. 1969. Brief information is given for each species that is considered to be endangered.
0684 Rare and Endangered Birds of the Southern National Forests. E. Burnham Chamberlain. USDA Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. 1974. 108 pp.
0685 The Ecology and Management of the Red-Cockaded Woodpecker; Proceedings of a Symposium at Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, Folkston, Georgia, May 26-27, 1971. Richard L. Thompson, ed. U. S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. Washington, D. C. 1971. ii + 188 pp.
0686 "Endangered Species: Red-Cockaded Woodpecker". John V. Dennis. National Parks and Conservation 46(4) 24-27. April 1972. On an endangered bird of southern pine forests.
0687 Endangered Rare and Uncommon Wildflowers Found on the Southern National
Forests. U.S. Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. 1970. 20 pp.
0688 "Our Rare and Endangered Trees" Elbert L. Little, Jr. American Forests 81 (7) 16-21, 55-57. July 1975. Examines the tree species listed in the Smithsonian Report of Endangered and Threatened Plant Species of 1974. Those of Georgia: Elliottia racemose; Salix floridana; Torreya taxifolia; Quercus georgiana; Quercus og/ethorpensis; and Franklinia a/atamaha. The last is classified as extinct in its natural habitat; it survives in cultivation.
0689 "Bald Cypress: Endangered or Expanding Species?" Herbert S. Sternitzke. Economic Botany 26(2) : 130-134. April-June 1972. Is bald cypress. occurring in Georgia in most of the Coastal Plain, threatened by decline of natural reproduction in the cut-over forests? The extent of the problem and its implications are discussed.
0690 "A Wet Search for a Rare Flower". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 16, 1969, Pp. 12-13, 15-18. On the trail of the 'exceedingly rare" Shortia galacitolia, or Oconee-bells in Rabun County. The little wildflower was discovered in 1787 or 1788 by French botanist Andre Michaux.
0691 "Shortia galacitolta from Georgia". Wilbur H. Duncan, Haskell Venard, and G. W. McDowell. Rhodora 52(622) 229-232. October 1950.
0692 "Rare Plant Blooms in Georgia Woods". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 2, 1970. Pp. 12-14, 15-17. Elliottia racemosa. the "Georgia plume", grows in no other state. The rare shrub has been thought to be extinct then later rediscovered several times. Found on sandhills between the lower Savannah and Altamaha Rivers, Elliottia greatly resists transplanting.
0693 "An Occurrence of Elliottia in Central South Georgia". Wayne R. Faircloth. Castanea
35(1). 58-61. March 1970.
"A small relict stand of Elliottia racemosa Muhl. was found on a north-facing outcrop of
Deep Sandstone along West Fork of
Creek in Turner County, Georgia. Presumably this is
the first report of an occurrence of this unitypic genus of Ericaceaa on a rock outcrop.
The rarity of this taxon and its presence in an extremely xeric habitat is of great phyto-
geographic interest."
0694 "Saving the Georgia Plume from Extinction". Edgar T. Wherry. Wild Flo- 14 31-32. 1937. On Elliott/a racemosa.
0695 "A New Colony of Elliottia". H. W. Trudell. Bartonla 10: 24-27. January 9, 1929.
19
Environmental Planning and Management
A colony of Elliottia racemosa in Candler County, Georgia is reported.
0696 "Rescuing El/iottia". H. W. Trudell. Bartonia 9. 11-15. October 1926. Bulloch and Telfair Counties were visited to collect Elliottia racemosa from two different colonies.
0697 "Notes on Elliottia racemosa". Roland M. Harper. Plant World 5 . 87-90. May 1902.
0698 "The Rediscovery of Elliottia". John K. Small. Journal of the New York Botanical Garden 2 113-114. August 1901. Elliottia racemosa from Columbia County and Bulloch County, Georgia is reported.
0699 "On the Trail of the Fabulous Franklin/a". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine December 12, 1971, Pp. 10, 12, 14,36-37,39. The Franklin Tree (Franklinia a/atamaha) was discovered by John and William Bartram in 1765. No report of the Franklinia in its native habitat, the lower Allamaha sand ridges, has been made since 1790. The flowering tree and a search for it are described.
0700 "Franklinia altamaha (Marshall); Georgia's Living Fossil Tree". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 4(1): 13-17. 1951.
0701 "A Supplementary Chapter on Frankinia alatamaha". Francis Harper and Arthur Newlin Leeds. Bartonia 19. 1-13. March 8, 1938.
0702 "The Historical Background of Franklin's Tree" Charles F. Jenkins. Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 57(3) 193-208. 1933. On the romantic history of Franklin's Tree or Franklima altamaha, diScovered near the Altamaha River by the great eighteenth-century naturalist William Bartram. The flowermg tree has not been seen in 1ts native habitat since its discovery.
0703 "The H1story of the Franklin Tree, Franklin/a alatamaha". E. T. Wherry. Journal of the Washington Academy ot Science 18 . 172-176. March 19, 1928.
0704 Pilularia rediscovered in the East". John K. Small. Journal olthe New York Botanical Garden 36: 141-142. 1935. Pifularia from Barrow County, Georgia is reported.
0705 "Red Wolf - The Last Cry?" C. C. Lockwood. Animals I The International Wildlife Magazine 15(11) . 508-511. November 1973. Originally found over most of the Southeast, the red wolf (Canis rufus) now exists only in s1x Texas counties and one Louis1ana pansh.
ENERGY
0706 The Energy Problem: A Plan For Georgia's Future. Georgia Center for Technology Forecasting and Assessment. Atlanta. July 1, 1974. [iv] + 103 pp. + ix pp.
0707 Proceedings From a Symposium: "Our Nation's Energy Crisis and Georgia's Future" [Georgia Institute ol Technology, Atlanta, March 11-12, 1974]. Georgia Institute of Technology and Georgia Power Company. Atlanta. No date. ii + 141 pp.
0708 Projected Demand for Electrical Power in Georgia to 1985. Chuang Maungkaew. Doctoral dissertation, 1975, University of Georgia. 150 pp.
0709 "The South's New Atomic Age". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine December 6, 1970. Pp. 8-11, 23-25, 58. The Edwin I. Hatch nuclear power facility on the Altamaha River near Baxley and other nuclear plants built or under construction in neighboring states are described.
ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
0710 Georgia's Environmental Forces. John Caldwell Waters. Masters thesis, 1970, University of Georgia. 145 pp.
0711 Maintaining A Quality Environment In Georgia. Robert E. Stiemke et a/. Georgia Task Force on Environmental Health, compiled by Office of Comprehensive Health Planning, Georgia Departmen) of Public Health. Atlanta. January, 1971. 167 pp. Presents the Task Force's findings and recommendations on pollution of water and air, pesticides control, solid waste, population, housing, sanitation, noise pollution, and other environmental concerns.
0712 Georgia Nature Study and Conservation Directory. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. 1971. A listing of educational materials, places, organizations, and persons concerned with the
study or conservation of Georgia's natural resources.
0713 "The Corps Takes Time For Inventory". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 27, 1972. Pp. 8-9, 38-39. The Corps of Engineers has begun an inventory of important natural values in the United States.
0714 "A Plan to Save Some Special Places". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 8, 1972. Pp. 8-9, 36. The Georgia Heritage Trust plan will save several natural, historical and recreational sites from destruction.
0715 "What Price Progress?". Philip F.-C. Greear. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine November 12, 1972. Pp. 12, 38, 41. Mankind's tremendous progress in technology permits the erection of structures that can significantly alter natural systems for certain single purposes. But all environmental consequences of such actions may not be foreseen. The author gives as examples dam projects on the Nile and Savannah Rivers.
0716 Federal Agency Environmental Activities - Atlanta. Federal Executive Board, Environmental Quality Committee. Atlanta. 1973. 27 pp. Environment-related programs of federal agencies are described.
0717 "Heritage Trust Edition". Bud Van Orden. Outdoors in Georgia 2(1): (Whole issue). January 1973. Outlines the Georgia Heritage Trust Program and shows by photographs several outstanding examples of endangered sites that are being considered for acquisition.
0718 "Is Doomsday Inevitable?". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 25, 1973. Pp. 8-9, 58, 61, 63. Speakers at the Atlanta Environmental Symposium find natural limits to unchecked growth.
0719 "Georgia's Heritage: A Treasure Worth Saving". Lon ice C. Barrett. Parks & Recreation 8(11) : 30-35. November 1973. Describes the Georgia Heritage Trust, a state program for preservation of irreplaceable natural and historic resources.
0720 Report ol the Governors Commission on Planned Growth. Governors Commission on Planned Growth. Atlanta. December 1973. v +53 pp.
0721 Vital Areas Council Report to the Georgia General Assembly on Land Use. Vital Areas Council [Citizens Council on Land Use created by 1973 Georgia General Assembly]. Atlanta. January 17, 1974. [vii]+ 24 pp. The Council, created by Act 609 of the 1973 Georgia General Assembly, investigated land misuse in the state and developed recommendations for governmental action to correct the worst abuses.
0722 Vital Areas Council Public Hearings Summaries. Vital Areas Council. Atlanta. Various pagings. [1973-74]. Not published; copy available for consultation at Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section.
0723 What Should A Land Use Policy Statement for Georgia Contain? A Land Use Seminar, December 4-5, 1974, Athens, Georgia. Soil Conservation Society of America, Georgia Chapter. Athens. 1974. vi+ 125 pp.
0724 "Heritage Trust Edition". T. Craig Martin. Outdoors in Georgia 3(1): (whole issue). January 1974. The status of the Georgia Heritage Trust Program is examined in a pictorial essay.
0725 Atlanta Region Prototype- The Georgia Resource Assessment Program. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section. Atlanta. February 1974. [35 pp.] A comprehensive resource and land-use information system is introduced by a smallarea model.
0726 Community Well-Being as a Factor in Urban Land Use Planning. L. Douglas James eta/. Report No. ERC-0174. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. 1974. 229 pp. NTIS number: PB-227 339.
0727 ECS Phase One - Environmental Corridor Study. Georgia Department of Natural Resources (Arkhora Associates, Inc). Atlanta, April 1974. [iv] + [79] pp. +fold. maps. Environmental corridors are linear systems containing natural features of special value to man or nature. Examples are river corridors, ridge lines. and fault zones. This study identifies many of these areas to provide a framework for future planning and resource management.
0728 Public Expenditures In Natural Resources Development for 77 Counties, Georgia, 1961-70. Gerald LeCiar and Waldon R. Kerns. Research Report 190 [Agricultural Experiment Stations]. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Department of Agricultural Economics. Athens. June 1974. iii+ 33 pp. "Data on the distribution of natural resource development expenditures from public sources in 77 counties has been assembled and presented as a first step in estimating the impact of these investments on recipient areas... Forest Service expenditures were concentrated in those 24 counties associated with national forest locations or the mountainous area. [Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service] expenditures were made in each of the 77 counties whereas [Soil Conservation Service] and [Farmers Home Administration] expenditures were made in 55 and 39 counties respectively. Corps [of En-
20
Floods
gineers] expenditures were made in only 18 of the 77 counties".
0729 Environmental Management and Public Polley: An Analysis of the Environmental Impact Statement Process with Emphasis on Procedures of the Environmental Protection Agency and Federal Agency Activities In the Southeastern United States. DRH/EP-74/01. Donald Ray Hudson. Doctoral dissertation. 1974. Georgia State University. Department of Management. Atlanta. 502 pp. NTIS number: PB-233 945.
0730 Field Test of an Environmental Impact Assessment Methodology. Martin A. Smith. Report No. ERC-1574. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. August 1974. 197 pp. NTIS number: PB-236 045.
0731 Southern Environmental Protection Workshop, April 23-24, 1974. Council of State Governments. Lexington, Ky. August 1974. [viii]+ 107 pp.
0732 Impact of Natural Resource Investments on Income and Employment, Georgia. Waldon Kerns and Gerald LeCiar. Research Bulletin 164. [University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations]. Athens. March 1975. 31 pp.
0733 "The Man Who Told Us So". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 30, 1975. Pp. 10-12, 14-15. Dr. Eugene P. Odum of the University of Georgia, the author of the world's first text-book on ecology and the "father" of modern ecology, is interviewed.
0734 "Environmental Laws of 1975". Bill Tinkler. Outdoors In Georgia 4(6) : 21-22. June 1975. Summary of sixteen natural resources laws passed by the 1975 Georgia General Assembly.
0735 Integrative Procedures for Coordinated Urban Land and Water Management: A Systems Analysis. Augustine 0. Esogbue. Report No. ERC-0675. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. June 1975. 231 pp.
0736 Georgia ASCS Annual Report- 1974. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, Georgia State ASCS Office. Athens. [1975]. [xx] + 127 pp. Includes narrative and statistical summaries of the year's work in the Rural Environmental Assistance Program (REAP). the Rural Environmental Conservation Program (RECP), the Appalachian Land Stabilization and Conservation Program, the Cropland Adjustment Program, and other conservation programs.
0737 Environmental Regulations for Georgia Industry. Roger D. Howard. Georgia Bureau of Industry and Trade. Atlanta. January 1976. Various pagings.
0738 Directory [of] State and Federal Officials Engaged In Land and Water Resources Management, South Atlantic - Gulf Region. Southeast Basins Inter-Agency Committee. Atlanta. February 1976 (revised). 49 pp.
0739 102 Monitor- Environmental Impact Statements. [U.S.] Council on Environmental Quality. Washington, D. C. Monthly. Lists Environmental Impact Statements [EIS's] filed during preceding month. Includes description of each proposed project for which an EIS was done, a state-county index, an agency index, and other information.
0740 The Georgia Conservancy Magazine. The Georgia Conservancy. Atlanta. Quarterly. The official magazine of the Georgia Conservancy, a non-profit conservation organization.
0741 Georgia Out-of-Doors. Georgia Wildlife Federation. Tucker, Georgia. Monthly. Official publication of the Georgia Wildlife Federation.
FLOODS
GENERAL LOCAL STUDIES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL
0742 Floods In Georgia, Magnitude and Frequency. C. M. Bunch and McGlone Price. Open-File Report. U. S. Geological Survey. 1962. 152 pp.
0743 Floods In Georgia- Frequency and Magnitude. R. W. Carter. Circular 100. U. S. Geological Survey. 1951. vi+ 127 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
0744 Magnitude and Frequency of Floods In the United States. Part 2-A. South Atlantic Slope Basins, James River to Savannah River. Paul R. Speer and Charles R. Gamble. Water-Supply Paper 1673. U.S. Geological Survey. 1964. x + 329 pp. + 2 maps+ 1 plate in pocket.
Includes flood data and methods for flood-frequency determination for rivers and large streams of the Savannah River Basin.
0745 Magnitude and Frequency of Floods In the United States. Part 2-B. South Atlantic Slope and Eastern Gulf of Mexico Basins, Ogeechee River to Peart River. Harry H. Barnes, Jr. and Harold G. Golden. Water-Supply Paper 1674. U.S. Geological Survey.-1966. xvi + 409 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Includes flood data and methods for flood-frequercy determination for rivers and large streams of the following major river basins of Georgia: Ogeechee, Altamaha, Satilla, St. Marys, Suwannee, Ochlocknee, Chattahoochee, Coosa, and Tallapoosa.
0746 Magnitude and Frequency of Floods In the United States.Part 3-B. Cumberland and Tennessee River Basins. Paul R. Speer and Charles R. Gamble. Water-Supply Paper 1676. U.S. Geological Survey. 1966. xii + 340 pp. + 2 maps in pocket. Includes flood data and methods for flood-frequency determination for rivers and large streams of the Tennessee River Basin in Georgia.
0747 Preliminary Flood-Frequency Relations for Small Streams In Georgia. Harold G. Golden, U. S. Geological Survey. Open File Report. Contract. Research GDOT Research Project No. 6303, Hydrology of Small Drainage Areas in Georgia; Interim Report. Georgia Department of Transportation. April 1973. iv + 29 pp. Preliminary information for estimating magnitude and frequency of flood peak discharges on small streams in Georgia.
0748 Flood Peak Runoff and Associated Precipitation In Selected Drainage Basins In the United States. Tate Dalrymple. Water-Supply Paper 1813. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. xiv + 406 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Concerns gaged drainage basins of 400 square miles or less. Data were collected at the following gaging stations in Georgia: (1) Alcovy River below Covington, (2) Amicalola Creek near Dawsonville, (3) Apalachee River near Bostwick, (4) Cedar Creek n11ar Cedartown, (5) Chattahoochee River near Leaf, (6) Chattooga River (western) at Summerville; (7) Chattooga River (eastern) near Clayton, (8) Chattooga River (eastern) near Tallulah Falls, (9) Chestatee River near Dahlonega, (10) Coosawattee River near Carters, (11) Fightingtown Creek at McCaysville, (12) Flint River near Griffin; (13) Hiwassee River at Presley, (14) Middle Oconee River near Athens, (15) Nottely River near Blairsville, (16) Nottely River near lvylog, (17) Oconee River at Athens, (18) Potato Creek near Thomaston, (19) Tobesofkee Creek near Macon, (20) Toccoa River near Dial, and (21) Towaliga River near Forsyth.
0749 Dally River Stages. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Weather Service. Silver Spring, Md. Annual.
LOCAL STUDIES
0750 FIA Flood Hazard Boundary Map Series. U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Federal Insurance Administration. Washington, D. C.
0751 Flood Plain Information Report Series. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Washington, D. C. A series of detailed reports examining floods on particular streams or reaches of streams. Normally these reports are completed for streams of urban or suburban areas, 911pecially those areas that have had significant flooding problems. Information on past floods is summarized and future floods are projected. Flood plains are indicated on aerial photograph reproductions.
0752 Special Flood Hazard Information Report Serias. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Washington, D. C. Similar to Flood Plain Information Report Series above, but less detailed.
0753 "Magnitude and Frequency of Historic Floods on Chattahoochee River at Columbus, Ga." Alexander A. Fischback, Jr. In: Short Contributions t.o the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia, Bulletin No. 56, Georgia Department of Minl!s, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1950, pp. 66-68.
0754 Survey Report on Weracoba Creek at Columbus, Georgia. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Mobile District. Mobile, Ala. 1968. [70] pp. Examination of need and economic feasibility for flood control improvements.
0755 Survey Report on Chattahoochee River at and In the VIcinity of Columbus, Georgia. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Mobile District. Mobile, Ala. 1964. [45] pp. Examination of the feasibility of improvements for flood control in the area on the left bank of the Chattahoochee River immediately south of Columbus between Bull and Upatoi Creeks.
0756 Survey Report on Peachtree and Nancy Creeks at and In the VIcinity of Atlanta, Georgia. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile District. Mobile, Ala. 1966. [147] pp. Examination of the feasibility of flood control works on Nancy Creek and the North and South Forks of Peachtree Creek.
0757 "The Frequency of Floods on the Flint River". C. M: Bunch. In: Short Contributions to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia, Bulletin No. 56, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1950, pp. 69-73.
0758 Floods on Lookout Creek In VIcinity of Trenton, Georgia. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Water Control Planning. Knoxville, Tenn. September ,1969. 7 f'p. + 4 fold. maps.
0759 Floods on South Chickamauga Creek, East Chickamauga Creek and Little Chlcka-
21
Forestry
mauga Creek In Vicinity of Ringgold, Georgia. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Water Control Planning. Knoxville, Tenn. February 1970. 70 pp. + 5 fold. maps.
0760 Floods on Toccoa - Ocoee River and Flghtlngtown Creek, Vicinity of McCaysville, Georgia and Copperhill, Tennessee. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Water Control Planning. Knoxville, Tenn. September 1958. 63 pp. + 3 fold. maps.
0781 Floods on West Chickamauga Creek In Vicinity of Fort Oglethorpe and Chickamauga, Georgia. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Water Control Planning. Knoxville, Tenn. April 1968. 55 pp. + 3 fold. maps.
0762 Planning For Flood Damage Prevention In Fort Oglethorpe and Chickamauga, Georgia and In Walker and Catoosa Counties - Supplement! - Planning For Flood Damage Prevention Along South Chickamauga Creek and Tributaries In Vicinity of Ringgold, Georgia. Coosa Valley Area Planning and Development Commission. Rome, Georgia. January 1971. 22 pp. + 10 plates.
0763 Planning lor Flood Damage Prevention In Fort Oglethorpe and Chickamauga, Georgia and In Walker and Catoosa Counties. Coosa Valley Area Planning and Development Commission. Rome, Georgia. April 1969. 19 pp. + 7 plates+ Appendices A-C.
0764 Peacock Creek, Liberty County, Georgia. Detailed Project Report. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. October 1968. Various pagings. Examination of need and economic feasibility for flood control improvements.
PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
0765 Planning lor Flood Damage Prevention. Jerrold A. Moore. Special Report No. 35. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. Atlanta. 1958. 61 pp.
0766 The Ellecta of Land Use Change on the Hydrology of an Urban Watershed [Peachtree and Nancy Creeks, Atlanta]. James R. Wallace. Report No. ERC-0871. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. October 1971. 66 pp. NTIS number: PB-206 426.
0767 The Flood Plain as a Residential Choice: Resident Attitudes and Perceptions and Their Implications to Flood Plain Management Polley. L. Douglas James, Eugene A. Laurent, and Duane W. Hill. Report No. ERC-0671. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. October 1971. 288 pp. NTIS number: PB-206 424.
0768 Remedial Flood Plain Management as the Focus lor an Experiment In Interdisciplinary Team Research. L. Douglas James. Report No. ERC-0771. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. October 1971. 76 pp. NTIS number: PB206 425.
0769 The Peachtree Creek Watershed as a Case History In Urban Flood Plain Develop-
ment. L. Douglas James et at. Report No. ERC-0971. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. October 1971. 83 pp. NTIS number: PB-206 427.
0770 The Use of Questionnaires In Collecting Information lor Urban Flood Control Planning. L. Douglas James. Report No. ERC-0274. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. February 1974. xiv + 313 pp. NTIS number: PB-232 423.
0771 Analysis of Urban Land Treatment Measures lor Flood Peak Reduction. Alan M. Lumb, James R. Wallace, and L. Douglas James. Report No. ERC-0574. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. June 1974. 146 pp. NTIS number: PB-236 418.
0772 Integration of Hydrologic, Economic, Ecologic, Social, and Well-Baing Factors in Planning Flood Control Measures lor Urban Streams. L. Douglas James, Arthur C. Benke, and Harvey L. Ragsdale. Report No. ERC-0375. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. February 1975. xii + 192 pp. Four watersheds are used as case studies: Noonday Creek in Cobb County; Proctor Creek and Utoy Creek in Atlanta; and Warren Creek in DeKalb County.
0773 Survey and Analysis of Urban Drainage Ordinances and a Recommended Model Ordinance. Thomas N. Debo. Report No. ERC-0475. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. February 1975. 297 pp. NTIS number: PB240 817.
0774 UROS4: Urban Flood Simulation Model, Part 1. Documentation and Users Manual. Alan M. Lumb. Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Civil Engineering and DeKalb County Board of Commissioners. Atlanta and Decatur, Georgia. March 1975. 228 pp. NTIS number: PB-242 936. On the background and use of the Urban Flood Simulation Model for DeKalb County, Georgia.
0775 UROS4: Urban Flood Simulation Model. Part 2. Applications to Selected DeKalb County Watersheds. L. Douglas James and Alan M. Lumb. Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Civil Engineering and DeKalb County Board of Commissioners. Atlanta and Decatur, Georgia. May 1975. 241 pp. NTIS number: PB-242 937.
MISCELLANEOUS
0778 Floods of August1940 in the Southeastern States. Water-Supply Paper 1066. U. S.
Geological Survey. 1949. xii + 554 pp. + 3 maps in pocket.
0777 Floods of March-April 1951 in Alabama and Adjacent States. Water-Supply Paper 1227-A. U.S. Geological Survey. vii+ 134 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
0778 "Historical Comments on Floods and Droughts in the Southeastern United States". M. T. Thomson. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(3) : 95-97. 1955.
0779 "The Hydrologic Response of Small Basins in Georgia". James F. Woodruff and J.D. Hewlett. Southeastern Geographer 11(1): 1-8. April1971.
0780 "A Hydrologic Response Map For the State of Georgia". J. D. Hewlett. Water Resources Bulletin 3(3) : 4-20. September 1967.
FORESTRY
GENERAL APPALACHIAN FORESTS MANAGEMENT ON FEDERAL FORESTS COMMERCIAL FORESTS HARDWOODS INSECTS AND DISEASES PRESCRIBED BURNING CLEAR CUTTING HYDROLOGY WILDLIFE URBAN FORESTRY MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL
0781 A History of Georgia Forestry. I. James Pikl, Jr. Research Monograph No. 2. University of Georgia, Graduate School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Athens, Georgia. 1966. vi + 91 pp.
0782 "Forest Resources of Georgia". Ray Shirley. Forest Farmer 31 (7) : 811. April 1972.
0783 Georgia's Timber, 1972. Herbert A. Knight and Joe P. McClure. Resource Bulletin SE-27. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. May 1974.48 pp. Report of the fourth U.S. Forest Service survey of Georgia's forests. This survey was completed in November 1972. The report summarizes statistical reports issued earlier for each offive regions in the state (Southwest, Southeast, Central, North Central, and North). These earlier reports were issued as Resource Bulletins SE-19, SE-21, SE-22, SE-24, and SE-25 during 1971-1972.
0784 Georgia's Timber. Robert W. Larson and Benjamin Spada. Resource Bulletin SE-1. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. 1963. iv + 39 pp. Report of the third survey of Georgia Forests conducted by the U.S. Forest Service.
0785 Forest Facts For Georgia. B. F. Grant and A. E. Patterson. Forestry Bulletin No. 10. Agricultural and Industrial Development Board of Georgia; Georgia Department of Forestry; and American Forestry Association. September 1946. Summary of nine earlier reports, one for each of the nine Georgia Department of Forestry Districts (Forestry Bulletins 1-9).
0786 Georgia Forest Resources and Industries. A. R. Spillers and I. F. Eldredge. Miscellaneous Publication No. 501. U. S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D.C. 1943. iv + 70 pp. + fold. map.
0787 Forest Resources of Central Georgia. Forest Survey Release No. 41. USDA Forest Service, Southern Forest Experiment Station. New Orleans. 1939. 29 pp.
0788 Forest Resources of North Central Georgia. Forest Survey Release No. 44. USDA Forest Service, Southern Forest Experiment Station. New Orleans. 1939. 28 pp.
0789 Forest Resources of North Georgia. Forest Survey Release No. 45. USDA Forest Service, Southern Forest Experiment Station. New Orleans. 1939. 29 pp.
0790 Forest Resources of South Georgia. M. M. Lehrbas and I. F. Eldredge. Miscellaneous Publication No. 390. U. S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D.C. January 1941. iv + 50 pp. + fold. map.
0791 "Georgia's Forest Resources." Roland M. Harper. Southern Woodlands 1(3) : 4-23; 1(4): 1-19; 1(5): 3-19; 1(6): 15-32. 1907-8.
22
Forestry
0792 Fore1try In the Middle Georgia Area. E. Evan Brown. Merritt G. LaPlante, and J. C. Chai. Research Bulletin 50. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. December 1968. 47 pp. Concerns the following counties: Bibb, Crawford, Houston, Jones, Monroe, Peach, Twiggs.
0793 Fore~t Inventory Statistics- 125 Tennes1ee Valley CountiH 1970. Forestry Bulletin No. 152. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Forestry, Fisheries. and Wildlife Development. Norris, Tenn. December 1971. 19 pp. Concerns the following Georgia counties: Catoosa, Dade, Fannin, Rabun, Towns, Union, Walker, and Whitfield.
0794 Fore~t Inventory Stat11tlcs- Catoosa, Dade, Walker, WhiHield County Unit. Forestry Bulletin No. 129. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Forestry Development. Norris, Tenn. January 1967. 19 pp.
0795 Fore~t Inventory Statistics lor Fannin County, Georgia. Forestry Bulletin No. 76. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Forestry Relations. Norris, Tenn. November 1959.
0798 Fore~t Inventory Stat11tlcs lor Towns County, Georgia. Forestry Bulletin No. 66. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Forestry Relations. Norris, Tenn. April 1959. 19 pp.
0797 Fore~t Inventory Statistics lor Union County, Georgia. Forestry Bulletin No. 78. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Forestry Relations. Norris, Tenn. January 1960. 16 pp.
0798 North Georgia Fore~t Industry Outlook. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Forestry Development. Norris, Tenn. 1966.
0799 Southern Fore1try. Charles N. Elliott and M. D. Mobley. Turner E. Smith & Co. Atlanta. 1938. ix + 494 pp. A textbook.
0800 Manual of Southern Fore1try. Howard E. Weaver and David A. Anderson. Interstate Printers and Publishers, Inc. Danville, Illinois. 1954. 368 pp.
0801 Fore~try In the South. M. D. Mobley and Robert N. Hoskins. Turner E. Smith. Atlanta. 1956. 440 pp.
0802 "Recent Developments in Southern Forestry". Reuben B. Robertson. Georgia Review 5(3): 362-368. Fall 1951.
0803 Georgia' Fore111 and Their Development. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Division of Forestry. Atlanta. [1939?]. 48 pp. A general look at forest management in Georgia.
0804 Fore1t Polley In Georgia's Changing Socio-Political Environment. Richard Wallace Jones. Doctoral dissertation, 1968, University of Georgia. 178 pp.
0805 Georgia Forestry. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon. Quarterly. Began 1948. News, statistical data, and short feature stories on forestry topics in Georgia.
0806 A Fore1t Atlas of the South. Thomas C. Nelson and Walter M. Zillgitt, eds. USDA Forest Service, Southern Forest Experiment Station, New Orleans, La. and Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, Asheville, N.C. 1969. 27 pp. + 1 fold. map in pocket.
APPALACHIAN FORESTS
0807 The Southern Appalachian Forests. H. B. Ayres and W. W. Ashe. Professional Paper 37. U.S. Geological Survey. 1905. 291 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Survey of the forests of the Appalachian region of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. General summaries of the tree species of the area and of human activities affecting the forest are followed by descriptions of individual drainage basins.
0808 Denudation and Erolon In the Southern Appalachian Region. .. Leonidas Chalmers Glenn. Professional Paper 72. U.S. Geological Survey. 1911. [ii] + 137 pp. Study of the "effect of deforestation and consequent erosion of the steep mountain slopes on geologic, hydrologic, and economic conditions, both in the mountain region itself and in the surrounding areas through which the many streams that rise in the high Appalachians flow. ." Georgia areas studied include the Highlands and Valley and Ridge provinces and the upper Piedmont reaches of the Savannah and Chattahoochee rivers.
0809 Message from the Pre1ldent of the United Stat Transmitting a Report of the Secretary of Agriculture In Relation to the Forests, River~, and Mountains of the Southern Appalachian Region. Senate Document No. 84. Government Printing Office. 1902. 210 pp. Erosion, floods, and damaging agricultural and forestry practices are reviewed. Purchase and creation of a national forest reserve is recommended.
0810 "Conservation and Politics in the South, 1899-1906". Willard P. Gatewood. Georgia Rev- 16(1): 30-42. Spring 1962. On the movement for natural preservation in the Southern Appalachians which brought the Southern national forests and a national park.
0811 Conservation and the South, 1890-1920. Frank Bedingfield Vinson. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia. 378 pp.
0812 Fore1ts of Georgia Highlands, Their Importance lor Water~hed Protection, Recrea
lion and Wood Production. C. R. Hursh and L. I. Barrett. Bulletin 15. Georgia Forest Service. 1931. 32 pp.
0813 Forest and Water Resources In the Appalachian Area of Georgia. James 0. Wise and E. Evan Brown. Research Bulletin 12. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1967. 31 pp.
0814 Forest Assistance Programs and the Private Landowner In Northeast Georgia. William Hosking. Masters thesis, 1975, University of Georgia. 72 pp.
MANAGEMENT ON FEDERAL FORESTS
0815 Coordinating Requirements lor Managing the Chattahoochee National Fore~t. USDA Forest Service, Chattahoochee - Oconee National Forests, Unit Planning Team. Gainesville, Georgia. April 1973. 75 pp.
0816 Guide lor Managing the National Forests In the Appalachians. 2nd ed. FSH 2123. USDA Forest Service, Eastern and Southern Regions. Atlanta. January 1973. [iv] + 34 pp.
0817 "The Public Gets in on the Act". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine December 7, 1975. Pp. 22-24, 26. A public charrette, or planning session, conducted by the U. S. Forest Service is summarized. The session was held to gather public input into the Forest Service's management planning for the South Slope area of the Chattahoochee National Forest in north Georgia.
0818 "Forest Management on National Wildlife Refuges". Verlon E. Carter. American Forests 77(8) : 22-25, 57-59. August 1971. An examination of prescribed burning and even-aged management practices on the Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge in middle Georgia.
0819 Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge, Jones and Jasper County [ale], Georgia: EvenAged Forestry Management. RL-417-R. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. June 1969. [12] pp. "This brochure explores the scope and benefits of Even-aged Forest Management in relation to wildlife, timber, and recreation on the Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge. The forest management techniques presented in tabular and map form illustrate one approach for developing wildlife habitat variety under the concept of even-aged Forest Management".
0820 A Resume of Pre~cribed Burnings on the Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge. Eugene Czuhai and C. T. Cushwa. Resea,ch Note SE-86. USDA Forest Srvice, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. February 1966. 4 pp.
0821 "Harvesting Timber on a Wildlife Refuge". Cleveland van Dresser. American Forests 59 18-19,91. November 1953. "The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service has gone into the timber business, and if operations on the Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge in Georgia are a good indication, business is booming".
COMMERCIAL FORESTS
0822 The South's Third Forest: How It Can Meet Future Demands; A Report. Southern Forest Resource Analysis Committee. 1969. vi + 111 pp.
0823 "The Story Behind the South's Third Forest". Paul Friggens. American Forests 77(10) : 32-34, 54-55. October 1971. A look at commercial forestry in the south.
0824 "The Third Forest- The Wonderful Story of Georgia's Trees [Special Issue]." AI lanta Economic Review 20(12) . 1-46. December 1970.
0825 A Guide to Loblolly and Slash Pine Plantation Management In Southeastern USA. W. G. Wahlenberg, ed. Report No. 14. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. 1965. X+ 360 pp. Guide to evaluation and preparation, planting, thinning, harvesting, prescribed burning, insects and disease control, marketing, and special measures. Loblolly and slash pines are grown primarily in the Coastal Plain region and some areas of the Piedmont.
0826 Silviculture of Loblolly Pine In the Georgia Piedmont. Ernst V. Brender. Report No. 33. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. 1973. vi+ 74 pp.
0827 Growth and Yield of Slash Pine Plantations. Frank A. Bennett. Research Paper SE-1. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. January 1963. 23 pp.
0828 Forest Solis and Silviculture In Georgia. Laurence C. Walker and Henry F. Perkins. Report No.4. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. 1956. 36 pp.
0829 Georgia Woodland Management. C. Dorsey Dyer, A. E. Patterson, and D. J. Weddell. Bulletin 578. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Agricultural Extension Service. Athens. 1953. 32 pp.
0830 Landowner's Manual - Forest Management Shortcourse. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. 1970. Textbook on forest management for private landowners.
23
Forestry
0831 Forest Practices- Vocational Agriculture. Georgia Department of Education, Vocational Education Service. Atlanta. July 1955. vi + 115 pp. On management of woodland areas in Georgia, for high school pupils and adult farmers enrolled in vocational agriculture studies.
0832 Georgia Commercial Forestry Conference. . . Savannah, May 26, 27, 28, 1930. Bulletin No. 11. Georgia Forestry Service. July 1930. 108 pp.
0833 How to Keep One-Third of Georgia in Pine. Stephen G. Boyce and Joe P. McClure. Research Paper SE-144. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. November 1975. 23 pp. Five management actions that, the authors believe, would keep about one-third of the state in pine forests are identified.
0834 Timber Stand Improvement in the Southern Appalachian Region. George M. Jemison and George H. Hepting. Miscellaneous Publication No. 693. U. S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D. C. 1949. iv + 80 pp.
0835 Ten Years of Timber Management in the Middle Coastal Plain of Georgia. E. P. Jones and F. A. Bennett. Research Paper SE-16. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. February 1965. A 10-year progress report on work at the George Walton Experimental Forest in Dooly County.
0836 Utilization of the Southern Pines. Peter Koch. Agriculture Handbook No. 420. USDA Forest Service. Southern Forest Experiment Station. New Orleans. A~gust 1972. 2 vols.
0837 Southern Pulpwood Production. In: Resource Bulletin Series SE and SO. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, Asheville, N.C., and Southern Forest Experiment Station, New Orleans, La. Annual. Statistical summaries of each year's production for each of thirteen Southern states including Georgia.
0839 Development of the Southern Pulp and Paper Industry, 1900-1970. Jack Porter Oden. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, Mississippi State University. 664 pp.
0840 "Pulp and Paper and Georgia: The Newsprint Paradox". James Pikl, Jr. Forest History 12. 6-19. 1968.
0841 The Place of the Pulp and Paper Industry in the Georgia Economy. Gordon Siefkin et a/. Studies in Business and Economics No. 8. Emory University, School of Business Admimstration. 1958. 140 pp.
0842 Survey of Wood Residue in Georgia. Resource - Industry Series, No. 1. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. December 1958. 39 pp.
0843 A Study of the Problems and Potentials of the Gum Naval Stores Industry. Tze I. Chiang, W. H. Burrows, W. C. Howard, and G. D. Woodward, Jr. Project A-1111. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Division. Atlanta. 1971. [viii]+ 159 pp.
0844 Economic Analysis of Changes in Georgia's Forest. Adele Kushner. Report No. 32. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. January 1973. 28 pp.
0845 An Economic Model of Georgia's Long-Run Timber Market. Albert A. Montgomery, V. L. Robinson, and J. D. Strange. Report No. 34. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. May 1975. 21 pp.
0846 Impacts of Forest Industries on the Economy of Georgia. Robert L. Chaffin, Jere Atchison, and Adele Kushner. Report No. 26. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. January 1971. 24 pp.
0947 Wood-Using Industries in Georgia - A Utilization Report and Directory. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon, Georgia. 1971. 81 pp.
0848 "Choctawhatchee Sand Pine: Good Prospect for Georgia - Carolina Sandhills". Russell M. Burns. Journal of Fo,...try 70(12) : 741-742, December 1972. Sandhill sites in Georgia and South Carolina that are dominated by unmerchantable hardwoods may be converted to pine-growing sites if the Choctawhatchee variety of sand pines is used.
0849 "Breeding Super Trees; Research Teams Make Georgia Pines Grow Faster, Taller, Straighter and Healthier". Charles Elliott. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 20, 1969. Pp. 22-26.
0850 "Forestry Goals: Super Trees, Cheaper Houses". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 17, 1970. Pp. 24, 26, 48. Forestry research in the South is examined.
0851 "Tomorrow's Forests". Leonard Foote. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 28, 1971. Pp. 12, 14, 16, 19, 22. Forestry, a big industry in Georgia, is reviewed and future management methodology is forecast.
0852 Seed to Seedlings. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon, Georgia. 1967. 14 pp. A review of the Superior Tree Program in Georgia.
0853 "Rehabilitation of Forest Land -The Southern Region". Charles H. Fitzgerald eta/. Journal of Forestry 71 (3) : 148-153. March 1973.
On control of "!ores\ weeds" (i.e., underbrush and noncommercial trees) in commercial forests in the South.
0854 "Rehabilitation of Forest Land - The Southern Region: A Comment". William F. Morgan, Jr. Journal of Forestry 71(11). 708. November 1973.
0855 "The South - An Unregulated Forest Region". Walter C. Anderson. Journal of Forestry 72(4) : 221-223. April 1974. On the absence of regulation of timber cutting in the South.
0856 "Control of Animal Damage to Young Plantations in the South". Hamlin J. Williston. Journal of Forestry 72(2): 78-81. February 1974. Chemical repellent and mechanical control methods to prevent or minimize animal damage to commercial forests are summarized.
0857 Forestry and Water Resources in the Economic Development of the Allamaha Planning and Development Commission Area. Boyd B. Rose, David W. Culver, and E. Evan Brown. Bulletin N.S. 174. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. 1966. 45 pp. Concerns the following counties: Appling, Jeff Davis, Tattnall, Toombs, Wayne.
0858 Timber, Wood Products, and Water Resources in the Economic Development of the Central Savannah River Area of Georgia. Boyd B. Rose, Ronald M. North, and E. Evan Brown. Bulletin N.S. 116. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. May 1964. [iv] +55 pp. Concerns the following counties: Burke, Columbia, Emanuel, Glascock, Jefferson, Jenkins, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, Screven, Taliaferro, Warren, Wilkes.
0859 Timber, Wood Products and Water Resources in the Economic Development of the Challahoochee- Flint Commission Area of Georgia. David W. Culver and E. Evan Brown. Research Bulletin 8. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1967. 41 pp.
0860 Timber, Wood Products and Water Resources In the Economic Development of the Coastal Plain Commission Area of Georgia. Boyd B. Rose, E. Evan Brown, and David W. Culver. Bulletin N.S. 147. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. September 1965. 42 pp. Concerns the following counties: Berrien, Brooks, Cook, Echols, Irwin, Lanier, Lowndes, Tift, Turner.
0861 Timber and Wood Products in the Economic Development of the Coosa Valley Area of Georgia. Boyd B. Rose and Gene A. Bramlett. Bulletin N.S. 91. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. February 1962. [vii] + 33 pp. Concerns the following counties: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Dade, Douglas, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, Whitfield.
0862 The Economic Development of the Northeast Georgia Commission Area Through Use of Forest Products and Water Resources. Bulletin N.S. 175. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. 1966.
0863 The Use of Forestry and Water Resources in the Economic Development of the Slash Pine Planning and Development Commission Area. E. Evan Brown, John H. Kunze, and Merritt G. LaPlante. Research Bulletin 22. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. 1967. 57 pp. Concerns the following counties: Atkinson, Bacon, Ben Hill, Brantley, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Pierce, Ware.
0864 Forestry and Water Resources in the Economic Development of the Southwest Georgia Planning and Development Commission Area. Boyd B. Rose, David W. Culver, and E. Evan Brown. Bulletin N.S. 152. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. January 1966. 43 pp. Concerns the following counties: Baker, Calhoun, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Grady, Lee, Miller, Mitchell, Seminole, Terrell, Thomas, Worth.
HARDWOODS
0865 Proceedings - Symposium on Hardwoods of the Piedmont and Coastal Plain. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. 1966. 74 pp.
0866 "Composition of Upland Hardwood Forests of the Georgia Piedmont". Jack T. May. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 26(1): 39-44. January 1968. "A partial analysis of stands on upland sites indicates that desirable hardwoods will grow on deep, porous sandy clay to clay soils in the Georgia Piedmont. The principal needs are (1) to develop silvicultural techniques that will provide abundant stocking of desirable species at the proper time, from the best phenotypes, and (2) to develop efficient and economical techniques for intermediate cultural operations".
0867 Management and Inventory of Southern Hardwoods. John A. Putnam, George M. Furnival, and J. S. McKnight. Agriculture Handbook No. 181. U.S. Department of Agriculture. November 1960. iv + 102 pp.
0868 Hardwood Distribution Maps for the South. Arnold Hedlund and Herbert A. Knight. Resource Bulletin S0-19. USDA Forest Service, Southern Forest Experiment Station, New Orleans, La., and Southeastern Forest Experiment Station, Asheville, N.C. 1969. ii + 13 pp. Volumetric distribution, in the form of county-outline maps, of 12 hardwood species and groups of species.
24
Forestry
0889 Controlling Undesirable Hardwoods. Laurence C. Walker. Report No. 3. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. 1956. 24 pp. Explanations of three types of methods: chemical, mechanical, and fire.
0870 An Annotated Bibliography of Southern Hardwoods, Volume 11. W. D. Miller. Technical Bulletin No. 228. North Carolina State University. Agricultural Experiment Station. Raleigh. 1974. 211 pp.
INSECTS AND DISEASES
0871 lnMCia and D l - of Georgia's Trees. Elmer R. Roth, Terry S. Price, and Robert G. Stryker. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon. June 1974. [vii] + 113 pp.
0872 Forest Dlaaaaaa and Insecta of Georgia's Trees. L.W.R. Jackson. G. E. Thompson and H. 0. Lund. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon. [1954?].
08731naecta In Southam Foresta. C. B. Marlin, ed. Louisiana State University Press. Baton Rouge. 1965. xiii + 129 pp.
0874 lnMCia and Dl...... of Trees In the South. USDA Forest Service, State and Private Forestry Division. Atlanta. 1972. 84 pp.
0875 Seed and Cone Insecta of Southam Pines. Bernard H. Ebel eta/. General Technical Report SE-8. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station and Southeastern Area, State & Private Forestry. Asheville, N.C. and Atlanta, Ga. 1975. 41 pp.
0878 Eastern Forest lnMCia. Whiteford L. Baker, USDA Forest Service. Miscellaneous Publication No. 1175. U. S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D.C. February 1972. 642 pp.
08n "Deadly Beetles Strike Our Pines". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 14, 1972. Pp. 12, 14-16. 22 million acres in the Southeast are infested with the pine beetle which each year destroys 20 million cubic feet of growing stock.
0878 "Infrared Spies Among the Trees". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 23, 1970. Pp. 12-14, 23. Aerial photography with infrared film has proved to be a valuable tool in the detection of forest pests and diseases.
PRESCRIBED BURNING
0879 A Guide for Prescribed Fire In Southam Foresta. H. E. Mobley et al. USDA Forest Service. Atlanta. 1973. 40 pp.
0880 "Use of Fire in Southern Forests". A. B. Crow. Journal of Forestry 71 (10): 629-632. October 1973. On the benefits of prescribed burning in the South's commercial forests.
0881 "Scheduling Prescribed Burns for Hazard Reduction in the Southeast". Stephen S. Sackett. Journal of Forestry 73(3) : 143-147. March 1975. Twelve-year studies in the SE Coastal Plain revealed that pine stands should be burned every three years to reduce natural fuels and thus forestall damage from possible wildfires. Guidelines for prescribed burning in the region are presented.
0882 Prescribed Bumlngln Slash and Longleaf Pine Foresta of Georgia. C. Dorsey Dyer and C. Nelson Brightwell, Bulletin 594. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Agricultural Extension Service. Athens. 1955. 14 pp.
0883 "Do Forest Managers Have a Smokey Bear Complex?" Dean Wohlgemuth. Georgia Game and Fish 7(2) : 6-10. February 1972. Why controlled burning is helpful to forests and wildlife.
0884 "Why Are They Burning the Forests and Cutting the Trees at Allatoona and Clark Hill?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine January 14, 1973. Pp. 8-10, 22. The Corps of Engineers is weeding pines from some of its land to improve wildlife habitat. Selective cutting and controlled burning are methods used in the Engineers' land management project.
0885 "Comments on the History of Controlled Burning in the Southern United States". E. V. Komarek, Sr. In: Proceecllnga of the 17th Annual Arizona Waterahad Symposium, September 1973, Phoenix; Arizona.
0886 Wildfire Versus Prescribed Fire In the Southern Environment. Hugh E. Mobley and Ed Kerr. USDA Forest Service, Southeast Area, State and Private Forestry [Division]. Atlanta. July 1973. 6 pp. The impacts of controlled and uncontrolled lire on timber, water, soil, wildlife, range resources, air quality, and scenic beauty in the South are summarized.
OS,7 Soma Effects of Prescribed Burning on Coastal Plain Forest Soli. L. J. Metz, Thomas Lotti, and R. A. Klawitter. Station Paper 133. USDA Forest Service, Southeast Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. 1961. 10 pp.
0888 Time and Space Variation of Fire Danger In Southeastern Georgia. James Thomas Paul. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, University of Georgia. 157 pp.
CLEAR CUTTING
0889 "Ciearcut". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 3(9) : 14-20. September 1974. A discussion of a controversial forestry practice.
0890 "Is the Answer... Clearcut?". Aaron Pass. Georgia Game and Fish 6(8): 8-12. August 1971. Clearcut harvesting of trees (the cutting of all trees on a tract including those which are commercially unusable) is examined.
0891 Regeneration After Clearcuttlng In the Southern Appalachians. Charles E. McGee and Ralph M. Hooper. Research Paper SE-70. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. December 1970. 12 pp.
0892 "Ciearcutting and Aesthetics in the Southern Appalachians". Charles E. McGee. Journal of Forestry 68(9) : 540-544. September 1970.
HYDROLOGY
0893 An Analysis of Forest Water Problema In Georgia. John D. Hewlett. Report No. 30. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. August 1972. 32 pp.
0894 An Outline of Forest Hydrology. John D. Hewlett and Wade L. Nutter. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1969. viii + 132 pp.
0895 "Watershed Values Important in Land Use Planning on Southern Forests". James E. Douglass. Journal of Foreatry 72(10): 617-621. October 1974. Forests cover 20 to 65 percent of the land in the major water resource regions of the South, and forest management practices control or regulate the volume and timing of streamflow from these lands. Although water quality is emerging as the major water problem, quantity and timing of streamflow are also important and interrelated watershed values which should be considered in land use planning. Protection or improvement of hydrologic performance of forest soils will continue to be an important consideration in planning.
0896 Streamflow Modification Through Management of Eastern Foresta. James E. Douglass and W. T. Swank. Research Paper SE-94. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. May 1972. 15 pp. "Equations for predicting the first-year yield increase, duration of the increase, and the total volume of water which occurs from cutting forests are presented... The paper also discusses the effects of forest cutting on the seasonal distribution of increased annual flow, stormflow peaks and volumes. and water quality characteristics".
0897 Study of Subsurface Flow Into Mountain Streams as Related to Topography and Partial (Variable) Source Areas. John D. Hewlett. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. Georgia. December 1972. 8 pp. NTIS number: PB-239 351.
0898 "Economic Feasibility of Irrigating Southern Pines". Chelvadurai Manogaran. Water Resources Research 9(6) : 1485-1496. December 1973. Costs of irrigation would exceed benefits at 1973 technology.
WILDLIFE
0899 Atlas of Southern Forest Game. Lowell K. Halls and John J. Stransky. USDA Forest Service, Southern Forest Experiment Station. [New Orleans, La.]. 1971. 24 pp.
0900 While-Tailed Deer In the Southern Forest Habitat - Proceedings ol a Symposium at Nacogdoches, Texas, March 25-26, 1969. USDA Forest Service, Southern Forest Experiment Station. Wildlife Habitat and Silviculture Laboratory. Nacogdoches, Texas. 1969. [iv] + 130 pp.
0901 Identifying Woody Plants Valuable to Wildlife In Southern Foresta. Simeon W. Oefinger, Jr. and Lowell K. Halls. Research Paper S0-92. USDA Forest Service. Southern Forest Experiment Station. New Orleans, La. 1974. iv + 76 pp. Twigs, buds, and other key identification features are illustrated in color photographs for 70 browse species common to pine-hardwood forests of the South.
0902 Fleshy Fungi Commonly Eaten by Southern Wildlife. Howard A. Miller and Lowell K. Halls. Research Paper S0-49. USDA Forest Service. Southern Forest Experiment Station. New Orleans, La. 1969. iv + 28 pp. Aid to identification of 58 species of mushrooms commonly eaten by wildlife in the Southeast.
0903 Deer Browse Resources of North Georgia. Thomas H. Ripley and Joe P. McClure. Resource Bulletin SE-2. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. December 1963. 20 pp.
0904 Deer Browse Resources of the Chattahoochee National Forest. Richard F. Harlow, Paul A. Shrauder, and Monte E. Seehorn. Research Paper SE-136. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. July 1975. 16 pp. Reports the quantity, frequency, density, and utilization of browse plants by forest type.
0905 Deer Browse Resources of the Oconee National Forest. Richard F. Harlow, Paul A. Shrauder, and Monte E. Seehorn. Research Paper SE-137. USDA Forest Service. Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. July 1975. 16 pp. Yields. frequency, density, and utilization of browse plants are estimated for each forest type.
25
Game and Fish
URB.'\N FORESTRY
0906 Symposium on the Role of Trees In the South'l Urban Environment, Januery 31 February 3, 1971, University of Georgia. U. S. Dept. of Agriculture Forest Service, Georgia Forestry Commission, and University of Georgia, sponsors. University of Georgia Center for Continuing Education. Athens. 1971. vi+ 105 pp. Seventeen papers on the roles of trees in reducing air pollution, abating noise, neutralizing wastes, stimulating economic values, and providing aesthetic banefits. Also: urban tree diseases. climatic forces, destructive impact of man, urban ecology and forestry programs, and social and legal factors affecting such programs.
0907 "Metro Forestry in Atlanta: Tree Power". A. Ray Shirley. American Forests 76(10) : 8-11, 48. October 1970. Describes the metro Atlanta forestry program of the Georgia Forestry Commission. Metro foresters advise on tree diseases, insect damage, planting, landscaping and other needs in the seven metropolitan counties: Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Douglas. Fayette, Fulton, and Gwinnett.
0908 "What Trees Do For You". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 13, 1971. Pp. 12, 15-16, 30. The Metro Forestry Program, established in 1967 as a cooperative project of the Georgia Forestry Commission and the City of Atlanta, works to protect the city's wealth of trees. The program assists homeowners by providing information about insects, disease, pruning, feeding, and value of trees.
0909 "He Has Life-or-Death Power Over Atlanta's 100,000 Trees.. _ From Ailanthus to Zelkova". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 6, 1974. Pp. 10, 36, 39-40. The work of Atlanta's city arborist is examined.
0910 "New Hope for Elms". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine January 16, 1972. Pp. 22. 41-42. The elm may not go the way of the chestnut thanks to new research, but fighting Dutch elm disease is an expensive task. Atlanta's city forest entomologist and others look at the problem.
MISCELLANEOUS
0911 "Distribution of Natural Pine in the Coastal Plain Region of Georgia". Glenn 0. Ware. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 29: 179-182. June 1971.
0912 Growth and Yields of Natural Stands of the Southern Pines. F. X. Schumacher and T. S. Coile. T. S. Coile. Inc. Durham, N.C. 1960. 115 pp.
0913 "f'!adial Growth of Forest Trees in the Georgia Piedmont". L. W. R. Jackson. Ecology 33(3). 336-341. July 1952.
0914 "The Effect of Rainfall and Temperature on the Annual Radial Growth of Pine in the Southern United States". T. S. Coile. Ecological Monographs 6 : 533-562, 22 ligures. 1936.
0915 "Climatic Limitations for Tree Growth Potential in Southern Forests". Chelvadurai Manogaran. Southeastern Geographer 13(2): 71-81. November 1973.
0916 Climatic Limitations on the Potential lor Tree Growth In Southern Forests. Chelvadurai Manogaran. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, Southern Illinois University. 96 pp.
0917 Variation in Mineral Flux to the Forest Floors of a Pine and a Hardwood Stand In the Georgia Piedmont. Allen L. Torrenueva. Doctoral dissertation, 1975, University of Georgia. 125 pp.
0918 Research Information Digest - Recent Publications of the Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. Biannual. An annotated list of reports by members of the station research staff and cooperators. Includes reports published in professional journals, proceedings, and textbooks as well as the publication series of the U. S. Forest Service.
GAME AND FISH
GENERAL HUNTING
General Mammals Birds Wildlife Management Areas
FISHING
General
Freshwater Saltwater
MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL.
0919 Georgia Wildlife Habitat and Resource Inventory. James E. Morrow. Georgia State University, Environmental Research Group. Atlanta. Prepared for Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Game and Fish Division. 1973. 345 pp. Birds, fish, and mammals in Georgia are inventoried. Emphasis is on game species.
0920 Wildlife, A Valuable Resource. Georgia State Game and Fish Commission. 1948. 36 pp.
0921 Wild Life Resources of Georgia; Their Protection and Development. Georgia State Division of Wildlife. [1938?]. 32 pp.
0922 Wildlife and Fish Information lor Georgia Teachers. Georgia Game and Fish Commission, Information and Education Division. Atlanta. No date. 90 pp.
0923 Southeastern Economic Survey of Wildlife Recreation. Joseph C. Horvath. Georgia State University, Environmental Research Group. Atlanta. 1974. 2 vols. Fishing, hunting, and wildlife-watching activities in the Southeast are surveyed.
0924 "Economic Survey of Southeastern Wildlife and Wildlife-Oriented Recreation". Joseph C. Horvath. In: Transactions of the Thirty-Ninth North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference, 1974, pp. 187-194.
0925 Economic Importance of Sport Fishing and Hunting In the Coastal Plains Province of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. U. S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, Southeast Region. Atlanta. October 1968. 178 pp.
0926 Proceedings of the Sport Flehlng Seminar, October 8-9, 1970, Myrtle Beach, S.C. Seminar Series, No. 71-2. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1971. 76 pp.
0927 Proceedings of the Sport Flehlng Seminar, November 18-19, Jekyll Island, Georgia. Seminar Series. No. 72-1. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1972. 41 pp.
0928 "Wildlife: How Valuable?" David Almand. Georgia Game and Fish 3(4) : 10-12. April1968. On the economic values of wildlife in Georgia. The author estimates that 500 million dollars per year is directed into the state's economy as a result of fishing and hunting activities.
0929 Economic Returns of Wildlife to the Landowner. Publication L-148. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. March 1974.
0930 How to Have Small Game on Your Land... Small Game Management in Georgia. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. 1971. 28 pp. Game management techniques for private landowners are summarized. Species discussed are cottontail rabbit, mourning dove, bobwhite quail, wood duck, and gray squirrel.
0931 Protection and Wildlife Enhancement Practices. Publication L-152. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. March 1974. Conservation practices for landowners interested in attracting wildlife are outlined.
0932 Wildlife Plantings. Publication C-578. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. 1968. Plants for attraction of wildlife are recommended.
0933 A Wild Life Program lor Georgia Farms. C. A. Whittle, H. B. Butner, and A. 0. Duncan. State of Georgia, Division of Vocational Education and Division of Wild Life. Atlanta. 1939.48 pp.
0934 Wildlife Habitat Management Handbook; Southern Region. FSH 2609. 23 R. USDA Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. February 1971. Various pagings, looseleaf.
0935 "A System for Wildlife Habitat Management on Southern National Forests". Herman L. Holbrook. Wildlife Society Bulletin 2(3) : 119-123. Fall 1974. The Featured Species Concept of the U. S. Forest Service in the South is described.
0936 "How Hunting and Fishing Have Changed". Leonard Foote. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 17, 1972. Pp. 12, 14, 37. The origins and subsequent development of hunting, fishing and game & fish management in the United States are explained.
0937 Hunting In the Old South: Original Narratives of the Hunters. Clarence Gohdes, ed. Louisiana State University Press. Baton Rouge. 1967. xx + 176 pp.
0938 "Hunting in the Old South; Original Narratives of the Hunters". Clarence Gohdes, ed. Georgia Review 18(3) : 255-265 (Fall 1964); 18(4) : 463-478 (Winter 1964); 19(1) : 93-120 (Spring 1965); 19(2) 226-238 (Summer 1965); 19(3) : 350-359 (Fall 1965); 19(4) : 471-484 (Winter 1965); 20(1) : 99-107 (Spring 1966); 20(2) : 220-236 (Summer 1966); 20(3) : 352-369 (Fall 1966).
26
Game and Fish
0939 Thla Land I have Loved. Robert C. Balfour, Jr. Privately published. Rose Printing Co. Tallahassee, Fla. 1975. 133 p. The pleasures of hunting and fishing in the region between Thomasville and Tallahassee are described in historical sketches and reminscences.
HUNTING
General
0940 "Hunting in Georgia". Aaron Pass. Outdooraln Georgia 3(10) : 13-20. October 1974. Lists State Wildlife Management Areas, industrial forest lands, commercial shooting preserves, and game species, with basic information on each.
0941 "The Atlanta Magazine Guide to Hunting in Georgia". Jim Morrison, ed. Georgia Game and Flah 4(11): [16-page insert]. November 1969. Where, when, and how to hunt in Georgia. Summaries of squirrel, deer, quail, rabbit, dove, waterfowl, turkey, bear, and small game hunting. Also deer population map, hunting area map, and listing of hunting facilities both on public lands and private preserves.
0942 The Game Resourcea ol Georgia. J. H. Jenkins. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. 1953. ix + 114 pp. Contents: field methods, wildlife regions, general history of settlement and last use, whitetailed deer, turkey, quail, rabbits, squirrels, ruffed grouse, mourning dove, clapper rail, waterfowl, some introduced wildlife species, furbearers and larger mammals, and future outlook.
Mammals
0943 "The Management of Georgia Deer". George W. Allen. Journal ol Wildlife Management 12(4) : 428-432. October 1948.
0944 "The Extirpation and Restoration of North Georgia Deer - A Sixty Year History". James H. Jenkins. In: Tranuctlons, Seventeenth North American Wildlife Conference, 1952, pp. 472-476.
0945 "Sapelo Hunt". Marcie Auton. Outdooraln Georgia 4(11): 2-5. November 1975. Public deer hunts conducted as a control on the deer population of the island are examined.
0946 "Don't Say No to Doe Hunting". Marvin Tye. Georgia Game and Fish 4(11): 8-11. November 1969. Wildlife management studies show that bagging of bucks exclusively is harmful to an expanding deer population. But successful hunting of deer of both sexes is dependent upon elimination of poachers and wild dogs. Includes maps showing 1951 and 1968 deer population distribution and status by county.
0947 "Out on a Limb". Aaron Pass. Georgia Game and Fish 6(1): 1-3. January 1971. Notes on hunting Georgia's most popular game animal, the squirrel.
0948 "Bear Facts and Fables". Marvin Tye. Georgia Game and Flah 3(9) : 9-10. September 1968. On bear hunting in Georgia and the possibilities of establishment of larger populations.
0949 "The Fox or the Hunter". Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Flah 3(9): 1-5. September 1968. On fox hunting in Georgia.
0950 "Wild Hog Hunt". Marvin Tye. Georgia Game and Flah 6(12): 8-10. December 1971. Hunting wild boars in Georgia is possible even though they are classed as non-game animals. Boar may be taken in some of the management areas, on Fort Stewart, and on several private hunting preserves.
0951 "Hunting the Buffalo". Marcus B. Morehead. Georgia Game and Fish 6(12) : 2-4. December 1971. Buffalo Swamp in Carroll County is a ten-mile long, half-mile wide wetland teeming with duck, woodcock, swamp rabbit, quail, deer, and bobcat.
0952 A Contribution to the Biology and Management ol the Cottontail Rabbit (Sytvilagus floridanus ma/larus) In Georgia. Michael R. Pelton. Doctoral dissertation, 1969, University of Georgia. 181 pp.
0953 Some Ellecll of Beaver (Castor canadensis) and Beaver Pond Management on the Ecology and Utilization ol Fish Populatlona along Warmwater Streams In Georgia and South Carolina. Thomas M. Pullen, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia. 94 pp.
0954 "Hounds of Hell". Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Flah 3(12) : 13-19. December 1968. On the wild dog problem in Georgia. An estimated 300,000 stray dogs have caused millions of dollars in losses of livestock and wildlife resources.
0955 "One of the Last of the Big-Time Fur Trappers". John Pennington. Atlanta Joumal and Conatltutlon Magezlne April 15, 1973. Pp. 10, 12, 24, 26. One of 213 licensed trappers in Georgia in 1973 is interviewed. The Coweta County man uses leg-holding steel traps to capture beaver, otter, bobcat, muskrat, mink, red and gray fox, raccoon, opossum, rabbit, and feral cats and dogs.
Birds
0956 Handbook on Native and Pen-Raised Game Blrda. Southeastern Conference on Management of Shooting Preserves and Game Birds, April9-12, 1961. University of Georgia Center for Continuing Education. Athens. 1961. 62 pp.
0957 Game Bird Production and Health. Circular No. 688. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. August 1975.
0958 Birds on Georgia Farms. Georgia Department of Game and Fish. Atlanta. No date. 40 pp.
0959 The Mourning Dove Study In Georgia. Final Report. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. 1950. 98 pp.
0960 "Some Aspects of the Population Ecology of Breeding Doves in Georgia". Eugene P. Odum and Milton N. Hopkins. Journal ol Wildlife Management 17(2) : 132-143. April 1953.
0961 "Forward Look for Turkeys". Dean Wohlgemuth. Georgia Game and Fish 4(11) : 4-7. November 1969. Notes on turkey hunting in Georgia. Maps show turkey population distribution and status by county.
0962 "Turkey Trot". Aaron Pass. Georgia Game and Fish 7(3) : 6-10. March 1972. Georgia's wild turkey restoration program is described. Land use change from original forest to agriculture once threatened to confine the turkey to a few small areas, but now change from agriculture to timber production presents an opportunity to return the gamebird to its previous wide range.
0963 Prince ol Game Birds: The Bobwhite Quail. Charles Elliott. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Atlanta. 1974. 193 pp.
0964 The Bobwhite Quail: Ill Habits, Preservation and Increase. Herbert L. Stoddard. Charles Scribner's Sons. New York. 1932. xxix + 559 pp. + 69 plates. A quail preserve in Grady County, Georgia was the site for this comprehensive study of the bobwhite quail.
0965 The Bobwhite Quail; Its Propagation, Preservation and Increase on Georgia Farma. Herbert L. Stoddard. State Department of Game and Fish. Atlanta. No date. 75 pp.
0966 The Bobwhite Quail: Ill Lite and Management. Walter Rosene. Rutgers University Press. New Brunswick, N.J. 1969. xxvi + 418 pp.
0967 "Quail Habits and Habitats'". Aaron Pass. Outdoora In Georgia 1(6) : 2Q-23. December 1972. On the rise and decline of the bobwhite quail (Colinus virgianus) in Georgia. Preferring the brushy borders of the fields of small farms, the birds have increased and decreased in numbers with the historical increase and current decrease of small farming operations. The end of World War II was the turning point of the process.
0968 '"Merry Bob White and His Many Enemies". James Henry Jones. Georgia Magazine 10(3) 26-27. October-November 1966. The bobwhite quail has been threatened by urbanization, disease, predators and sportsmen, but maintains remarkable capabilities for survival.
0969 Bobwhite Quail Foods and Populations on Pine Plantations in the Georgia Piedmont During the First Seven Years Following Site Preparation". Norman L. Brunswig and A. Sydney Johnson. In: Proceedings ol the Twenty-Sixth Annual Conference, Southeastern Association ol Game and Fish Commissioners, October 22-25, 1972, Knoxville, Tenn., pp. 96-107.
0970 '"How Wild the Hunting?" Charles Elliott. Outdoor Llle 154(2): 74-77, 94-95. August
1974.
Commercial quail-hunting preserves in Georgia are examined.
0971 An Economic Analysis ol the Commercial Shooting Preserve Industry In Georgia. Laron Sidney Law. Masters thesis, 1975, University of Georgia. 92 pp.
0972 Waterfowl Tomorrow. Joseph P. Linduska, ed. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. 1964. xii + 770 pp. + 1 fold. map. 103 authors from all sections of the United Statis and Canada examine the 48 species of ducks, geese, and swans of North America and the lands that support them.
0973 '"Duck Hunting Georgia Style". Oscar Dewberry. Georgia Game and Flah 4(1) : 4-6. January 1969.
0974 "Georgia's Native Waterfowl: Wood Ducks". Jim Odum. Outdoors In Georgia 4(12): 2-5. December 1975.
0975 '"The Ingenious Wood Duck". Leonard Foote. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine April13, 1969. Pp. 16-19, 23.
0976 Wanted: More Wood Ducks In Georgia. Publication B-649. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. June 1970. Life history and requirements of wood ducks are outlined and management practices described for the landowner interested in providing habitat for the species.
0977 ..Woodies' World: The Beaver Pond". Sharon Davis. Georgia Game and Fish 5(1) :
27
Game and Fish
1-4. January 1970. On protection of beaver ponds as habitat for wood ducks.
0978 "Where the Wild Geese Went". John Culler. Georgia Game and Fish 5(2). 1-4. February 1970. Migration of the Canada goose south to Georgia has been halted by the creation of private and federal refuges to the north. A project to encourage the geese to nest in Georgia (at Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge) is described.
0979 "The Geese That Came Down From the Cold". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 3(10) . 29-32. October 1974. On a cooperative program of state and federal agencies which would establish a large population of Giant Canada geese in the Tennessee River Valley.
0980 "Game Bird of the Future". Ron Odom. Outdoors in Georgia 2(10): 9-13. October 1973. The clapper rail, also known locally as the marsh hen, could become one of the most popular of game birds in the luture. Georgia's 350,000 acres of Saltmarsh, the rail's habitat, should remain relatively stable while the habitats of many other game birds fall to urbanization and modern forestry management practices.
0981 Final Report - Clapper Rail Survey and Investigation Study. John Oney. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. 1954. 50 pp.
Wildlife Management Areas
0982 "Chickasawhatchee Wildlife Management Area". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 3(2) : 17-22. February 1974.
0983 "Ocmulgee Wildlife Management Area". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 2(5) : 20. May 1973.
0984 "Rum Creek Wildlife Management Area". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 4(12) : 28-29. December 1975. Description and map. The 4000-acre area is in Monroe County.
0985 "Warwoman Wildlife Management Area". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 2(9) 9-12. September 1973. The advantages of the area for hunting, fishing, camping, and hiking are outlined. Warwoman WMA is in Rabun County in Northeast Georgia.
0986 "Wildlife Management Areas: Cedar Creek". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 3(10): 7-10. October 1974. Description and map of the 35,000-acre area in Putnam, Jasper and Jones counties.
0987 "Wildlife Management Areas: Clark Hill". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 3(6) : 22-25. June 1974.
0988 "Wildlife Management Areas: Cohutta". ,loe Cullens. Outdoors In Georgia 3(5) 7-11. May 1974.
0989 "Wildlife Management Areas- Rayonier". Dean Wohlgemuth. Outdoors In Georgia 4(1): 7-11. January 1975. Description of Rayonier WMA in Wayne and Brantley Counties.
0990 "Georgia's Neglected Hunting Area". Marvin Tye. Georgia Game and Fish 6(11) : 1-4. November 1971. The Bullard Creek Wildlife Management Area along the Altamaha River offers hunting without a crowd. The area comprises 18,000 acres in Appling and Jeff Davis Counties.
0991 "Educated Deer at Berry College". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 2(10). October 1973. Describes the Berry Wildlife Management Area and Wildlife Refuge in Floyd County.
FISHING
General
0992 Flshin' in Georgia. Georgia Department of Game and Fish. Atlanta. No date. 45 pp. General summary of regulations, guide to the best fishing spots, and description of Georgia sportfish.
0993 "Fishing in Georgia". Charles Elliott. Georgia Review 2(1) : 72-78. Spring 1948. A brief summary.
0994 This is Georgia Fishing. Georgia Bureau of Industry and Trade, Tourist Division. Atlanta. No date. 32 pp. Guide to freshwater and saltwater fishing in the state including descriptions of individual fish species and listing of fishing facilities on reservoirs, rivers, and the coast.
0995 "The Atlanta Magazine Guide to Fishing in Georgia". [Jim Morrison, ed.] Georgia Game and Fish 4(6) . [16-page insert]. June 1969. Includes: listing of public and commercial fish camp facilities on rivers, reservoirs, and salt water areas; state waters map; summary of trout fishing; guide to salt water fishing; list of record catches; descriptions and illustrations of each type of sportfish in Georgia; and summaries of fishing potentials in streams, ponds, reservoirs and the Okefenokee Swamp. Compiled by staff of State Game and Fish Commission.
0996 Gone Fishing. Charles Elliott. Stackpole Company. Harrisburg, Pa. 1953. xi + 291 pp. A fisherman's experience in the Georgia mountains, the Okefenokee Swamp, the Suwannee River, the coastal waterways and elsewhere in the state.
0997 "For Want of a Ramp... the Fishing was Lost". Wayne Thomaston. Georgia Game and Fish 5(6) : 10-12. June 1970. Georgia's boat launching ramp construction program is described. Sixty ramps in use are listed.
Freshwater
0998 "Sweet Song of the Rivers". Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Fish 2(8) : 5-7, 16. August 1967. General survey of river fishing possibilities in Georgia.
0999 "Managed Trout Streams". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 4(4): 13-20. April1975. Guide and map. Managed trout streams are found in the following Wildlife Management Areas: Chattahoochee, Lake Burton, Coleman River, Swallow Creek, Warwoman, Chestatee, Coopers Creek, Blue Ridge, Cohutta, Johns Mountain, Lake Russell, Rich Mountain, and Coosawattee.
1000 "Management Stream Directory". Aaron Pass. Georgia Game and Fish 6(5) : 1-5. May 1971. Guide to trout fishing in the creeks and rivers flowing through ten wildlife management areas in the Chattahoochee National Forest: Warwoman, Blue Ridge, Chestatee, Chattahoochee, Swallow Creek, Coleman River, Lake Burton, Cohutta, Johns Mountain, and Lake Russell.
1001 "Pick Your Trout Stream". Jim Tyler. Georgia Game and Fish 2(8) : 1-4. August 1967. Guide to the trout streams of north Georgia. Includes chart showing streams outside management areas that are stocked with trout.
1002 "Return of the Native". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 3(4): 8-11. April 1974. Outlines the decline and restoration of populations of brook trout (Salvelinus frontinalis) in the north Georgia mountains.
1003 "Wild Trout for Wild Streams" Aaron Pass. Georgia Game and Fish 7(4) : 14-16. April 1972. Native brook trout populations in north Georgia have declined due to pollution and habitat alteration. Erosion from clearing and construction activities brings sill to normally clear trout streams which settles on spawning gravels, thus hindering reproduction. A management program is described which will maintain wild trout streams and work toward reclamation of abused streams.
1004 "Noontootla - A Sixteen-Year Creel and Use History of a Southern Appalachian Trout Stream Under Changing Management Regulations". Joseph R. Fatora. In: ProceedIngs of the Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference, Southeastern Association of Game and Fish Commissioners, September 27-30, 1970, Atlanta, Georgia, pp. 622-637.
1005 "A Hatchery is not a Home". Marvin Tye. Georgia Game and Fish 5(3) : 4-7. March 1970. A look at the Lake Burton Fish Hatchery in Rabun County where trout are grown for most of Georgia's cold-water streams.
1006 "Tailwater Trout". Dean Wohlgemuth. Georgia Game and Fish 6(10) : 13-15. October 1971. The cold water drawn from the bottom of some of the large Piedmont reservoirs will support trout, a fish usually found only in cold mountain streams. Such a place, the Savannah River just below Lake Hartwell, is described.
1007 "Forgotten Fishing". Bill Morehead. Outdoors In Georgia 4(7) : 6-9. July 1975. A look at the "redeye" or "coosa" bass and the "Flint River shoal" bass, two distinctive varieties of the smallmouth bass.
1008 "Coosa Crappie". Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Fish 3(3) : 1-5. March 1968. Crappie fishing at Mayo's Lock & Dam, on the Coosa River below Rome, is described. The 1915 dam and its lock for river barges are inactive.
1009 "Carp: Undesirable Aliens". Marvin Tye. Georgia Game and Fish 5(8) : 14-15. August 1970. Carp, introduced into the U.S. from Germany in 1876, are among the most undesirable of "rough" fish in Georgia's lakes and reservoirs. A good example of man's upsetting of the balance of nature, the carp ruins the habitat for many game fish.
1010 "The Striped Bass are Coming". John Culler. Georgia Game and Fish 5(7) : 8-9. July 1970. Efforts to reestablish the striped bass populations in Georgia are described. It is anticipated that the anadromous fish will provide both sport and biological control of "trash" fish in the state's larger reservoirs.
1011 "Rockfish Fever". Dean Wohlgemuth. Georgia Game and Fish 7(4); 6-9. April1972. Georgia's striped bass program is summarized. Also known as rockfish, the striped bass is being stocked in Georgia reservoirs and in estuarine areas.
1012 "Ogeechee Spectacular". John Culler. Georgia Game and Fish 5(3) : 9-11. March 1970.
28
Geology
Shad fishing in the almost-unpolluted Ogeechee River is described.
1013 "Tiny Tarpon". Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Fish 3(4) : 1-5. April 1968. On shad fishing as a Georgia sport, especially at the New Savannah Bluff Lock & Dam on the Savannah River below Augusta.
1014 Statewide Fisheries Investigations, F-21-1, June 1, 1968 through June 30, 1969 Annual Prog1'811 Report. State Game and Fish Commission, Atlanta. 1969. 2 vols. In twelve parts: (1) Pond Management Investigations, (2) Reservoir Limnologicallnvestigations, (3) Smallmouth Bass Stream Investigations, (4) Trout Stream Investigations, (5) Evaluation of Slot Baskets for Taking Suckers in Lake Seminole, (6) Applied Management in Warmwater Streams, (7) Benthos Studies in Warmwater Streams, (8) Effects of Insecticide Treatments for Mosquito Control on Aquatic Insect Production in Lake Seminole, (9) Evaluation of Antimyacin as a Selective Fish Toxicant, (10) An Investigation of Aspects of the Life History of Largemouth Bass in Lake Seminole, (11) Evaluation of Striped Bass Introductions in Lakes Blackshear and Seminole, (12) Life History Studies of Stream Fishes.
1015 Southam Region Fisheries Investigations, Project F-19-R-3, July 1, 1967 to June 30, 1968 - Final Report. State Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. 1968. 130 pp. Various studies of fish in southern Georgia streams and reservoirs, notably Lakes Blackshear, Seminole and Chattahoochee (Eufaula) and the Alpaha and Suwannee Rivers.
1016 Northam Region Fisheries Investigations, Project F-17-R-3, July 1, 1967 to June 30, 1968- Final Report. State Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. 1968. 221 pp. Various studies of fish in Northern Georgia streams and reservoirs. Trout and smallmouth bass analyzed in detail.
1017 Central Region Fisheries Investigations, Project F-18-R-3, July 1, 1967 to June 30, 1968- Final Report. State Game and Fish ommission. Atlanta. 1968. Unpaged. Various studies of fish in central Georgia streams and reservoirs, notably Lakes Sinclair, Clark Hill, Jackson, and Tobesofkee.
1018 Reservoir Fishery Resources Symposium. Presented by the Reservoir Committee of the Southam Division, American Fisheries Society at the University of Georgia, Center for Continuing Education, Athens. American Fisheries Society. [Washington]. 1967. viii + 569 pp.
1019 "Five Little Mountain Jewels". Dean Wohlgemuth. Georgia Game and Fish 6(7) : 1-4. July 1971. Fishing the five small reservoirs of the Tallulah and Tugaloo rivers: Lake Rabun, Tallulah Falls Lake, Seed (or Nacoochee) Lake, Yonah Lake, and Tugaloo Lake.
1020 "Every Month is Bass Time in Georgia". Frances Greene. Georgia Life 1(2): 21-23. Autumn 1974. The fishing tournaments of Georgia's 56 Bassmaster's Clubs are described.
1021 "Landing Lunkers for Fun & Profit". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 10, 1973. Pp. 14-16, 21-22, 24, 26. The annual Seminole Lunker Bass Tournament is a big event on Lake Seminole, one of the world's best lakes for the fishing of black or largemouth bass.
1022 "Management Implications of Bass Fishing Tournaments". John A. Holbrook II, Don Johnson and Joseph P. Strzemienski. In: Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth Annual Conference, Southeastern Aaaoclatlon of Gama and Fish Commissioners, October 22-25, 1972. Knoxville, Tenn., pp. 320-324. This study was designed to assess the harvest of a bass fishing tournament and its effect on the bass population of a lake. The data evaluated here are taken from a total of 2254 largemouth bass weighing an estimated 4419.5 pounds harvested during a three day (29-31 March 1972) bass fishing tournament held at Lake Lanier. Georgia, a 38 000 acre reservOir.
1023 "The Results of Population Alteration and Factors Affecting Balance in Farm Ponds in Georgia". Willard W. Thomaston. In: Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Conference, Southeastern Association of Game and Fish Commissioners, October 14-17, 1962, Charleston, S.C., pp. 361-370.
1024 Management of Georgia Sportflshlng Ponds. Mac V. Rawson, Jr. Bulletin 732. University of Georgia College of Agriculture. Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. 1974. 22 pp.
1025 Georgia Fish Pond Management. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. [1954]. viii+ 99 pp. On selection of a site, construction, stocking, fertilization, and fishing. Renovation of old ponds is explained.
1026 "Fish by the Acre". Thomas H. Haile. Georgia Review 4(4) : 324-330. Winter 1950. On the benefits of constructing small farm ponds.
Saltwater
1027 "Saltwater Sport". T. Craig Martin. Outdoors In Georgia 1(6): 6-10. December 1972. Tips on fishing for speckled trout, channel bass, black drum. sheepshead, and striped bass on Georgia's coast. Sixteen coastal marinas are listed; facilities at each are noted.
1028 "Tangle with a Tarpon!" Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Fish 4(8) : 1-6. August 1969. Tarpon fishing on the Georgia coast is described. The best area is at the mouth of the Alta-
maha River.
1029 "Follow the Birds". Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Fish 4(8): 10-14. August 1969. Follow the birds to find schools of Spanish mackerel off the Georgia coast. Mackerel fishing is described and how-to tips are given.
1030 "Shark Fishing Off Jekyll". Robert Coram. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Maga zlne June 2, 1974. Pp. 10-12, 14.
1031 "Sharks!" Joe Cullens. Outdoors In Georgia 4(8) : 2-6. August 1975. Brief guide to shark fishing off Georgia's coast.
1032 "Georgia Sinks a Ship for the Fish". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine July 20, 1975. Pp. 10-13. The Department of Natural Resources is using old ships to create artificial reefs off the Georgia coast.
1033 "Jekyll Island's $1,310,970.67 Fishing Hole". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April29, 1973. Pp. 1Q-11, 56, 58. An uncompleted marina at Jekyll Island may oversome siltation problems and the island's expensive fishing pier may get good fishing - if some design mistakes are rectified.
1034 "An Economic Analysis of Georgia's Marine Charter Boat Fishing Industry." E. Evan Brown and Fred J. Holemo. Marine Fisheries Review 37(4) : 11-12. April 1975.
MISCELLANEOUS
1035 Annual Progress Reports - [Various Projects]. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Game and Fish Division. Atlanta.
1036 Outdoor Georgia. State of Georgia. Atlanta. May 1940 - March 1946. Official natural resources conservation magazine of the State of Georgia under three agencies: the Division of Wildlife, the (old) Department of Natural Resources, and the Game and Fish Commission.
1037 Georgia Outdoors. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Monthly, 1962-1966. Monthly newsletter of !he Commission.
1038 Georgia Game and Fish. Georgia Game and Fish Commission. Atlanta. 1950-1961 (old series). 1966-June 1972 (new series).
1039 Outdoors In Georgia. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Atlanta. Monthly Began July 1972. Official magazine of the Department of Natural Resources.
1040 Bibliography of Research Publications of the U. S. Bureau of Sport Flsherlea and Wildlife, 1928-72. Paul H. Eschmeyer and Van T. Harris. Resource Publication 120. U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. 1974. vi + 154 pp.
GEOLOGY
GENERAL TOPOGRAPHY MINERALS
General Specific
WATER
Supply and Use Chemical Character Reservoirs and Hydropower Ground Water
MISCELLANEOUS
Caves Earthquakes Fossil Hunting Other Bibliographies
COASTAL PLAIN
General Stratigraphy Structural Features Minerals
GENERAL
29
Geology
KAOLIN, BAUXITE, FULLERS EARTH, AND ATTAPULGITE
PETROLEUM MISCELLANEOUS Ground Water GENERAL DECLINE OF ARTESIAN PRESSURE MISCELLANEOUS Geophysical Investigations Carolina Bays Coast and Lower Coastal Plain Geologic History Continental Shelf Coastal Sediments GENERAL CONTINENTAL SHELF ESTUARIES AND SALT MARSHES BEACHES AND ESTUARY ENTRANCES
HIGHLANDS NORTHWEST GEORGIA PIEDMONT COUNTIES
GENERAL
1041 "The Georgia Story: The Geological History of Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 2(4) : 2-14; 2(5) : 2-5; 2(6) . 2-6; 2(7) : 4-7; 3(1) : 2-9; 3(2) : 44-47; 3(3) : 74-75; 3(4) : 109-112; 3(5) : 160; 3(6) : 209-210; 4(1) : 2-4.
1042 Geologic Map of Georgia. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. (In press).
1043 Geologic Map of Georgia. George W. Stose and Richard W. Smith. Georgia Division of Mines, Mining and Geology. Atlanta. 1939. 1 : 500,000.
1044 Handbook of Georgia Geology. Dewitt E. Jones and Charles Danzwith. Atlanta Area Technical School, Department of Civil Engineering Technology. 1969. 1250] pp. Compilation of existing information on Georgia geology for students in the school's program of Civil Engineering Technology.
TOPOGRAPHY
1045 Phyalcal Geography of Georgia. Laurence LaForge et al. Bulletin No. 42. Geological Survey of Georgia. Atlanta. 1925. x + 189 pp. + 43 plates. Delineates and describes the surface features of the state.
1046 "Physical Features of Georgia". H. F. Perkins and F. T. Ritchie, Jr. Journal of Soli and Water Conservation 23(3) . 97-100. 1968. General survey of each of Georgia's eight major land resource areas: (1) Sand Mountain, (2) Southern Appalachian Ridges and Valleys, (3) Blue Ridge, (4) Southern Piedmont, (5) Sandhi lis, (6) Blacklands, (7) Southern Coastal Plain, and (8) Atlantic Coast Flatwoods.
1047 Phyalographlc Zones In Georgia. Georgia State Highway Department. Atlanta. 1970. 35 pp.
1048 State of Georgia- Slope Map. U. S. Geological Survey. 1973. 1 : 500,000. 46 in. x 39 in. Percentage of slope is indicated by variation of colors.
1049 National Topographic Map Series. U. S. Geological Survey. 1882 to date. 1 : 24,000; 1 : 62,500; 1 : 250,000; and other scales. The major source for topographic information in the United States. Each map covers a quadrangle area bounded by lines of latitude and longitude and is designated by the name of a city, town, or prominent feature of the area covered. Index maps of each state are available from the U. S. Geological Survey.
1050 "Topographically Speaking". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 1(4) : 7-9. October 1972. Georgia's topographic mapping program is explained.
1051 Geodetic Survey of Georgia. Frederick H. McDonald, ed. State Highway Board of Georgia. Atlanta. 1938. xxx + 1102 pp. + 1 fold. map.
MINERALS
General
1052 State of Georgia - Mineral Resource Map. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1969. 1 : 500,000. 42 x 36 in.
1053 Mining Directory of Georgia. Anna C. Martin and Lynda P. Stafford. Circular 2. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. 1972. [iii] + 87 pp. Summary of mining operations, by county and mineral. Data includes name and address of company, location(s) of mine or quarry, and uses of mineral products mined.
1054 "Geological Provinces of Georgia and Their Principal Mineral Resources". A. S. Furcron. In: Short Contribution to the Geology, Geography, and Archaeology of Georgia, Bulletin No. 56, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1950, pp. 10-20.
1055 The Common Rocka and Mlnerala of Georgia. Revised. A. S. Furcron. Information Circular No. 5. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1961. 6 pp. Descriptions of individual minerals and types of rock are presented. Includes general locational information.
1056 Mineral Resource of Georgia. A. S. Furcron eta/. Georgia Department of Natural Resources; Division of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1938. 104 pp. Reprint of section of textbook Natural Resources of Georgia (Department of Natural Resources and Department of Education, 1938).
1057 A Preliminary Report on the Mineral Resources of Georgia. Revised ed. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 23. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1926. x + 164 pp. + 21 plates + 1 map. General information on economic minerals.
1058 Georgia's Mineral Reaources: A Summary of Available Data on Their Put, Present and Future Statui. George I. Whitlach, ed. Project E-233-3. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Branch. June 1962. iv + 130 pp.
1059 "The Mineral Industry of Georgia". J. Robert Wells and Sam M. Pickering, Jr. In Mlnerala Yearbook, 1972 - Volume II, Area Reports: Domeatlc, U. S. Bureau of Mines, 1974; pp. 195-209. General summary including reviews of each mineral commodity, list of principal mining companies, and table showing value of mineral production in each county.
1060 Mining in Georgia - Big Business with a Bigger Future [Special Issue]. Atlanta Economic Review 21(7): 1-39. July 1971.
1061 "There's More Than Gold in Them Thar Hills". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 16, 1975. Pp. 12-16, 18-19. A look at mining in Georgia. The state ranks eighth in the nation in the production of industrial minerals.
1062 Directory of Commercial Minerals In Georgia and Alabama along the Central of Georgia Railway. Central of Georgia Railway. Savannah. 1923. 154 pp. + 1 fold. map.
1063 The Role of Mineral Industries In Six Southeastern States. John E. Husted. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. Atlanta. November 1973. 134 pp. NTIS number: PB-231 758. Examination of economic factors pertaining to mining activities in Georgia, Alabama, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
1063 Census of Mineral Industries, 1972: South Atlantic States. Area Series MIC 72(2). U.S. Bureau of Census. Suitland, Md. August 1975. vi+ 42 + 4 pp.
1085 "The Industrial Minerals of Georgia". Garland Peyton. In: Short Contributions to the Geology Geography and Archaeology of Georgia, Bulletin No. 56, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1950, pp. 1-10.
1066 "The Industrial Minerals of Georgia". Garland Peyton. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(1) : 1-8. 1954.
1067 "A Catalogue of Georgia Minerals". Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(6): 9-10; 1(7) . 12; 1(8): 13-14; 1(9): 9; 1(10): 16-17; 1(11): 17; 1(12). 12; 2(1): 10; 2(3): 7-9; 2(4) : 17; 3(1) . 10-12; 3(2) : 48-49; 3(5): 161-162; 3(6): 211-213; 4(1): 4-5; 4(2): 53-55. 1948-1951.
1068 "Gem Minerals of Georgia." James G. Lester. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(3) : 102-104. 1959.
1089 "Georgia's Gems". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 1(2): 6-10. August 1972. Mineral collecting is one of the state's fastest-growing avocations. To be found are diamonds, corundum, quartz, opal, beryl, garnets, moonstone, rutile, zircon, kyanite, lazulite, epidote, staurolite, pearls, gold and other collectables.
1070 "Gem Minerals of Georgia". James G. Lester. Emory University Quarterly 15(3) : 160-167. October 1959. A summary of what the gem collector may find in Georgia.
1071 "Rock Hunt: A Brown's Guide Do-lt-Yourself Tour". Helene Blihovde. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(5) 53-56. September-October 1975. Guide to three mineral hunting sites: Garnett Hill - Little Bob Copper Mine in Paulding County, Emerson Mining Cut in Bartow County, and Big Cedar Creek in Floyd County.
1072 "Rock Hunting". Joe Cullens and Sam Pickering. Outdoors In Georgia 4(4) : 9-12. April 1975. Suggestions for Georgia mineral collectors. Includes list of mineral and lapidary clubs in the state.
30
Geology
1073 "A Museum of Gems and Minerals". Georgia Magazine 9(4) 24-25. December 1965 - January 1966. A notable collection of gems and minerals of the world (with emphasis on those from Georgia) is housed in the lobby of Atlanta's Fulton Federal Savings and Loan office. The sites in Georgia where many of the specimens were found are pointed out.
1074 Symposium on Mineral Resources of the Southeastern United States. Frank G. Snyder, ed. University of Tennessee Press. Knoxville. 1950. x + 236 pp. Nineteen papers from a symposium held at Knoxville, Tenn., March 3-5, 1949, are printed.
1075 United States Mineral Resources. Donald A. Brobst and Walden P. Pratt, eds. Professional Paper 820. U.S. Geological Survey. 1973. viii+ 722 pp. A commodity-by-commodity summary. Emphasis is on economic considerations such as how much of X mineral do we have?, How much do we need?, and What will it cost to extract the difference?
Specific (Alphabetically)
1076 Potential Sources of Aluminum. Information Circular 8335. U. S. Bureau of Mines. 1967. 148 pp. Bauxite, bauxitic clay, and kaolin are sources of aluminum as are anorthosite and certain similar materials. Principal deposits of the first three are found in Georgia, Arkansas, Hawaii, and Oregon. Technological, economic, and political factors in the utilization of low-grade sources (those other than bauxite) are discussed.
1077 Alumina from Kaolin Potentials. William C. Ward, Jr. et a/. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. Atlanta. 1972. v + 64 pp. Study prepared for Georgia Department of Industry and Trade. Georgia possesses large deposits of kaolin along the Fall Line. These contain 35% alumina.
1078 "Asbestos in Georgia" Georgia Mineral Newsletter 9(1): 2-7. 1956.
1079 A Report on the Asbe.tos, Talc and Soapstone Deposits of Georgia. Oliver B. Hopkins. Bulletin No. 29. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1914. xvi + 319 pp. + 21 plates+ 1 map.
1080 "Attapulgite in Fuller's Earth Deposits of Georgia and Florida." B. F. Buie and H.R. Gremillion. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(1-2) : 20-25. 1963.
1081 "Commercial Production and Uses of Attapulgite Clay Products". T. D. Oulton. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(1-2) : 26-28. 1963.
1082 "Attapulgus Clay". Paul F. Kerr. American Mineralogist 22(5) : 534-550. May 1937.
1083 Report on the Barytes Deposits of Georgia. J.P. D. Hull. Bulletin No. 36. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1920. xii + 146 pp. + 11 plates+ 4 maps. Describes the mineral, types and distribution of deposits, and methods of mining and processing. Includes descriptions of individual deposits. Most of these are in the Cartersville Mining District of Bartow County, but a few are in Murray, Whitfield, Gordon, Floyd, Cherokee, and Polk Counties.
1084 Barite Resources of the United States. Donald A. Brobst. Bulletin 1072-B. U.S. Geological Survey. 1958. iv + [63] pp. + 1 map in pocket. "A study of the production and use of ore, geochemistry, and geology of the deposits, with consideration of mining methods and exploration, and estimates of reserves". Georgia's barite resources are in Bartow County near Cartersville.
1085 A Preliminary Report on the Bauxite Deposits of Georgia. Thomas L. Watson. Bulletin No. 11. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1904. 169 pp. + 12 plates + 1 map. General geology, chemical composition and varieties, uses, methods of mining and processing, and individual deposits are described. Principal deposits are found in the Hermitage, Bobo, and Summerville districts of Bartow, Floyd, Polk, Chattooga, and Walker counties.
1086 Geology of the Southeastern Bauxite Deposits. Elizabeth F. Overstreet. Bulletin 1199-A. U.S. Geological Survey. 1964. iv + 19 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1087 "Beryl in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(3) : 91-95. 1959.
1088 A Preliminary Report on a Part of the Clays of Georgia. George E. Ladd. Bulletin No. 6-A. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1898. 204 pp. + 17 plates. Includes: properties; uses (brick, pottery, paper-making, fire-proofing, etc.); prospecting and testing, geology and physiography, notes by localities, and comparison of clays. Concerned only with the clays of middle Georgia (those found along the Fall Line).
1089 Second Report on the Clay Deposits of Georgia. Otto Veatch. Bulletin No. 18. Geologic Survey of Georgia. 1909. 453 pp. + 32 plates + 3 maps. Classification and origin, composition, geological distribution, geographical distribution, uses, and individual mines and processing operations are described. Covers the entire state and re-surveys the middle Georgia region previously covered.
1090 "The Bleaching Clays of Georgia". Harry X. Bay and Arthur C. Munyan. In: Clay Investigations In the Southern States, 1934-35, Bulletin 901, U. S. Geological Survey, 1940; pp. 251-300. Bleaching clays occur within five areas of the state: (1) In the Chickamauga limestone of Chattooga, Dade, and Walker Counties is Ordovician bentonite; (2) In the Eocene Midway formation of Stewart County is fuller's earth; (3) In the Twiggs clay member of the Eocene Barnwell formation of Crawford, Houston, Jones, Twiggs, Washington and Wilkinson Counties is fuller's earth; (4) In the Oligocene Flint River formation of Crisp, Dooly,
Macon, and Sumter Counties is "bentonitic (?) clay"; and (5) In the Miocene Hawthorn formation of Decatur, Grady, and Thomas Counties is fuller's earth.
1091 Beneficiation and Utilization of Georgia Clays. R. T. Stull and G. A. Bole. Bulletin 252. U.S. Bureau of Mines. Washington, D. C. 1926. [iv] + 72 pp.
1092 "Some Clay's Good". John Scott. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(3) : 93-102. 1954. Reprinted from Excavating Engineer, May 1954. The mining of kaolin in Georgia is described.
1093 A Preliminary Report on the Coal Deposits of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 12. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1904. 121 pp. + 14 plates+ 1 map. Description of Georgia! coal, summary of structural geology of the coal fields, and examination of individual exposures and mines. Georgia's coal fields are within Dade,Walker and Chattooga counties underlying a part of the Cumberland Plateau.
1094 "Georgia's Copper Deposits". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 5(5) . 137-139. 1952.
1095 Copper Deposits of the Appalachian States. Walter Harvey Weed. Bulletin 455. U.S. Geological Survey. 1911. 166 pp. Georgia's deposits are discussed on pages 145-151.
1096 A Preliminary Report on the Corundum Deposits of Georgia. Francis P. King. Bulletin No.2. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1894. 133 pp. + 6 plates+ 1 map.
1097 "Corundum in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(4): 167-177. 1960. Known corundum occurrences in Georgia are summarized.
1098 "Diamonds in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(2) : 2-3. 1948.
1099 Dolomites and Magnesian Limestones In Georgia. A. S. Furcron. Information Circular 14. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1942. [ii] + 30 pp. Brief discussion of distribution of these rocks in the state. Principal deposits are in the Paleozoic rocks of northwest Georgia and in the Whitestone- Marble Hill belt of Fannin, Gilmer, Pickens, and Cherokee counties.
1100 The Flagstone Industry of Georgia. A. S. Furcron. Information Circular 12. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1940. 8 pp.
1101 The Gold Deposits of Georgia. Roy A. Wilson. Information Circular 4. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1934, reprinted 1965. 8 pp. Summary of geologic features of the deposits and descriptions of mining activities at certain mines in Lumpkin, White, Cherokee, Forsyth, Paulding, and McDuffie counties.
1102 A Preliminary Report on a Part of the Gold Deposits of Georgia. W. S. Yeates. Bulletin No. 4-A. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1896. 542 pp. + 21 plates+ 1 map. A county-by-county survey of gold deposits and mining operations. Covers: White, Rabun, Habersham, Towns, Union, Hall, Gwinnett, Forsyth, Dawson, Fulton, Cherokee, Bartow, Cobb, Paulding, Douglas, Carroll, Haralson, Gilmer, Fannin, and Lumpkin counties.
1103 Second Report on the Gold Deposits of Georgia. S. P. Jones. Bulletin No. 19. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1909. 283 pp. + 8 plates+ 2 fold. maps. Survey of gold deposits in belts and in isolated localities. Descriptions of mines and goldbearing tracts are arranged by county. This report adds sixteen counties to the list of goldbearing counties of Bulletin 4-A (above). These are: Coweta, Elbert, Greene, Hart, Henry, Lincoln, McDuffie, Madison, Meriwether, Murray, Newton, Oglethorpe, Taliaferro, Walton, Warren, and Wilkes.
1104 "Gold Deposits of Georgia". C. F. Parks, Jr. In: Short Contributions to the Geology Geography and Arctiaeology of Georgia - II, Bulletin No. 60, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1953, pp. 60-67. General survey of the geology of the deposits.
1105 "A Brief History of Gold Production in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 17 : 24-25. 1964-1965.
1106 "What Can We Do About Gold?" A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(4) : 161-162. 1960. On the feasibility of renewed mining of Georgia's gold.
1107 "Some Gold Deposits in Georgia". Charles F. Park, Jr. In Ore Deposits as Related to Structural Features, W. H. Newhouse, ed.; Hafner Publishing Company, New York, 1969 (facsimile of 1942 edition), pp. 199-201.
1108 "Georgia's Gold". Lynda P. Stafford. Outdoors In Georgia 3 (8): 2-12. August 1974.
1109 "Gold Mining in Georgia". C. S. Anderson. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers 109: 61-68. 1934. Investigation of the old Allatoona mine and observations on the probabilities of reviving gold mining in the state.
1110 "Gold Deposits of Georgia" C. F. Park, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 6(4) 107-113. 1963.
1111 "The Gold Deposits of Georgia". S. W. McCallie. Georgia Mineral Society Newslet-
31
Geology
ter 3(6): 232-233; 4(1): 10-12, 4(2): 59-61; 4(3). 106-107; 4(4): 152-155; 4(5): 172-174. 1950-1951.
1112 A Preliminary Report on a Part of the Granites and Gneisses of Georgia. Thomas L. Watson. Bulletin No. 9-A. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1902. 368 pp. + 32 plates + 4 maps. Physical and chemical properties, varieties, mode of occurrence, uses, distribution, weathering, and quarries are described.
1113 Granites of the Southeaatem Atlantic States. Thomas Leonard Watson. Bulletin 426. U. S. Geological Survey. 1910. 282 pp. "Granites of Georgia" (Chapter VII) is found on pages 206-267.
1114 Iron Ore Deposits of Georgia. R. H. Haseltine. Bulletin No. 41. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1924. vi + 222 pp. + 10 plates. "General outline and description of the occurrence and nature of the iron ores found in Georgia".
1115 Report on the Fossil Iron Ores of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 17. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1908. 199 pp. + 24 plates+ 3 maps. Fossil or Clinton iron ores in Georgia are confined to Dade, Walker, Catoosa, and Chattooga counties. This report summarizes the origin, distribution, physical and chemical properties. methods of mining, and uses of the ore and examines individual deposits in detail.
1116 Hard and Soft Kaolins of Georgia. T. A. Klinefelter eta/. Report of Investigations No. 3682. U. S. Bureau of Mines. 1943. 20 pp. Compares physical and chemical properties of hard and soft kaolins. Concludes that hard grades can be used if milling techniques are employed.
1117 "Occurrence and Exploration of Georgia's Kaolin Deposits" Thomas L. Kesler. MinIng Engineering 3 . 879-885. October 1951.
1118 "Environment and Origin of the Cretaceous Kaolin Deposits of Georgia and South Caro:ina". Thomas L. Kesler. Economic Geology 51 (6) : 541-554. September- October 1956. The deposits occur along the "Fall Line" from western Georgia to central South Carolina. The larger deposits in Georgia are shown to be in Twiggs, Wilkinson, Washington, and Richmond Counties.
1119 "Environment and Origin of the Cretaceous Kaolin Deposits of Georgia and South Carolina". Thomas L. Kesler. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(1-2): 3-11. 1963.
1120 "The Relationship Between Properties and Uses of Georgia Kaolin" Lane Mitchell. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(4) . 141-143. 1955.
1121 "Mining and Processing Industrial Kaolins". Haydn H. Murray. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(1-2). 12-19. 1963.
1122 Distribution of Kaolin and Fuller's Earth Mines and Plants In Georgia and North Florida. [Map]. R. A. Shrum. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. Atlanta. 1970. Scale: 1 inch= 6 miles.
1130 "Kyanite, Sillimanite and Andalusite in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(1): 9-21. 1960.
1131 Sillimanite and Massive Kyanlte In Georgia. A. S. Furcron and Kelton H. Teague. Bulletin No. 51. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 145. X + 76 pp. Describes deposits of sillimanite in Hart, Elbert, and Madison Counties and deposits of massive kyanite in Cherokee, Pickens, and Dawson Counties.
1132 Exploration of Georgia and South Carolina Sillimanite Deposito. W. C. Hudson. Report of Investigations 3927. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1946. 44 pp.
1133 A Report on the Limestones and Cement Materials of North Georgia. T. Poole Maynard. Bulletin No. 27. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1912. xxvi + 293 pp. + 22 plates+ 1 map. General information and detailed descriptions of individual occurrences in the following counties: Stephens, Habersham, Hall, Fannin, Gilmer, Pickens, Cherokee, Polk, Floyd, Chattooga, Dade, Walker, Catoosa, Whitfield, Murray, Gordon, and Bartow.
1134 A Preliminary Report on the Manganese Deposito of Georgia. Thomas L. Watson. Bulletin No. 14. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1908. 195 pp.+ 8 plates+ 2 maps. Origin, distribution, physical and chemical properties, methods of mining and processing, and uses are described. With descriptions of individual mines- most of which are in Bartow and Floyd Counties.
1135 Report on the Manganese Deposito of Georgia (Second Report on Manganese). J.P.D. Hull, Laurence LaForge; and W. R. Crane. Bulletin No. 35. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1919. xvi + 295 pp. + 11 plates + 2 maps. In three parts: (1) analysis of the relation of the ore deposits to the structural geology; (2) descriptions of individual deposits and mining operations and the mode of occurrence of the ore; and (3) examination of methods of mining and cleaning the ore. Deposits studied are in the following counties: Bartow, Polk, Floyd, Haralson, Paulding, Catoosa, Whitfield, Murray.
1136 Cobalt-Bearing Manganese Deposito of Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee. W. G. Pierce. Bulletin 940-J. U.S. Geological Survey. 1944. Pp. i-iv, 265-285 +fold-out maps. Georgia's deposits are in Bartow, Floyd, and Polk Counties.
1137 The Georgia Marble District: Field Excursion. w. Robert Power and Ernest H. Reade.
Guidebook No. 1. Annual Meeting, Geological Society of America, Southeastern Section. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. 1962. 21 pp.
1138 A Preliminary Report on the Marbles of Georgia. 2nd ed. Revised and enlarged. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 1. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1907. 126 pp. +52 plates+ 2 maps. Includes: description of marbles of Pickens, Fannin, Gilmer, and Cherokee Counties; notes on the semi-crystalline marbles of northwest Georgia; history of marble development in Pickens County; description of quarrying and finishing methods; and physical and chemical analyses.
1139 "Georgia Marble". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(11) : 3-7. 1948.
1123 Field Conference on Kaolin and Fuller's Earth, November 14-16, 1974. S. H. Patterson and B. F. Buie. Guidebook 14. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. 1974. vi+ 53 pp. General summary of geology and mining-processing of (1) kaolin of the Macon-Gordon area and (2) fullers earth of the Meigs-Attapulgus-Quincy area. Includes road logs and maps for field trips in each area. Counties of concern: Wilkinson, Twiggs, Decatur, Grady, Thomas.
1124 "Geology and Mineralogy of the Sedimentary Kaolins of the Southeastern United States - A Review". Thomas F. Bates. In: Clay and Clay Minerals -Proceedings of the 12th National Conference on Clays and Clay Minerals, Macmillan Company, New York, 1964, pp 177-194.
1125 Refining and Utilization of Georgia Kaolins. Ira E. Sproat. Bulletin 128 (Mineral Technology 18). U. S. Bureau of Mines. Washington, D.C. 1916. [ii] +59 pp.
1126 Kyanlte an,d Vermiculite Deposits of Georgia. Louis M. Prindle eta/. Bulletin No. 46. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1935. x + 50 pp. + 11 plates. Descriptions of deposits of (1) kyanite in the following counties: Habersham, Rabun, Towns, Union, Fannin, Pickens, Cherokee, Lincoln, Talbot, Upson, and Fulton; (2) vermiculite in Towns and Rabun.
1127 Kyanlte, Vermiculite, and Olivine In Georgia. Richard W. Smith. Information Circular 3. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1934. 6 pp.
1128 Forsterite Olivine Deposito of North Carolina and Georgia. Charles E. Hunter. Bulletin No. 47. Georgia Department of Natural Resources; Division of Mines, Mining, and Geology. 1941. 117 pp. Descriptions of deposits of olivine in Rabun County and Towns County, Georgia and portions of southwestern North Carolina.
1129 Kyanlte, Sillimanite, and Andaluslte Deposito of the Southeastern States. Gilbert H. Espenshade and Donald B. Potter. Professional Paper 336. U. S. Geological Survey. 1960. vi+ 121 pp. + 11 maps in pocket.
1140 "The Story of the Georgia Marble Company". S. E. Hyatt. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 6(3) : 1-7. 1953.
1141 "Quarrying on an Old Ocean Floor". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 18, 1975. Pp. IG-11, 14, 17-18. A look at the operations of the Georgia Marble Company at Tate, Marble Hill, and Nelson in north Georgia.
1142 "The Great Stone Serpent of Long Swamp Valley" Ollie Reeves. Georgia Magazine 4(3) : 22-23. October-November 1960. The history of Georgia marble is briefly summarized.
1143 Producing America's Burled Treasure: The Story of the Georgia Marble Company. Atlanta. N.d. 23 pp.
1144 The Romance of Georgia Marble. Jerome G. Daneker. Thomsen-EIIis Co. Baltimore & New York. 1927. Story of the mining and use of Georgia marble.
1145 Mica-Bearing Pegmatlleo of Georgia. A. S. Furcron and Kelton H. Teague. Bulletin No. 48. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1943. xii + 192 pp. Descriptions of mines and prospects, primarily in the following counties: Upson, Lamar, Monroe, Cherokee, Pickens, Lumpkin, Union, Fannin, Towns, Rabun, Hart, and Elbert.
1146 A Preliminary Report on the Feldspar and Mica Deposits of Georgia. S. L. Galpin. Bulletin No. 30. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1915. xii + 190 pp. + 10 plates. "The report contains, in addition to descriptions of feldspar and mica deposits, one chapter dealing with the general geology of the area in which these deposits occur [the crystalline area, i.e. Piedmont and Highlands regions]. and a second detailing the nature of the rock pegmatite and the uses, values, and the like, of its most important minerals, particularly feldspar and mica".
1147 Monazite Deposito of the Southeastern Atlantic States. John B. Mertie, Jr. Circular 237. U.S. Geological Survey. 1953. ii + 31 pp. + 1 fold. map.
32
Geology
1148 "The Occurrence of Monazite in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society N...,.letter 3(3) : 72-73. 1950.
1149 A Preliminary Report on the Ocher Deposits of Georgia. Thomas L. Watson. Bulletin No. 13. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1906. 81 pp. + 11 plates+ 3 maps. Origin, distribution, physical and chemical properties. methods of mining and preparation, and uses of the ocher from the Cartersville Mining District of Bartow County are described.
1150 "Peat Deposits of Georgia". Charles W. Fortson, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 14(1). 1-21. 1961. Peat occurs in several areas of south Georgia. Extensive deposits are in the Okefenokee Swamp. The possibilities of mining and marketing of this resource are discussed.
1151 Petroleum Exploration In Georgia. William E. Marsalis. Information Circular 38. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1970. vi + 51 pp. + 1 plate in pocket + 10 enclosures. Describes oil and gas tests drilled from 1903 to 1970.
1151 Petroleum and Natural Gas Possibilities In Georgia. T. M. Prettyman and H. S. Cave. Bulletin No. 40. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1923. viii+ 167 pp. + 8 plates.
1153 "Petroleum Operations in South Alabama, Georgia and Florida". J. L. Patton. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(4) : 135-139. 1954. The geology of the area is summarized as it relates to petroleum potential.
1154 "Oil and Gas Exploration in Alabama, Georgia, and Florida". Robert B. Baum. Geophysics 18(2) : 340-359. April 1953.
1155 011 Tests In Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst. Information Circular 19. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1960. 14 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Oil tests are listed chronologically by county. Information for each: general location; name; operator; date completed; basis for locating well; elevation at well site; total depth drilled; rock type at bottom; remarks; references. Most of the more than one hundred tests were made in the Coastal Plain; a few were drilled in Catoosa, Dade, and Walker counties in northwest Georgia.
1156 011 Seeps In Georgia: A Reinvestigation. Richard H. Sams. Geologic Report 2. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1971. [ii] + 18 pp. Surface oil seepages described by Prettyman and Cave (Geological Survey of Georgia Bulletin 40, 1923) and others are reexamined and found to be inactive. More testing is recommended.
1157 "He Hopes to Find Oil in Georgia". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 27, 1975. Pp. 18-20, 23, 27, 29. A look at the heretofore unsuccessful search for oil in Georgia.
1158 A Preliminary Report on the Phosphates and Marls of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 5-A. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1896. 98 pp. + 3 plates. A survey of deposits in Decatur, Thomas, Brooks, Lowndes. Echols, Charlton, Camden, Glynn, and Mcintosh Counties.
1159 A Preliminary Report on a Part of the Pyrites Deposits of Georgia. H. K. Shearer and J. P. D. Hull. Bulletin No. 33. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1918. xii + 229 pp. + 9 plates + 1 map. Types and distribution of deposits are summarized and individual deposits are described. Concerns the following counties: Carroll, Haralson, Douglas, Paulding, Cobb, Fulton, Cherokee, Forsyth, Dawson, Lumpkin, White, Hall, Banks, Habersham, Rabun, Towns, Fannin, Floyd, and Lincoln.
1160 Preliminary Report on the Sand and Gravel Deposits of Georgia. L. P. Teas. Bulletin No. 37. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1921. xiv + 392 pp. + 20 plates+ 1 map.
1161 Glass Sands and Glau Making Materials In Georgia. Information Circular 11. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mines. Mining and Geology. 1940. 26 pp.
1162 Shales and Brick Clays of Georgia. Richard W. Smith. Bulletin No. 45. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1931. xiv + 348 pp. + 10 plates+ 1 map. Descriptions of deposits of (1) shale in Bartow, Polk. Floyd, Chattooga, Dade, Walker, Catoosa, Whitfield, Murray, and Gordon Counties; (2) residual clays in Hall, Fulton, Richmond, Washington, and Baldwin Counties; and (3) alluvial clays of the Columbus District, the Macon District, the Milledgeville District, and the Augusta District.
1163 Report on the Slate Deposits of Georgia. H. K. Shearer. Bulletin No. 34. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1918. x + 192 pp. + 13 plates+ 3 maps. Characteristics, origin, methods of mining, and uses are summarized. Individual deposits and mining operations are described. All are in Polk, Bartow, or Gordon Counties.
1164 "Staurolite in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(12) : 3-8. 1948.
1165 "The Production of Stone in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 17: 25-30. 1964-1965. The mining of stone for building material is summarized by type: granite, marble, limestone, sandstone, slate, quartz, gneisses, metagraywackes, and flagstone.
1166 A Report on the Building and Ornamental Stones of Georgia. George P. Woollard.
Masters thesis, Georgia School of Technology. 1932. x + 151 pp.
1167 "The Distribution and Character of Stone for Aggregate in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(1): 1-8. 1959. Rock suitable for aggregate, gravel, or similar crushed stone are reviewed.
1168 A Preliminary Report on the Roeds and Roed-Bulldlng Materials of Georgia. S. W. McCalli~. f:!yiJetin No.8. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1901.264 pp. + 27 plates+ 1 map. A county-by-county description of roads, road-building materials available, and methods of construction and maintenance.
1169 A Second Report on the Public Roeds of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 24. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1910. 37 pp. Describes available road-building materials in each major physiographic region.
1170 A Third Report on the Public Roeds of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 28. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1912. 12 pp. Table shows for each county: mileage and type of public roads, average cost per mile, number of convicts used in road improvement, number of mules on public roads, number and cost of bridges. value of road machinery, and other data.
1171 The Study and Beneficiation of Georgia Talc. Howard Putnam Buller. Masters thesis, 1949, Emory University. iv + 80 pp.
1172 Titanium In the Southeastern United States. Fred P. Giese, L. E. Shirley, and J. L. Vallely. Information Circular 8223. U. S. Bureau of Mines. 1964. ii + 30 pp.
1173 Tripoli Deposits of Georgia. Geoffrey W. Crickmay. Information Circular 9. Georgia Department of Forestry and Geological Development. 1937. 7 pp. General summary and descriptions of individual deposits. Tripoli occurs in the following counties: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Floyd, Gilmer, Murray, Polk, Walker, Whitfield.
1174 "Prospecting for Uranium in Georgia, Part 1". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(2) : 38-46. 1955.
1175 "Prospecting for Uranium in Georgia, Part II". Vernon J. Hurst. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(2) : 46-53. 1955.
1176 Zirconium and Hafnium In the Southeastern Atlantic States. John B. Mertie, Jr. Bulletin 1082-A. U.S. Geological Survey. 1958. iv + 28 pp.
MISCELLANEOUS
11n "Some Lost Mineral Localities in Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(3): 124-129. 1960. Some reports of minerals from certain Georgia localities have not been verified. Unconfirmed reports and records and legends concerning the minerals cassiterite, spodumene, lead, silver, opal, epidote and cacoxenite are among these.
1178 "Meteorites in Georgia". Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(7): 13-17. 1948.
1179 "Meteorites in Georgia. Part 1. Nature and Value of Meteorites". E. P. Henderson and A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 9(4) : 126-135. 1956.
1180 "Meteorites in Georgia. Part 2: Description of Falls". Edward P. Henderson and A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(4) : 113-142. 1957.
1181 "Meteorites Found in Georgia". Geoffrey W. Crickmay. Forestry- Geological Review [Atlanta] 4(7) : 7-8. July 1934.
1182 "The Sardis (Georgia) Meteorite". E. P. Henderson and C. Wythe Cooke. Proceedings
of the United States National Museum (Smithsonian Institution) 92 (3142) : 141-150.
1942.
Examination of a meteorite found in Jenkins County near its border with Burke County.
The meteorite was named for the town nearest to its location.
1183 "A Restudy of the Social Circle, Georgia, Meteorite". E. P. Henderson and Stuart H. Perry. American Mineralogist 36: 603-808. July-August 1951. New analysis of a meteorite found near Social Circle, Walton County, Georgia, in 1926.
1184 "He Plowed Up a 'Star' in his Cornfield". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constl tutlon Magazine May 5, 1975. Pp. 36, 38, 40. A stony meteorite found by a Jenkins County Farmer in 1974 may be four billion years old. One of approximately 20 meteorites known to have fallen in Georgia, the stone is now in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution.
1185 "New Data on Georgia Tektites". Elbert A. King, Jr. Geochlmlca et Cosmochlmlca Acta 28(6) : 915-919. June 1964.
1186 "Moldavites and Similar Tektites from Georgia, U.S.A.". Alvin Jerome Cohen. Geochemlca et Cosmochemlca Acta 17(1-2) : 150-153. August 1959.
1187 "Field Investigation of Georgia Tektites and Description of New Specimens". Elbert A. King, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(3-4): 57-61. 1962.
1188 "The Cement Industry in Georgia". Charles V. Solbrig. Georgia Mineral Neweletter 15(1-2): 5-9. 1962. Cement plants at Rockmart and Clinchfield produced 2.4 million barrels in 1960. The two
33
Geology
plants utilize raw materials from northwestern and southwestern Georgia.
1189 Recovery ol Heavy Minerals from Sand and Gravel Operations In the Southeastern United States. E. G. Davis and G. V. Sullivan. Report of Investigations 7517. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1971. 25 pp. Valuable heavy minerals (ilmenite, kyanite, zircon, rutile, and monazite) occur in sand and gravel operations in Georgia, Alabama, and the Carolinas. Recovery of these is discussed.
1190 Iron and Steel Scrap In the Southeast. V. A. Danielson, J. F. O'Neill, and H. W. Ahrenholz. Information Circular 8329. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1967. 85 pp. Examines sources, consumption, and movement of iron and steel scrap in seven southeastern states including Georgia.
WATER
Supply and Use
1191 Water In Georgia. J. T. Callahan, L. E. Newcomb and J. W. Geurin. Water-Supply Paper 1762. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. vi+ 88 pp. A popular summary examining regional occurrence, water use, water problems, and future needs.
1192 Water In Georgia; A Report on the Historical, Physical, and Leqal Aspects ol Water In Georgia. Georgia Water Use and Conservation Committee. Printed for distribution by the Georgia Water Law Revision Commission. Atlanta. 1955. 85 pp.
1193 Water Resourcaa Date for Georgia. U.S. Geological Survey. Doraville, Ga. Annual. Streamflow and water quality data for surface waters is tabulated.
1194 Streamflow Mapa ol Georgia's Major Rivers. M. T. Thomson. Information Circular 21. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1960. 29 pp.
1195 Flow Characteristics ol Georgia Streams. Ernest J. Inman. Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. Atlanta. 1971. vii+ 262 pp. Summaries of flow duration and of low and high flows at gaging stations.
1196 Flow Duration of Georgia Streams. James W. Rabon. Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. June 1961. vi + 326 pp.
1197 Travel Time ol Georgia Streams. Alan M. Lumb. Report No. ERC-1273. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. September 1973. 80 pp. NTIS number: PB-224 848.
1198 Drainage Area Data for Georgia Streams. A. F. Carter. Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. 1959. 251 pp.
1199 Surface Water Supply of the United States, 1966-70. Part 2, South Atlantic Slope and Eastern Gulf of Mexico Basins - Volume 1, Basins from James River to Savannah River. Water-Supply Paper 2104. U.S. Geological Survey. 1974 [1975]. x + 1018 pp. Records of stage and discharge of streams and of stage and contents of lakes and reservoirs during the 1966-70 water years. This report is part of the second series of watersupply papers to be published on a 5-year basis. The first series covered the 5-year period October 1, 1960 to September 30, 1965.
1200 Surface Water Supply of the United States, 1966-70. Part 2, South Atlantic Slope and Eastern Gull ol Mexico Basin - Volume 2, Basins from Ogeechee River to Carrabelle River. Water-Supply Paper 2105. U.S. Geological Survey. 1975. x + 797 pp. Records of stage and discharge of streams and of stage and contents of lakes and reservoirs during the 1966-70 water years. This volume includes records for the following basins in Georgia: Ogeechee, Altamaha, Satilla, St. Marys, Suwannee, Alpaha, Withlacoochee, and Ochlockonee.
1201 Surface Water Supply ol the United States, 1986-70. Part 2, South Atlantic Slope and Eastern Gulf of Mexico Basins - Volume 3, Basins from Apalachicola River to Pearl River. Water-Supply Paper 2106. U.S. Geological Survey. 1975. viii+ 764 pp. Records of stage and discharge of streams and of stage and contents of lakes and reservoirs during the 1966-70 water years. This volume includes records for the following basins in Georgia: Chattahoochee, Flint, Coosa, and Tallapoosa.
1202 Surface Water Supply of the United States, 1966-70. Part 3, Ohio River Basin Volume 4, Ohio River Basin below Wabash River. Water-Supply Paper 2110. U.S. Geological Survey. 1973. x + 896 pp. Records of stage and discharge of streams and of stage and contents of lakes and reservoirs during the 1966-70 water years. This volume includes records for Georgia tributaries of the Tennessee River.
1203 Summary ol the Industrial Water Resources ol Georgia. Special Report No. 44. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. Atlanta. 1964. 121 pp.
1204 "Water as a Factor in the Location of Industry in the Southeast". John A. McGregor. Southeastern Geographer 10(1): 41-54. April 1970.
1205 Surface Water Resources ol Georgia During the Drought ol1954. Part 1, Streamflow. M. T. Thomson and A. F. Carter. Information Circular 17. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1955. 79 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1206 Effect of a Severe Drought (1954) on Streamflow In Georgia. M. T. Thomson and A. F. Carter. Bulletin No. 73. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1963. vi+ 97 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1207 "The Drought of 1954 in Georgia". M. T. Thompson. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(3) : 103-107. 1954.
1208 Water Data for Metropolitan Areao - A Summary of Data lrom 222 Areas In the United States. William J. Schneider, comp. Water-Supply Papers 1871. U.S. Geological Survey. 1988. vi+ 397 pp. Information for each area: (1) size and population, (2) general hydrology, (3) current data-collection activities, (4) current investigations by the U. S. Geological Survey, and (5) hydrologic reports pertaining to the area. Georgia areas (Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas or SMSA's) covered are Albany, Atlanta, Augusta, Columbus, Macon and Savannah. In addition, Walker County, Georgia is included as part of the Chattanooga, Tennessee area.
1209 The Availability and Use ol Water In Georgia. M. T. Thomson eta/. Bulletin No. 65. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1956. xiv + 329 pp. + 3 plates in pocket. Summary of the sources, quantities, and quality of water in the state, both surface water and ground water.
1210 Use ol Water In Georgia, 1970; With Projections to 1990. A. F. Carter and A.M. F. Johnson. Hydrologic Report No. 2. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Water Resources Survey. 1974. 74 pp.
1211 "Georgia". S. w. McCallie. In: Contributions to the Hydrology ol Eastern United
States, 1903, Water-Supply Paper 102, U.S. Geological Survey, 1904, pp. 207-237. Tabular summaries of water supplies including streams, wells, and springs. Three tables are presented: (1) "Sources of Water of [184) Georgia Cities and Towns", (2) "Well records in Georgia" [information regarding 90 water wells). and (3) "Miscellaneous Spring Records in Georgia" [information regarding 100 springs].
1212 "The Surface Water Situation in Georgia". M. T. Thomson. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(3) : 87-92. 1955. Supply of and demand for water in Georgia streams is summarized. The situation with regard to irrigation receives particular attention.
1213 "Water and Industry in Georgia". Kenneth A. MacKichan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(1-2) . 20-22. 1962.
1214 Water Requirements of Selected North Georgia Manufacturing Industries. Office of Water Resources Research, Project No. A-014-GA. John A. McGregor. University of Georgia. Athens. 1969. v + 61 pp.
1215 Water Requirements ol the Pulp and Paper Industry. Orville D. Mussey. Water-Supply Paper 133Q-A. U.S. Geological Survey. 1955. viii+ 71 pp. + 1 plate in pocket.
1216 The Characteristics ol Georgia's Water Resources and Factors Related to their Use and Control. Garland Peyton. Information Circular 16. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1954. 4 pp. Tabulates some general water information by regions of similar water features (Piedmont, Mountains, Valley and Ridge, Upper Coastal Plain, Lower Coastal Plain).
1217 "Impact of Urban Growth on Water Resources in Southeastern United States". Richard A. Stephenson. Southeastern Geographer 12(2): 155-161. November 1972.
1218 Evaluation ol the Surface-Water Data Program In Georgia. A. F. Carter. Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. 1970. 65 pp.
Chemical Character
1219 Chemical Character ol Surface Waters of Georgia. William L. Lamar. Water Supply Paper 889-E. U.S. Geological Survey. 1944. iv + [63] pp.
1220 Quality ol Surface Waters ol the United States, 1970- Part 2, South Atlantic Slope and Eastern Gulf ol Mexico Basins. Water-Supply Paper 2152. U.S. Geological Survey. 1974. X+ 668 pp. Records of chemical analysis, water temperature, and suspended sediment of surface waters. This volume includes records for all basins in Georgia except those of the Tennessee River.
1221 Quality ol Surface Waters ol the United States, 1970 - Part 3, Ohio River Basin. Water-Supply Paper 2153. U.S. Geological Survey. 1975. x + 444 pp. Records of chemical analysis, water temperature, and suspended sediment of surface waters. This volume includes records for those portions of the Tennessee River basin lying within Georgia.
1222 Chemical Quality ol Water ol Georgia Streams, 1957-58 (A Reconnaissance Study). Rodney N. Cherry. Bulletin No. 69. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1961. vi+ 100 pp. Chemical analyses by river basin and by region of similar water quality. (Georgia's streams were found to be "still relatively free of chemical contamination by man's activities".)
1223 "Chemical Character of the Larger Public Water Supplies in Georgia". William L. Lamar. Journal American Water Works Association 34(4) : 505-512. April 1942.
34
Geology
1224 Industrial Quality of Public Water Supplies In Georgla1940. William L. Lamar. Water-Supply Paper 912. U. S. Geological Survey. 1942. iv + 83 pp.
1225 "Organic and Inorganic Geochemistry of Some Coastal Plain Rivers of the Southeastern United States''. K. C. Beck. J. H. Reuter, and E. M. Perdue. Geochlmlca et Cosmochlmlce Acta 38(3) : 341-364. 1974. "In a comprehensive study of the distribution of organic and inorganic constituents in natural waters the chemical compositions of several rivers flowing through the Coastal Plain of southeast Georgia (the Satilla River, in particular) have been investigated. These streams are generally characterized by low suspended sediment low, low ionic strength, low pH values, and a predominance of organic over inorganic constituents".
1226 Chemical Characterization of Dissolved Organic Matter and Ita Influence on the Chemistry of River Water. J. Helmut Reuter and Edward M. Perdue. Report No. ERC0372. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. May 1972. 40 pp. NTIS number: PB-210 714.
1227 Sediment Transported by Georgia Streams. Vance C. Kennedy. Water-Supply Paper 1668. U.S. Geological Survey. 1964. viii+ 101 pp. "A reconnaissance investigation of the sediment transported by selected Georgia streams was made during the period December 1957 to June 1959 to provide some understanding of the physical quality of stream water in Georgia and to supply facts needed in planning more detailed work. The investigation was made by studying the variation of sediment concentration and sediment load with stream discharge at 33 sites and by relating the available data to the topographic, geologic, climatic, and surface soil conditions in the state."
1228 "Sediments of the Chattahoochee River, Georgia - Alabama". Charles J. Cazeau and Ernest H. Lund. Southeastern Geology 1(2) :51-58. 1959.
1229 The Clay Minerals of the Ocmulgee River. William Scott Parks. Masters thesis, 1971, Emory University. 82 pp.
Reservoirs and Hydropower
1230 Reservoirs In the United States. R. 0. R. Martin and R. L. Hanson. Water-Supply Paper 1838. U.S. Geological Survey. 1966. vi+ 115 pp. + 1 map in pocket. A listing of reservoirs having a usable capacity of 5000 acre-teet or more and completed or under construction as of Jan. 1, 1963. Data for each: (a) location, (b) drainage area in square miles, (c) surface area in acres, (d) storage in acre-feet, (e) storage ratio, (f) uses, (g) date completed, (h) owner or operator, and (i) source for storage records. The following Georgia reservoirs are included: (1) Allatoona, (2) Blue Ridge, (3) Burton, (4) Clark Hill, (5) Columbia, (6) Flint River, (7) Goat Rock, (8) Hartwell, (9) Bartletts Ferry, (10) Seminole, (11) Lanier, (12) Lloyd Shoals (Jackson), (13) Mathis (Terrora-Rabun), (14) Nottely, (15) Oliver, (16) Sinclair, (17) Stevens Creek, (18) Tugaloo, (19) Walter F. George, (20) Warwick (Crisp County Dam).
1231 Water Resources of Georgia. B. M. Hall and M. R. Hall. Water-Supply and Irrigation Paper No. 197. U.S. Geological Survey. 1907. 342 pp. Gage heights and discharge measurements for Georgia streams are tabulated. The data enable estimation of available fall at any place and, thus, the amount of water power that can be developed.
1232 A Preliminary Report on a Part of the Water-Powers of Georgia. C. C. Anderson and B. M. Hall. Bulletin No. 3-A. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1896. 150 pp. + 10 plates + 2 maps. List of waterfalls and shoals showing, for each, location (major basin, county, stream, point on stream), fall in feet, length of shoal in feet, gross horsepower, and utilized power, if any. (Many of the falls and shoals listed here have since been destroyed.)
1233 Second Report on the Water Powers of Georgia. B. M. Hall and M. R. Hall. Bulletin No. 16. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1908. 424 pp. + 14 plates+ 1 map.
1234 Third Report on the Water Powera of Georgia. B. M. Hall and M. R. Hall. Bulletin No. 38. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1921. viii + 316 pp. + 11 plates+ 4 maps. Compilation of stream flow data with estimates of available water power. Also included are detailed descriptions of individual developed sites (dams and hydroelectric power plants).
Ground Water
1235 Ground-Water Levels In the United States, 1969-73- Southeastern States. WaterSupply Paper 2171. U. S. Geological Survey. 1975. vi + 250 pp.
1236 A Preliminary Report on the Underground Waters of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 15. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1908. 370 pp. + 29 plates+ 1 fold. map.
1237 A Preliminary Report on the Artesian-Well System of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No.7. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1898. 214 pp. + 7 plates+ 2 maps.
1238 The Artesian System In Georgia: Stratigraphy and Hydrology of the Ocala. Robert E. Carver. University of Geology, Department of Geology. Athens. 1971.8 pp. NTIS number: PB-206 217.
1239 "Ground Water - Our Most Abundant Mineral". Harlan B. Counts. Atlanta Economic Review 21(7): 22-25. 1971. A brief summary of Georgia's ground water resources.
1240 "Ground Water for Georgia's Expanding Economy". Joseph T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(4) : 152-160. 1960. The program of ground-water investigations from 1938 to 1960 is summarized. Illustrations show population changes, ground-water provinces. problem areas. funds expended, and the areas covered by ground-water reports.
1241 "Georgia's Ground-Water Resources". Joseph T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(3) : 94-95. 1957.
1242 "Is the Water Table Falling?". J. T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(1) : 9-11. 1959. Fluctuation of the water table (the upper surface of the body of ground-water in an area) is explained, especially with regard to the Atlanta area.
1243 "Ground Water for Irrigation in Georgia". S. M. Herrick. Agricultural Engineering 27(11): 521-522. November 1946.
1244 "Ground Water for Irrigation in Georgia". S. M. Herrick. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(1): 14-16. 1955.
1245 "Iron in Georgia Ground Water". B. F. Joyner. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(3-4): 73-74. 1963.
1246 Ground-Water Designs and Patterns. J. W. Stewart. Geologic Report No. 1. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. 1971. [ii] + 21 pp. "The purpose of this article is twofold: first. to show the principal types of ground water patterns produced by the ever changing water level within the earth's crust; and second, to show how man has changed nature's simple basic ground water designs into somewhat complex but symmetrical and harmonious patterns". Describes fluctuations caused by (1) ground-water recharge and discharge, (2) transpiration and evaporation, (3) atmospheric pressure and wind gusts, (4) ships and trains, (5) hurricanes, (6) earthquakes, (7) ocean tides, (8) earth tides, (9) and pumping.
1247 The Mineral Springs of Georgia. J. R. Duggan. J. W. Burke & Co. Macon. 1881. 56 pp.
1248 A Preliminary Report on the Mineral Springs of Georgia. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 20. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1913. 190 pp. + 23 plates+ 1 map. Summary of origin, classification, chemical constituents, and medicinal values along with descriptions and analyses of individual springs and wells.
1249 "Thermal Springs of the Southeastern Atlantic States". Thomas L. Watson. In: "The Temperatures of Hot Springs and the Sources of Their Heat and Water Supply. Ill. Journal of Geology 32(5) 373-384, July-August 1924. Warm Springs in Meriwether County, Lifsey or Pine Mountain Spring in Pike County, and Thundering Spring in Upson County are investigated.
1250 "'Blowing Springs and Wells of Georgia, "Nith an Explanation of the Phenomena". S. W. McCallie. Science (new series) 25 226-229. February 8, 1907. The Grant Blowing Spring at the base of Lookout Mountain in Catoosa County and the Boston well and the Lester well of Thomas County are investigated and explained.
1251 Computing Phreatic Groundwater Storage. Loris E. Asmussen and Adrian W. Thomas. Research Bulletin 153. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. March 1974. 23 pp. "'A method for computing a shallow groundwater storage and distribution is suggested. To test its utility in routing of both surface and subsurface water through a watershed and to assign quantitative values to the hydrologic processes, a watershed water balance was performed (author).
1252 "Some Notes on the Relation of Ground-Water Levels to Pond Levels in Limestone Sinks of Southwestern Georgia". E. L. Hendricks. American Geophysical Union Transactions 35(5) 796-804. October 1954.
MISCELLANEOUS
Caves
1253 "'The Caves of Georgia'" (J. Roy Chapman]. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 4(3) : 111-112; 4(4): 156-157; 4(5): 192-193; 4(6) : 225-226; 5(1): 15-17; 5(2): 51-52; 5(3) 83-84; 5(4): 116-117; 5(5): 161-162: 5(6): 191-192. 1951-1952. Reprinted 1963 by Georg1a Department of Mmes. Mining and Geology, 20 pp.
1254 "'The Caves of Georgia. Geoffrey W. Crickmay. Forestry - Geological Review [Atlanta] 6(10) : 7-8. October 1936.
1255 Georgia Underground. Dogwood City Grotto of the National Speleological Society. Atlanta. Bimonthly. Official publication of the Dogwood City Grotto, an organization of caving enthusiasts in Atlanta. Ga. [Limited distribution].
1256 "'Forgotten Cave Rediscovered"'. Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 29. 1969. Pp. 12-14, 18-19,31. Ellisons Cave, in Pigeon Mountain about four miles from Lafayette, contains two of the deepest pits in North America. The rediscovery of this extensive cave with its "Fantastic" and "Incredible"' pits is recounted.
1257 "The Golly Hole"'. Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine
35
Geology
May 13, 1973. Pp. 16-18, 23-25. Sinkholes, like the giant 'Golly Hole' in Shelby County, Alabama, are examined. Formed in areas underlain by cavernous limestone, these sites of surface collapse are not fully understood. They can and have caused loss of life and property. Major pollution problems have occurred in some areas where wastes were dumped into sinkholes.
1258 "An Archeomagnetic Measurement of the Age and Sedimentation Rate of Climax cave Sediments, Southwest Georgia". B. B. Ellwood. Arnerlcen Journal of Science 271 (3) : 304-310. October 1971.
Earthquakes
1259 "Earthquake History of Georgia". J. W. Stewart. Georgia Mineral Newlletter 11 (4) : 127-128. 1958.
1260 "Earthquakes in Georgia". G. W. Crickmay and Lane Mitchell. Forestry-Geological Review [Atlanta] 5(3) : 7-8. March 1935.
1261 "The Effects of Earthquakes on Water Levels in Wells in Georgia". J. W. Stewart. Georgie Mlnel'lll Newsletter 11(4): 129-131. 1958.
1282 lmpllcetlons of Seismic Activity at the Clark Hill Reservoir. H. Edward Denman, Jr. Masters thesis, 1974, Georgia Institute of Technology, viii+ 103 pp.
Fossil Collecting
1263 "Fossil Shark Teeth from the Coastal Plain of Georgia". Horace G. Richards and Bryce M. Hand. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11(3): 91-95. Autumn 1958. Description and list of collecting sites.
1264 "Shark's Teeth". Gerard R. Case. Outdoors in Georgia 4(3) : 4-9. March 1975. Guide to the hunting of fossils.
1265 "Fossil Hunt" Margaret Tucker and Falma Moye. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(2) : 30-34. March-April 1975. Northwest Georgia provides the sites for exploration of ancient coral reefs.
Other
1266 "Georgia's Geologic Showplaces". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 2(3) : 16-19. March 1973. Short descriptions of areas of special geological interest in Georgia.
1267 "How to Read a Rock". Leonard Foote. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 8, 1970, Pp 24-26, 28, 30. Several geologtc features from various parts of the state are briefly examined.
1268 Guides to Southeastern Geology. Richard J. Russell, ed. Geological Society of America. New York. 1955. [viii) + 592 pp. Guidebook to geologic features along principal roads in the region. Prepared for 1955 annual meeting in New Orleans.
1269 Simple Bouguer Gravity Map of Georgia. Leland Timothy Long, S. R. Bridges, and L. M. Dorman. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Division of Earth and Water Resources. 1972. 11 x 17 in. Includes explanatory text.
1270 The Georgia Gravity Base Net. Robert E Ziegler and LeRoy M. Dorman. Bulletin No. 86. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey). 1976. [iv) + 33 pp. station descriptions and values, along with data reduction and adjustment methods, are g1ven for 58 gravity base stations. Older values in the area are compared with these results.
1271 "River Pirates in Georgia". Eldon J. Parizek. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(1) 40-42. 1954. R1ver piracy is the interception of one stream by another. A possible example in Georgia is that of the Tallulah River which may have flowed into the Chattahoochee before interception by the Tugaloo. A site with potential for piracy is in Hall County. There the Chattahoochee could be diverted from its course to the Gulf of Mexico to a new outlet on the Atlantic coast.
1272 Geochemical Environments and Cardiovascular Mortality Rates In Georgia. Hansford T. Shacklette, H. I. Sauer, and A. T. Miesch. Professional Paper 574-C. U.S. Geological Survey. 1970. iv + 39 pp. "A study of the chemical elements in soils and plants from counties that have contrasting rates for d1seases of the heart and blood vessels."
1273 "'Distribution of Trace Elements in the Environment and the Occurrence of Heart Disease in Georgia". Hansford T. Shacklette, H. I. Sauer, and A. T. Miesch. Geological Society of America Bulletin 83(4) . 1077-1082. April 1972. Summary of study presented in detail in U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 574-C.
1274 Pavement Faulting Study, Extent and Severity of Pavement Faulting In Georgia. Georgia Department of Transportation. Atlanta. August 1972. 90 pp. NTIS number: PB220 813.
The faulting problem on each Interstate Highway in Georgia is summarized. Remaining service lives with respect to faulting for some of the more severely damaged highways are estimated.
1275 "Description and Origin of Stone Layers in the Soils of the Southeastern States". E. J. Parizek and J. F. Woodruff. Journal of Geology 65(1) : 25-34. January 1957. "Layers and lenses of stones are common in the soils of the southeastern states. These accumulations were formerly termed stone-lines and assigned a subsurface origin. This pa.per renames the features carpedoliths and describes and classifies them on the basis of cross-sectional profiles into two categories (1) linear and (2) lenticular. Possible modes of origin of carpedoliths are reviewed, and it is concluded that they are former surface aggregations covered by sheet wash and colluvial deposits".
1276 "Tectonic Framework of the Southeastern United States". Philip B. King. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 34(4) : 635-671. April 1950.
1277 Historical Sketch of the Geological Survey of Georgia, Bibliography and Other Data. H. S. Cave. Bulletin No. 39. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1922. [vi) + 154 pp. + 7 plates. Historical sketch, description of survey equipment, summary of mineral production, and bibliography of Georgia geology.
1278 "Georgia's Geological Surveys". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 17 : 18-24. 1964-1965. The first geological survey in Georgia was carried out in the 1830's under Dr. John R. Catting, who was appointed the first State Geologist. This historical sketch traces the development of geological investigations in Georgia from Catting's survey to the time of the State Department of Mines, Mining and Geology.
Bibliographies and Other Aids
1279 Annotated Bibliography of Georgia Geology Through 1959. Howard Ross Cramer, Arthur Thomas Allen, Jr. and James George Lester. Bulletin No. 79. Georgia Department of Mines. Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1967. vi+ 368 pp. Comprehensive. Indexed by county, subject, and geological age.
1280 Annotated Bibliography of Georgia Geology from 1960 through 1984. Howard Ross Cramer. Bulletin No. 84. Georgia Department of Mines. Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1972. vi+ 110 pp.
1281 Geologic and Water-Supply Reports and Maps- Georgia. U.S. Geological Survey. January 1975. 20 pp. A comprehensive list of reports and maps published by the U. S. Geological Survey relatmg to the geology and mineral and water resources of Georgia.
1282 List of Publications, 15th ed. Circular 1. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. 1974.21 pp.
1283 Geologic and Mineral Resource Map Index of Georgia. David E. Lawton and Martha G. Pierce. Information Circular 44. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1972. 46 pp. Index to geologic maps and mineral maps of the period 1825-1971. Portions of the state covered by each map are shown graphically (These range from individual properties of mining companies to the state as a whole).
COASTAL PLAIN
General
1284 Geology of the Coastal Plain of Georgia. C. Wythe Cooke. Bulletin 941. U.S. Geological Survey. 1943. vi+ 121 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1285 Preliminary Report on the Geology of the Coastal Plain of Georgia. Otto Veatch and Lloyd William Stephenson. Bulletin No. 26. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1911.466 pp. + 30 plates + 2 maps.
1286 Geology of the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Province of North America. Grover E. Murray. Harper and Bros. New York. 1961. xvii + 692 pp.
1287 "Summary of Geology of Atlantic Coastal Plain". H. E. LeGrand. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 45(9) 1557-1571. September 1961.
1288 "Major Features in the Geology of the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain". L. W. Stephenson. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 16(17) . 460-481. October 1926.
1289 "Hydrogeologic Framework of the Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plain". Harry E. LeGrand. Southeastern Geology 5(4) : 177-194. 1964.
1290 Geologic Map of the Tertiary and Quaternary Formations of Georgia. F. Stearns MacNeil. Oil and Gas Investigations Map 72. U.S. Geological Survey. 1947. 1 : 506,880.
1291 "Cenozoic Geology of Southeastern Alabama, Florida, and Georgia". Lyman D. Toulmin, Jr. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 39(2) : 207235. February 1955.
1292 Geology of the Coastal Plain of East-Central Georgia. Philip E. LaMoreaux. Bulletin No. 50. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1946. vi+ 26 pp.
36
Concerns the following counties: Baldwin, Hancock, Jones, Twiggs, Washington, and Wilkinson.
1293 Geology end Ground-Water RHourceto of the Coeslel Plein of Eest-Centrel Georgie. Philip E. LaMoreaux. Bulletin No. 52. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1946. xii + 173 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Concerns the southern one-third of Jones, Baldwin, and Hancock counties and all of Twiggs, Wilkinson, and Washington Counties.
1294 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of the Macon Area, Georgie. H. E. LeGrand. Bulletin No. 72. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1962. iv + 68 pp. + 3 maps in pocket. Concerns the following Coastal Plain counties: Bibb, Crawford, Houston, Macon, Peach, Schley, and Taylor.
1295 Geology and Ground-Water RHources of Central-East Georgia. H. E. LeGrand et al. Bulletin No. 64. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1956. x + 174 pp. + 2 maps in pocket. Concerns the following counties: Richmond, Columbia, McDuffie, Warren, Glascock, Jefferson, and Burke. Includes a chapter on surface water resources of the area.
1296 Extrusive Volcanics and Associated Dike Swarms In Central-East Georgia. Thomas J. Crawford, V. J. Hurst, and L. D. Ramspott. Guidebook to Field Trip No.2. Geological Society of America, Southeastern Section. Athens, Georgia. 1966. 53 pp.
1297 Geology of the Piedmont-Coastal Plain Contact In Eastern Alabama and Western Georgia. Charles William Drennen. Masters thesis. 1950, University of Alabama.
1298 ""Geomorphology of River Valleys in the Southeastern Atlantic Coastal Plain". D. J. Colquhoun. Southeastern Geology 7(3) : 101-109. July 1966.
1299 A Morphometric Comparison of Drainage Basins In the Southeastern Coastal Plain. Paul Fred Ries. Masters thesis. 1965. University of Georgia. 127 pp.
Stratigraphy
1300 "Stratigraphy of Coastal Plain of Georgia. C. Wythe Cooke and Arthur C. Munyan. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 22(7): 789-793. July 1938.
1301 ""Regional Subsurface Stratigraphy and Structure of Florida and Southern Georgia". Paul L. Applin and Esther R. Applin. Bulletin of the American Alloclation of Petroleum Geologists 28(12): 1673-1753. December 1944.
1302 ""A Catalog of Type Localities of Coastal Plain Stratigraphic Units". James F. L. Connell. Southeastern Geology 2(2): 49-126. 1960.
1303 "A Supplementary Catalog of Type Localities of Coastal Plain Stratigraphic Units". James F. L. Connell. Southeastern Geology 4(1): 1-78. 1962. "To supplement the 324 names of surface and subsurface stratigraphic units listed in a previous paper by the writer (1960). this paper lists 546 additional names of geologic units which have been used in the Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plains. The rock units employed herein range in age from Pennsylvanian to Recent. The geographic distribution encompasses an area from West Texas to Maine.
1304 Subsurface Geology of the Georgia Coastal Plain. Stephen M. Herrick and Robert C. Vorhis. Information Circular 25. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1963. iv + 78 pp. + 1 fold. map.
1305 A Subsurface Study of Pleistocene Deposits In Coastal Georgie. Stephen M. Herrick.
Information Circular 31. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1965.8 pp.
1306 "Subsurface Stratigraphy of the Atlantic Coastal Plain Between New Jersey and Georgia". Horace G. Richards. Bulletin ot the American Association ot Petroleum Geologists 29(7) : 885-955. July 1945.
1307 Subsurface "Basement" Rocks of Georgia. Charles Milton and Vernon J. Hurst. Bulletin No. 76. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1965. IV + 56 pp. Examines the igneous and metamorphic rocks of early Paleozoic and earlier ages that form the "'basement" beneath the sedimentary rocks of the Coastal Plain. Recognition of these rocks is important in test drilling for petroleum.
1308 "' 'Basement' Rocks of Florida and Georgia". Charles Milton and Robert Grasty. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin 53(12) : 2483-2493. December 1969.
1309 lllustreted Fossils of the Georgia Coastal Plain. Horace G. Richards. [Special Publication No.2]. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. [1969]. [48] pp. Reprint of a series of short papers published in the Georgia Mineral Newsletter (see next entry) describing and illustrating fossils of sea-dwelling organisms from the sediments of different geological periods or epochs. Traces backwards the geological history of the Georgia Coastal Plain from Recent and Pleistocene to Cretaceous.
1310 "The Pleistocene of Georgia". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(3): 110-114. Fa111954. First of a series of articles on the geology and paleontology of the Coastal Plain of Georgia.
1311 "'The Pliocene of Georgia". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(4) :
Geology
159-162. Winter 1954.
1312 "The Miocene of Georgia". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(1) : 27-33. Spring 1955.
1313 "The Oligocene of Georgia". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(2) : 60-64. Summer 1955.
1314 "'The Paleocene and Eocene of Georgia. Part 1: Paleocene, Lower and Middle Eocene". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(3): 110-116. Autumn 1955.
1315 "'The Paleocene and Eocene of Georgia. Part 2: Upper Eocene". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(4) : 151-156. Winter 1955.
1316 "'The Cretaceous of Georgia. Part 1: Lower Cretaceous, Tuscaloosa and Eutaw Formations". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 9(1) : 19-23. Spring 1956.
1317 "The Cretaceous of Georgia. Part 2: Blufftown, Cusseta, Ripley and Providence Formations". Horace G. Richards. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 9(2) 65-69. Summer 1956.
1318 "Oligocene Stratigraphy of Southeastern United States". F. Stearns MacNeil. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 28(9) : 1313-1354. September 1944.
1319 Stratigraphy and Economic Geology of the Coastal Plain of the Central Savannah River Area, Georgia. John Sandy, Robert E. Carver, and Thomas J. Crawford. GuidebookField Trip No. 3. Geological Society of America, Southeastern Section. Athens, Georgia. April 16. 1966. [vi] + 30 pp. Describes the general stratigraphy and the geological setting of commercial clay deposits in the area.
1320 Late Tertiary Stratigraphy of Eastern Georgia. S. M. Herrick and H. B. Counts. [Guidebook No.7]. Third Annual Field Trip, Georgia Geological Society. Georgia Geological Society. 1969. iv + 88 pp. Field trip begins at Augusta. parallels the Savannah River across Burke County to Stony Bluff Landing.
1321 "'Tertiary Stratigraphy and Geohydrology in Southwestern Georgia". C. W. Sever and S. M. Herrick. In: Geological Survey Research 1967, Professional Paper 575-B, U.S. Geological Survey. 1967. pp. B50-B53.
1322 "Stratigraphy Along Chattahoochee River, Connecting Link Between Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains'". Lyman D. Toulmin. Jr. and Philip E. LaMoreaux. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 47(3) : 385-404. March 1963.
1323 A Study of River Terraces of the Chattahoochee River Between Challehoochee, Florida, and Fort Gaines, Georgia. William B. Roberts. Masters thesis, 1958, Florida State University. v + 47 pp. + 3 maps in pocket.
1324 Stratigraphy, Paleontology, and Economic Geology of Portions of Perry and Cochran Quadrangles, Georgia. S. M. Pickering, Jr. Bulletin No. 81. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1970. iv + 67 pp. + 2 plates in pocket. Concerns portions of Pulaski, Houston, Dooly, and Bleckley counties.
1325 Stratigraphy of the Outcropping Cretaceous Rocks of Georgia. D. Hoye Eargle. Bulletin 1014. U.S. Geological Survey. 1955. iv + 101 pp. + maps. A study of the stratigraphy, structure, and geologic history of rocks that crop out in a northeastward-trending belt across the central part of the State.
1326 "Stratigraphy of Outcropping Cretaceous Beds of Southeastern States". Watson H. Monroe. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 31(10) : 18171824. October 1947.
1327 Regional Subsurface Stratigraphy, Structure, and Correlation of Middle and Early Upper Cretaceous Rocks In Alabama, Georgia, and North Florida. P. L. Applin and E. R. Applin. Preliminary Chart 26, Oil and Gas Investigations. U.S. Geological Survey. 1947. 3 sheets.
1328 '"The Outcropping Cretaceous Rocks of Georgia". D. Hoye Eargle. In: Short Contributions to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia - II, Bulletin No. 60, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1953, pp. 1-20. Concerns all or portions of the following counties: Baldwin, Bibb, Chattahoochee, Clay, Columbia. Crawford, Glascock. Hancock. Houston. Jones. McDuffie, Macon, Marion, Muscogee, Peach, Quitman, Richmond, Schley, Stewart, Talbot, Taylor, Twiggs, Warren, Washington. and Wilkinson. Correlates the outcropping Cretaceous rocks of Georgia with those of other states and coordinates several interpretations within Georgia.
1329 Correlation Chart for the Outcropping Tertiary Formations of the Eestem Gull Region. F. Stearns MacNeill. Preliminary Chart 29, Oil and Gas Investigations. U. S. Geological Survey. 1947.
1330 '"Upper Cretaceous Coast of Georgia and Alabama." William F. Tanner. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(3-4) : 89-92. 1962.
1331 '"Cretaceous- Tertiary Boundary of East-Central Georgia and West-Central South Carolina"". R. J. Scrudato and T. A. Bond. Southeastern Geology 14(4) : 233-239. 1972.
1332 A Guide to Selected Upper Cretaceous and Lower Tertiary Outcrops In the Lower
37
Geology
Chattahoochee River Valley ol Georgia. William E. Marsalis and Michael S. Friddell. Guidebook 15. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. 1975. vi + 87 pp. Guide to field trip beginning at Columbus and ending near Hilton in Early County. An overall view of the rock units of the Lower Chattahoochee Valley area is obtained.
1333 Secllmentallon In the Upper Cretaceous ol East-Central Georgia. Philip Ambrose Turner. Masters thesis. 1959, Cornell University. v + 30 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1334 The Origin ol the Cuoseta Sand. Norman Curtis Hester. Doctoral dissertation, 1968, University of Cincinnati. The Upper Cretaceous Cusseta Sand occurs in eastern Alabama and western Georgia.
1335 Stratigraphy and Paleontology ol the Jackson Group ol Georgia. James Frederick Louis Connell. Doctoral dissertation, 1955, University of Oklahoma.
1336 "Stratigraphy of the Jackson Group in Eastern Georgia". Robert E. Carver. Southeastern Geology 14(3) : 153-175. 1972.
1337 "Stratigraphy of the Jackson Group (Eocene) in Central Georgia". Robert E. Carver. Southeaetem Geology 7(2) : 83-92. 1966.
1338 Stratigraphy and Oetracoda ol the Ripley Formation ol Weetem Georgia. Raymond Weathers Stephens, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1960, Louisiana State University. "The Ripley formation (Gulfian) and its bounding formation in western Georgia were studied stratigraphically from the Chattahoochee River on the west to the Ocmulgee River on the east. Surface exposures were measured and described in detail and ostracod samples and rocks for thin sections were collected for study." Includes outcrop map and cross section.
1339 Stratigraphy and Sedimentation of the Middendorf Formation Between the Lynches River, South Carolina, and the Ocmulgee River, Georgia. David Strange Snipes. Doctoral dissertation, 1965, University of North Carolina. "The outcropping basal Upper Cretaceous beds between the Lynches River, South Carolina, and the Ocmulgee River, Georgia, are assigned to the Middendorf Formation. These beds... previously have been referred to the Tuscaloosa Formation (Group) but their lithology differs appreciably from typical Tuscaloosa strata exposed near Tuscaloosa, Alabama".
1340 "Quaternary Surface Formations of Southern Part of Atlantic Coastal Plain". John A. Doering. Joumal ol Geology 68(2) : 182-202. March 1960. Describes and maps the Citronelle formation which was shown on early geological maps as the "Lafayette" or "Altamaha" formation.
1341 "Aitamaha Formation of the Coastal Plain of Georgia". Otto Veatch. Science (new series) 27: 71-74. January 10, 1908.
1342 "The Tivola Member of the Ocala Limestone of Georgia". James F. L. Connell. Southeaetem Geology 1(2) : 59-72. 1959.
1343 Petrology of the Tuecalooea Formation In Weet-Central Georgia. Hulon Matthews Madeley. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, Ohio State University.
1344 Age and Correlation of the Clinchfield Sand In Georgia. S. M. Herrick. Bulletin 1354-E. U. S. Geological Survey. 1972. 17 pp.
1345 The Gull Serlee In the Sublurface In Northam Florida and Southern Georgia. Paul L. Applin and Esther R. Applin. Professional Paper 524-G. U.S. Geological Survey. 1967. iv + 35 pp. + 7 plates in pocket. Stratigraphy, structure, lithofacies, and micropaleontology are studied.
1346 Geology ol the Miocene and Pliocene Series In the North Florida - South Georgia Area. Norman K. Olson, ed. Atlantic Coastal Plain Geological Association and Southeastern Geological Society- Annual Field Conferences (7th ACPGA and 12th SEGS). 1966. 94 pp.
1347 "Hydrologic Effects of Quaternary Sediments Above the Marine Terraces in the Georgia Coastal Plain". Loris E. Asmussen. Southeastern Geology 12(3) : 189-201. 1971.
Structural Features
1346 "Structural Features of the Coastal Plain of Georgia". Howard Ross Cramer. Southeastern Geology 10(2) : 111-123. 1969.
1349 Chattahoochee Anticline, Apalachicola Embayment, Gull Trough and Related Structural Featuree, Southweetern Georgia, Fact or Fiction. S. H. Patterson and S. M. Herrick. Information Circular 41. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey ol Georgia). 1971. [iv] + 16 pp.
1~50 "The Chattahoochee Anticline in Georgia". Charles W. Sever. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 17 : 39-43. 1964-1965. A large up-folding in the southwest corner of the state is analyzed and the history of its nomenclature is reviewed. The author proposes a change in concepts regarding the extent and trend of the redefined Chattahoochee Anticline.
Minerals
GENERAL
1351 South Georgia Mlnerale Program. Georgia Division of Conservation; Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. Atlanta. 1966-1969. 11 vols. Study of economic minerals of the Coastal Plain emphasizing phosphates, heavy minerals, clays, and sands. Project Reports were issued as follows: No. 1 - (Purpose, Scope, Procedures etc.]; No. 2 - Echols County; No. 3 - Brooks, Camden, Clinch, Effingham, Lanier, Lowndes, Thomas, and Ware Counties; No. 4 - Phosphorite Exploration in portions of Lowndes, Echols, Clinch and Charlton Counties; No. 5 - [Atkinson, Ben Hill, Berrien, Coffee. Cook, and Irwin Counties and Appendices to Project Reports No.2 and No.3]; No.6- Effingham County Sands and Heavy Minerals Phosphate-Sand; No.7Phosphate Deposits of South-Central Georgia and North-Central Peninsular Florida; No.8- Heavy Mineral Bearing Sand of the Coastal Region of Florida; No.9- Miscellaneous; No. 10 - Savannah Area [Screven, Bryan, Effingham, and Chatham]; No. 11 (Phosphorite in Berrien, Brooks, Bulloch, Chatham, Clinch, Colquitt, Crawford, Houston, Lowndes, Pulaski, Twiggs, and Wilkinson].
1352 Economic Geology ol the Georgia Fall Line Area. R. H. Carpenter et al. Georgia Geological Society Guidebook 10. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1971.
1353 Mineral Resourcee of the Central Savannah River Area. Vernon J. Hurst, Thomas J. Crawford, and John Sandy. U.S. Economic Development Administration. 1966. 2 vols.
KAOLIN, BAUXITE, FULLERS EARTH, ATTAPULGITE
1354 Sedimentary Kaolins of the Coastal Plain of Georgia. Richard W. Smith. Bulletin No. 44. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1929. x + 482 pp. + 18 plates+ 1 map. Primarily descriptions of deposits in each of the following counties: Muscogee, Chattahoochee, Stewart, Talbot, Marion, Taylor, Schley, Crawford, Peach, Houston. Bibb, Twiggs, Jones, Wilkinson, Baldwin, Hancock, Washington, Glascock, McDuffie, Columbia, Richmond, Burke, Quitman, Randolph, Webster, Sumter, Macon, and Meriwether.
1355 Supplement to Sedimentary Kaolins of Georgia. Arthur C. Munyan. Bulletin No. 44-A. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1938. vi + 42 pp. + 4 plates. Notes developments in the kaolin industry since publication of Bulletin No. 44(above).
1356 Kaolin and Aseoclated Sediments of Eaet-Central Georgia. Ronald John Scrudato. Doctoral dissertation, 1969, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill.
1357 "Mineralogical and Chemical Variations in the Kaolin Deposits of the Coastal Plain of Georgia and South Carolina". David N. Hinckley. American Mineralogist 50(11-12) : 1865-1883. November-December 1965.
1358 Mineral and Colloidal Constitution ol Some Georgia Kaoline. Lane Mitchell. Doctoral dissertation, 1941, Pennsylvania State University.
1359 "Kaolins and Fire Clays of Central Georgia". Otto Veatch. In: Contributions to Economic Geology 1906, Bulletin 315, U.S. Geological Survey, 1907; pp. 303-314.
1360 "Kaolins of the Dry Branch Region, Georgia". Otto Veatch. Economic Geology 3(2) . 109-117. March-April 1908. Summary of the geology, structure, and theory of origin of the deposits.
1361 The Origin ol the Kaolin and Bauxite Deposits of Twiggs, Wilkinson, and Washington Countlee, Georgia. Roger Seth Austin. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, University of Georgia.
1362 Bauxite and Kaolin Deposits of the Irwinton District, Georgia. Walter B. Lang eta/. Bulletin 1199-J. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. iv + 26 pp. +map in pocket.
1363 Bauxite In Areas Adjacent to and Between the Springvale and Andersonville Districts, Georgia. Alfred D. Zapp and Lorin D. Clark. Bulletin 1199-H. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. iv + 10 pp. +map in pocket. Low-grade bauxite and bauxitic clay of little potential economic importance occur in a strip which includes parts of Clay, Quitman, Stewart, Webster, Sumter, Marion, Schley, and Macon Counties.
1364 "Georgia Contains Resources for Future Aluminum Industry". Georgia Mineral Newsletter 9(4) : 124. 1956. Percentages of alumina in bauxite, bauxitic clays, and kaolin found in the Andersonville district are estimated.
1365 A Report on the Bauxite and Fullers Earth ol the Coastal Plain of Georgia. H. K. Shearer. Bulletin No. 31. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1917. xvi + 340 pp. + 16 plates+ 1 map. General information and descriptions of individual deposits. Bauxite deposits studied are in the following Coastal Plain counties: Wilkinson, Baldwin, Twiggs, Washington, Sumter, Macon, Schley, and Stewart. Fullers earth deposits are in Twiggs, Blackley, Houston, Crawford, Wilkinson, Jones. Baldwin, Washington, Glascock, Jefferson, Burke, Richmond, Columbia, Decatur, Grady, Thomas. Brooks, Lowndes, Echols, Appling, Toombs, and Screven.
1368 "Relation of Economic Deposits of Attapulgite and Fuller's Earth to Geologic Structure in Southwestern Georgia". Charles W. Sever. In: Geological Su.,.y Reaaarch 1964, Professional Paper 501-B. U.S. Geological Survey, 1964. pp. B116-B-118.
38
"Mapping of geologic structure in southwestern Georgia revealed that all existing mines in deposits of attapulgite and Fuller's earth are near the axis of a southwest-plunging structural trough".
1367 "Field Trip to Attapulgite Fuller's Earth Localities in Georgia and Florida". B. F. Buie, L. R. Gremillion and F. T. Ritchie. In: Clay and Clay Minerals- Proceedings of the TweHih National Conference on Clays and Clay Minerals, Macmillan Company, New York, 1964, pp. 1-6. Colquitt, Decatur, Grady, and Thomas Counties in Georgia are attapulgite fuller's earth localities. Given here is a road log for a 115-mile trip in the area.
1368 The Origin of Attapulglte In the Miocene Strata of Florida and Georgia. L. Ray Gremillion. Doctoral dissertation, 1965, Florida State University.
1369 Petrology of Attapulgus Clay In North Florida and Southwest Georgia. G. H. McClellan. Doctoral dissertation, 1964, University of Illinois.
PETROLEUM (See also 1151-1157)
1370 Symposium on the Petroleum Geology of the Georgia Coastal Plain. Lynda P. Stafford, comp. Bulletin No. 87. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey). 1974. iv + 196 pp. + 12 fold. plates. Thirteen papers and seven abstracts of papers from a February, 1974 symposium at Americus, Georgia, are reprinted.
1371 "Stratigraphy and Petroleum Potential of Peninsular Florida and Southern Georgia". E. H. Rainwater. Transactions Gull Coast Asaoclatlon of Geological Societies 20 : 49-49. 1970.
1372 "Stratigraphy and Its Role in the Future Exploration for Oil and Gas in the Gull Coast". E. H. Rainwater. Transactions Gull Coast Association of Geological Societies 10 : 33-75. 1960.
1373 "Oil and Gas Possibilities in Atlantic Coastal Plain from New Jersey to Florida". Olive C. Postley. Bulletin of the American Asaoclatlon of Petroleum Geologists 22(7) : 799-815. July 1938.
1374 "Recent Petroleum Activities in Coastal Plain of South Georgia". A. C. Munyan. Bulletin of the American Asaoclatlon of Petroleum Geologists 22(7): 794-798. July 1938. Includes discussion of structural map prepared by Prettyman and Cave in 1923 (Georgia Geological Survey Bulletin 40).
1375 "Oil Seeps Along the Chattahoochee Anticline in Georgia". Charles W. Sever. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 17 : 43-45. 1964-1965.
1376 "The Petroleum Potential of the Emerged and Submerged Atlantic Coastal Plain of the United States." John E. Johnston, James Trumbull and Gordon P. Eaton. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(2) : 66-73. 1960.
1377 "Carolinas - Georgia Offshore Potential for Oil and Gas". Norman K. Olson. In: Report of the Conference on Marine Resources of the Coastal Plains States, December 5-6, 1974, Wilmington, North Carolina, Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services, Wilmington, N.C., 1975.
1378 "Does Georgia Have Any Tidelands Oil?" Eldon J. Parizek. Georgia Review 7(3) . 309-318. Fall 1953.
MISCELLANEOUS
1379 An Environmental Inventory lor the Coastal Plain and Adjacent Atlantic Waters of the Southeastern States; Part I - A Bibliography of Selected Coastal and Offshore Mineral Investigations. Publication No. 72-4. Coastal Plains Center tor Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1972. 6 pp.
1380 An Evaluation of Offshore Sand and Gravel Deposits as Construction or Specialty Materials. Roger Martin and A. G. Hicks. Technical Report Series, No. 75-3. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1975. iii+ 66 pp.
1381 Exploration Techniques lor Aggregate Resources In Coastal Georgia. James L. Harding and James R. Woolsey. Technical Report Series, No. 75-1. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1975. [iii] +50 pp. Describes tools and techniques to aid in the evaluation of potential sand and gravel deposits in Georgia coastal waters.
1382 A Report on the Limestones and Marls of the Coastal Plain of Georgia. J. E. Brantly. Bulletin No. 21. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1916. x + 300 pp. + 11 plates+ 1 map. Includes general discussion of geology of state; general discussion of limestone origin and classification; description of individual exposures of limestone and marl in the Coastal Plain; and summary of mining and processing methods and uses.
1383 "Commercial Limestones of the Flint River Basin South of Albany, Georgia". A. S. Furcron and Charles W. Fortson, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(2) : 45-57. 1960. Deposits of limestone suitable tor commercial uses are indicated in the following counties: Decatur, Grady, Mitchell, Worth, Dougherty, Early, and Calhoun.
1384 Monazite In Part of the Southern Atlantic Coastal Plain. Lincoln Dryden. Bulletin 1042-L. U. S. Geological Survey. 1958. Pp. i-iv, 393-429 + fold-out maps.
Geology
GENERAL
Ground.Water
1385 Underground Waters of the Coastal Plain of Georgia. L. W. Stephenson and J. 0. Veatch. Water-Supply Paper 341. U.S. Geological Survey. 1915. 539 pp. + 21 plates including fold-out maps. Regional discussion of geology, physiography, and water supply is followed by summaries tor each county. These precede a summary of the chemical character of waters of the Coastal Plain.
1386 Artesian Water In Tertiary Limestone In the Southeastern States. V. T. Stringfield. Professional Paper 517. U. S. Geological Survey. 1966. viii + 226 pp.
1387. Hydrology of Limestone Terranes In the Coastal Plain of the Southeastern United States. v. T. Stringfield and H. E. LeGrand. Special Paper Number 93. Geological Society of America. New York. 1966. vi+ 46 pp.
1388 "Ground Water in the Coastal Plain of Georgia". Stephen M. Herrick and Robert t: Wait. Journal Southeastern Section American Water Works Association 20(1) : 73-86. 1956.
1389 Artesian Water In Southeastern Georgia, With Special Reference to the Coastal Area. M. A. Warren. Bulletin No. 49. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1944. 2 vols. Concerns the following counties: Brantley, Bryan, Camden, Charlton, Chatham, Effingham, Glynn, Liberty, Long, Mcintosh, Pierce, and Wayne.
1390 Water From the Principal Artesian Aquifer In Coastal Georgia. A. E. Krause and D. 0. Gregg. Hydrologic Atlas No. 1. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. Atlanta. 1972. 1 folding sheet.
1391 "Artesian Water in the Coastal Area of Georgia and Northeastern Florida". V. T. Stringfield, M. A. Warren, and H. H. Cooper, Jr. Economic Geology 36(7) : 698-711. November 1941.
1392 Source and Quality of Ground Water In Southwestern Georgia. Robert L. Wait. Information Circular 18. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1960. [ii] + 74 pp. Concerns the following counties: Baker, Brooks, Calhoun, Clay, Colquitt, Cook, Crisp, Decatur. Dooly, Dougherty, Early, Grady, Lee, Lowndes, Miller, Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Seminole, Sumter, Terrell, Thomas, Tift, Turner, Worth.
1393 Water-Level Fluctuations In Limestone Sinks In Southwestern Georgia. E. L. Hendricks and Melvin H. Goodwin, Jr. Water Supply Paper 1110-E. U. S. Geological Survey. 1952. viii+ [90] pp. [numbered i-viii, 157-246] + 1 plate in pocket. "A study of the hydrology of several ponds, with brief botanical descriptions and with particular reference to breeding place$ of malaria-carrying mosquitoes".
1394 "Relation of Surface-Water Hydrology to the Principal Artesian Aquifer in Florida and Southeastern Georgia". V. T. Stringfield. In: Geological Survey Resaarch 1984, Professional Paper 501-C, U.S. Geological Survey, 1964, pp. C164-C-169. The relations of surface drainage to recharge and discharge of the aquifer are described.
1395 "Geologic and Hydrologic Factors Affecting Perennial Yield of Aquifers". V. T. Stringfield and H. H. Cooper, Jr. Journal American Water Works Association 43(10) : 803-816. October 1951.
1396 "The Perennial Yield of Artesian Water in the Coastal Area of Georgia and Northeastern Florida". H. H. Cooper, Jr. and M.A. Warren. Economic Geology 40(4) : 263-282. June-July 1945.
1397 The Yield of Sedimentary Aquifers of the Coastal Plain Southeast River Basins. Joseph T. Callahan .. Water-Supply Paper 1669-W. U. S. Geological Survey. 1964. iv + 56 pp. + 1 plate in pocket. Estimated safe yield is about 24 billion gallons per day. The volume of fresh water in storage is about 21 billion acre-feet. The ratio of ground water in storage to sale yield is about 1 acre-toot to 1 gallon per day.
DECLINE OF ARTESIAN PRESSURE
1398 "Ground-Water Withdrawals and Decline cit Artesian Pressures in the Coastal Coun-
ties of Georgia". J. W. Stewart and M. G. Croft. Georgia Mineral NeWifetter 13(2) : 84-93. 1960.
1399 "Decline of Artesian Pressures in the Coastal Plain of Georgia, Northeastern Florida, and Southeastern South Carolina". J. W. Stewart and H. B. Counts. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11(1): 25-31. 1958.
1400 "The Piezometric Surface of the Coastal Plain Aquifer in Georgia, Estimates of Original Elevation and Long-Term Decline". Robert E. Carver. Southeastern Geology 9(2) : 87-99. 1968.
1401 "Will Wells Run Dry on the Coast?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 25. 1973. Pp. 14, 18, 38. Over-use of groundwater by industries in the coastal area of Georgia has seriously depleted the flow of water from many wells. Numerous artesian wells no longer flow or are contaminated. Unhappy citizens and threatened wildlife communities are two of the resulting problems.
39
Geology
1402 "Wild-Flowing Wells Waste Water". J. T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(1): 21-23. 1960. Artesian wells without shut-off valves waste valuable ground water in coastal counties. The decline of artesian pressure and salt-water contamination of the aquifer are results.
MISCELLANEOUS
1403 Dewatering of the Clayton Formation During Construction of the Walter F. George Lock and Dam, Fort Gaines, Clay County, Georgia. J. W. Stewart. Water-Resources Investigations 2-73. U.S. Geological Survey. January 1973 [1975]. 29 pp. NTIS number: PB-239 600. Dewatering lowered the potentiometric surface 60 feet at a pumping rate of 8,400 gallons per minute. The pumpage was from the shell unit of the Clayton Formation.
1418 "Carolina Bays and Their Origin". W. F. Prouty. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 63 : 167-224. February 1952.
1419 "Streamlining of the Carolina Bays". H. E. LeGrand. Journal of Geology 61 (3) 263-274. 1953.
1420 "The Carolina Bays and Emergence of the Coastal Plain of the Carolinas and Georgia" Eugene C. Robertson. In: Geological Survey Research 1962, Professional Paper 450-C, U.S. Geological Survey, 1962, pp. C87-C90.
1421 "Swamps That Puzzle Everybody". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine November 10, 1974. Pp. 10, 12, 14, 21. Carolina bays are examined.
1404 Hydraulics of Aquifers at Alapaha, Coolidge, Fitzgerald, Montezuma, and Thomasville, Georgia. Charles W. Sever. Information Circular 36. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1969. 16 pp.
1405 The Geochemistry of the Groundwaters of Northeastern Florida and Southeastern Georgia. Eugene Brown. Doctoral dissertation, 1952, University of Florida.
1406 "Relations of Fresh and Salty Ground Water Along the Southeastern U. S. Atlantic Coast". Robert L. Wait and J. T. Callahan. Ground Water 3(4) : 3-17. 1965.
1407 Well Logs of the Coastal Plain of Georgia. Stephen M. Herrick. Bulletin No. 70. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1961. viii + 462 pp. + i map in pocket. Data on stratigraphy, especially water-bearing formations. Of value in search for ground water and petroleum.
1408 Logs of Selected Wells In the Coastal Plains of Georgia. Esther R. Applin and Paul L. Applin. Bulletin No. 74. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1964. vi+ 231 pp. Lithologic and paleontologic descriptions of cores and cuttings from 31 selected wells (oil tests and water wells).
1409 Index to Core Holes, Georgia Coastal Plain, 1965-1972. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. 1973. (14] pp. Location and depth of core holes are indicated.
1410 "Solution Subsidence of a Limestone Terrane in Southwest Georgia". S. M. Herrick and H. E. LeGrand. Bulletin of the International Association of Scientific Hydrology 9(2) : 25-36. June 1964. "Ground-water studies in Baker and Mitchell Counties, Ga. have shown interesting geologic and geomorphic features which result from the solvent action of ground water in the near-surface limestone formations of Tertiary age."
1411 "Pre-Eocene Solution Features in Southeast Alabama and Southwest Georgia". L. D. Toulmin and S. S. Winters. Florida State University Studies No. 13. Florida State University. Tallahassee. 1954. Pp. 72-83. "Solution pits in Paleocene limestone near Fort Gaines, Georgia are described and compared with narrower and deeper solution pits or pipes of Pliocene (?) to recent origin in Florida. The Georgia pits are filled with lower Eocene sand and covered by lower Eocene marine deposits. Three small natural bridges near Fort Gaines are associated with the solution pits."
1412 "lnterflow or Shallow Phreatic Flow in the Coastal Plain of Georgia". Loris E. Asmussen and J. C. Ritchie. Journal of Hydrology 9(2) : 182-193. October 1969. Shallow-flow runoff, or interflow, from 0.637 acre of Tifton sandy loam was 31 per cent of total precipitation for a three-month study period.
Geophysical Investigations - Central Savannah River Area
1413 Geologic Interpretation of Geophysical Maps, Central Savannah River Area, South Carolina and Georgia. D. L. Daniels. Geophysical Investigations Map GP-893. U. S. Geological Survey. 1974 (1975]. 3 sheets, scale 1 : 250,000 + 10 page text. "An aeromagnetic survey of the central Savannah River region is used, with geologic and other geophysical data, to delineate specific rock types and broad areas of similar tectonic style in the Piedmont and in basement rocks of the Atlantic Coastal Plain".
1414 Natural Gamma Aeroradloactivlty of the Savannah River Plant Area, South Carolina and Georgia. R. G. Schmidt. Geophysical Investigations Map GP-306. U.S. Geological Survey. 1961. 1 : 250,000.
1415 Aeromagnetic Map of the Savannah River Plant Area, South Carolina and Georgia. A. J. Petty, F. A. Petrafeso, and F. C. Moore, Jr. Geophysical Investigations Map GP-489. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. 1 : 250,000. 1 sheet.
1416 Aeroradioactlvity Maps of Parts of Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina. Open-File Report 75-400. U.S. Geological Survey. Reston, Va. 1975. 15 plates.
Carolina Bays
1417 The Origin of the Carolina Bays. Douglas Wilson Johnson. Columbia University Press. New York. 1942. xi+ 341 pp.
Coast and Lower Coastal Plain: Geologic History (Chronologically)
1422 "Seven Coastal Terraces in the Southeastern States". C. Wythe Cooke. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 21(21). 503-513. December 19, 1931.
1423 "Pleistocene Features of the Atlantic Coastal Plain". Richard Foster Flint. American Journal of Science 238: 757-787. November 1940. "'Reviews the literature... and gives the results of reconnaissance study of a part of this region. in a preliminary attempt to clarify the origin of these features". See volume 239 (1941). pages 457-462 for discussion by C. W. Cooke and rejoinder.
1424 Sea Islands of Georgia: Their Geologic History. Count D. Gibson. University' of Georgia Press. Athens. 1948. 73 pp.
1425 Pleistocene Shore Lines In Florida and Georgia. F. Stearns MacNeil. Professional Paper 221-F. U.S. Geological Survey. 1950. iv + (18] pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1426 A Study of the Pleistocene Shore Lines Between the Altamaha and the Savannah Rivers in Georgia. Sigmund J. Rosenfeld. Masters thesis, 1955, Emory University. vii + 51 pp.
1427 "Origin of the Sea Islands of the Southeastern United States". John M. Zeigler. Geographical Review 49 222-237. 1959. Reprint with comments in: Barrier Islands, Maurice L. Schwartz, ed., Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross, Stroudsburg, Penn., 1973, pp. 91-107. loentifies three types of islands along the Georgia- South Carolina coast: erosional remnant islands, marsh islands, and beach-ridge islands.
1428 "Comparison of Modern and Ancient Beaches, Central Georgia Coast"'. John H. Hoyt and Robert J. Weimer. Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists 47 . 529-531. 1963. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute. Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
1429 "Burrows of Callianassa major Say, Geologic Indicators of Littoral and Shallow Neritic Environments". Robert J. Weimer and John H. Hoyt. Journal of Paleontology 38(4): 761-767. July 1964. Reprint in Collected Reprints -Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute. Sapelo Island. Georgia, 1965. Studies in the area of Sapelo Island indicate that burrows of the marine decapod Callianassa major Say are confined to high-energy littoral and shallow neritic environments. The burrows serve as geologic indicators of these environments. Certain sandstones on Sapelo Island, at Sutherland Bluff on the Georgia mainland, and in the Rocky Mountain area that contain these burrow structures must therefore have been deposited in shallow neritic and littoral environments.
1430 "Late Pleistocene and Recent Sedimentation, Central Georgia Coast, U.S.A.". John H. Hoyt, R. J. Weimer, and V. J. Henry, Jr. In: Developments in Sedimentology; Volume 1: Deltaic and Shallow Marine Deposits, L.M.J.U. Van Straaten, ed., 1964, pp. 170-176. Repnnt in Collected Reprints- Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island. Georgia, 1965. Coastal sediments of central Georgia and the environments of their deposition are described. The geologic history of the area is related to Late Pleistocene to Recent sea level fluctuations.
1431 Pleistocene and Holocene Sediments, Sapelo Island, Georgia and Vicinity. John H. Hoyt, Vernon J. Henry, and James D. Howard, comps. Guidebook for Field Trip No. 1, April 11-13, 1966, Geological Society of America, Southeastern Section. University of Georgia Marine Institute. Sapelo Island, Georgia. 1966. iv + 1_94 pp. A field guide with background papers.
1432 "Influence of Island Migration on Barrier-Island Sedimentation". John H. Hoyt and Vernon J. Henry, Jr. Geological Society of America Bulletin 78(1). 77-86. January 1967. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island. Georgia, 1968. Reprint with comments in Barrier Islands, Maurice L. Schwartz, ed .. Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross; Stroudsburg, Penn .. 1973. pp. 236-247. The objectives of the paper are "(the] interpretation of influences of [the] tidal-inlet environment on present-day sediments and the establishment of criteria for the recognition of similar influences on ancient sediments". The area of study is Sapelo Island and adjacent smaller islands and inlets.
1433 "Pleistocene Shoreline Sediments in Coastal Georgia: Deposition and Modification". John H. Hoyt and John R. Hails. Science 155 . 1541-1543. March 24, 1967. Reprint in
40
Geology
Collected Reprints - Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, 1968. "New evidence invalidates the former concept that Pleistocene shorelines are 'terrace' cut and fill structures. Comparison of Pleistocene and Holocene sediments with morphology of the shoreline indicates that Pleistocene deposits accumulated in barrier-island environments and that the 'terraces' are former lagoonsalt marshes. Stratigraphic evidence supports six major Pleistocene shorelines below an elevation of 100 feet".
1434 "Intercontinental Correlation of Late Pleistocene Sea Levels". John H. Hoyt. Nature 215 (510) : 612-614. August 5, 1967. The late Pleistocene shorelines of coastal Georgia are compared with those of southern South West Africa.
1435 "Barrier Island Formation". John H. Hoyt. Geological Society of America Bulletin 78: 1125-1135. September 1967. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968. Reprint with comments in Barrier Islands, Maurice L. Schwartz, ed., Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross, Stroudsburg, Penn., 1973, pp. 248-259. Review of barrier island development theories and presentation of the author's theory that barrier islands are created by the flooding of areas landward of shoreline ridges during periods of slow submergence, as during the late Holocene.
1436 "Barrier Island Formation: Discussion". C. Wythe Cooke. Geological Society of America Bulletin 79 : 945-948. July 1968. Reprint with comments in Barrier Islands, Maurice L. Schwartz, ed., Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross, Stroudsburg, Penn., 1973, pp. 260-262. Discussion of paper "Barrier Island Formation" by J. H. Hoyt [see above].
1437 "Barrier Island Formation - Reply". John H. Hoyt. Geological Society of America Bulletin 79(7) : 947. July 1968. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine lnsti:ute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968. Reprint with comments in Barrier Islands, Maurice L. Schwartz, ed.; Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross; Stroudsburg, Penn., 1973, pp. 263-264. Reply to C. W. Cooke [see above].
1436 "Barrier Island Formation: Discussion". John J. Fisher. Geological Society of America Bulletin 79 : 1421-1426. October 1968. Reprint with comments in Barrier Islands, Maurice L. Schwartz, ed., Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross, Stroudsburg, Penn., 1973, pp. 277282. Discussion of barrier island formation theory of J. H. Hoyt [see above].
1436 "Barrier Island Formation - Reply". John H. Hoyt. Geological Society of America BuHeUn 79(10): 1427-1431. 1968. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume I, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968. Reprint with comments in Barrier Islands, Maurice L. Schwartz, ed., Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross, Stroudsburg, Penn., 1973, pp. 283-268. Reply )o J. J. Fisher [see above].
1440 "Geology of the Golden Isles and Lower Georgia Coastal Plain". John H. Hoyt. In: Conference on the Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia, October, 1968, Sea Island, Georgia, David S. Maney, Frederick C. Marland, and Clifford B. West, eds., University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1969, pp. 18-34.
1441 "Barrier Development on Submerged Coasts; Problems of Sea-Level Changes from a Study of the Atlantic Coastal Plain of Georgia, U.S.A. and Parts of the East Australian Coast". John R. Hails and John H. Hoyt. Zeltachrlft fur Geomorphologle, Supplementband 7 : 24-55. 1968. Reprint in Collected Reprints - Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
1442 "Age of Late Pleistocene Shoreline Deposits, Coastal Georgia". John H. Hoyt, R. J. Weimer, and V. J. Henry, Jr. In: Means of Correlation of Quarternary Successions, R. B. Morrison and H. E. Wright, Jr.; eds., University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, 1968, pp. 381-393. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
1443 "Submergence Along the Atlantic Coast of Georgia". Robert L. Wait. In: Geological Survey Research 1968, Professional Paper 600-D, U.S. Geological Survey, 1968, pp. D38D41. "Cypress stumps recovered from river terrace material near Brunswick, Ga., may indicate submergence of the Atlantic coastal area during Holocene geologic time".
1444 "An Appraisal of the Evolution of the Lower Atlantic Coastal Plain of Georgia, U.S. A." John R. Hails and John H. Hoyt. Institute of British Geographers Transactions 46 : 53-67. 1969. Reprint in Collected Reprints - Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
1445 "Pleistocene Shorelines in a Relatively Stable Area, Southeastern Georgia, U.S.A.". John H. Hoyt and J. R. Hails. Giornale dl Geologia (2) 35, lase. 4: 105-117. 1969. Reprint m Collected Reprints- Volume 7, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1969.
1446 "The Significance and Limitations of Statistical Parameters for Distinguishing AnCient and Modern Sedimentary Environments of the Lower Georgia Coastal Plain". John R. Hails and John H. Hoyt. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 39(2) : 559-580. 1969. Repnnt in Collected Reprints - Volume 7, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1969.
1447 "A Review of Recent Studies on the Marine Pleistocene of the Atlantic Coastal Plain - New Jersey to Georgia". Horace G. Richards. Transactions Gull Coast Association of
Geological Societies 19: 601-609. 1969. A state-by-state look at recent work by many authors. An attempt to correlate some of the SO-plus formation and physiographic names used by these authors is made. The work of John H. Hoyt is emphasized in the section on Georgia.
1448 "Decapod Burrows in Holocene Barrier Island Beaches and Washover Fans, Georgia". Robert W. Frey and Taylor V. Mayou. Senckenberglana Maritima 3 : 53-77. 1971. Investigation Ql the burrows of the ghost crab Ocypode quadrats Fabricius and the fiddler crab Uca pugilator (Bose) and discussion of their geologic significance as indicators of ancient shorelines.
1449 Trail Ridge: A Relic Shoreline Feature of Florida and Georgia. William A. Pirkle. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
1450 "Shoreline Processes". John H. Hoyt. Journal of Geologic Education 20(1) : 16-22. January 1972.
1451 Barrier Islands. Maurice L. Schwartz. Benchmark Papers in Geology, vol. 9. Dowden, Hutchinson & Ross. Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. 1973. xiv + 451 pp. The development of barrier islands such as those along the coast of Georgia has been an object of study and debate by gemorphologists for more than a century. Collected here are 40 papers tracing the debate from the pioneering work of Elie de Beaumont in 1845 to the present. The conclusion of the editor is that three basically different explanations of the formation of barrier islands are each valid. Thus, multiple causality should be accepted.
1452 The Neogene of the Georgia Coast. Robert W. Frey, ed. University of Georgia, Department of Geology, for the 8th Annual Field Trip of the Georgia Geological Society. Athens. 1973. v + 102 pp. Summary of research on coastal and nearshore geology.lncludes (1) "Holocene Sediments of the Georgia Coastal Area" by J. D. Howard, (2) "A Sedimentary Framework of the Substrates Adjacent to Georgia Tidellnlets" by George F. Oertel, (3) "Geology of the Chatham County Area, Georgia" by V. J. Henry, R. T. Giles, and J. R. Woolsey, and (4) "Vertebrate Fossils of Coastal Georgia: A Field Geologist's Guide" by M. R. Voorhies.
1453 "Geology of Coastal Georgia". William R. Mann. In: Symposium on the Petroleum Geology of the Georgia Coastal Plain, Bulletin No. 87, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey), 1974, pp. 125-134. Brief summary of research and general description of each of the seven barrier island salt marsh stages that mark the geological history of the area.
1454 "Pleistocene Stratigraphy of Southeastern Georgia". John H. Hoyt and John R. Hails. In: Post-Miocene Stratigraphy: Central and Southern Atlantic Coastal Plain, Robert Q. Oaks and J. R. DuBar, Utah State University Press, Logan, Utah, 1974; pp. 191-205. "Deposits of six major Pleistocene shorelines can be distinguished... These deposits comprise six formations, the Wicomico, Penholoway, Talbot, Pamlico, Princess Anne and Silver Bluff, in order of decreasing age and decreasing associated sea-level altitude... The Pleistocene sediments accumulated along barrier-island coasts similar to that of modern Georgia. Broad 'terraces' are former lagoons and salt marshes."
Continental Shelf (See also Sediments: Continental Shelf)
1455 "Marine Geology of the Atlantic Continental Margin of the Southern United StatesSymposium Issue". Orrin H. Pilkey. Southeastern Geology 9(4) : (Whole issue). 1968. 100 pp.
1456 "Physiographic Features on the Outer Shelf and Upper Slope, Atlantic Continental Margin, Southeast United States". I. G. Macintyre and J. D. Milliman. Geological Society of America Bulletin 81 (9) : 2577-2597. September 1970.
1457 "Bottom Topography of the Georgia Continental Shelf". Orrin H. Pilkey and Robert T. Giles. Southeastern Geology 7(1): 15-18. 1965. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
1458 The Geology and Origin of Gray's Reef, Georgia Continental Shelf. Jesse L. Hunt, Jr. Masters thesis, 1974, University of Georgia. ix + 83 pp.
1459 "The Continental Margin South of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina: Shallow Structure". Elazar Uchupi. Southeastern Geology 8(4) : 155-177. 1967.
1460 Atlantic Continental Shelf and Slope of the United States- Physiography. Elazar Uchupi. Professional Paper 529-C. U.S. Geological Survey. 1968. iv + 30 pp. + 3 maps in pocket.
1461 Atlantic Continental Shelf and Slope of the United States: Shallow Structure. Elazar Uchupi. Professional Paper 529-1. U. S. Geological Survey. 1970. iv + 44 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Description of the subsurface morphology and speculation on the evolution of the sedimentary framework of the terrace.
1462 Sediments, Structural Framework, Petroleum Potential, Environmental Conditions, and Operational Considerations of the United States South Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf. Open-File Report No. 75-411. U.S. Geological Survey. August 1975. 262 pp.
1463 "Seismic Refraction Study of Shallow Part of Continental Shelf Off Georgia Coast". J. W. Antoine and V. J. Henry, Jr. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin
41
Geology
49(5) : 601-609. May 1965. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
1464 "Offshore Extension of the Upper Eocene to Recent Stratigraphic Sequences in Southeastern Georgia". Morris J. McCollum and Stephen M. Herrick. In: Geological Survey Research 1964, Professional Paper 501-C, U. S. Geological Survey, 1964, pp. C61-C63. "Strata ranging in age from Recent to late Eocene were penetrated in test holes drilled 10 miles offshore from Savannah Beach, Ga. Study of the rock cores and cuttings reveals that the stratigraphic sequence is similar to that onshore but that the post-Miocene section is thinner".
1465 Outer Continental Shell Map Series. U. S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management. New Orleans, La. 1975.
GENERAL
Coastal Sediments
1466 "Quaternary Paralic and Shelf Sediments of Georgia". Vernon J. Henry and John H. Hoyt. Southeastern Geology 9(4): 195-214. 1968. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo lslend, Georgia, 1968.
1467 "Genesis of Sedimentary Deposits along Coasts of Submergence". John H. Hoyt. XXIII International Geological Congress 8:311-321. 1968. Reprints in Collected Reprints -Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
1468 "Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology I. Introduction". James D. Howard, Robert W. Frey and Hans-Erich Reineck. Senckenberglana Maritima 4: 3-14. 1972.
1469 "Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology II. Provenance and Distribution of Heavy Minerals." Sibylle Gadow. Senckenbergiana Maritima 4 : 15-45. 1972.
1470 "Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. Ill. Beach Dynamics and Beach Development". Friedrich Wunderlich. Senckenberglana Maritima 4. 47-79. 1972.
1471 "Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. IV. Physical and Biogenic Sedimentary Structures of the Nearshore Shelf". James D. Howard and Hans-Erich Reineck. Senckenberglana Maritima 4 : 81-123. 1972.
1472 "Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. V. Distribution and Environmental Significance of Lebensspuren and in-situ Skeletal Remains". Gunther Hertweck. Senckenberglana Maritima 4: 125-167. 1972.
1473 "Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. VI. Study of Sedimentary Structures Made by Beach and Offshore Animals in Aquaria". Robert W. Frey and James D. Howard. Senckenberglana Maritima 4: 169-182. 1972.
1474 "Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. VII. Distribution and Zonation of Macrobenthic Animals". Jurgen Dorjes. Senckenbergiana Maritima 4: 183-216. 1972.
1475 "Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. VIII. Conclusions". James D. Howard and Hans-Erich Reineck. Senckenberglana Maritima 4: 217-223. 1972.
1476 Depositional Sedimentary Environments. Hans-Erich Reineck and lndra Bir Singh. Springer-Verlag. New York, Heidelberg, and Berlin. 1973. xvi + 439 pp.
1477 "Heavy-Mineral Investigation of Recent and Pleistocene Sands of Lower Coastal Plain of Georgia" James Neiheisel. Geological Society of America Bulletin 73(3) : 365374. March 1962.
1478 "Transport of Trace Metals to the Atlantic by Three Southeastern Rivers." H. L. Windom, K. C. Beck, and R. Smith. Southeastern Geology 12(3): 169-181. January 1971.
1479 "The Estuarine Formation of United States Atlantic Coastal Plain Phosphorite" D. R. Pevear. Economic Geology 61 (2) . 251-256. March-April 1966.
1480 Factors Influencing Occurrence of Phosphorite In Georgia's Coastal Plain Sediments. John Edwin Husted. Doctoral dissertation, 1970, Florida State University.
1481 "Transport and Deposition of Clay Minerals, Southeastern United States". James Neiheisel and Charles E. Weaver. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 37(4): 1084-1116. December 1967. "The clay minerals and heavy minerals contained in the sediments and suspended load of a number of rivers, estuaries, and portions of the Continental Shelf were studied in order to determine the effects of compositional variations in source areas on the mineral distribution pattern at the site of deposition. An attempt was made to see how minerals could be w~ed as natural tracers to study the transport and deposition of sediments".
1482 "The Nature and Occurrence of Heavy Minerals in Pleistocene and Holocene Sediments of the Lower Georgia Coastal Plain". John R. Hails and John H. Hoyt. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 42(3) : 646-666. September 1972.
CONTINENTAL SHELF
1483 "Heavy Minerals of the U. S. South Atlantic Continental Shelf and Slope". Orrin H. Pilkey. Geological Society of America Bulletin 74(5) : 641-646. May 1963. Reprint in Collected Reprints - Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
1484 "Bottom Sediments of the Atlantic Shelf and Slope off the Southern United States." Donn S. Gorsline. Journal of Geology 71 (4) : 422-440. July 1963.
1485 "Sediments on the Continental Margin off Eastern United States". Elazar Uchupi. In: Geological Survey Research 1963, Professional Paper 475-C, U.S. Geological Survey, 1963, pp. C132-C137.
1486 "The Relict-Recent Sediment Boundary on the Georgia Continental Shelf". Orrin H. Pilkey and Dirk Frankenberg. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 22(1) : 37-40. January 1964. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
1487 "The Size Distribution and Mineralogy of the Carbonate Fraction of United States South Atlantic Shelf and Upper Slope Sediments". Orrin H. Pilkey. Marine Geology 2(1-2) : 121-136. October 1964.
1488 "Oolites on the Georgia Continental Shelf Edge". Orrin H. Pilkey, Delmar Schnitker and D. R. Pevear, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 36(2) : 462-467. June 1966. Reprint in Collected Reprints -Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
1489 "Phosphorite in Georgia Continental Shelf Sediments". David R. Pevear and Orrin H. Pilkey. Geological Society of America Bulletin 77(8) : 849-858. 1966. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
1490 "Aspects of Carbonate Sedimentation on the Atlantic Continental Shelf off the Southern United States". Orrin H. Pilkey et a/. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 39(2) : 744-768. June 1969. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 7, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1969.
1491 "Holocene and Late Pleistocene Sediment Sources, Continental Shelf off Brunswick, Georgia". Robert E. Carver. Journal of Sedlmenlary Petrology 41 (2): 517-525. June 1971.
1492 Sources of Holocene and Late Pleistocene Sediments on the Continental Shell off Georgia. David Mark Kaplan. Masters thesis, 1971, University of Georgia. vii+ 57 pp.
1493 Atlantic Continental Shell and Slope of the United States - Petrology of the Sand Fraction of Sediments Northern New Jersey to Southern Florida. John D. Milliman. Professional Paper 529-J. U. S. Geological Survey. 1972. iv + 40 pp. + 9 plates in separate case.
1494 "Sediments of the Continental Margin Off the Eastern United States". John D. Milliman, 0. H. Pilkey, and D. A. Ross. Geological Society of America Bulletin 83(5) : 13151334. May 1972.
1495 Shell Sediment Transport: Process and Pattern. D. J. P. Swift, D. B. Duane, and O.H. Pilkey, eds. Dowden, Hutchinson, and Ross, Inc. Stroudsburg, Penn. 1972. 656 pp.
1496 "Zone of Influence- Inner Continental Shelf of Georgia". Gary N. Bigham. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 43(1). 207-214. March 1973.
ESTUARIES AND SALT MARSHES
1497 Source and Distribution of Sediments at Brunswick Harbor and VIcinity, Georgia. James Neiheisel. Technical Memorandum No. 12. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Coastal Engineering Research Center. Washington, D.C. March 1965.49 pp. NTIS number: AD-620 873.
1498 "Sedimentation in a Meandering Estuary". Lynton S. Land and John H. Hoyt. Sedimentology 6(3) 191-207. 1966. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966. Erosion and deposition in a meandering estuary separating Sapelo and Blackbeard Islands are investigated.
1499 Suspended Sediment Olstrlbutlon of Doboy Sound, Georgia. John S. Levy. Masters thesis, 1968, University of Georgia. viii+ 102 pp.
1500 "Landward Transport of Bottom Sediments in Estuaries of the Atlantic Coastal Plain". Robert H. Meade. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 39(1): 222-234. March 1969.
1501 "A Profile of Biogenic Sedimentary Structures in a Holocene Barrier Island - Salt Marsh Complex, Georgia". Robert W. Frey and James D. Howard. Transactions - Gull Coast Association of Geological Societies 19: 427-444. 1969. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 7, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1969.
1502 "Radiographic Examination of Variations in Barrier Island Facies, Sapelo Island, Georgia". James D. Howard. Transactions - Gull Coast Association of Geological Societies 19: 217-232. 1969.
1503 Geochemistry of Holocene Salt Marsh Deposits In the Vicinity of Sapelo Island,
42
Geology
Georgl8, U.S.A. Rushdi F. Rihani. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia.
1504 "Mineralogy of Sediments in Three Georgia Estuaries". Herbert L. Windom, W. J. Neal, and K. C. Beck. Joumal of Sedimentary Petrology 41(2): 497-504. June 1971.
1505 "Animal-Sediment Relationships in Two Beach-Related Tidal Flats; Sapelo Island, Georgia". James D. Howard and Jurgen Doerjes. Joumal of Sedimentary Petrology 42(3): 608-6?3. September 1972.
1501 lledlment DlffeNntlatlon In the Altamaha River-Estuary-Marine System. Jeffrey Leonard Mitchell. Masters thesis, 1972, Emory University. 74 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1507 Sediment and Macro-lnfaunal Trends in the Altamaha Estuary. George Palmer Burbanck. Masters thesis, 1972, Emory University. 124 pp.
1508 "Shell Deposits and Shell Preservation in Quaternary and Tertiary Estuarine Sediments in Georgia, U.S.A." Harmut U. Wiedemann. Sedimentary Geology 7(2) : 103-125. 1972.
1509 "Characteristic Physical and Biogenic Sedimentary Structures in Georgia Estuaries". James D. Howard and Robert W. Frey. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin 57(7): 1169-1184. July 1973.
1510 "Dynamic Relationship Between Hydraulics and Sedimentation in the Altamaha Estuary". Glenn S. Visher and James D. Howard. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 44(2) : 502-521. June 1974.
1511 "Backshore Heavy-Minerai Concentration on Sapelo Island, Georgia". James R. Woolsey, Vernon J. Henry, and Jesse L. Hunt. Joumal of Sedimentary Petrology 45(1) : 280-284. March 1975.
BEACHES AND ESTUARY ENTRANCES (CHRONOLOGICALLY)
1512 "Beach Sands Between Charleston, South Carolina and Miami, Florida". James H.C. Martens. Bulletin ofthe Geological Society of America 46 : 1563-1596. October 31, 1935.
1513 "High-Angle Beach Stratification, Sapelo Island, Georgia". John H. Hoyt. Joumal of Sedimentary Petrology 32(2) : 309-311. June 1962. Reprint in Collectad Reprints Volume 3. University of Georgia Marine Institute. Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1964. "Foreshore sand bars at Sapelo Island typically have a steep landward slope. Deposition on this slope results in landward movement of the bar. The deposits are characterized by high-angle cross-stratification with dips as steep as 30 degrees".
1514 "Rhomboid Ripple Mark, Indicator of Current Direction and Environment". John H. Hoyt and Vernon J. Henry, Jr. Joumal of Sedimentary Petrology 33(3) : 604-608. September 1963. Reprint in Collected Reprints - Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
1515 "Development and Geologic Significance of Soft Beach Sand". John H. Hoyt and Vernon J. Henry, Jr. Sedimentology 3(1): 44-51. 1984. Reprint in Collected ReprintsVolume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute. Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
1516 "Beach Profiles of a Georgia Barrier Island". Orrin H. Pilkey and Dennis M. Richter. Southeastern Geology 6(1) : 11-19. 1984. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965. "Seasonal beach profiles were obtained from seven stations at the south end of Sapelo
Island, Georgia, during 1963. Except for accreation Isic] at the extreme south tip of the
island, most of the study area is being eroded. Unlike other beaches reported in the literature, the seasonal and observed storm changes of the Sapelo Island beach are slight".
1517 "Eolian Cross-Bedding in the Beach Dune Environment, Sapelo Island, Georgia". Lynton S. Land. Joumal of Sedimentary Petrology 34(2) : 389-394. June 1964. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 4, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1965.
1518 "Atlantic Beach and Dune Sediments of the Southern United States". Robert T. Giles and Orrin H. Pilkey. Joumal of Sedimentary Petrology 35(4) : 900-910. December 1965. Reprint in Collected Reprints -Volume 5, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1966.
1519 "Air and Sand Movement to the Lee of Dunes". John H. Hoyt. Sedimentology 7(2): 137-143. September 1966.
1520 "Occurrence of High-Angle Stratification in Littoral and Shallow Neritic Environments, Central Georgia Coast, U.S.A.". John H. Hoyt. Sedimentology 8: 229-238. 1967. Reprint in Collected Reprints- Volume 6, University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia, 1968.
1521 "Barrier Beaches of Eastern America". Christopher J. Schuberth. Natural History 79(6) : 46-55. June-July 1970. "Man must understand the inconstant nature of surf-washed sand if he wishes his works to endure on these coastal islands".
1522 National Shoreline Study. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 1971. 5 vols. National appraisal of shore erosion and shore protection needs.
1523 "Our Disappearing Beaches". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Joumaland Constitution Magazine June 6, 1971. Pp. 14-16, 18, 21-22. Erosion of Georgia's beaches continues despite stopgap measures. No permanent solution has been found that will cure the problem caused by man's destruction of the natural forces that maintain a beach. Tybee and St. Simons beaches are examined.
1524 Sediment - Hydrodynamic Interrelationships at the Entrance of the Doboy Sound Estuary, Sapelo Island, Georgia. George Frederick Oertel II. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Iowa. 187 pp.
1525 Facies Distribution and Animal-Sediment Relationships In Doboy Sound, A Georgia Estuary. Taylor Vinton Mayou. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, University of Iowa. 234 pp. Distribution of potentially preservable physical and biogenic features observed in Doboy Sound, Georgia, were studied to determine: (1) distribution and type of sediment being deposited, (2) characteristic sedimentary structures preserved in the estuary, (3) distribution of geologically significant macrofauna, (4) distribution of dead shells, and (5) animal-sediment relationships and effect of organisms on the sedimentary record preserved in estuarine sediments.
1526 "Water Circulation and Sedimentation at Estuary Entrances on the Georgia Coast". George F. Oertel II and James D. Howard. In: Shell Sediment Transport: Process and Pattern, D.J.P. Swift. D. B. Duane, and 0. H. Pilkey, eds., Dowden, Hutchinson, and Ross, Inc. Stroudsburg, Penn., 1972, pp. 411-427. "Estuary entrance-shoals extend seaward of all major entrances of the Georgia coast. Orientation and morphology of these shoals occur in response to (a) transient coastal currents controlled by seasonal winds, (b) the relative magnitude of ebb-jets to coastal currents, and (c) hydraulic pressure gradients at entrances."
1527 Pattems of Sediment Transport at Nearshore Zones Influenced by Wave and Tidal Currents: A Study Utilizing Fluorescent Tracers. George F. Oertel. Technical Report Senes. No. 72-7. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. November 1972. 28 pp.
1528 "Sediment Transport of Estuary Entrance Shoals and the Formation of Swash Platforms". George F. Oertel. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 42(4) : 858-863. December 1972.
1529 Observations of Net Shoreline Postilions and Approximations of Barrier Island Sediment Budgets. George F. Oertel. Technical Report Series, No. 73-2. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. February 1973. 23 pp. NTIS number: COM73-10692.
1530 "Examination of Textures and Structures of Mud in Layered Sediments at the Entrance of Georgia Tidal Inlets". George F. Oertel. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 43(1) . 33-41. March 1973.
1531 Sedimentary Framework of the Eroding Beach-Shorefac System, Adjacent to Tybee Island, Georgia. George F. Oertel. Technical Report Series, No. 73-5. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. June 1973. 27 pp.
1532 Pattems of Water Flow and Sediment Dispersion Adjacent to an Eroding Barrier Island [Tybee Island]. George F. Oertel. Technical Report Series, No. 73-9. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. January 1974. 35 pp.
1533 Patterns of Sediment Dispersion on the Shoreline of an Eroding Barrier Island [Tybee Island]. George F. Oertel. Technical Report Series, No. 74-2. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. January 1974. 88 pp.
1534 Hydrographic Framework of the Doboy Sound Estuary and Surveys of the Other Tidal Inlets Along the Coast of Georgia. George F. Oertel. Technical Report Series, No. 74-4. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1974. 61 pp.
1535 Jekyll Island Beach Erosion Control and Hurricane Protection- Feasibility Report. Edwin C. Keiser. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. February 1974. v + 75 pp. + 4 pis.+ appendices. A federal project is recommended for control of beach erosion for the entire ocean shoreline. Construction of a 1000-foot groin, restoration of 27,000 feet of beach, and periodic nourishment of the ocean shoreline are proposed.
1536 "Tight Little Island". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine May 26, 1974. Pp. 16-19-20, 22. After long battering by both the Atlantic Ocean and Savannah Beach politics, Tybee Island is starting to make a comeback. Restoration of its beach may lead the way.
1537 "A Review of the Sedimentologic Role of Dunes in Shoreline Stability, Georgia Coast". George F. Oertel. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 32: 48-56. 1974.
1538 "Georgia's Coast Gets a Brand-New Island". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine March 16, 1975. Pp. 12-14, 19. A two-mile long island, recently formed off the coast of Chatham County, is described. The new barrier island has a wide beach, sand dunes, and marshes much like its older neighbors.
1539 "Savannah Gets a New Beach - But Will It Last?" Lucy Justus. Atlanta Joumaland Constitution Magazine October 12, 1975. Pp. 34-36,38,40. A look at the beach restoration and erosion-control project of the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers on Tybee island.
43
Geology
HIGHLANDS
1540 "The Georgia Highland". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral NewsleHer 9(3) : 91-104. 1956. Geological aspects of the north Georgia mountain province are discussed. The area includes all or parts of Rabun, Towns, Union, Fannin; Murray, Gilmer, Pickens, Dawson, Lumpkin, White and Habersham counties.
1541 Studies of Appalachian Geology: Central and Southern. George W. Fisher et a/., eds. lnterscience Publishers. New York. 1970. xx + 460 pp. Twenty-five papers examine recent work in the Appalachians. Five papers deal with the stratigraphy and sedimentation of the Valley and Ridge and the Appalachian Plateau, five more examine the structure and tectonics of the same regions; six papers look at the geology of the Blue Ridge; and nine deal with the Piedmont. For each of the four sections there is a short introduction.
1542 "Recent Trends in Thought and Research on Southern Appalachian Tectonics". Robert D. Hatcher, Jr. Southeastern Geology 14(3): 131-151. 1972.
1543 The Tectonics of the Appalachians. John Rodgers. Wiley-lnterscience. New York. 1970. xiv + 271 pp.
1544 Tectonics of the Southern Appalachians. W. D. Lowry, ed. Memoir No. 1. Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Department of Geological Sciences. Blacksburg, Va. 1964. [iv] + 114 pp.
1545 An Introduction to the Blue Ridge Tectonic History of Northeast Georgia. Robert D. Hatcher, Jr. Guidebook No. 13-A, Georgia Geological Society. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1974. vi+ 60 pp. Includes geologic map of Rabun County and surrounding area.
1546 "Stockwork Tectonics in the Appalachian Piedmont of South Carolina and Georgia". Villard S. Griffin. Geologlsche Rundschau 60(3): 868-886. June 1971.
1547 "Comparative Tectonics of Some Alpine and Southern Appalachian Structures". J. Robert Butler. Southeastern Geology 12(4): 203-221. 1971.
1548 "Developmental Model for the Southern Appalachians". Robert D. Hatcher, Jr. Geological Society of America Bulletin 83(9) : 2735-2760. September 1972. "A developmental model is proposed for the southern Appalachians. This model integrates current ideas on structure, sedimentation, metamorphism, and igneous activity with the concept of plate tectonics".
1549 "Geomorphology of the Southern Appalachians". Charles Willard Hayes and Marius R. Campbell. National Geographic 6 : 63-126. May 23, 1894.
1550 Cambrian System of the Southern Appalachians. Charles Elmer Resser. Special Paper No. 15. Geological Society of America. 1938. viii+ 140 pp.
1551 "The Base of the Cambrian in the Southern Appalachians". Philip B. King. American Journal of Science 247 . 513-530, 622-645. August 1949.
1552 "Basement Versus Cover Rocks in the Blue Ridge of Northeast Georgia, Northwestern South Carolina, and Adjacent North Carolina". Robert D. Hatcher. American Journal of Science 273(8) : 671-685. October 1973.
1553 "Geology of the Southern Blue Ridge Belt". Vernon J. Hurst. American Journal of Science 273(8): 643-670. October 1973. The Southern Blue Ridge Belt in Georgia lies between the Brevard Zone and the Cartersville Fault. This includes all of the Georgia Highlands region and a part of the Piedmont.
1554 "The Inner Piedmont Belt of the Southern Crystalline Appalachians". Villard S. Griffin, Jr. Geological Society of American Bulletin 82(7): 1885-1898. July 1971.
1555 "Structure of the Metamorphic Belt of the Southern Appalachians". Anna I. Jonas. American Journal of Science [Fifth series] 24(141) 228-243. September 1932.
1556 Geology of the Highlands - Cashiers Area, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Joseph Michael McKniff. Doctoral dissertation, 1967, Rice University.
1557 "Ocoee Series of the Southern Appalachians". George W. Stose and Anna J. Stose. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 60 . 267-320. February 1949. The Ocoee Series in Georgia lies principally within Cherokee, Pickens, Gilmer, and Fannin Counties.
1558 "Chilhowee Group and Ocoee Series of the Southern Appalachians". George W. Stose and Anna J. Stose. American Journal of Science 242(7) . 367-390, 401-416. July 1944.
1559 Ocoee Metasediments, North Central Georgia- Southeast Tennessee; Field Excursion. Vernon J. Hurst and J. S. Schlee. Guidebook No. 3, Annual Meeting, Geological Society of America, Southeastern Section. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. 1962. 28 pp. + fold-out map. Summary of knowledge regarding the stratigraphy of the Ocoee rocks of western Fannin County, Georgia and Polk County, Tennessee. Includes road log.
1560 Geology and Ore Deposits of the Ducktown Mining District, Tennessee. W. H. Emmons and F. B. Laney. Professional Paper 139. U. S. Geological Survey. 1926. vi + 114
pp. + 4 plates in pocket. Part of the Ducktown district lies within Fannin County, Georgia.
1561 Mineral Resources of the Appalachian Region. U. S. Geological Survey and U. S. Bureau of Mines. U. S. G. S. Professional Paper No. 580. U. S. Geological Survey. 1968. 492 pp.
1562 Mineral Resources of Union, Towns, Lumpkin and White Counties, Georgia [Map]. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. Atlanta. 1950. Scale 1 : 63,360.
1563 "Stratigraphy and Paleogeography in the Murphy Marble Belt". W. Robert Power and Joseph T. Forrest. American Journal of Science 273(8) : 698-711. October 1973.
1564 "Blue Ridge Front- A Fault Scarp". William A. White. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 61 : 1309-1346. December 1950. "The present Blue Ridge scarp seems to have been produced by a late Tertiary normal fault- the Blue Ridge border fault. Evidence of its existence can be found along an almost strarght line extending about 700 miles from the vicinity of Gainesville, Georgia to northwestern New Jersey".
1565 Ultramafic and Related Rocks In the Vicinity of Lake Chatuge. Marvin E. Hartley Ill. Bulletin No. 85. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey). 1973. ix + 61 pp. + 1 map in pocket. The structure, petrography, and economic geology of certain basic rocks in Towns County are described.
1566 The Lake Chatuge Sill Outlining the Brasstown Antiform. M. Eugene Hartley Ill and H. Michael Penley. Guidebook No. 13, Georgia Geological Society. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1974. [ii] + 27 pp. Guidebook to field trip investigating the Lake Chatuge ultramafic sill. Its origin, development, and significance are described.
1567 "River Capture in the Tallulah District, Georgia". Douglas Wilson Johnson. Science (n.s.) 25 428-432. March 1907. A discussion of evidence supporting the theory of a "river capture" in the upper Savannah River drainage. According to this theory, the Tallulah and Chattooga rivers once flowed into the Chattahoochee.
1568 "Drainage Modifications in the Tallulah District." Douglas Wilson Johnson. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History 33 : 211-248. 1907. Stream capture in the Tallulah area is studied.
NORTHWEST GEORGIA
1569 Geology and Mineral Resources of the Paleozoic Area In Northwest Georgia. Charles Butts and Benjamin Gildersleeve. Bulletin No. 54. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1948. xii + 176 pp. + 1 fold. sheet+ 2 maps in pocket. Concerns all of Dade, Catoosa, Walker, Whitfield, Chattooga and Floyd counties and most of Murray, Gordon, Bartow, and Polk.
1570 The Paleozoic Group; The Geology of Ten Counties of Northwestern Georgia. J. W. Spencer. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1893. 402 pp. Describes geological and physical characteristics, economic geology, and soils of Polk, Floyd, Bartow, Gordon, Murray, Whitfield, Catoosa, Chattooga, Walker, and Dade counties.
1571 Geology of the Crystalline Rocks and of the Paleozoic Area of Northwest Georgia. Robert 0. Vernon et a/. [Guidebook to] Seventh Field Trip. Southeastern Geological Society. Tallahassee, Fla. 1951. iv + 41 pp.
1572 The Carbonate Rocks In the Coosa Valley Area, Georgia. William H. Mclemore and Vernon J. Hurst. Coosa Valley Area Planning and Development Commission and U. S. Department of Commerce, Economic Development Administration. Rome, Georgia and Washington, D. C. 1970. ix + 170 pp.
1573 "Minerals and Geology of 10 Counties of Northwest Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(8) : 4-7. 1948.
1574 Northwest Georgia Area- Mines, Quarries, and Prospects. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology and Tennessee Valley Authority. Atlanta. 1946. Scale 1 : 250,000.
1575 Contributions to the Paleontology of Northwest Georgia. A. T. Allen and J. G. Lester. Bulletin No. 62. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1954. vi+ 166 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1576 Sedimentary Environments In the Paleozoic Rocks of Northwest Georgia. T. M. Chowns, comp. Guidebook 11, 7th Annual Field Trip, Georgia Geological Society. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Division of Earth and Water Resources (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1972. vi+ 102 pp.
1577 The Geology of the Sand - Lookout Mountain Area, Northwest Georgia. John Wentworth Sullivan. Information Circular 15. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Division of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1942. (ii] + 68 pp.
1578 Pennsylvanian Stratigraphy of the Northern Part of Sand Mountain, Alabama, Geor gla, and Tennessee. Robert Lake Wilson. Doctoral dissertation, 1967, University of Tennessee.
44
Geology
1579 "The Petrology of Lower Pennsylvanian Sewanee Sandstone, Lookout Mountain, Alat>ama and Georgia". Chih Shan Chen and H. Grant Goodell. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 34(1): 46-72. March 1964.
1580 Pennsylvanian Sediments In Northwest Georgia. Ernest Wilroy Renshaw. Masters thesis, 1951, Emory University. vii + 64 pp.
1581 "Pennsylvanian Nomenclature in Northwest Georgia". William C. Culbertson. In: Geological Survey Research 1962, Professional Paper 450-E, U. S. Geological Survey, 1963; pp. E51E57. "Published reports give four different nomenclatures for the rocks of Early Pennsylvanian age in northwest Georgia. The purpose of this article is to rename the rock units of Georgia according to their correlation with the rock units of Tennessee, and to show their correlation with the equivalent rocks in the adjacent part of Alabama."
1582 Ths Geology and Geochemistry of the Mississippian System In Northwest Georgia and Southeast Tennessee. William Hickman McLemore. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia.
1583 The Detailed Paleontology and Stratigraphy of the Mississippian System of Lookout Mountain In Tennessee. Robert Malcolm Crisler. Masters thesis, 1954, Emory University. viii + 69 pp.
1584 The Detailed Stratigraphy and Paleontology of the Mississippian System of the Area Between Cooper Heights and Trenton, Georgia. William Halsell Moore, Jr. Masters thesis, 1954, Emory University. viii+ 53 pp. The area investigated lies in Dade and Walker Counties. Ga.
1585 Ths Stratigraphy, Paleontology, and Structure of the Mississippian System In Ringgold Quadrangle, Georgia. Steve R. Windham. Masters thesis, 1956, Emory University. viii + 92 pp. + 2 maps in pocket.
1586 Zonation of the Mississippian Strata In the VIcinity of Pigeon Mountain In Northwest Georgia. Garland Edgar Wheeler. Masters thesis, 1954, Emory University. viii + 58 pp.
1587 "Mississippian Reef Structures in Northwest Georgia". Vaux Owen, Jr. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 13: 128-131. 1955.
1586 Stratigraphy of the Lower Devonian Rocks of Northwestern Georgia. Walter Edward Nunan. Masters thesis, 1971, Emory University. 88 pp.
1589 "Palinspastic Map of Devonian Strata of Alabama and Northwest Georgia". John D. Kieler and John M. Dennison. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin 56(1) : 161-166. January 1972.
1590 Pre-Chattanooga Devonian Stratigraphy of Alabama and Northwest Georgia. John David Kiefer. Doctoral dissertation, 1970, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign.
1591 The Geology of the Silurian Red Mountain Formation from Taylor Ridge to Horn Mountain. Lee Sayles Truxes. Masters thesis, 1956, Emory University. vii +50 pp.
1592 Depositional Features of the Silurian Red Mountain Formation In Northwest Georgia. George Marion Lamb. Masters thesis. 1954, Emory University. vi + 45 pp.
1593 A Facies Study of the Red Mountain Formation of Northwestern Georgia. Walter Lee Sandlin, Jr. Masters thesis, 1960. Emory University. vi + 78 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1594 Zonation of the Middle and Upper Ordovician Strata In North-stern Georgia. Arthur T. Allen and James G. Lester. Bulletin No. 66. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1957. viii+ 110 pp. + 1 plate in pocket. Beds of Ordovician strata are correlated with previously defined formations. Five belts of these strata are mapped and measured. Concerns portions of Catoosa. Chattooga, Dade, Gordon. Walker, and Whitfield counties.
1595 Paleontology and Stratigraphy of the Middle and Upper Ordovician Limestone In Rabbit Valley, Georgia. Robert Edward Murphy. Masters thesis, 1953, Emory University. xi + 96 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1596 Paleontology and Stratigraphy of the Ordovician. Limestones In the Chattanooga Valley, Georgia. Ernest Louis Vest, Jr. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory University. ix + 125 pp.
1597 A Guide to the Stratigraphy of the Chickamauga Supergroup In Its Type Area. Robert C. Milici and James W. Smith. Georgia Geological Society Guidebook 8. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1969.
1598 Stratigraphy and Uranium Content of the Chattanooga Shale In Northeastern Alabama, Northwestern Georgia, and Eastern Tennessee. Lynn Glover. Bulletin 1087-E. U. S. Geological Survey. 1959. iv + 33 pp. + 5 plates in pocket.
1599 "Physiography of the Chattanooga District, in Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama". C. W. Hayes. In: Nineteenth Annual Report, 1897-98, Part 2, U. S. Geological Survey, 1898, pp. 1-58.
1600 Bauxite Deposits of Northwest Georgia. Walter S. White et al. Bulletin 1199-M. U.S. Geological Survey. 1966. iv + 42 pp. + 3 maps in pocket. The geology, history, and production of deposits in the Hermitage. Bobo, and Cave Spring areas of Floyd, Bartow, and Polk Counties are summarized. Several deposits in Chattooga and Walker Counties are studied in lesser detail.
1601 Sulfide Deposits In the Coosa Valley Area, Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst and T. J. Crawford. Coosa Valley Area Planning and Development Commission. Rome. March 1970. 190 pp.
1602 "A Contribution to the Petrography of the Silurian Iron Ores of Northwest Georgia". Richard C. Fountain. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(3): 114-116. 1960.
1603 Red lronOre Beds of Silurian Age In Northeastern Alabem., Northwestern Georgi., and Eastern Tennessee. Jesse W. Whitlow. Mineral Investigations Field Studies Map MF-175. U.S. Geological Survey. 1962. 1 : 250,000. 2 sheets.
1604 "Large Springs in Northwestern Georgia". J. T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11 (3) : 80-86. 1958. The origin and quality of water from springs in the area are examined. Location, temperature, and flow of each are indicated.
1605 "The Tertiary History of the Tennessee River". Douglas Wilson Johnson. Journal of Geology 13: 194-231. April-May 1905. Did the Tennessee River flow into the Coosa River during the Tertiary cycle, prior to capture by a stream to its west? The evidence for this theory and evidence for an alternative theory are reviewed.
1606 The Geology of the Conasauga Formation In the VIcinity of Ranger, Georgia. William LaRue Smith. Masters thesis, 1958, Emory University. viii+ 27 pp.
1607 The Stratigraphy of the Conasauga Group In the VIcinity of Adairsville, Georgia. Karlis Spalvins. Masters thesis, 1967, Emory University. viii + 62 pp.
1606 Geology of an Area Along the Cartersville Fault near Fairmount, Georgia. James William Smith. Masters thesis, 1959, Emory University. vii+ 41 pp. + 2 maps in pocket.
1609 A Detailed Petrographic Study of the Paleozoic Sediments In the Area of Fairmount, Georgia. Alfred Wright Stuart. Masters thesis, 1956, Emory University. [viii] + 33 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1610 The Cartersville Fault Problem. Robert D. Bentley eta/. Guidebook No.4, 1st Annual Field Trip, Georgia Geological Society. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. 1966. [iv] + 38 pp. Field guide to the Cartersville Fault of northwestern Georgia. The undetermined course of the fault in the area east and southeast of the town of Cartersville is the problem here described.
1611 "Graded Bedding, A Clue to the Existence of the Cartersville Fault". James W. Smith. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(2) :53-54. 1957.
1612 A Portion of the Rome Fault of Northwest Georgia. Kenneth Frederick Reighard. Masters thesis. 1963, Emory University. vii+ 65 pp.
1813 Precambrian - Paleozoic Appalachian Problema. [A. S. Furcron, Ed.]. Bulletin No. 80. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey ). 1969. vi + 139 pp. + 2 fold. maps. Five papers on the structure, stratigraphy, and lithology of the state's oldest rocks: (1) "Stratigraphy of the Chickamauga Supergroup in Its Type Area (NW Ga.]" by R. C. Milici and J. W. Smith; (2) "Stratigraphy and Structure of an Area in the Vicinity of Adairsville. Georgia" by K. Spa ivins; (3) "Late Precambrian and Early Paleozoic Erosional and Depositional Sequences of Northern and Central Virginia [correlation with Georgia]" by A. S. Furcron; (4) "Stratigraphy and Structure of the Murphy Marble Belt in Parts of Northern Georgia" by W. M. Fairley; and (5) "Isotopic Dating and Metamorphic !sograds of the Crystalline Rocks of Georgia" by J. W. Smith, J. M. Wampler, and M. A. Green.
PIEDMONT
1614 Geology of the Crystalline Rocks of Georgia. Geoffrey W. Crickmay. Bulletin No. 58. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1952. vi + 56 pp. The stratigraphy, the structural geology, and the character of the rocks are described. The crystalline rock area is that of the Piedmont and the Highlands physiographic provinces.
1615 "The Piedmont in Georgia". Vernon J. Hurst. In: Studies of Appalachian Geology: Central and Southern, George W. Fisher eta/., eds.. lnterscience Publishers. New York, 1970, pp. 383-396. Work completed since publication of the geologic map of Georgia by Stose and Smith in 1939 requires revision of earlier concepts. Presented here is "a working summary of major stratigraphic, tectonic, metamorphic, and chronologie concepts derived from the recent work. most of which is unpublished".
1616 "Correlations of Stratigraphic Belts of the Northwest Georgia Piedmont and Blue Ridge". William M. Fairley. American Journal of Science 273(8) : 686-697. October 1973.
1617 Stratigraphic and Structural Features Between tha Cartersville and Brevard Fault Zones. Thomas J. Crawford and Jack H. Medlin. [Guidebook lor] 5th Annual Field Trip [Guidebook No.9]. Georgia Geological Society. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1970. (iii]+ 37 pp.
1618 "The Western Georgia Piedmont Between the Cartersville and Brevard Fault Zones". Thomas J. Crawford and Jack H. Medlin. American Journal of Science 273(8): 712-722.
45
Geology
October 1973. Stratigraphy and structure of the Piedmont of western Georgia is discussed. This area is roughly that of the counties Carroll, Haralson, Paulding, Douglas, and the northern part of Heard.
1619 Brevard Faull Zone In Western Georgia and Eastern Alabama by Thomas J. Crawford and Jack H. Medlin [and] Tertiary Stratigraphy of the Central Georgia Coastal Plain by Paul F. Huddleston, W. E. Marsalis, and S.M. Pickering, Jr. Guidebook 12, Geological Society of America Southeastern. Section Annual Meeting. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1974. vi+ 67 + iv + 35 pp. + [5] plates in pocket.
1620 The Geology of the Brevard Lineament near Atlanta, Georgia. Michael W. Higgins. Bulletin No. 77. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). [1966]. vi+ 49 pp. + 1 map in pocket. The Brevard zone is conspicuous as a topographic feature crossing Georgia in a generally northeast-southwest direction. In the Atlanta area, the Chattahoochee River follows the course of this zone. The area studied here covers portions of Fulton, Cobb, Douglas, and Carroll counties.
1621 Geologic Map of the Brevard Fault Zone Near Atlanta, Georgia. Michael W. Higgins. Miscellaneous Geologic Investigations Map 1-511. U.S. Geological Survey. 1968. 1 :48,000.
1622 The Brevard Zone of Northeasternmost Georgia. Robert Grady Pruitt. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory Umversity. viii+ 71 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1623 Physiography and Climatology of the Atlanta Area. Carlyle J. Roberts, ed. Bulletin No. 24. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. Atlanta. 1960. 59 pp.
1624 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of the Atlanta Area, Georgia. S. M. Herrick and H. E. LeGrand. Bulletin No. 55. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1949. viii + 124 pp. + 2 maps in pocket. Concerns the following counties: Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Douglas, Fulton, Gwinnett, and Rockdale.
1625 Water Resources of the Atlanta Metropolitan Area. R. W. Carter and S. M. Herrick. Circular 148. U.S. Geological Survey. 1951. iv + 19 pp. + 2 maps in pocket.
1626 Emergency Water Supplies for the Atlanta Area in a National Disaster [Map]. J. W. Stewart and S. M. Herrick. Special Publication No. 1. Georgia Geological Survey and U.S. Geological Survey. 1963.
1627 "Water for Atlanta". Lawrence E. Newcomb and Joseph T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(1): 1-9. 1960.
1628 Groundwater of the Piedmont and Blue Ridge Provinces In the Southeastern States. H. E. LeGrand. Circular 538. U.S. Geological Survey. 1967 (Reprinted 1973). 11 pp.
1629 "The Quality of the Ground Water, and its Problems, in the Crystalline Rocks of Georgia". Joseph T. Callahan and Harry E. Blanchard, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(3-4): 66-72. 1963.
1630 Studies of Saprolite and Its Relation to the Migration and Occurrence of Groundwater In Crystalline Rocks. J. Hatten Howard, Ill. Report No. ERC-0473. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. June 1973. 31 pp. NTIS number: PB-222 002. "A zone of low-permeability has developed within the mantle of weathered rock material on many of the igneous and metamorphic crystalline rocks of the Georgia Piedmont. This layer of low-permeability, often termed a hardpan, retards water infiltration and, during times of heavy precipitation, may cause a heavy runoff. This project studies the nature of the zone and its relationship to the low-permeability".
1631 "Sheet Structure, A Major Factor in the Occurrence of Ground Water in the Granites of Georgia". Harry E. LeGrand. Economic Geology 44(2) : 110-118. March-April 1949. Ground water in the Piedmont of Georgia occurs partly as a result of the sheet structure of the granitic rocks which underly the region.
1632 "Ground-Water Conduits in the Ashland Mica Schist, Northern Georgia". C. W. Sever. In: Geological Survey Research 1964, Professional Paper 501-D, U. S. Geological Survey, 1964, pp. D141-D143.
1633 "The Mineral Industry of the Atlanta Metropolitan Area". Avery H. Reed, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletler 14(1): 26-27. 1961.
1634 Socioeconomic Aspects of Mining In Selected Cities: Urbanization and Surtace MinIng, Atlanta, Ga. R. R. French, A. W. Stuart, and D. H. White. Information Circular 8477. U. S. Bureau of Mines. 1970. 50 pp. Conflicts between the Atlanta area's crushed stone industry and the expansion of the metropolis are examined.
1635 Mines and Prospects of the Chattahoochee - Flint Area, Georgia. Sumner Long. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. 1971. x + 143 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Concerns the following counties: Carroll, Coweta, Harris, Heard, Meriwether, Pike, Talbot, Troup, and Upson.
1636 Geochemical Study of Alluvium In the Chattahoochee-Flint Area, Georgia. Vernon
J. Hurst and Sumner Long. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. 1971. vi + 52 pp. + 4 plates in pocket. Approximately 2000 alluvial samples were collected and analyzed for copper, zinc, and lead. The possibilities of new deposits of these metals in the area are discussed.
1637 Gold Deposits of the Southern Piedmont J. T. Pardee and C. F. Park, Jr. Professional Paper 213. U.S. Geological Survey. 1948. viii + 156 pp. + 45 plates in pocket. History, character, and occurrence. Descriptions of mines in Bartow, Cherokee, Dawson, Lincoln. Lumpkin, McDuffie, Paulding, and White Counties. Includes "fairly complete" bibliography.
1638 Mica Depoalts of the Southeastern Piedmont. Part 1. General Features. Richard H. Jahns, Wallace R. Griffitts, and E. W. Heinrich. Professional Paper 248-A. U.S. Geological Survey. 1952. vi+ 102 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1639 Mica Deposits of the Southeastern Piedmont. Part 7. Hartwell District, Georgia and South Carolina. Part 8, Outlying Deposits In South Carolina. Wallace R. Griffitts and Jerry C. Olson. Professional Paper 248-E. U.S. Geological Survey. 1953. iv + [32] pp. + 2 maps in pocket.
1640 Mica Deposits of the Southeastern Piedmont. Part 9. Thomaston-Barneavllle District, Georgia. Part 10. Outlying Deposits In Georgia. E. W. Heinrich, M. R. Klepper, and R. H. Jahns. Professional Paper 248-F. U. S. Geological Survey. 1953. vi + [73] pp. + 16 maps in pocket.
1641 Fluvial Monazite Deposits In the Southeastern United States. William C. Overstreet eta/. Professional Paper 568. U. S. Geological Survey. 1968. vi + 85 pp. + 9 plates in pocket. Georgia deposits studied are in: Oconee, Clarke, Oglethorpe, Barrow, and Jackson Counties in the basin of the Oconee River; Spalding and Pike Counties in the basin of th!' Flint River; and Troup, Meriwether, and Harris Counties in the basin of the Chattahoochee River.
1642 "Diabase of the Georgia Piedmont". James G. Lester and A. T. Allen. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 61 : 1217-1224. November 1950. Fifty-seven new diabase dikes are mapped.
1643 "The Elberton Batholith". Lawrence D. Ramspott. Southeastern Geology 5(4): 223230. 1964. The Elberton batholith is a granitic rock mass underlying over 900 square miles of the eastcentral Georgia Piedmont (all or parts of Elbert, Oglethorpe, Greene, Hancock, Wilkes and Lincoln Counties).
1644 "Granite Pedestal Rocks in the Southern Appalachian Piedmont". Geoffrey W. Crickmay. Journal of Geology 43(7) : 745-758. October-November 1935. Pedestal rocks of granite, often resembling mushrooms, are common in the southern Appalachian Piedmont. They are formed chiefly by granular disintegration initiated by expansion through hydration. This process occurs more readily on the lower slopes of the rock because rain waters there do not evaporate as quickly as the water on the top which is more exposed than the lower slopes to the direct rays of the sun.
1645 "Radioactivity on Southeastern Granite Outcrops". J. Frank McCormick and David J. Cotter. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 22( 1) : 2Q-28. January 1964.
1646 "Natural Gamma Radiation in Northeast and East-Central Georgia". Jerry C. Ritchie and Gayther L. Plummer. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 27(4) : 173194. September 1969.
1647 "Zeolites in the Georgia Piedmont". L. D. Ramspott. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 25(1): 18-25. January 1967.
1648 "Effect of Buford Reservoir on Flow of Chattahoochee River at Atlanta". R. W. Carter. In: Short Contributions to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia -II, Bulletin No. 60, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1953, pp. 161-167.
1649 "Reregulation of Impounded Water, Chattahoochee River, Ga." Benjamin M. Hall, Jr. Journal- American Water Works Association 51(1): 33-42. January 1959. On reregulation of Chattahoochee River flows between Buford Dam (Lake Lanier) and Atlanta.
1650 "A Morphometric Analysis of Some Piedmont Sub-Regions". James F. Woodruff. Southeastern Geographer 3 : 17-24. 1963. Quantitative analysis generally bears out Laurence La Forge's concept of the sub-regional physiography of the Georgia Piedmont.
1651 Morphometric Analysis of Drainage Basin Characteristics on the Georgia Piedmont. Thomas J. Gergel. Masters thesis, 1964, University of Georgia. vi+ 178 pp.
1652 "Influence of Lithology and Structure on the Course of the Upper Oconee River". Eldon J. Parizek. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 12: 110-114. 1954.
1653 "Influence of Underlying Rock Structures on Valley Profiles in the Georgia Piedmont". James F. Woodruff and Eldon J. Parizek. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 46(1). 129-139. March 1956. Studies in the Georgia Piedmont suggest that lithology and structure strongly influence valley shapes and stream courses. This is in opposition to generally accepted assumptions.
1654 Quantitative Characteristics of Drainage Basins In the Delineation of Geomorphic
46
;"':J.P.~'f-.. ,";
Geology
Regions. Leonard Jesse Evenden. Masters thesis, 1962, University of Georgia. ix + 111 pp. The Piedmont of Georgia is studied.
1655 Drainage Buln Shape AI a Meuurement of Physiographic DIHerences. Robert Wilson Millians. Master thesis, 1963, University of Georgia. 103 pp.
1656 Morphometries of Drainage Basins of Diverse Physiographic Provinces. Russell Robert Hassemer. Masters thesis, 1963, University of Georgia. 106 pp.
1657 Channel Geometry of Piedmont Streams as Related to Frequency of Floods. F. A. Kilpatrick and H. H. Barnes, Jr. Professional Paper 422-E. U. S. Geological Survey. 1964. iv + 10 pp.
1656 Tracing Stormflow to Varying Source Areas In a Small, Forested Watershed In the Southeastern Piedmont. Wilhelm G. A. Tischendorf. Doctoral dissertation, 1969, University of Georgia. 127 pp.
1659 Petrology of Southeastern Piedmont River Sands, Georgia, South Carolina, and Norlh Carolina. Thomas Lawrence Burnett. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, Texas A & M University. The petrology of certain sands from the Altamaha, Ogeechee, Savannah, Santee, PeeDee, and Cape Fear rivers is examined.
1660 "Apparent Absence of Soil Creep in the Georgia Piedmont". Eldon J. Parizek and James F. Woodruff. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 67: 1111-1116. August 1956.
1661 A Gravity Survey of the South-Central Georgia Piedmont. Robert H. Carpenter and Preston Prather. Information Circular 42. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1971. [iv] + 16 pp.
1662 The Pre-Recent Sediments and Surfaces of the Georgia Piedmont. Howard Willis Dennis. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia.
1663 Some Highlights of the Cretaceous and Crystalline Terranes of Georgia. Howard Ross Cramer and Willard H. Grant. Guidebook, 11th Field Trip. Southeastern Geological Society. Tallahassee, Fla. 1965. vi + 37 pp. In three parts: (1) "Survey of the Exposed Cretaceous Rocks of Georgia" with itinerary of field trip from Lumpkin to Columbus, (2) "Survey of the Metamorphic Rocks between Columbus and Woodbury" with itinerary of field trip, and (3) "Survey of the Geology of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia, Georgia, Area" with itinerary of field trip.
1664 Ultramafic Plutons In the Central Piedmont of Georgia. David Cureton Prowell. Masters thesis, 1972, Emory University. 83 pp.
1665 The Geologic History of Muslve Sulfide Bodies In West-Central Georgia. Robert Bigham Cook, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia.
COUNTIES
Baker
1666 Geophysical Exploration on the Coastal Plain of Georgia In Baker County, Georgia. DonaldS. McClain. Masters thesis, 1953, Emory University. v + 41 pp.
Baldwin
1667 "Lyell' Gully, A Record of a Century of Erosion". H. Andrew Ireland. Journal of Geology 47(1): 47-63. 1939. In 1846 Sir Charles Lyell described a large, actively eroding gully about 3'1> miles west of Milledgeville. The gully was 20 years old when he saw it. With photographs and statements which give subsequent information on the gully since 1846, the author presents a documented history of over 110 years of erosion.
Bartow
1668 Geology and Ground Water Resources of Bartow County, Georgia. M. G. Croft. Water-Supply Paper 1619-FF. U. S. Geological Survey. 1963. iv + 32 pp. + 1 plate in pocket.
1669 Geology and Mineral Deposits of the Cartersville District, Georgia. Thomas L. Kesler. Professional Paper 224. U.S. Geological Survey. 1950. vi + 97 pp. + 19 plates. The district contains residual deposits of barite, manganese oxides. brown iron, ocher, umber, and primary bedded deposits of specular hematite.
1670 "Structure and Ore Deposition at Cartersville, Georgia". Thomas L. Kesler. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers 144 : 276-293. 1941.
1671 Structure and Ore Deposition at Cartersville, Georgia. Thomas L. Kesler. Technical Publication No. 1226. American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. New York. 1940. )8 pp.
1672 Mineral Exploration of the Allatoona Dam (Ga.) Quadrangle. L. W. Elston eta/. Project E-100-572. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta. 1970. 36 pp.
1673 Barite and Ocher In the Cartersville (Ga.) District. W. M. Weigel. Report of lnvesti-
gations 2477. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1923. 11 pp. Descnbes properties, mining and processing methods, and uses.
1674 Investigation of the Hermitage Bauxite District, Bartow and Floyd Counties, Ga. Walter T. Leweicki. Report of Investigations 4577. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1949. 10 pp.
1675 Iron Ores of the Cartersville District, Georgia. C. W. Hayes and E. C. Eckel. Bulletin 213. U. S. Geological Survey. 1903. Pp. 233-242.
1676 Reconnaissance of the Cartersville Manganese Deposits, Bartow County, Georgia. J. F. O'Neill and C. E. Wyndham. Report of Investigations 5017. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1954. 65 pp.
1677 Investigations of the Cartersville Manganese District, Bartow County, Ga. A. L. Peyton and Walter T. Leweicki. Report of Investigations 4539. U. S. Bureau of Mines. 1949. 32 pp.
1678 ..Sienna ("Ocher.. ) Deposits of the Cartersville District, Georgia... Thomas L. Kesler. Economic Geology 34(3) : 324-341. May 1939.
1679 .. When Pleistocene Animals Roamed in Georgia". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 23, 1975. Pp. 10, 13, 32-34. Ladd's Mountain near Cartersville, the site of the state's largest known assemblage of Pleistocene fossils, is examined.
Bibb
1680 Mineral Resources of Bibb County, Georgia. James E. Callahan. Project A-436. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. 1960. 29 pp.
Brooks
1681 .. Limestones Exposed in the Lower Withlacoochee Valley of Georgia". Charles W. Fortson, Jr. Southeastern Geology 1(2) : 73-76. 1959. At least two limestones, the Suwannee and the Tampa, are exposed along the Withlacoochee R1ver and in nearby sink holes in Brooks and Lowndes Counties.
Burke
1682 .. Piezometric Levels in the Cretaceous Sand Aquifer of the Savannah River Basin". George E. Siple. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(4) : 163-166. 1960. A water-bearing sand is described in an area that includes Burke and Richmond counties.
Calhoun
1683 ..Summary of the Ground-Water Resources of Calhoun County, Georgia". Robert L. Wait. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(1): 26-31. 1960.
Catoosa
1684 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Catoosa County, Georgia. Charles W. Cressler. Information Circular 28. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1963. 19 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1665 Geology of the Ringgold, Georgia Area. Arthur T. Allen, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1950, University of Colorado.
Charlton
1686 Summary Report on the Geology and Mineral Resources of the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, Ga. Jack E. Smedley. Bulletin 1260-N. U. S. Geological Survey. 1968. 10 pp.
1687 Airborne Radioactivity Survey in the Folkston Area, Charlton County, Georgia, and Nassau County, Florida. A. M. Moxham. Geophysical Investigations Map GP-119. U. S. Geological Survey. 1954. 1 62,500.
Chatham
1688 Stratigraphy and Economic Geology of the Eastern Chatham County Phosphate Deposit. James W. Furlow. Bulletin No. 82. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology (Geological Survey). 1969. iv + 40 pp. + 10 fold. plates. Study of the probable effects of mining on the artesian aquifer system of coastal Chatham County and estimates of the extent, depth, grade, volume, and value of the phosphate matrix there.
1689 Report on the Proposed Leasing of State-Owned Lands for Phosphate Mining. University System of Georgia, Advisory Committee for Mineral Leasing in the Coastal Area. Atlanta. November 1968. [approx. 200] pp. The environmental and economic effects of proposed phosphate mining in Chatham County are predicted.
47
Geology
1690 "The Marshes of Chatham". George T. Bagby. Georgia Game and Fish 3(12) : 4-9. December 1968. Statement on the proposed mining of phosphates in Chatham County's coastal marshlands.
1691 "Notes on the Position of a Phosphate Zone and Its Relation to Ground Water in Coastal Georgia". R. L. Wait. In: Geological Survey Research 1970, Professional Paper 700-C, U.S. Geological Survey, 1970, pp..C202-C205.
1692 Salt-Water Encroachment, Geology, and Ground-Water Resources of Savannah Area, Georgia and South Carolina. Harlan B. Counts and Ellis Dansky. Water-Supply Paper 1611. U.S. Geological Survey. 1963. vi+ 100 pp. + 6 plates in pocket.
1693 "Salt-Water Encroachment, Geology, and Ground-Water Resources of Savannah Area, Georgia and South Carolina - A Summary". Harlan B. Counts and Ellis Dansky. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(3) : 96-102. 1959.
1694 "Salt Water Encroachment into the Principal Artesian Aquifer in the Savannah Area, Georgia and South Carolina". Harlan B. Counts. Journal Southeastern Division American Water Works Association 24(1): 25-50. 1960.
1695 Relation of Salt-Water Encroachment to the Major Aquifer Zones, Savannah Area, Georgia and South Carolina. M. J. McCollum and H. B. Counts. Water-Supply Paper 1613D. U.S. Geological Survey. 1964. iv + 26 pp. + 4 plates in pocket. Relation of salt water to fresh ground water.
1696 "Salt-Water Movement in the Principal Artesian Aquifer ol the Savannah Area, Georgia and South Carolina". M. J. McCollum. Ground Water 2(4) : 4-8. October 1964.
1697 "Land Subsidence Related to Decline of Artesian Pressure in the Ocala Limestone at Savannah, Georgia". G. H. Davis, J. B. Small and H. B. Counts. Geological Society of America Engineering Geology Case Histories 4: 185-192. 1964.
1698 "Effects of Tides, Ships, Trains, and Changes in Atmospheric Pressure on Artesian Water Levels in Wells in the Savannah Area, Georgia". 0. B. Odum. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 14(1): 28-29. 1961.
1699 "Salinity of the Lower Savannah River in Relation to Stream-Flow and Tidal Action". William L. Lamar. American Geophysical Union Transactions 21 : 463-470. 1940.
Chattooga
1700 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of the Paleozoic Rock Area, Chattooga County, Georgia. Charles W. Cressler. Information Circular 27. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1964. 14 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
Cherokee
1701 Georgia Iron Deposits, Cherokee, Bartow, Floyd, and Polk Counties, Part I. Walter T. Leweicki. Reports of Investigations 4178. U. S. Bureau of Mines. 1948. 28 pp.
1702 Georgia Iron Deposits, Cherokee, Bartow, Floyd, and Polk Counties, Part 11. A. F. Robertson. Report of Investigations 4179. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1948. 42 pp.
Clarke
1703 "A Preliminary Investigation of the Geology of Clarke County, Georgia". Eldon J. Parizek. In: Short Contributions to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia- II, Bulletin No. 60, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1953, pp. 21-31.
Clay
1704 "Summary of the Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Clay County, Georgia". Robert L. Wait. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(2) : 93-101. 1960.
Clayton
1705 "Relation of Permeability and Jointing in Crystalline Metamorphic Rocks near Jonesboro, Georgia". J. W. Stewart. In: Geological Survey Research 1962, Professional Paper 450-D, U.S. Geological Survey, 1962, pp. D168-D170.
Cobb
1706 Geology of the Kennesaw Mountain - Sweat Mountain Area, Cobb County, Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory University. xiv + 165 pp. + 3 maps in pocket.
1707 Geologic Map of Kennesaw Mountain- Sweat Mountain Area, Cobb County, Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. Atlanta. 1959. Scale 1 : 24,000.
1708 "Salt Springs and Wells of Cobb and Douglas Counties, Georgia. A Ground Water Enigma" A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 4(1): 8-10. 1951.
1709 Peculiar Mineral Waters from Crystalline Rocks of Georgia. Myron L. Fuller. WaterSupply Paper 160. U.S. Geological Survey. 1906. Pp. 86-91. Mineral waters from the Austell-Lithia Springs area of Cobb and Douglas Counties are examined.
Columbia
1710 The Geology of the Pollard's Corner Area, Columbia County, Georgia. William Hickman McLemore. Masters thesis, 1965, University of Georg1a. 49 pp.
Cook
1711 Ground-Water Resources and Geology of Cook County, Georgia. C. W. Sever. Open-File Report. U. S. Geological Survey. 1972. 40 pp.
Crawford
1712 Mineral Resource Survey of Crawford County, Georgia. Alfred T. Navarre, Jr. ProJeCt A-436-3. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. 1960. 7 pp. +map.
Crisp
1713 Mineral Resource Survey of Crisp County, Georgia". A. S. Furcron and Eugene C. Perry, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11 (2) : 37-44. 1958.
1714 summary of the Ground-Water Resources of Crisp County, Georgia". Robert L. Wait. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11 (2) 44-47. 1958.
Dade
1715 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Dade County, Georgia. M. G. Croft. Information Circular 26. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1964. 17 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1716 The Geology of Cloudland Canyon State Park, Dade County, Georgia". M.G. Croft. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(3). 84-89. 1959.
1717 Pre-Pennsylvanian Stratigraphy of the West Hall of the Durham Quadrangle. Wi IIlam Gilbert Clement. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory University. ii + 66 pp. + 1 fold. map. The area invest1gated l1es pnncipally withm Dade County, Ga.
1718 The Stratigraphy and Paleontology of the Ordovician System in Lookout Valley, Georgia. Frank Thompson Ingram. Masters thesis, 1954, Emory University. xi + 94 pp. + 1 map m pocket The area 1nvest1gated lies 1n Dade County, Ga.
1719 Exploration of Lookout Mountain and Sand Mountain Coal Deposits, Dade and Walker Counties, Georgia. John R. Troxell. Report of Investigations 3960. U. S. Bureau of M1nes. 1946. 10 pp.
1720 Coal Deposits on Sand and Lookout Mountains, Dade and Walker Counties, Georgia. V H Johnson. Preliminary Map. U.S. Geological Survey. 1946, reprinted 1959.1. 48,000.
1721 Pennsylvanian Geology of a Part of the Southern Appalachian Coal Field. Harold R. Wanless. Memoir 13. Geological Society of Amenca. 1946. xii + 162 pp. + 40 plates. Study of Pennsylvanian strata of western VIrginia, southeastern Kentucky, Tennessee, and northwestern Georg1a (Georg1a counties: Dade and Walker).
Dawson
1722 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Crystalline Rocks, Dawson County, Georgia. Charles W. Sever. Information Circular 30. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1964. 32 pp. + 2 maps in pocket.
1723 The Structural Geology of a Porilon of Southwestern Dawson County, Georgia. Boone Moss Bowen. Masters thesis, 1961, Emory University. 45 pp.
1724 "The Temperature of the Ground and Ground-Water, Dawson County, Georgia". Charles W. Sever and Joseph T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(1-2) : 20-22. 1962.
1725 "Infiltration Rates in Weathered Crystalline Rocks at the Georgia Nuclear Laboratory, Dawson County, Ga." J. W. Stewart. In: Geological Survey Research 1962, Professional Paper 450-E, U.S. Geological Survey, 1963, pp. E140-E142.
1726 Infiltration and Permeability of Weathered Crystalline Rocks, Georgia Nuclear Laboratory, Dawson County, Ga. J. W. Stewart. Bulletin 1133-D. U.S. Geological Survey. 1964. iv +59 pp. + 7 maps in pocket. An investigation to determine the probable effect of waste discharge into a disposal pit constructed in weathered crystalline rocks is described.
1727 "Water-Yielding Potential of Weathered Crystalline Rocks at the Georgia Nuclear
48
Geology
Laboratory". J. W. Stewart. In: Geological Survey Research 1962, Professional Paper 45D-B, U.S. Geological Survey, 1962, pp. B106-B107.
1728 "Acid Water in the Crystalline Rocks of Dawson County, Georgia". Charles W. Sever. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(3-4): 57-61. 1962.
1729 "The Lockheed Radiation Effects Facility and Radioactive Waste Disposal Systems". J. H. Edgerton and B. M. Bowen. Georgia Mineral Newllletter 12(3): 105-112. 1959. Disposal of waste from a nuclear reactor at the former Georgia Nuclear Laboratory in Dawson County, Georgia is discussed. Topographic, geologic, and hydrologic data for the area is summarized.
1730 Geologic and Hydrologic Data Relating to Disposal of Waste In Crystalline Rocks, Georgia Nuclear Laboratory, Dawson County, Georgia. J. W. Stewart and H. E. Blanchard. Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. 1962.
1731 Geologic and Hydrologic Investigation at the Site of the Georgia Nuclear Laboratory, Dawson County, Ga. J. W. Stewart, J. T. Callahan, R. F. Carter, eta/. Bulletin 1133-F. U. S. Geological Survey. 1964. vi + 90 pp. + 4 plates in pocket.
1732 Aeromagnetic Map of the Georgia Nuclear Laboratory Area, Georgia. P. W. Philbin, F. A. Petrafeso, and C. L. Long. Geophysical Investigations Map GP-488. U.S. Geological Survey. 1964. I : 250,000. I sheet.
1733 Natural Gamma AeroradloacUvlty olthe Georgia Nuclear Laboratory Area, Georgia. Jules A. MacKallor. Geophysical investigations Map GP-351. U.S. Geological Survey. 1963. I : 250,000.
Decatur
1734 Ground-Water Resources ol Bainbridge, Georgia. Charles W. Sever. Information Circular 32. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1965. 10 pp.
1735 "Ground-Water Resources of Bainbridge Air Base, Decatur County, Georgia". Charles W. Sever. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(1-2) : 39-43. 1963.
1736 "The Fuller's Earth Industry in the Georgia-Florida District". James L. Calver. Georgia Mineral Ne-letter 9(2): 37-44. 1956. Decatur County and Grady County are part of a region rich in Fuller's earth deposits. The mining of this clay material in the area is briefly summarized.
1737 Fuller's Earth and Other Industrial Mineral Resources of the Meigs- AHapulgusQuincy District, Georgia and Florida. Sam H. Patterson. Professional Paper 828. U. S. Geological Survey. 1974. iii+ 45 pp. + 2 plates in pocket.
1738 "Relation Between Chemical Quality and Water Discharge in Spring Creek, Southwestern Georgia". L. G. Toler. In: Geological Survey Research 1965, Professional Paper 525-C, U.S. Geological Survey, 1965, pp. C209-C213.
DeKalb
1739 Geology oflhe Stone Mountain- Lithonia District, Georgia. Leo Anthony Herrmann. Bulletin No. 61. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1954. xvi + 139 pp. + 5 plates in pocket. The district includes the eastern portion of DeKalb County, the southwestern portion of Gwinnett County, and the western portion of Rockdale County. The report examines the petrography, structural geology, and stone industry of the district. Includes descriptions of individual quarries (granite and gneiss).
1740 The Geology ollhe Region Around Stone Mountain, Georgia. James George Lester. Doctoral dissertation, 1939, University of Colorado.
1741 Stone Mountain - Uthonla District; Field Excursion. Willard H. Grant. Guidebook No. 2, Annual Meeting, Geological Society of America, Southeastern Section. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining, and Geology. 1962. 21 pp.
1742 "The Inexpensive Mountain". Mary Suzanne Hopkins. Nature Magazine 48 : 77-78, 108. February 1955. The origin of Stone Mountain in DeKalb County is summarized.
1743 Regional Setting and Intrusion Mechanics of the Stone Mountain Pluton. David Wilfred Mohr. Masters thesis, 1965, Emory University. viii+ 68 pp.
1744 '"Exfoliation and Weathering at Stone Mountain. Georgia. and Their Bearing on Disfigurement of the Confederate Memorial". C. A. Hopson. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11 (3) : 65-79. 1958.
1745 "Origin of Granite Domes in the Southeastern Piedmont". William A. White. Journal ol Geology 53(4): 276-282. July 1945. "The forms of the granite domes of the Southeast, which heretofore have been attributed to exfoliation, are regarded as the product of granular disintegration brought about by chemical weathering".
1748 "Radioactive Springs of Stone Mountain". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society He-letter 4(2) : 55-58. 1951.
1747 Recent Stream Sedlmentallon In the VIcinity of Stone Mountain, DeKalb County,
Georgia. James Hannon Pound. Masters thesis, 1957, Emory University. viii + 75 pp. + I map in pocket.
1748 Geology of the Panola Shoals Area, DeKalb Area, Georgia. Willis Holland. Masters thesis. 1954, Emory University. x + 92 pp. + I map in pocket.
1749 Petrology, Petrography, Mineralogy, and Structure of the Arabia Mountain Gneiss, DeKalb County, Georgia. Harland Elbert Cofer, Jr. Masters thesis, 1948, Emory University. 62 pp. + I fold. map.
1750 The Petrography and Structure ol a Portion of Soapstone Ridge, DeKalb and Clayton Counties, Georgia. James A. King. Masters thesis, 1957, Emory University. vii + 34 pp. + 3 plates in pocket.
Dougherty
1751 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Dougherty County, Ga. Robert L. Wait. Water-Supply Paper 1539-P. U. S. Geological Survey. 1963. vi + 102 pp. + 5 plates folded in pocket.
1752 Geology ol the Albany West Quadrangle, Georgia. Robert L. Wait. Miscellaneous Geologic Investigations Map 1-348. U.S. Geological Survey. 1962. I : 24,000. I sheet.
1753 "Sources of Ground Water for Irrigation in Dougherty County, Georgia". Robert L. Wait. Georgia Mineral Ne-letter 11(4): 123-127. 1958.
1754 "History of the Water-Supply at Albany, Georgia". Robert L. Wait. Georgia Mineral Ne-letter 10(4) : 143-147. 1957.
Douglas
1755 Geology ol Eastern Douglas County, Georgia. Eugene Louis Schepis. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory University. viii +56 pp. + I map in pocket.
Elbert
1756 Elberton Granlteer. Elberton Granite Association. Elberton, Ga. Quarterly.
1757 A Program ol Research and Technical Assistance lor the Granite Industry In Elbert County, Georgia. Jerry L. Lewis and Joe N. Harris. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. Atlanta. May 1965. [iv] + 145 pp.
1758 "Granite Industry Booms in Elberton". William A. Kelly. Georgia Magazine 8(5) : 22-23. February - March 1965.
1759 The Building ol a Great Industry: The Story ol the Coggins Industries and Their Development. Georgia Granite Corporation, Oglesby Granite Quarriers, Southern Quarrying Company, Berkeley Granite Corporation, Columbia Marble Company, Moretti-Harrah Marble Corporation, and Beaver Dam Granite Company. Elberton and Atlanta. [1937?]. [72 pp.]. On the history of the Coggins granite and marble industry in Elberton and Atlanta, Georgia; Sylacauga, Alabama; and Marble and Salisbury, North Carolina.
Fannin
1760 Stratigraphy, Structure, and Mineral Resources ol the Mineral Bluff Quadrangle, Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst. Bulletin No. 63. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1955. xii + 137 pp. + 2 plates in pocket. The mineral Bluff qua,Prangle (7'12 minute) is mostly in Fannin County, Georgia, but includes small portions of Tennessee and North Carolina.
1761 "Operations of the Tennessee Copper Company on Sulphide Ores of the Ducktown Basin. Tenn:. H. F. Kendall and others. Georgia Mineral Ne-letter 7(2) : 76-82. 1954. The Ducktown mining district lies in the Blue Ridge region of Tennessee and Georgia. The history of the mining operations there is briefly described.
1762 Pre-Cambrian Sedimentation In the Northe11st Part ol CohuHa Mountain Quadrangle, Georgia. James Mellen. Masters thesis, 1956, Cornell University. [vi]+ 42 pp. The area investigated lies principally in western Fannin County, Ga.
Floyd
1763 Geology and Ground-Water Resources ol Floyd and Polk Counties, Georgia. Charles W. Cressler. Information Circular 39. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia) 1970. iv + 95 pp. + 2 maps in pocket.
1764 "Ground Water in Floyd County, Georgia". J. T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11(1): 16-18. 1958.
1765 "Mineral Resource Survey of Floyd County, Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11(1): 1-15. 1958.
1766 The Bauxite Deposits of Floyd, Bartow, and Polk Counties, Northwest Georgia. W.S. White and N. M. Denson. Circular 193. U.S. Geological Survey. 1952. iv + 27 pp. + 3 maps
49
Geology
in pocket. Most of the bauxite deposits of northwest Georgia are in the Hermitage, Bobo, and Cave Springs districts of Floyd, Bartow, and Polk Counties.
Forsyth
1767 Geologic Map of Forsyth and North Fulton Counties, Georgia. Joseph B. Murray. Bulletin 88 - Plate 1. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Earth and Water Division. 1973. 1 : 63,360.
Fulton
1768 The Geology of Part of the Sandy Springs Quadrangle, Georgia. Mike Wicker Higgins. Masters thesis, 1965. Emory University. 141 pp. The Sandy Springs quadrangle lies in Cobb and Fulton Counties, Ga.
1769 Structural Relations of the Granites and the Associated Rocks of South Fulton County, Georgia. Harland Elbert Cofer, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1958, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Gilmer
1770 "Comments on the Geology of the Ellijay Quadrangle, Georgia- North CarolinaTennessee". A. S. Furcron. In: Short Contributions to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia - II, Bulletin No. 60, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1953, pp. 32-40. The Ellijay quadrangle (15-minute) includes, in Georgia, parts of Fannin, Gilmer, Pickens, Dawson, Lumpkin, and Union counties.
1771 Structure and Stratigraphy of a Portion of the Murphy Marble Belt In Gilmer County. Robin Spear Graham. Masters thesis, 1967, Emory University. [x] + 59 pp.
1772 Floods In Vicinity of Ellijay, Ga. McGlone Price. Hydrologic Investigations Atlas HA-418. U.S. Geological Survey. 1971. 1 :6,000 [One sheet 34 x 36 in.].
1773 "Iron Ores Near Ellijay, Georgia". W. C. Phalen. In: Contributions to Economic Geology 1907, Bulletin 340, U. S. Geological Survey, 1908; pp. 330-334.
Glynn
1774 Geology and Occurrence of Fresh and Brackish Ground Water In Glynn County, Ga. Robert L. Wait. Water-Supply Paper 1613-E. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. vi+ 94 pp. + 4 plates in pocket.
1775 Hydrology and Chloride Contamination of the Principal Artesian Aquifer In Glynn County, Georgia. Robert L. Wait and Dean 0. Gregg. Hydrologic Report 1. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. 1973. viii+ 93 pp. + 2 maps in pocket + 4 enclosures.
1776 Geologic and Hydrologic Control of Chloride Contamination In Aquifers at Brunswick, Glynn County, Ga. Dean 0. Gregg and Everett A. Zimmerman. Water-Supply Paper 2029-D. U. S. Geological Survey. 1974. vi+ 44 pp. + 6 plates in pocket.
1777 "Jekyll Island- Its Geology and Water Resources". J. T. Callahan. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(2) : 33-39. 1952.
1778 Interim Report on Test Drilling and Water Sampling in the Brunswick Area, Glynn County, Georgia. Robert L. Wait. Information Circular 23. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1962. iv + 46 pp. Preliminary results of a ground-water investigation to determine the source of brackish water contamination of limestone aquifers are presented.
1779 "Distortion of the Geothermal Field in Aquifers by Pumping". Robert Schneider. In: Geological Survey Research 1972, Professional Paper 800-C, U. S. Geological Survey, 1972, pp. C267-C270. "A positive departure of about 1.9 degrees Centigrade in a shallow zone of the heavily pumped artesian carbonat~-rock aquifer in Brunswick, Ga., near the center of an extensive potentiometric depression, is believed to result from horizontal flow of warm water possibly derived in part from a distant region where water moves upward".
1780 "Mass Transport in Flowing Groundwater". John D. Bredehoeft and George F. Pinder. Water Resources Research 9(1): 194-210. 1973. "The mass transport equation and the equation of motion have been coupled and solved numerically for a saturated isothermal groundwater system in which there are no chemical reactions. A case history of groundwater contamination at Brunswick, Georgia, illustrates the use of this physical-chemical model in predicting and controlling the future movement of contaminants".
1781 "An Analysis of Ground-Water Fluctuations Caused by Ocean Tides in Glynn County, Georgia". D. 0. Gregg. Ground Water 4(3) : 24-32. 1966.
1782 "Rock Movement Triggered by a Water-Level Change in the Brunswick Area, Georgia". D. 0. Gregg. In: Geological Survey Research 1970, Professional Paper 700-C, U.S. Geological Survey, 1970, pp. C198-C201.
1783 Relation of Salty Ground Water to Fresh Artesian Water In the Brunswick Area, Glynn County, Georgia. J. W. Stewart. Information Circular 20. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1960. [iv] + 42 pp.
1784 "Contamination of Fresh Water Aquifers through an Unplugged Oil-Test Well in Glynn County." Robert L. Wait and Morris J. McCollum. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(3-4) : 74-80. 1963.
1785 "Relation of Carbon-14 Concentrations to Saline Water Contamination of Coastal
Aquifers". Bruce B. Hanshaw ef at. Water Research 1(1): 109-114. 1965.
Naturally occurring stable or radioactive isotopes can be used to determine the origin of saline water that contaminates some coastal aquifers. In this study carbon-14 and deuterium analyses in the Ocala Limestone aquifer near Brunswick suggest that water from the Claiborne Group rather than nearby ocean water is the source of contamination.
1786 "Notes on Oyster Shell Deposits Near Brunswick, Glynn County". Charles W. Fortson, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(2) : 61. 1959. Oyster shell concentrations in the area are indicated on a general map. These were found to be insufficient to warrant their mining for use in the manufacture of cement, as had been proposed.
1787 Geodetic Survey of Glynn County, Georgia. U. S. Works Projects Administration. Atlanta. 1940. 77 pp.
1788 Pleistocene Stratigraphy In Glynn and Mcintosh Counties, Georgia. Thomas Francis Logan. Masters thesis, 1968, University of Georgia. 103 pp.
Gordon
1789 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Gordon, WhiHield, and Murray Counties, Georgia. C. W. Cressler. Information Circular 47. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division (Geological Survey). 1974. vi+ 56 pp. + 3 maps in pock et.
1790 Maps Showing Geology and Well Locations, Gordon, WhiHield and Murray Counties, Georgia. C. W. Cressler. Open-File Report. U.S. Geological Survey. 1971.
Greene
1791 Geology and Mineral Resources of the Bethseda Church Area, Greene County, Georgia. Jack H. Medlin and Vernon J. Hurst. Information Circular 35. Georgia Department of Mines. Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1967. 29 pp.
1792 Geology and Petrography of the Bethesda Church Area, Greene County, Georgia. Jack Harold Medlin. Masters thesis, 1964, University of Georgia. 100 pp.
1793 Physical Land Conditions In Greene County, Georgia. David P. Powell and Charles Gay. Physical Land Survey No. 23. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Washington, D.C. 1941. 53 pp.
Gwinnett
1794 Surface-Water Resources of the Yellow River Basin In Gwlnnett County, Georgia. R. F. Carter and W. B. Gannon. Information Circular 22. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1962. 34 pp. + 1 map in pocket. "An inventory of surface-water resources of a small basin is presented, including information on water available for use at almost all points on perennial streams".
Habersham
1795 Exploration of Mineral Deposits In Habersham County, Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst and Thomas J. Crawford. U. S. Department of Commerce, Area Redevelopment Administration. Washington, D.C. 1964. 180 pp. Survey of asbestos, flagstone, gold, granite, gneiss, kyanite, marble, soapstone, chromite, mica, and metal sulphides deposits in the county. With recommendations, location maps, and brief descriptions of 41 mineral collecting localities.
1796 The Distribution of Trace Elements In a Small Reservoir as influenced by Two Types of Discharge. Michael James Duever. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, University of Georgia. Distribution of trace elements in Lake Russell (Habersham County) was monitored for two years. During the first year water was discharged under the dam; during the second discharge was over the dam.
Hancock
1797 Preliminary Reconnaissance of the Geology and Mineral Resources of Hancock County, Georgia. Charles W. Fortson, Jr. Project No. A-436-2. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. 1959. ii + 16 pp. + 1 fold. map.
Hart
1798 The Geology of Hart County, Georgia. Willard Huntington Grant. Bulletin No. 67. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey}. 1958. viii + 75 pp. + 5 plates in pocket.
50
Geology
1711 "Geology of the Taylor Mica Mine, Hart County, Georgia". Frank G. Lesure. GeorglaiiiiMI'III Newsletter 15(1-2) : 9-14.
Houston
1800 "Geology of Iron Ore Deposits of the Perry Quadrangle, Georgia". S. M. Pickering, Jr. Georglalllnaral Newsletter 14(4): 83-90. 1961.
Jackson
1801 The Geology of the Talmo Area, Jackson and Hall Counties, Georgia. William Young Klett. Masters thesis, 1969, University of Georgia. 66 pp.
Jasper
1802 The Geology of the Northwestern Portion of Jasper County, Georgia. Richard C. Fountain. Masters thesis, 1961, Emory University. viii + 65 pp.
1803 Geology and Petrology of the Pegmatite District In Southwestern Jasper County, Georgia. Vincent Matthews. Masters thesis, 1967, University of Georgia. 66 pp.
1804 "The Pegmatites of Jasper County, Georgia". Lendall P. Warriner. Mining EngineerIng 1 : 376-380. October 1949.
1805 Geochemical and Geophysical Survey of the Gladesvllle Norite, Jasper County, Georgia. Robert H. Carpenter and Thomas C. Hughes. Information Circular 37. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1970. [iv] + 7 pp. + 5 plates.
1806 "Norile Intrusives in Western Jasper County and Eastern Monroe County, Georgia". Robert H. Carpenter. In: 6th Annual Field Trip, October 8-9, 1971, Georgia G.Oioglcal Society, Georgia Geological Society and Geological Survey of Georgia, [1971], [8} pp.
Lamar
1807 The Geology of the Barnesville Aree and the Towallga Fault, Lamar County, Georgia. Willard H. Grant. Guidebook for Second Annual Field Trip [Guidebook No.6], Georgia Geological Society. [Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology}. 1967.
Lee
1808 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Lee and Sumter Counties, Southwest Georgia. Vaux Owen, Jr. Water-Supply Paper 1666. U. S. Geological Survey. 1963. iv + 70 pp. + 6 plates folded in pocket.
1809 "Limestones of Lee County, Georgia". A. S. Furcron and Eugene C. Perry, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11 (4) : 111-118. 1958.
1810 "Summary of Ground-Water Resources of Lee County, Georgia". Vaux Owen, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11(4): 118-121. 1958.
1811 "Lee County's Rivers and Streams". L. E. Newcomb. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11(4): 121-123. 1958.
Liberty
1812 EHecta of Ground-Water Pumping In Parts of Liberty and Mcintosh Counties, Georgia, 1966-70. Richard E. Krause. Information Circular 45. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division. (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1972. 15 pp. "Industrial pumping near Riceboro has lowered the ground-water level enough to cause many wells, including some at Harris Neck and Blackbeard Island National Wildlife Refuges, to stop flowing. During 1966, water levels declined more than 11 feet near the center of pumping... About 80 to 90 percent of this additional decline is attributed to the industrial pumping near Riceboro, but it is superimposed on a regional water-level decline of as much as 45 feet. .. since 1880".
Lincoln
1813 The Geology and Mineralogy of Graves Mountain, Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst. Bulletin No. 66. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1959. vi + 33 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Graves Mountain, in western Lincoln County, is one of the world's most notable sites for mineral collecting. This report examines the character and areal distribution of its mineral deposits with emphasis on the potential for commercial mining operations.
1814 "Graves Mountain, Georgia". Peter Zodac. Rocks and Minerals 14(5) 131-141. May 1939.
1815 "Lazulite of Graves Mountain, Georgia". Thomas L. Watson. Journal of the WashIngton Academy of Sclences11(16). 386-391. October 4, 1921.
1818 Magruder and Chambers Copper Deposita, Lincoln and Wilkes Counties, Ga. Alexander L. Peyton and Harland E. Cofer, Jr. Report of Investigations 4665. U. S. Bureau of
Mines. 1950. 23 pp.
Lumpkin
1817 "The Gold Deposits of Dahlonega, Georgia". Waldemar Lindgren. In: Gold and Tin Deposita of the Southern Appalachians, Bulletin 293, U. S. Geological Survey, 1906, pp. 119-128. Includes descriptions of six mines: (1) Preacher Cut, (2) Consolidated Mines, (3) Standard Mines, (4) Lockhart Mine, (5) Benning Mine, and (6) Jumbo Mine.
1818 The Gold Placers of the VIcinity of Dahlonega, Georgia. William P. Blake and Charles T. Jackson. Report to the Yahoola River and Cane Creek Hydraulic Hose Mining Company. Boston. 1859. 64 pp. + 2 fold-out maps.
1819 'The Battle Branch Gold Mine, Auraria, Georgia". C. F. Park, Jr. and R. A. Wilson. Economic Geology 31(1): 73-92. 1936. Summary of general geology and mineralogy. Includes plan of the mine and sketch map showing topography and geology of the immediate area.
1820 "Residual Enrichment and Supergene Transport of Gold, Calhoun Mine, Lumpkin County, Georgia". Frank G. Lesure. Economic Geology 66(1): 178-186. January-February 1971.
1821 Gold and Pyrite Deposita of the Dahlonega District, Georgia. Edwin C. Eckel. Bulletin 213. U.S. Geological Survey. 1903. Pp. 57-63.
1822 "Placer Mining for Gold near Dahlonega, Georgia". Garland Peyton. Engineering and Mining Journal141(4): 39. Apri11940.
1823 Investigation of the Chestatee Copper and Pyrite Deposit, Lumpkin Co., Georgia. M. H. Kline and W. A. Beck. Report of Investigations 4397. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1949. 12 pp.
McDuffie
1824 "Gold Mining in McDuffie County, Georgia". W. H. Fluker. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers 33: 119-125. 1903.
Mcintosh
1825 "Gold Bearing Black Sand Found in Georgia Near the Mouth of the Altamaha River Above the Town of Darien". L. M. Richard. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(3-4) : 92. 1962.
Macon
1828 Geological Survey of Macon County, Georgia, With List of Minerals. Louis M. Richard. Macon County Geological Survey Committee. Oglethorpe, Georgia. 1958.44 pp.
Meriwether
1827 The Warm Springs of Georgia: Their Geologic Relations and Origins- A Summary Report, D. F. Hewett and G. W. Crickmay. Water-Supply Paper 819. U. S. Geological Survey. 1937. iv + 40 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1828 Bauxite Deposita of the Warm Springs District, Meriwether County, Georgia. Walter S. White. Bulletin 1199-1. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. iv + 15 pp. +map in pocket.
Mitchell
1829 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Mitchell County, Georgia. Vaux Owen, Jr. Information Circular 24. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1963. 40 pp.
1830 "Stratigraphy and Ground-Water Resources of Mitchell County, Georgia - Summary". Vaux Owen, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 14(2&3) : 41-51.
Monroe
1831 The Geology of Eastern Monroe County, Georgia. Jesse Preston Prather. Masters thesis, 1971, University of Georgia. viii+ 82 pp.
Morgan
1832 Geology of the Hard La~or Creek Area In West- Central Morgan County, Georgia. David Edward Lawton. Masters thesis, 1969, University of Georgia. 51 pp.
Murray
1833 Geology and Mineral Resources of the Northwest Quarter ol the Cohutta Mountain Quadrangle. John W. Salisbury. Bulletin No. 71. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining
51
Geology
and Geology (Geological Survey). 1961. vi+ 61 pp. + 1 map in pocket. The NW quarter of the Cohutta Mountain quadrangle (15-minute) includes approximately one-sixth of Murray County, Georgia and a strip of Polk County, Tennessee. (A 7'12-minute quadrangle map of this area was issued in 1966 under the designation "Tennga".)
1834 Areal Geology of the Northern Hall of Calhoun Qu,drangle, Georgia. Robert Eugene Cribb. Masters thesis, 1953, Emory University. vii+ 47 pp. The area investigated comprises portions of southeastern Whitfield County and southwestern Murray County, Ga.
1835 The Geology of the Murray County, Georgia Talc District. Robert E. Needham. Masters thesis, 1972, University of Georgia. 107 pp.
1836 Talc Deposits of Murray County, Georgia. A. S. Furcron, Kelton H. Teague, and James L. Calver. Bulletin No. 53. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1947. x + 75 pp. + 6 maps in pocket.
Newton
1837 The Geology of Central Newton County, Georgia. Charles Harwood Gardner. Masters thesis, 1961, Emory University. 51 pp.
1838 The Geology of a Portion of Newton and Walton Counties, Georgia. Ernest Herbert Reade. Masters thesis, 1960, Emory University. ix + 65 pp.
1839 The Geology of Northwestern Newton and Southwestern Walton Counties, Georgia. Roger Stephen Schultz. Masters thesis, 1961, Emory University. vi + 46 pp.
1840 The Distribution of Branches In River Networks. Ennio V. Giusti and W. J. Schneider. Professional Paper 422-G. U. S. Geological Survey. 1965. 10 pp. The Yellow River Basin in Newton and Rockdale Counties is examined.
1841 "Points of Origin of Perennial Flow in Georgia". William J. Schneider. In: Geological Survey Research 1962, Professional Paper 450-B, U. S. Geological Survey, 1962, pp. B113-B114. Yellow River and Tired Creek (Grady County) are examined.
1842 Petrofabrlc and Movement Study of Faults In Newton and Walton Counties, Georgia. Donovan Deronda Jones. Masters thesis, 1970, Emory University. v + 28 pp.
Pickens
1843 Geology of the Tate Quadrangle, Georgia. W. S. Bayley. Bulletin No. 43. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1928. x + 170 pp. + 22 plates + 2 maps. The Tate Quadrangle (15-minute) includes the eastern part of Pickens County, the northeastern quarter of Cherokee County, a narrow strip along the west side of Dawson County, and a small part of northwestern Forsyth County.
1844 The Murphy Syncline In the Tate Quadrangle, Georgia. William M. Fairley. Bulletin No. 75. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). [1965] vi + 71 pp. + 2 plates in pocket. Concerns the marble and the surrounding metamorphosed sedimentary rocks. Revises the regional structural interpretation previously held for the area, especially discounting the existence of the Whitestone thrust fault. Includes a geologic map.
Polk
1845 Geology of Polk County, Georgia. William H. Pinson, Jr. Masters thesis, 1949, Emory University. 178 pp. + 2 fold. maps.
1846 The Geology of the Indian Mountain Area, Polk County, Georgia. Thomas Jones Crawford. Masters thesis, 1957, Emory University. ix +57 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1847 "Geology of Part of Indian Mountain, Polk County, Georgia and Cherokee County, Alabama". T. J. Crawford. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(2) : 39-51. 1957.
1848 A Preliminary Report on a Part of the Iron Ores of Georgia- Polk, Bartow and Floyd Counties. S. W. McCallie. Bulletin No. 10-A. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1900. 190 pp. + 8 plates + 1 map.
1849 "Reconnaissance Geologic Survey of Parts of Polk and Haralson Counties, Georgia". James E. Webb. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11 (1) . 19-24. 1958.
Pulaski
1850 Reconnalssence Geology of Pulaski County, Georgia. Robert E. Carver. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. 1964.
Putnam
1851 The Geology of the Presley's Mill Area, Northwest Putnam County, Georgia. Carl
Weston Meyers. Masters thesis, 1969, University of Georgia.
1852 The Petrology 01 the Igneous Rocks of Putnam County, Georgia. Stephen Charles Libby. Masters thesis, 1971, University of Georgia. 99 pp.
Quitman
1853 Brown Iron Ore Resources: Quitman County, Georgia. James F. O'Neill. Information Circular 8264. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1965. 29 pp.
Rabun
1854 The Geology of Rabun and Habersham Counties, Georgia. Robert D. Hatcher, Jr. Bulletin No. 83. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1971. [vi] + 48 pp. + 2 plates in pocket.
1855 "The Geology of Tallulah Gorge". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 2(2): 11-12. 1949.
1856 "The Geology of the Tallulah Gorge". S. P. Jones. American Geologia! 27(2): 67-75 + 3 plates. February 1901.
1857 Petrography and Petrology of the Rabun Bald Area, Georgia - North Carolina. Robert T. Giles. Masters thesis, 1966, University of Georgia. 71 pp.
1858 "The Sinking Mountain Phenomenon". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine July 6, 1969. Pp. 12, 19. Sinking Mountain and Little Sinking Mountain, both in Rabun County, have displayed mysterious subsidences in recent times. The former, also known as Chattooga Mountain, has sunk about 60 feet within 100 years.
Randolph
1859 Bauxite Deposits of the Springvale District, Georgia". Lorin D. Clark. Bulletin 1199F. U. S. Geological Survey. 1965. iv + 24 pp. + 1 map in pocket. The Springvale district is in Randolph and Quitman Counties in the Coastal Plain province of Georgia.
Richmond
1860 "Fault". Bruce J. O'Connor. Outdoors in Georgia 4(1): 12-22. January 1975. Description and diagrams of the Belair fault west of Augusta. The relatively young fault was discovered by the author.
Rockdale
1861 Ground-Water Resources and Geology of Rockdale County, Georgia. M. J. McCollum. Information Circular 33. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1966. 17 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1862 The Geology of the Kelieytown Quadrangle, Georgia. Larry Eugene Jordon. Masters thesis, 1974, Emory University. x + 69 pp. The Kelleytown quadrangle (7'12-minute) lies in Rockdale, Henry, and Newton Counties, Ga.
Seminole
1863 Groundwater Resources and Geology of Seminole, Decatur, and Grady Counties, Georgia. Charles W. Sever. Water-Supply Paper 1809-Q. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. iv + 30 pp. + 2 plates in pocket.
1864 Geology of the Area In and around the Jim Woodruff Reservoir. Charles W. Hendry, Jr. and J. William Yon, Jr. Report of Investigations No. 16, Part I. Florida Geological Survey. 1958. 52 pp. Investigation of the surface geology of the 37,000-acre reservoir in Georgia's southwestern corner. (The reservoir is also known as Lake Seminole.)
Stephens
1865 "Prospecting Around Toccoa". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 6(1) : 14-16. 1953.
Stewart
1866 The Geology of the Lumpkin Quadrangle, Stewart County, Georgia. Charles William Almand. Masters thesis, 1961, Emory University. 86 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1867 The Geology of a Portion of Stewart County, Georgia. Samuel Roger Kirkpatrick. Masters thesis, 1959, Emory University. ix + 79 pp.
1868 "Iron Ores of the Clayton Formation in Stewart and Quitman Counties, Georgia". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 9(4) : 116-124. 1956.
Sumter
1869 "A Summary of the Ground-Water Resources of Sumter County, Georgia". Vaux Owen, Jr. Georgia Mineral Newaletter 12(2) : 42-51. 1959.
52
Highlands
1870 Mineralogy end Pelrology of the Andersonville, Georgia, Bauxite District. William Merle Flock. Doctoral dissertation, 1966, Pennsylvania State University.
1871 Stratigraphy and Sedimentation of the Wilcox Formation In the Andersonville BauxIte District of Georgia. George Robert Grumbles. Masters thesis, 1957, Emory University. ix + 115 pp.
1872 Bauxite Deposits of the Andersonville District, Georgia. Alfred D. Zapp. Bulletin 1199-G. U.S. Geological Survey. 1965. iv + 37 pp. + 3 plates in pocket. The Andersonville district is in Macon, Schley, and Sumter Counties, Georgia.
1873 Geohydrology of Sumter, Dooly, Pulaski, Lee, Crisp. and Wilcox Counties, Georgia. Hydrologic Investigations Atlas HA-435. U.S. Geological Survey. 1972. 2 fold. sheets.
Terrell
1874 "Summary of the Ground-Water Resources of Terrell County, Georgia". Robert L. Wait. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(3): 117-122. 1960.
Thomas
1875 Reconnelssance of the Ground Water and Geology of Thomas County, Georgia. C. W. Sever. Information Circular 34. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1966. 14 pp.
1876 "Miocene Structural Movements in Thomas County, Ga." C. W. Sever. In: Geological Survey Research 1966, Professional Paper 550-C, U.S. Geological Survey, 1966, pp. C12C16.
Towns
1877 The Bell Mountain Silica Depoalt, Towns County, Georgia. Vernon J. Hurst and George R. Horton. U. S. Department of Commerce, Area Redevelopment Administration. 1964. 42 pp. A geologic study and market survey.
Troup
1878 Geology of the Smith's Crossroads Area, Troup County, Georgia. Arthur C. Bailey, Jr. Masters thesis, 1969, University of Georgia. iii+ 52 pp.
1879 :Beryl from the Oxford Mine, Troup County, Georgia". Dennis Radcliffe and A. C. Bailey, Jr. American Mineralogist 57(1-2) : 272-276. 1972.
1880 "The Minerals Processing Company Mine and Other Beryl Deposits in Troup County, Georgia'. A. S. Furcron and C. N. Chancey. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(4) : 140-144. 1954.
Union
1881 The Stratigraphy, Structure, and Metamorphic History of the Northern Hall of the Nottely Dam 7Va Quadrangle, Georgia - North Carolina. Roy Harbin Dupuis. Masters thesis, 1975, University of Georgia. xii + 149 pp.
Upson
1882 Geology and Mineral Resources of the Thomaston Quadrangle, Georgia. James Wood Clarke. Bulletin No. 59. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1952. x + 103 pp. + 2 plates in pocket. The Thomaston Quadrangle (15-minute) comprises most of the eastern three-fifths of Upson County, part of northeastern Talbot County and very small portions of Pike and Lamar.
Walker
1883 Geology and Ground-Water Resources of Walker County, Georgia. Charles W. Cressler. Information Circular 29. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology. 1964. 15 pp. + 1 map 1n pocket.
1884 Geology of the Eastern Hall of the Durham Quadrangle, Northwest Georgia. Robert William Darling. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory University. xiii + 107 pp. + 2 maps in pocket. The area investigated lies in western Walker County, Ga.
1885 The Geology and Stratigraphy of the Cedar Grove Quadrangle of Northwest Georgia. Joseph Martin Dicus. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory University. ii + 55 pp. + 1 map in pocket. The area investigated lies in Dade and Walker Counties, Ga.
1886 Geology of a Portion of Kensington Quadrangle, Northwest Georgia. Henry Grady Traylor. Masters thesis, 1951, University of Iowa. vii+ 122 pp. The area investigated lies principally within Walker County, Ga.
1887 Stratigraphy of the Chickamauga Limestone In the Kensington Quadrangle. David
Craig Wright. Masters thesis, 1952, Emory University. iii + 42 pp. + 1 map in pocket.
1888 A Detailed Study of the Silurian Stratigraphy In Walker County, Georgia. William Louis Mitchell. Masters thesis, 1950, Emory University. iv + 71 pp.
1889 Raw Materiels for Lightweight Aggregate In Appalachian Region, Alabama end Georgia. Ro<1alllo P. Hollenbeck and M. E. Tyrell. Report of Investigations 7244. U.S. Bureau of Mines. 1969. 21 pp. Clays, shales, and slates from 29 locations were tested and evaluated. Samples from 1) locations in Alabama and from one location in Walker County, Georgia, were found to be suitable.
Webster
1890 The Stratigraphy and Uthology of Webster County, Georgie. Vaux Owen. Masters thesis, 1956, Emory University. xii + 82 pp.
1891 "Clayton Iron Ores of Webster County, Georgia". A. S. Furcron and Donald L. Ray. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(3) : 73-76. 1957.
White
1892 Exploration lor Mineral Deposits In White County, Georgia. U. S. Department of Commerce, Area Redevelopment Administration. Washington, D.C. December 1964. 166 pp. Examines economic minerals: aggregates, asbestos, gold, mica, platinum, sillimanite, soapstone. Notes 19 mineral-collecting localities for the hobbyist. Appendices: (1) Summary of published information: (2) Mine and prospect examinations: (3) Report on Martin gold properties and Reynolds Vein; (4) Report on Glen Comyn gold mines.
WhiHield
1893 Geology and Mineral Resources of the Dalton Quadrangle, Georgia- Tennessee. Arthur C. Munyan. Bulletin No. 57. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1951. vi+ 128 pp. + 2 maps in pocket. The Dalton quadrangle (15-minute) includes, in Georgia, the northwestern part of Murray County, the northern half of Whitfield County, and a small portion of northeastern Catoosa County.
1894 Structure end Stratigraphy of the Ordovician Umestonesln Mill Creek Valley, Georgia. John Byron Moore. Masters thesis, 1954, Emory University. x + 55 pp.
Wilkes
1895 The Geology of the Metesvllle Area, Wilkes end Lincoln Counties, Georgia. James Allen Fouts. Masters thesis, 1966, University of Georgia.
1896 The Geology of a Part of West- Central Wilkes County, Georgie. Robert Bigham Cook. Masters thesis, 1968, University of Georgia. 53 pp.
1897 Specific Cations In Ground Waters Related to Geologic Formations In the Broed Quadrangle, Georgia. Charles A. Salotti and James A. Fouts. Bulletin No. 78. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey). 1967. vi + 34 pp. + 1 map in pocket. Concerns an area of about 60 square miles in Wilkes County.
1898 Copper, Lead, and Zinc Concentration In Stream Sediment, Metasvllle Quadrangle, Wilkes and Lincoln Counties, Georgia. Robert H. Carpenter. Information Circular 43. Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey of Georgia). 1971. iv + 12 pp.
Worth
1899 "Notes on Some Iron Ore Deposits in Worth County". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(2) 62. 1959.
HIGHLANDS
1900 Southern Highlands Mountain Resources Management Plan. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, North Carolina Department of Administration, and South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation, and Tourism. June 1974. 2 vols. "(A] multi-state regional plan for guiding the development and conservation of recreation resources in... the Southern Highlands Region".
1901 "Georgia's Mountain Majesties". Martin Shartar. Atlanta 14(11) 60, 62-63. March 1975. Haphazard growth threatens the mountain region of Georgia.
52-54, 56, 58,
53
Highways, Airports, and Industrial Sites
1902 Isolation and Problems of Development: A Case Study In the Georgia Mountains. Samuel Fleming Dayton, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of Georgia. 150 pp. Relationships among (1) economic development, (2) public investment in transportation, (3) conservation of natural resources, and (4) level of isolation in the region are explored. Alternative actions for stimulation of economic growth are discussed.
1903 Survey and Analysis of the Environmental Impact of Leisure-Oriented Residential Developments. Georgia Mountains Planning and Development Commission. Gainesville, Ga. January 1974. iv + 74 pp.
1904 An Analysis of Problem Areas Within the Leisure Time Industry of the GMPDC Region. Bruce Alexander. Georgia Mountains Planning and Development Commission. Gainesville, Ga. January 2, 1970. [iv] + 13 pp.
1905 A Residential Development Handbook on Site Selection, Site Evaluation, Site Planning and Construction In Northeast Georgia. Stephen Elliott Hendricks. Masters thesis, 1975, University of Georgia. 115 pp.
1906 Georgia Mountains: Developer's and Consumer's Guidelines lor Site Selection, Design, Construction, and Review Processes. Task Force on Development of Sensitive Areas in Northeast Georgia (Georgia Mountains Planning and Development Commission and other governmental agencies). Gainesville, Ga. and Atlanta, Ga. January 1973. 26 pp.
1907 Georgia Mountains Areawide Land Development Policies and Procedures Manual. Georgia Mountains Planning and Development Commission. GainesvUie, Georgia. January 1974. 66 pp.
1908 The Southam Appalachian Region: A Survey. Thomas R. Ford, ed. University of Kentucky Press. Lexington. 1967. xv + 308 pp. Nineteen papers examine change in the 190-county region (includes 20 counties of north Georgia). In four parts: The Changing Population; The Changing Economy; The Changing Society; Folk Arts in Transition. The four chapters under The Changing Economy are: Agriculture, A Reassessment; Extractive Industries and Forestry; Development of Manufacturing; and Potential of Tourism.
1909 The Appalachians. Maurice Brooks. Houghton Mifflin Company. Boston. 1965. xvii + 346 pp. A naturalist's guide to the Appalachians, from Quebec to Georgia.
1910 The. Great Smokles and the Blue Ridge. Roderick Peattie, ed. Vanguard Press. New York. 1943. x + 372 pp. The story of the Southern Appalachians - including history, the climate, the trees and wildflowers, and the people.
1911 The Georgia Mountains: Its Resources, Problems, and Potentials. Howard A. Schreiter. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. 1964. 78 pp.
1912 Upper Hlawas- Valley - Summary of Resources. Tennessee Valley Authority, Office of Tributary Area Development. Knoxville, Tenn. May 1965. Various pagings. Summary of natural and human resources in Fannin, Union, and Towns Counties, Georgia, and Cherokee and Clay Counties, Tennessee.
1913 Upper Little Tennessee River Region - Summary of Resources. Tennessee Valley Authority, Office of Tributary Area Development. Knoxville, Tenn. June 1966. Various pagings. Summary of natural and human resources in Rabun County, Georgia, and Graham, Jackson, Macon, and Swain Counties, North Carolina.
HIGHWAYS, AIRPORTS, AND INDUSTRIAL SITES
1914 "Where Should Ga. 400 Go?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine November 16, 1975. Pp. 34, 36, 38, 40-41. A look at a controversial highway proposal for Georgia's Highlands area.
1915 "Blue Ridge Parkway - Can We Afford the Price?". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 1(1): 7-11. July 1972. The proposed Blue Ridge Parkway Extension would have a wide range of adverse impacts on the mountain environment of north Georgia. These include erosion, siltation, chemical and thermal pollution of streams, loss of wildlife habitat, scarring of the scenic ridgelines and elimination of one of the few remaining wilderness areas of Georgia.
1916 "The Blue Ridge Parkway: Sunshine and Storm". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 17, 1972. Pp. 16-17, 19,23-24. Opposition to an extension of the Blue Ridge Parkway in Georgia increases - from conservationists, sportsmen, and concerned citizens.
1917 "Parkway Foes Sing Blue Ridge Blues". Cynthia Wilson. Audubon 75(3): 109-110. May 1973.
On opposition to a southward extension of the Blue Ridge Parkway into Georgia.
1918 "The Brasstown Controversy". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine November 29, 1970. Pp. 26-28, 30. Three new highways are proposed for the Brasstown Bald area. One, a road from Brasstown Bald to Young Harris, has stirred opposition from those who foresee unnecessary environmental damage.
1919 "The Battle of Allatoona". Eugene H. Methvin. Reader's Digest 102: 175-179. May 1973. On the 1970-71 fight to save Lake Allatoona from bisection by Interstate Highway 75.
1920 "The Pine Mountain Battle - Economics or Environment?" John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 19, 1972. Pp. 8-9, 26, 28-29. Interstate Highway 185 would cut scenic Pine Mountain in two if proposed "Line A" were adopted. The fight over the route is examined.
1921 "Diary of a Toll Road Fighter". Maxine A. Rock. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 30, 1972. Pp. 22, 24, 27, 30, 33. Some Atlanta citizens fight the North Atlanta Tollway proposal.
1922 Highway Litter In Georgia. Final Report. Richard A. Graves Ill and Robert E. Bowling. Georgia Department of Transportation, Research and Development Bureau. Atlanta. January 1974. 97 pp. NTIS number: PB-234 710. An analysis of the volume and composition of highway litter and the effects of average annual daily traffic, functional highway classification, geographical region, and season on the generation of litter in the state.
1923 "Billboards - Clutter and Controversy". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 19, 1971. Pp. 8-9, 32-34. The degree of regulation of billboards became a sensitive subject in Georgia after an ultimatum to the state from the federal Department of Transportation.
1924 Street and Highway Landscape Development. Robert J. Hill. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. 1962. The status of and need for street landscape improvement in Georgia is discussed. Objectives, benefits and means are briefly explained.
1925 A Report on the Proposed Parkway Between Augusta and Savannah, Georgia, Termed the Oglethorpe National Trail and Parkway. U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Washington, D.C. 1939. 128 pp. +map atlas. (Typewritten copy at Historic Preservation Section, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Atlanta].
1926 Spoil Disposal Problems for Highway Construction Through Marshes. J. G. Gosselink. University of Georgia, Institute of Ecology. Athens. [1973?]. 57 pp.
1927 Georgia Airport Directory, Georgia Department of Transportation, Office of Aviation Development. 1973. 1 vol. loose-leaf. Maps and information on each airport. Kept up to date by loose-leaf inserts.
1928 "Atlanta's Airport Dilemma". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 21, 1970. Pp. 8-9, 22, 24, 26. The problems of site selection for Atlanta's second airport are explained. Citizen opposition heads the list.
1929 "Atlanta's Up-in-the-Air Airport". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 16, 1974. Pp. 8-9, 30, 32-34. _ A Paulding County site for Atlanta's second airport is promoted by a local landowner.
1930 Industrial Sites In Georgia - Tenth Edition. Georgia Power Company, Industrial Development Division. Atlanta. 1975. 105 pp. Describes 52 representative planned industrial districts giving site and community information, map, and aerial photograph of each. Locations: Alma, Americus, Ashburn, Athens, Atlanta (8), Augusta, Brunswick, Carrollton, Columbus (2), Conyers, Cornelia, Covington, Dawson, Douglas, Dublin, Eastman, Jesup, LaGrange, Lavonia, Lawrenceville, Macon (2), Madison, McDonough, Milledgeville, Millen, Montezuma, Moultrie, Nashville, Peachtree City, Perry, Rockmart, Rome, Sandersville-Tennille, Swainsboro, Tifton (2) , Toccoa, Valdosta, Vidalia, Villa Rica, Watkinsville, Waycross, Waynesboro.
1931 Georgia Manufacturing Directory. Georgia Bureau of Industry and Trade Research Division. Atlanta. Annual. Manufacturing firms are listed and/or indexed alphabetically, geographically (county & city), by parent company, and by product. Each listing notes name of company, address, date established, market served, chief executive, sales and purchasing executives, four most important products with SIC codes, telephone numbers, and number of employees.
1932 "Rural-Urban Locational Preferences of Southern Manufacturers". Richard E. Lonsdale and Clyde E. Browning. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 61 (2) : 255-268. June 1971. The authors find that Southern plants are "much more oriented to small towns and rural areas than is true nationally, and [the] tendency is becoming even more pronounced.''
1933 Locatlonal Potential for the Chemical Industry In Georgia. Georgia Dept. of Industry and Trade, Research Division. Atlanta. 1970. 24 pp. Lists and locates Georgia's largest chemical firms and notes prime sites for location of new chemical plants.
1934 "Preliminary Evaluation of an Industrial Plant Site Using Remote Sensing Tech-
54
History
niques". David J. Barr and Melville D. Hensey. Proceedings of the American Society of Photogrammetry 38 : 82-94. 1972.
1935 "Industrial Site Study with Remote Sensing". David J. Barr and Melville D. Hensey. Photogrammetrtc Engineering 40 : 79-85. January 1974. An analysis of a karst terrain surface near Albany, Georgia by remote sensing techniques.
HISTORY
GENERAL
AGRICULTURE ARCHITECTURE CIVIL WAR COAST COLONIAL FRONTIER IN THE SOUTH COLONIAL GEORGIA COVERED BRIDGES DEAD TOWNS EDUCATION FOLKLORE FORTS GAZETTEERS AND GUIDEBOOKS GRIST MILLS HISTORIC PRESERVATION: THE STATE HISTORIC SITES: LISTINGS AND SURVEYS HISTORIC SITES: MISCELLANEOUS INDIANS MAPS, LAND SURVEYS, AND BOUNDARIES NATURALIST EXPLORERS PLACE NAMES RAILROADS RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD RELIGION REVOLUTIONARY WAR RIVERS AND RIVER TRAVEL ROADS, TRAILS, AND TRAVELLERS SETTLEMENT PATTERNS
MISCELLANEOUS BIBLIOGRAPHIES
COUNTIES
GENERAL
1936 The History of Georgia, Containing Brief Sketches of the Moat Remarkable Events Up to the Present Day. Hugh M'Call. Seymour & Williams. Savannah. 1811 [Volume 1]; 1816 [Volume 2); 1909 [Reprinted in one unabridged volume]; 1969 [Reprinted by Cherokee Publishing Company, Atlanta; x + 565 pp.).
1937 A Hletory of Georgia, From Its First Dlecovery by European to the Adoption of the Preaant Conetltutlon In MDCCXCVIII. William Bacon Stevens. D. Appleton and Co. New York. 1847. xiii + 503 pp.
1938 The History of the State of Georgia, From 1850 to 1881. I. W. Avery. Brown & Derby, Publishers. New York. 1881. xii + 754 pp.
1939 The History of Georgia, From 111 Earliest Settlement to the Present Time. T. S. Arthur and W. H. Carpenter. Claxton, Remsen & Haffelfinger. Philadelphia. 1852. 331 pp.
1940 The History of Georgia. Charles C. Jones, Jr. Houghton, Mifflin and Company. New
York. 1883. 2 vols.
1941 Georgia Land and People. Frances Letcher Mitchell. Franklin Printing and Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1893. xxvii + 495 pp.
1942 Memoirs of Georgia, Containing Hletorlcal Account of the State' Civil, Military, Industrial and Professional Interests, and Personal Sketches of Many of 111 People. South ern Historical Association. Atlanta. 1895. 2 vols.
1943 Storlee of Georgia. Joel Chandler Harris. American Book Company. New York. 1896. [Also published as Georgia from the lnvaelon of DeSoto to Recent Tlmee by D. Appleton and Company, 1896]. Reprinted 1972 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C., 315 pp.
1944 The Story of Georgia and the Georgia People, 1732 to 1860. George Gillman Smith. George G. Smith, Publisher. Macon, Georgia. 1900. xx + 664 pp.
1945 Hletory of Georgia. Robert Preston Brooks. Atkinson, Mentzer & Company. Boston. 1913. Reprinted 1972 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C., xvii + 444 pp.
1946 A Standard History of Georgia and Georgians. Lucian Lamar Knight. Lewis Publishing Company. Chicago. 1917. 6 vols.
1947 Hletory of Georgia. Clark Howell. S. J. Clarke Publishing Co. Chicago-Atlanta. 1926. 4 vols.
1948 Georgia's BI-Centannlal Memoirs and Memories; A Tale of Two Centuries, Review lng the State's Marvelous Story of Achievement, -Since Oglethorpe's Landing In 1733. Lucian Lamar Knight. Published by the author. St mons Island, Georgia. 1931. 3 vols.
1949 Georgia, A Pageant of Years. Mary Savage Anderson, Elfrida De Renne Barrow. Elizabeth Mackay Screven, and Martha Gallaudet Waring. Garrett & Massie, Inc. Richmond, Va. 1933. xii + 245 pp.
1950 Georgia as Colony and State. Amanda Johnson. Walter W. Brown Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1938. ix + 1064 pp.
1951 The Story of Georgia. Walter G. Cooper. American Historical Society, Inc. New York. 1938. 4 vols.
1952 Georgia, A Short History. E. Merton Coulter. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1947. [Revised and enlarged edition of A Short History of Georgia, by the author, 1933]. xii + 510 pp.
1953 The Georgia Story. James C. Bonner. Harlow Publishing Co. Oaklahoma City. 1958. xii + 492 pp. Georgia history for high school and junior college levels.
1954 Georgia Through Two Centuries. Warren Grice; E. Merton Coulter, ed. Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc. New York. 1965. 3 vols.
1955 This Is Your Georgia. Bernice McCullar. American Southern Publishing Company. Northport, Alabama. 1966. [x) + 876 pp.
1956 Georgia Volcee: A Documentary History to 1872. Spencer B. King, Jr. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1966. vi+ 370 pp.
1957 Georgia: Unfinished State. Hal Steed. Alfred A. Knopf. New York. 1942. xvi + 336 + viii pp. A series of sketches making up an "informal historical survey". Not a general history of the state.
1958 Georgia Studlee Selected Writings of Robert Preston Brookl. Gregor Sebba, ed. University of Georgia Ptess. Athens. 1952. xii + 309 pp. Historical studies, essays on Georgia's government, a defense of the South and a look at the University of Georgia.
1959 Studies in Georgia History and Government. James C. Bonner and Lucien E. Roberts, eds. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1940. xiv + 284 pp. Reprinted 1974 by TheReprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C. Twelve papers on varied subjects, including religion, the Spanish War, the Seminoles and Cherokees, the District Agricultural and Mechanical Schools, agriculture, and politics.
1960 New VIewpoints In Georgia History. Albert B. Saye. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1943. vii+ 256 pp.
1961 Atlas for Georgia History. James C. Bonner. Georgia College. Milledgeville, Ga. 1969. [iv] + 78 pp. Seventy maps with explanatory text and index.
1962 Collections of the Georgia Historical Society. Georgia Historical Society. Savannah. Began 1840. The series is a major source for records of early Georgia and works on Georgia history. Journals, proceedings, minutes, accounts, narratives and other written efforts are preserved.
1963 "The Early Historians of Georgia". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Historical Quarterly 31 (3) : 191-194. September 1947. On Hugh M'Call, William Bacon Stevens, Charles C. Jones, Jr. and others.
55
History
AGRICULTURE
1964 A History of Georgia Agriculture, 1732-1880. Jam11s C. Bonner. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1964.
1965 A Century of Georgia Agriculture, 1850-1950. Willard Range. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1954. xii + 333 pp.
1966 The Agrarian Revolution In Georgia, 1865-1912. Robert Preston Brooks. Bulletin of the University of Wisconsin No. 639. Madison, Wisconsin. 1914. 129 pp.
1967 "Agricultural Diversification in Georgia, 1939-1959". Irene Johnson. Southeastern Geographer 7 : 34-49. 1967.
1968 Agricultural Diversification In Georgia. Irene Johnson. Doctoral dissertation, 1965. Ohio State University. 164 pp.
1969 Types of Farming In Georgia. Frank P. King. Doctoral dissertation. 1949, Cornell University.
1970 "The Demise of the Piedmont Cotton Region". Merle C. Prunty and Charles S. Aiken. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 62(2) . 283-306. June 1972.
1971 An Atlas of Colton Production In the Southern United States: 1840-1960. James Paul Matthai. Doctoral dissertation, 1962, Columbia University. 161 pp. "The basic purpose of this study... is to map at frequent intervals the growth and changes of cotton production from 1840 to 1960. Production figures, gathered from the United States Census for each cotton producing county, form the statistical basis for the maps. To amplify the nature and causes of the many changes, explanatory textual information has been included. Further. as landforms. climate, and soils are important to any agricultural setting, additional map materials are included so that the proper relationship between cotton and its natural environment can be established."
1972 "The Silk Industry in Georgia". Pauline Tyson Stephens. Georgia Review 7(1) : 39-49. Spring 1953. History of an extinct Georgia industry.
1973 "Silk Culture in the Colony of Georgia". Mary Thomas McKinstry. Georgia Historical Quarterly 14(3) : 225-235. September 1930.
1974 "Peach Industry in Antebellum Georgia". James C. Bonner. Georgia Historical Quarterly 31(4): 241-248. December 1947.
1975 "Sweet With Bitter: Georgia's Peach". Inez Parker Cumming. Georgia Review 2(4) : 476:486. Winter 1948. On the past and present of the Peach State's peach.
1976 "Pecans in Georgia". Pauline Tyson Stephens. Georgia Review 2(3) : 352-361. Fall 1948. On the past and present of an important Georgia crop.
1977 "Pimientos in Georgia". Paul W. Chapman. Georgia Review 3(1) : 91-102. Spring 1949. On the past and present of a food industry in which Georgia excells.
1978 "The Georgia Apple". T. H. McHatton. Georgia Review 2(2) : 212-220. Summer 1948. On the past and present of an important crop on the mountain farms of northern Georgia.
1979 "Georgia and the Grape". B. S. Pickett. Georgia Review 3(3) : 279-288. Fall 1949. On past and present grape culture in Georgia.
1980 Georgia Agrlrama Development Plan. William B. Keeling and Adolph Sanders. University of Georgia, College of Business Administration, Division of Research; for Georgia Agrirama Development Authority. Athens. January 1973. 90 pp. A plan for development of an agricultural museum complex, Georgia Agrirama, in Tift County.
1981 'The Growing of Small Grains in Georgia". Edwin James. Georgia Review 4(3) : 197-206. Fall 1950. On wheat, rye, barley, oats, and rice in Georgia agriculture.
1982 "Lespedeza in Georgia and Elsewhere". Paul Tabor. Georgia Historical Quarterly 51(3): 331-335. September 1967. The history of Lespedeza striata. a forage and pasture plant commonly known as Japan clover, is briefly summarized.
1983 "Friendly Furriners". George H. King. Georgia Review 3(2) 1949. On the benefits of imported grasses in Georgia.
226-232. Summer
1984 "Dairying in Georgia". Paul W. Chapman. Georgia Review 1(4) : 434-444. Winter 1947.
1985 "The o'pen Range Livestock Industry in Colonial Georgia". James C. Bonner. Georgia Review 17(1): 85-92. Spring 1963.
1986 'The Genesis of Georgia's Livestock Industry". James C. Bonner. Georgia Review 11(2): 187-195. Summer 1957.
1987 "Cow Punching in Old Georgia". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(2) : 104-108, 1957. Georgia Review 3(3). 1949. Brief notes on cattle raising in early Georgia.
1988 "Georgia's Broiler Industry". Arthur Gannon. Georgia Review 6(3) : 306-317. Fall 1952. On the development of broiler raising in North Georgia.
ARCHITECTURE
1989 The Early Architecture of Georgia. Frederick Doveton Nichols. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1957. xvi + 292 pp.
1990 Bibliography of Architecture In Georgia to 1865. Frederick Doveton Nichols. Publication No.7. American Association of Architectural Bibliographers. [Charlottesville, Va.]. 1957. 9 pp.
1991 OuUine of the Development of Early American Architecture; The Southern States District- Georgia. Harold Bush-Brown. National Park Service, Historic American Buildings Survey, Districf Officer - Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta. No date. [iv] + 28 pp. [Unpublished, copies at Historic Preservation Section of Georgia Department of Natural Resources and Price Gilbert Memorial Library of Georgia Institute of Technology].
1992 "Historic Architecture in Georgia". Harold Bush-Brown. College Art Journal 6(2) : 133-139. Winter 1946.
1993 Architecture of Middle Georgia- The Oconee Area. John Linley. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1972. 198 pp. The domestic and public architecture of Baldwin, Hancock, Jasper, Johnson, Putnam, Washington and Wilkinson Counties is examined.
1994 "The Greek Revival House in Georgia". Wilbur Zelinsky. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 13(2) : 9-12. May 1954. On the number and distribution of dwellings in the Greek Revival style. The author finds a disproportionate number of urban over rural examples and finds these to be almost exclusively in towns of the lower Piedmont region. County-outline map of the state shows this distribution and indicates the number of ante-bellum Greek Revival dwellings extant in 1951 in each locality.
1995 Southwest Georgia Homes of Greek Revival Influence and Their Furniture, 18201890. Margaret Cannon. Masters thesis, 1963, Florida State University. Tallahassee. v + 107 pp.
1996 "The Classical Revival in the South". Ralph Fanning. Georgia Review 8(1) : 52-60. Spring 1954. On the dominant architectural movement in the 18th and 19th century South.
1997 Architecture of the Old South. Ernest Ray Denmark. Southern Architect and Building News. Atlanta. 1926. [vi] + 72 plates.
1998 The Architecture of the Old South: The Medieval Style. Henry Chandlee Forman. Harvard University Press. Cambridge. 1948. 203 pp.
1999 Southern Architecture Illustrated. Forward by Lewis E. Crook, Jr. and Introduction by Dwight James Baum. Harman Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1931. 287 pp. "More than two hundred and fifty illustrations and plans of outstanding Country and Suburban homes in the South as selected by a committee of prominent architects, members of American Institute".
2000 "Plantation Architecture of the Lower South on the Eve of the Civil War". James C. Bonner. Journal of Southern History 11 (3) : 370-388. August 1945.
2001 Architecture of Neel Reid In Georgia. James Grady. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1973. xxii + 204 pp. Buildings designed in the first quarter of the twentieth century by the architect are photographed. Most are private residences. All buildings but one existed at the time of publication.
2002 "The Elegant World of Neel Reid". Celestine Sibley. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 14, 1973. Pp. 22-24, 26, 31. This young architect changed the image of Atlanta homes (and other buildings) in the early twentieth century. Many of Reid's works still stand.
2003 William Jay, Regency Architect In Georgia and South Carolina. James Vernon McDonough. Doctoral dissertation, 1950, Princeton University.
2004 "Daniel Pratt, Architect and Builder in Georgia". Robert L. Raley. Antiques 102(3) : 425-433. 1972. Descriptions and illustrations of houses designed by Pratt, primarily in the Milledgeville area.
2005 "The Houses of Colonial Georgia". John P. Corry. Georgia Historical Quarterly 14(3): 181-201. September 1930. A description of public buildings and homes. primarily those of Savannah.
2006 'The Log House in Georgia". Wilbur Zelinsky. Geographical Review 43(2): 173-193. April1953.
2007 The Log Cabin In America, from Pioneer Days to the Present. Clinton Alfred Wes-
56
History
lager. Rutgers University Press. New Brunswick. N.J. [1969]. xxv + 382 pp. Georgia's log cabins are discussed on pages 112-114.
2008 White Columna In Georgia. Medora Field Parkerson. Rinehart & Co.. Inc. New York. 1952. XV + 367 pp. An illustrated popular history of old Georgia houses.
2009 Georgia Homes and Notable Georgiana. A~nie Hornady Howard. M.M. and A. H. Howard, publishers. Atlanta. [1940). 229 pp. Photographs and descriptions of many homes and other buildings in various cities and towns.
2010 Georgia Homea and Landmarks. Annie Hornady Howard, ed. Southern Features Syndicate. Atlanta. 1929. 186 pp.
2011 Hlatortc Houaea of America Open to the Public: An American Heritage Guide. Beverley Da Costa. ed. American Heritage Publishing Company. New York. 1971. 320 pp. Capsulized information on each house includes name. significant dates, location, owner/ operator. hours open. and listing on the National Register of Historic Places, with brief summary of the historical significance. Forty houses in Georgia are treated on pages 57-62.
2012 "Georgia". In: A Guide to Early American Homes South, Dorothy Pratt and Richard Pratt. McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York, 1956, pp. 94-113. Short descriptions of 61 early houses in Georgia.
2013 Early Southern Towns. Everett B. Wilson. A. S. Barnes and Co., Inc. South Brunswick, New Jersey. 1967. 351 pp. Homes and other buildings in the South that are believed to be older than 100 years are pictured. In Georgia, the towns of Augusta, Milledgeville, Macon and Washington are surveyed.
2014 "Town Planning in Colonial Georgia". John W. Reps. Town Planning Review 30 : 273-285. January 1960. On the plans and planning of Savannah, Frederica, Ebenezer, Darien, the proposed Margravate of Azilia, and other towns in the colony.
2015 "Planning in Georgia- Yesterday". Joanna Sears. Urban Georgia 21(9): 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 32. September 1971, The original plans of the cities of Columbus. Milledgeville, and Macon are examined.
2016 "Town Planning in White and Habersham Counties, Georgia". Joan N. Sears. Georgia Historical Quarterly 54(1). 20-40. Spring 1970. The period 1823-1913 is studied.
CIVIL WAR
General Atlanta Campaign March to the Sea Andrews Raid Records Miscellaneous
2017 Georgia Civil War Historical Markers. Georgia Historical Commission. Atlanta. 1964. 195 pp. Condensed texts and locations of the markers. Arrangement by highways facilitates touring by auto. With index to markers by title.
2018 Georgia in the War, 1861-1865. Charles Edgeworth Jones. [Foote & Davies). Atlanta. [1909]. 167 pp.
2019 The Campaign for Atlanta. Allen Phelps Julian. Wilbur G. Kurtz. Bell I. Wiley, Franklin M. Garrett. and Wilbur S. Nye. Civil War Times special edition. Gettysburg, Pa. 1964. 50 pp. Well-illustrated popular historical account.
2020 The Road Past Kennesaw - The Atlanta Campaign of 1864. Richard M. McMurry. National Park Service. Office of Publications. Washington, D.C. 1972. v + 72 pp.
2021 Atlanta. Jacob D. Cox. Campaigns of the Civil War- IX. Charles Scribner's Sons. New York. 1882. vii+ 274 pp.
2022 "The Atlanta Campaign, 1864". George C. Osborn. Georgia Historical Quarterly 34(4) : 271-287. December 1950.
2023 The Atlanta Campelgn: December 23, 1863 to July 18, 1864. Richard M. McMurry. Doctoral dissertation. 1967, Emory University. Atlanta. [vi] + 402 pp.
2024 The Atlanta Campaign, 18 July- 2 September, 1864. Errol MacGregor Clauss. Doctoral dissertation. 1965, Emory University. Atlanta. [v] + 402 pp.
2025 The Selge of Atlanta, 1864. Samuel Carter Ill. St. Martin's Press. New York. 1973. xii + 425 pp.
2026 Battle of Atlanta and the Georgia Campaign. William 0. Key. Twayne Publishers. New York. 1958. 92 pp.
A narrative account first printed serially in the Atlanta Constitution.
2027 The March to the Sea; Franklin and Nashville. Jacob D. Cox. Campaigns of the Civil War- X. Charles Scribner's Sons. New York. 1882. xii + 265 pp.
2028 "The March to the Sea. TomS. Gray, Jr. Georgia Historical Quarterly 14(2): 111138. June 1930.
2029 'Where Sherman Passed By". D. J. de Laubenfels. Geographical Review 47(3) : 381-395. July 1957. Features of the landscape along Sherman's route in central Georgia are examined using field maps drawn by one of the Union Army's topographical engineers. Some of the houses. fields. and roads indicated on the maps can still be seen.
2030 The Siege of Savannah In December, 1864 and the Confederate Operations In Georgia and the Third Military District of South Carolina during General Sherman's March from Atlanta to the Sea. Charles C. Jones. Jr. Printed for author by Joel Munsell, Albany. N.Y. 1874. x + 184 pp.
2031 Wild Train - The Story of the Andrews Raiders. Charles Kendall O'Neill. Random House. New York. 1956. xviii + 482 pp.
2032 "The Saga of the General and the Yonah - Better Known as the 'Great Locomotive Chase B. C. Yates. Georgia Magazine 5(5) : 20-22. February- March 1962.
2033 "The Andrews Raid". Wilbur G. Kurtz. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 13(4) : 8-29. December 1968. Historical sketch of the "Great Locomotive Chase", a Civil War incident which took place on the Western & Atlantic Railroad between Kennesaw and Ringgold in north-. western Georgia.
2034 "The Andrews Raid- A Sequel". James G. Bogie. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 16(2) : 26-46. Summer 1971.
2035 "The Andrews Railroad Raid" [and] "What Happened to the Locomotives". Wilbur G. Kurtz. Sr. Civil War Times 5(1): 8-17, 38-43. April1966.
2036 Civil War Recorda In the Georgia Department of Archives and History. Publication No.3. Georgia Department of Archives and History. Atlanta. 1970. 15 pp.
2037 The Confederate Records of the State of Georgia. Allen D. Candler, ed. Compiled and published under authority of the Legislature of the State of Georgia. Atlanta. 1909-1911. 5 vols.: I. II. Ill, IV. VI [Vol. V not published).
2038 The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. United States War Department. Washington. 1880-1901. 128 vols. Reprinted 1972 by The National Historical Society, Gettysburg, Pa.
2039 Atlas to Accompany the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. George B. Davis, Leslie J. Perry, and Joseph W. Kirkley (Compiled by Calvin D. Cowles). United States War Department. Washington. 1891-1895. 175 plates.
2040 Official Records of the Union and Confederate Navies In the War of the Rebellion. United States Navy Department. Washington. D.C. 1894-1927. 30 vols.
2041 Confederate Military History. Clement A. Evans. Ed. Confederate Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1899. 12 vols.
2042 The Atlanta Century: March, 1860- May, 1865. 2d ed. Norman Shavin. 1/D Publishing Co. Atlanta. [1966?]. 1 vol. (unpaged). Book edition of a non-partisan. historically researched series in weekly newspaper style of the Civil War period. Originally published in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Sunday edition. March 4. 1980 to May 7, 1965.
2043 "The Manufacture of Confederate Ordnance in Georgia". Beverly M. DuBose Ill. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 12(4): 8-21. December 1967. On Civil War arsenals and factories in Atlanta, Athens, Augusta, Columbus. Macon, and smaller towns. These included the Confederate Powder Works along the Augusta Canal, the Augusta Arsenal. the Columbus Iron Works, and numerous other facilities which made Georgia a leader in the war effort. Several of these are now preserved as historic sites.
2044 "The Churches in Georgia During the Civil War". T. Conn Bryan. Georgia Historical Quarterly 33(4) : 283-302. December 1949.
2045 The Children of Pride, A True Story of Georgia and the Civil War. Robert Manson Myers. ed. Yale University Press, New Haven. 1972. xxv + 1645 pp. An account of the life of a wealthy family in coastal Georgia, before, during, and after the Civil War. told entirely in family letters, brought together in chronological order without editorial links. The family is that of the Rev. Dr. Charles Colcock Jones (1804-1863) of Liberty County, Georgia. The time period covered by these letters is 1854 to 1868.
COAST
2046 The Golden Isles of Georgia. Caroline Couper Lovell. Little, Brown, and Company. Boston. 1933. 308 pp. Reprinted 1970 by Cherokee Publishing Co., Atlanta.
2047 Georgia's Land of the Golden Isles. Burnette Vanstory. University of Georgia Press.
57
History
Athens. 1956. 237 pp.
2048 The Lost Legacy of Georgia's Golden Isles. Betsy Fancher. Doubleday and Company, Inc. Garden City, N.Y. 1971. 216 pp.
2049 Flags of Five Nations: A Collection of Historical Sketches, Legends and Stories of the Golden Isles of Guale. Brunswick - Glynn County Chamber of Commerce and The Cloister. Sea Island, Georgia. No date. 95 pp.
2050 "The Golden Isles of Guale". W. Robert Moore. National Geographic Magazine 65(2) : 235-264. February 1934.
2051 Historical Markers In Coastal Georgia. Coastal Georgia Historical Society and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission, Brunswick, Georgia. [1971). [vi) +55 pp. Concerns the following counties: Bryan, Camden. Glynn, Liberty, Long, and Mcintosh.
2052 Early Days of Coastal Georgia. Margaret Davis Gate, author and Orrin Sage Wightman, photographer. Fort Frederica Association, Publisher. St. Simons Island, Georgia. 1955. 235 pp. Describes many historic places in coastal Georgia.
2053 The Ocean Highway: New Brunswick, New Jersey to Jacksonville, Florida. Federal Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration. American Guide Series. Modern Age Books. New York. 1938. xxxii + 244 pp. A guidebook. The Ocean Highway in Georgia is U.S. 17 from Savacnah parallel to the coast to Kingsland and the Florida line.
2054 The Intracoastal Waterway - Norlolk to Key West. Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration. American Guide Series. Government Printing Office. Washington. D.C. 1937. xii + 143 pp. A guidebook. The Intracoastal Waterway in Georgia traverses the following: Savannah River. Ossabaw Sound, St. Catherines Sound, Sapelo Sound, Doboy Sound, Altamaha Sound, St. Simon Sound, St. Andrew Sound, and St. Marys River.
2055 A Social Hlstcry of the Sea Islands. Guion Griffis Johnson. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1930. viii+ 245 pp. Traces the cultural development of the coastal islands of South Carolina and Georgia through the Reconstruction Period. Examines: early history, staple crops, sea-island cotton culture. plantation management, laborers and the land, the lives of the planter and his slaves. and the Civil War and its aftermath.
2056 Seed from Madagascar. Duncan Clinch Heyward. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1937. xiv + 256 pp. An account of the rice plantations of early South Carolina and Georgia.
2057 "The Development of Rice Culture in 18th Century Georgia" Douglas C. Wilms. Southeastern Geographer 12(1). 45-57. May 1972.
2058 Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation In 1838-1839. Frances Anne (Fanny) Kemble. Harper & Brothers. Publishers. New York. 1863. 337 pp.
2059 "Mistakes in Fanny Kemble's Georgia Journal". Margaret Davis Gate. Georgia Historical Quarterly 44(1): 1-17. March 1960. A map of plantation era St. Simons Island is included.
2060 Georgia's Disputed Ruins. E. Merton Coulter, ed. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1937. 289 pp. Three controversial documents are reprinted: "Certain Tabby Ruins on the Georgia Coast" b~ Marmaduke Floyd. "An Archaeological Report on the Elizafield Ruins" by James A. Ford. "Observations on the Method of Planting and Cultivating the Sugar-Cane in Georgia and South Carolina" by Thomas Spalding.
2061 The Spanish Missions of Georgia. John Tate Lanning. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1935. xiii + 321 pp.
2062 "Tapia or Tabby". Albert C. Manucy. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 11 (4) : 32-33. December 1952. On an early type of masonry construction of which Fort Frederica on St. Simons Island is an example.
2063 Tourism Historical- Recreational Conference; Held September 14, 1970 (at) Darien, Georgia. Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission. Brunswick, Georgia. 1970. 30 pp. The abundance of historical sites in the coastal area of Georgia is seen as a stimulus to an increase in the tourism industry. The recreational potential is related to the impact of Interstate Highway 95.
2064 "Coastal Georgia's Cultural Resources". Catherine M. Howett. In: The Value and Vulnerability ot Coastal Resources, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section, Atlanta. May 1975, pp. 183-199. NTIS number: PB-247 693. On conservation of the historical and archaeological features of coastal Georgia.
COLONIAL FRONTIER IN THE SOUTH
2065 The Debatable Land, A Sketch of the Anglo-Spanish Contest lor the Georgia Country. Herbert E. Bolton and Mary Ross. Russell & Russell. New York. 1925, reissued 1968. xiii
+ 138 pp.
2066 The Diplomatic History of Georgia, A Study of the Epoch of Jenkins' Ear. John Tate Lanning. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1936. xi + 275 pp. The War of Jenkins' Ear (1739-1742) was one of several conflicts between Georgia and Spanish Florida. The Spanish withdrew after their defeat at the battle of Bloody Marsh on St. Simons Island.
2067 Arredondo's Historical Proof of Spain's Title to Georgia. Herbert E. Bolton, ed. University ofCalifornia Press. Berkeley. 1925. xvii + 382 pp. + 1 fold-out map. An editorial introductory sketch and editorial notes accompany this publication of Antonio de Arredondo's dissertation Demoatraclon Hlslorlographlca. The document is a very valuable source for the study of the English-Spanish conflict over coastal Georgia.
2068 "The Spanish Era in Georgia History". J. Randolph Anderson. Georgia Historical Quarterly 20(3) : 210-238. September 1936. An address delivered at the celebration of the bicentennial of Darien, Georgia.
2069 "The Founding of Spanish Colonies in Georgia and South Carolina". J. G. Johnson. Georgia Historical Quarterly 15(4): 301-312. December 1931.
2070 "The Restoration of the Spanish Missions in Georgia, 1598-1606". Mary Ross. Georgia Historical Quarterly 10(3): 171-199. September 1926. On the 1597 uprising in Guale (seventeenth-century Spanish colony, now coastal Georgia) and the decade after.
2071 The Southern Frontier, 1670-1732. Verner W. Crane. University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor. 1929. [Ann Arbor Paperback edition, 1956. viii+ 359 pp.]. A pioneering work on the struggle over the Southern colonial frontier by the English, Spanish, French and Indians. Traces the origins of the colony of Georgia as both astrategic buller and a philanthropic venture.
2072 The Southern Frontier from the Founding of Georgia to the End of King George's War. Richard Paul Sonderegger. Doctoral dissertation, 1964, University of Michigan. 290 pp.
2073 John Stuart and the Southern Colonial Frontier: A Study of Indian Relations, War, Trade and Land Problems In the Southern Wllderneu, 1754-1775. John Richard Alden. University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor. 1944. Reprinted 1966 by Gordian Press. New York, xiv + 384 pp. A continuation of the account begun by Verner W. Crane in his The Southern Frontier, 1670-1732.
2074 The Southern Frontier. John Anthony Caruso. Bobbs-Merrill. Indianapolis. 1963. 448 pp. A narrative history of the early American frontier in Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and South Carolina.
2075 The Creek Frontier, 1540-1783. David H. Corkran. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1967. xv + 343 pp. History of the Creek Indians during the colonial period from an Indian point-of-view.
2076 Indian Affairs In Georgia, 1732-1756. John Pitts Corry. Published by the author. Philadelphia. 1936. 197 pp.
COLONIAL GEORGIA
2077 Colonial Georgia, A Study In British Imperial Polley In the Eighteenth Century. Trevor Richard Reese. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1963. viii+ 172 pp.
2078 The Most Delightful Country of the Universe, Promotional Literature of the Colony of Georgia, 1717-1734. Trevor R. Reese. Beehive Press. Savannah. 1972. xxi + 217 pp.
2079 Our First VIsit In America: Early Reports from the Colony of Georgia, 1732-1740. Peter Gordon, G.P.F. von Reck, J.M. Bolzius, Francis Moore, Benjamin Ingham, John Wesley, Thomas Causton, and George Whitefield. Introduction by Trevor R. Reese. Beehive Press. Savannah. 1974. xiv + 316 pp.
2060 Georgia and South Carolina During the Oglethorpe Period, 1732-1743. Billups Phinizy Spalding. Doctoral dissertation, 1963, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 440 pp.
2081 Georgia Plan: 1732-1752. PaulS. Taylor. University of California, Institute of Business and Economic Research. Berkeley, Calif. 1972. xviii + 322 pp. The original plans and intentions of the Trustees in the organizing of a colony called Georgia are reviewed and analyzed.
2082 An Economic History of Colonial Georgia, 1732-1754. Millon LaVerne Ready. Doctoral dissertation. 1970, University of Georgia. 384 pp.
2083 British Drums on the Southern Frontier - The Military Colonization of Georgia, 1733-1749. Larry E. Ivers. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1974. xiii + 274 pp.
2064 Georgia as a Proprietary Province; The Execution of a Trust. James Ross McCain. R. G. Badger [publisher]. Boston. 1917. 357 pp. Reprinted 1972 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C.
58
2085 Georgia Jol!rneys, Being an Account of the Lives of Georgia's Original Settlers and Many Other Early Settlers from the Founding of the Colony In 1732 until the Institution of Royal Government In 1754. Sarah B. Gober Temple and Kenneth Coleman. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1961. xviii + 348 pp.
2086 The Clamorous Malcontents- Criticisms & Defenses of the Colony of Georgia 1741 1743. Trevor R. Reese, introduction. Beehive Press. Savannah. 1973. xvi + 349 pp. Original documents from opposing factions illuminate the "malcontent" controversy in the early years of the colony of Georgia.
2087 The Royal Governors of Georgia, 1754-1775. William Wright Abbott. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. [1959). x + 198 pp.
2088 The Colonial Records of the Slate of Georgia. Allen D. Candler, ed. Compiled and published under authority of the Legislature of the State of Georgia. Atlanta. 1904-1916. 26 vols.
2089 A History of the OHiclal Records of the Colony and State of Georgia. Josephine Hart Brandon. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, Emory University. 409 pp.
COVERED BRIDGES
2090 "The Vanishing Breed". James G. Bogie. Georgia 15(9): 16-17,31. March 1972. Once more than 250 covered bridges were found in Georgia; now less than one-tenth remain.
2091 "Relics of the Road". Rob Ledford. Georgia Magazine 7(5): 12-19. February-March 1964. A look at several covered bridges in Georgia including some that have been destroyed or moved since thi_s article was written.
2092 Relics of the Road; The Covered Bridges of Georgia. Georgia State Highway Department, Public Information Office. Atlanta. (1965?]. 7 pp.
2092 Old Covered Bridges of Georgia, Mrs. Kirby-Smith Anderson. For the James Edward Oglethorpe Chapter, Daughters of the American Colonists. No date. Typed MS at Georgia Department of Archives and History. [x) + 108 pp.
2094 Covered Bridges of the South. Richard Sanders Allen. Stephen Greene Press. Brattleboro, Vermont. 1970. [v) +56 pp. The chapter on Georgia's bridges examines several of the twenty or so ""timbered tunnels" yet remaining in the state. Included is the story of Horace King, the ex-slave who was Georgia's greatest covered-bridge builder.
DEAD TOWNS
2095 The Dead Towns of Georgia. Charles C. Jones. Jr. Collections of the Georgia Historical Society, Volume 4, Georgia Historical Society, Savannah (Morning News Steam Printing House, Savannah). 1878. 263 pp. Reprinted 1974 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S. C. and Cherokee Publishing Company, Atlanta. 263 pp. Brief histories of several abandoned towns including Abercorn and Ebenezer in Effing ham County, Frederica in Glynn County, Hardwick in Bryan County, Sunbury in Liberty County, and others.
2096 Dead Towns of Georgia. George Raffalovich. For the Division of State Parks, Department of Natural Resources. 1938. Manuscript. Unpaged. (Copy at Georgia Department of Archives and History). Annotated listing by county of location of site.
2097 "The Migration to Richer Ground". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine December 5, 1971. Pp. 60-62, 64, 66, 68. Dead and dying towns in Georgia and the reasons for their demise are investigated. Graysville, Boykin. Coleman's Lake, White Sulphur Springs, Odessadale, Bluffton, and others are visited.
2098 ""Gone and Almost Forgotten - Starksville, Palmyra, Drayton, Danville, Pineville". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Magazine 11 (2): 15-17. August- September 1967. Five now-nonexistent towns in Southwest Georgia are described.
EDUCATION
2099 A History of Education In Georgia. Dorothy Orr. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1950. xiv + 463 pp.
2100 Education In Georgia. Charles Edgeworth Jones. Government Printing Office. Wash ington, D.C. 1889. 154 pp.
2101 Secondary Education In Georgia, 17321858. Elbert W. G. Boogher. [I.F. Huntzinger Co.. printer, Camden, N.J.]. Philadelphia. 1933. vii+ 452 pp. Includes a listing of the academies of Georgia with dates and references.
2102 Educational Survey[s] of [the Counties of Georgia]. M. L. Duggan. Georgia State Department of Education. 1914-1923. (43 vola.?].
2103 Two Hundred Years of Agricultural Education In Georgia. John T. Wheeler. Interstate Printers and Publishers. Danville, Illinois. 1948. viii+ 397 pp.
History
2104 The Rise and Progress of Negro Colleges In Georgia, 1865-1949. Willard Range. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1951. x + 254 pp.
2105 "Higher Education for Negroes in Georgia". Aaron Brown. Georgia Review 1(4) : 470-478. Winter 1947.
2106 "College Libraries in G~orgia". Virginia Satterfield. Georgia Historical Quarterly 25(1). 16-38. March 1941. ) A historical sketch focusing on the libraries of seven institutions: the University of Georgia, Emory University, Wesleyan College, Mercer University, Agnes Scott College, Georgia State College for Women (now Georgia College) and Georgia School (now Institute) of Technology.
FOLKLORE
2107 A Treasury of Georgia Folklore. Ronald G. Killion and Charles T. Waller. Cherokee Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1972. 267 pp. Folk tales, conjures, superstitions, customs, children's lore, folk songs and folk medicine 're collected. Included are a dictionary of Georgia ghosts, a rural vocabulary of animal
.,d plant names, and numerous legends concerning various people and places in the state.
2108 "Saving Georgia's Disappearing Folklore". Keith Colbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine January 25, 1970. Pp. 1012, 24-25.
2109 ""Preserving Georgia's Folk Heritage". John A. Burrison. Historic Preservation 24(3): 19-21. July- September 1972. On the folklore programs of Georgia State University. These include archives and a museum.
2110 The Foxflre Book. Eliot Wigginton, ed. Doubleday and Company, Inc. Garden City, N.Y. 1972. 384 pp. "Hog dressing; log cabin building; mountain crafts and foods; planting by the signs; snake lore, hunting tales. faith healing; moonshining; and other affairs of plain living" are described by the editor and his students at the Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School in Rabun County, Georgia.
2111 Foxllre 2. Eliot Wigginton, ed. Anchor Press-Doubleday. Garden City, N.Y. 1973. 410 pp. ""Ghost stories. spring wild plant foods, spinning and weaving, midwifing, burial customs, corn shuckin's, wagon making and more affairs of plain living".
2112 Foxflre 3. Eliot Wigginton, ed. Anchor Press- Doubleday. Garden City, N.Y. 1975. 511 pp. ""Animal care, banjos and dulcimers, hide tanning, summer and fall wild plant foods, butter churns. ginseng, and still more affairs of plain living".
2113 Foxllre. Southern Highlands Literary Fund, Inc. Rabun Gap, Georgia. Quarterly. Mountain crafts, folklore, recipes, songs, poetry, and other affairs of life in the North Georgia mountains region are preserved in this quarterly magazine.
2114 Handicrafts of the Southern Highlands. Allen H. Eaton. Russell Sage Foundation. New York. 1937. 370 pp. Comprehensive and well illustrated, from woodcarvings to log cabins.
2115 Crafts In the Southern Highlands. Southern Highland Handicraft Guild. Asheville, N.C. 1971. 46 pp.
2116 Georgia Jug Makers: A History of Southern Folk Pottery. John A. Burrison. Doctoral dissertation, 1973. University of Pennsylvania. 458 pp.
2117 "Searching for the Folk Pottery of Georgia". Charles Counts. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(4) : 21-25. F~ll 1973.
2118 Drums and Shadows: Survival Studies Among the Georgia Coastal Negroes. Georgia Writers Project of Work Projects Administration. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1940. XX + 274 pp.
2119 Slave Songs of the Georgia Sea Islands. Lydia Parrish, comp. Folklore Associates. Hatboro, Penn. 1965. 256 pp.
2120 Georgia's Heritage of Song. Henrietta Collings. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1955. 87 pp.
2121 Mountain Spirits - A Chronicle of Corn Whiskey from King James' Ulster Plantation to America's Appalachians and the Moonshine Life. Joseph Earl Dabney. Charles Scribner's Sons. New York. 1974. xxvi + 242 pp. '"Moonshining"" in the Southeast - particularly in Georgia, the leading state of illicit dis tilling.
2122 Myths and Tales of the Southeastern Indians. John R. Swanton, Bulletin 88. Smith sonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington D.C. 1929. 285 pp.
2123 "Myths of the Cherokee". James Mooney. In: Nineteenth Annual Report of the Bu reau of American Ethnology, 1897-98, Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Eth nology. 1900 [1902). pp. 3-546.
2124 "Myths of the Cherokees'". Ruth Elgin Suddeth. Georgia Review 10(1): 84-91. Spring 1956.
59
History
2125 "Land of Mystery and Magic- Cherokee Legends and Myths of Georgia Mountains". Ruth Elgin Suddeth. Georgia Magazine 2(2) : 31-33, 47. August- September 1958. North Georgia's Blood Mountain, Track Rock Gap, Nacoochee Mound, Tallulah Falls and Cohuttas Mountains are rich in Cherokee Indian folklore.
2126 "The Great Serpent of Cohutta Mountain". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 6(1): 21-22. 1953. A traditional Cherokee Indian tale. The scene is the Cohutta Mountain region of Murray and Fannin Counties.
2127 The Swimmer Manu~ertpt: Cherokee Sacred Formulas and Medicinal Pr&ICrtptlona. James Mooney; Revised, completed and edited by Frans M. Olbrechts. Bulletin 99. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington, D.C. 1932. xvii + 319 pp. + 13 plates.
FORTS
2128 "Georgia Forts (series]". Georgia Department of Archives and History, Forts Committee. Georgia Magazine 9-15. 1966- 1971. A series of 29 articles on Georgia's historic forts, as follows: (County of location indicated in parentheses) 1. Fort Argyle (Bryan) 9(6) : 11-13. April- May 1966. 2. Fort St. Simons (Glynn) 10(1): 29-31. June-July 1966. 3. Fort Augusta (Richmond) 10(2) : 20-22. August- September 1966. 4. Fort Wilkinson (Baldwin) 10(3) : 21-23. October- November 1966. 5. The Fort at Standing Peachtree (Fulton) 10(4): 21-23. December 1966- January 1967. 6. Fort George (Chatham) 10(5) : 17-19. February- March 1967. 7. Fort Hawkins (Bibb) 10(6) : 20-22. April- May 1967. 8. Fort Twiggs (Hancock) 11(1): 27-29. June- July 1967. 9. Fort St. Andrews, Fort Prince William (Camden) 11 (2) : 22-24. August - September 1967. 10. Fort King George (Mcintosh) 11 (3) : 22-24. October- November 1967. 11. The Okefenokee Forts (Charlton. Ware, Clinch) 11 (4) : 22-24. December 1967- January 1968. 12. Fort James (site now covered by waters of Clark Hill Reservoir) 11(5): 19-21. Febuary - March 1968. 13. Wofford's Station (Banks) 11(6): 24-26. April- May 1966. 14. Fort Morris (Liberty) 12(1): 21-23. June- July 1968. 15. Fort Early (Crisp) 12(2) : 24-26. August- September 1968. 16. Fort Jackson (Chatham) 12(3) . 17, 22-23. October- November 1966. 17. Fort Scott (site now covered by waters of Lake Seminole Reservoir) 12(4) : 28-29. December 1968- January 1969. 18. Fort Mitchell (Russell County, Alabama) 12(5): 20-21. February- March 1969. 19. Fort Fidius (Baldwin) 12(6): 20-21. April- May 1969. 20. Fort Mcintosh (Brantley or Camden) 13(2) : 21-23. August- September 1969. 21. Fort Mathews (Franklin) 13(4) : 37-38. December 1969- January 1970. 22. Oglethorpe Barracks (Chatham) 13(5) : 26-27. FebrJary- March 1970. 23. The Cherokee Removal Forts [Fort Buffington, Fort Newnan, Fort Sixes (Cherokee); Fort Campbell (Forsyth); Fort Cedartown (Polk); Fort New Echola (Gordon); Fort Cumming (Walker); Fort Hoskins (Murray); Fort Hetzel (Fanning); Fort Chastain (Towns); Fort Dahlonega (Lumpkin); Fort Means, Fort Rome (Floyd) ] 14(1) : 28-29. June- July 1970. 24. Fort Telfair and the Fortifications at Beards Bluff, 1778-1814 (Long) 14(2): 15-16,18. August- September 1970. 25. Augusta Arsenal, 1815-1829 (Richmond) 14(4) : 24-25. December 1970. 26. Fort Barrington (Mcintosh) 14(7) : 14-15, 20. March 1971 27. Fort Gaines (Clay) 14(9): 17-19. May 1971. 28. Fort Clarke (Greene) 15(3): 10-11. August 1971. 29. Fort Frederica (Glynn) 15(5). 8-9. November 1971.
GAZETTEERS AND GUIDEBOOKS
2129 A Gazetteer of the State of Georgia. Adiel Sherwood. Charleston: W. Riley, 1827, 143 pp.; Philadelphia: J. W. Martin & W. K. Boden, 1829, 301 pp.; Washington: P. Force, 1837, [iv] + 356 pp., Macon: S. Boykin, 1860, 209 pp.; 1860 edition reprinted 1970 by Cherokee Publishing Company, Atlanta. "A particular description of the rivers, mountains, creeks, counties, towns, villages, banks, canals, mineral springs, etc. etc. in alphabetical order..."A geographical dictionary, statistical abstract; and travel guide to mid-nineteenth century Georgia.
2130 Statistics of the State of Georgia: Including an Account of Its Natural, Civil, and Ecclesiastical History; Together with a Particular DescrtptiJn of Each County, Notices
A of the Manners and Customs of Its Aboriginal Tribes, and Correct Map of the State.
George White. W. Thorne Williams (publisher]. Savannah. 1849. Reprinted 1972 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C.. 624 + 77 pp. Although not mentioned in the title, the work includes an appended "Catalogue of the Fauna and Flora of the State of Georgia" by "eminent naturalists".
2131 Historical Collections of Georgia: Containing the Most Interesting Facts, Traditions, Biographical Sketches, Anecdotes, Etc., Relating to Its History and Antiquities, From Its First Settlement to the Present Time. 3rd ed. George White. Pudney & Russell, Publishers. New York. 1855. xvi + 688 + 58 pp. Reprinted 1968 by Heritage Papers, Danielsville, Georgia; and 1969 by Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, Md.
2132 Miscellanies of Georgia; Historical, Biographical, Descriptive etc. Absalom H. Chappell. Gilbert Printing Company, Columbus, Georgia. 1874, reprinted 1928. 73 + 137 pp.
2133 Hand-Book of the State of Georgia; Accompanied by a Geological Map of the State. Thomas P. Janes. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. 1876. vii+ 256 pp. Official handbook containing "geological and physical features... description of the principal Rocks and Soils. Elevations, Water-powers, and a partial account of the Natural Productions of the State, both mineral and vegetable".
2134 Sholes Georgia State Gazetteer and Bualn... Directory tor 1879 I 1880. C. W. Norwood, camp. 1M E. Sholes and Company, Publishers. Atlanta. 1879. x + 932 pp.
2135 The Commonwealth of Georgia. The Country; The People; The Productions. J. T. Henderson. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. 1885. viii + 379 pp. + 6 pis. + 22 maps.
2136 Georgia: Her Resources and Possibilities. R. T. Nesbitt. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. 1896. 475 pp.
2137 Georgia Historical and Industrial. 0. B. Stevens and R. F. Wright. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. 1901. 955 pp. A summary of the state's resources: soils and geology, roads, waterways, railroads, agriculture, stock raising, fish and game, manufacturers, education, benevolent institutions, religious denominations, and governments. Includes sketches of each county.
2138 Advantages of Georgia, For Those Desiring Homes In a Genial Climate (World's Fair Edition). Joseph T. Derry and R. F. Wright. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. [1904-1905?]. 259 pp. A general view of the state's resources is combined with a business gazetteer.
2139 Advantages of Georgia, For Those Desiring Homes In a Genial Climate. Joseph T. Derry and R. F. Wright. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. 1906-1907. 153 pp.
2140 Georgia: Comprising Sketches of Counties, Towns, Events, Institutions, and Persona, Arranged In Cyclopedic Form. [Cyclopedia of Georgia, alternate title]. Allen D. Candler and Clement A. Evans, eds. State Historical Association. Atlanta. 1906. 3 vols.
2141 Georgia. Samuel C. Dunlap. Georgia Bureau of Industries and Immigration. Atlanta. 1910. 47 pp.
2142 Facts About Georgia. Louis N. Geldert, ed. Georgia Chamber of Commerce. Atlanta. 1916. 277 pp.
2143 Georgia and Her Resources. Year Book of Agriculture -1930 edition, Serial No. 117. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. 1930. 232 pp. This summary of the state's agricultural resources includes statistical information on agricultural products. sketches of each of 161 counties, and a "Farmer's Cyclopedia of useful and varied information often sought, frequently needed and difficult to obtain on the farm and in the farm home".
2144 Georgia and Her Resources. Rogers Winter, ed. Year Book 1932, Serial No. 121. Georgia Department of Agriculture. Atlanta. August 1932. 114 pp.
2145 Georgia -A Guide to Its Towns and Countryside. American Guide Series. Federal Writers Project. Work Projects Administration. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1940. xxviii + 559 pp. Revised and extended 1954 by George G. Leckie; Tupper and Love Publishers, Atlanta; xxii + 457 pp.
GRIST MILLS
2146 'The Grist Mill in Georgia". M. T. Thomson. Georgia Review 7(3) : 332-346. Fall 1953. A short history.
2147 The Culture History of Grist Milling In Northwest Georgia. Donald Gregory Jeane. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, Louisiana State University. 153 pp.
2148 "An Album of Georgia Water Mills". Bill Lutrick and Roger Worden. Georgia Life 1(3) : 23-30. Winter 1974.
HISTORIC PRESERVATION: THE STATE
2149 Georgia's Historic Preservation Plan. Georgia Historical Commission [now Historic Preservation Section of Georgia Department of Natural Resources]. Atlanta. December 31, 1972. Various pagings.
2150 Handbook lor Historic Preservation In Georgia- A Guide lor Volunteers. William R. Mitchell, Jr. Georgia Historical Commission [now Historic Preservation Section of Georgia Department of Natural Resources]. Atlanta. 1971. 34 pp. Expanded edition 1974, 101 pp.
2151 "Many of Georgia's Historic Buildings are Now Being Restored." Mary Gregory Jewett. Georgia Magazine 11 (5) : 16-18. February- March 1968.
2152 "A Champion of Our Past". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine December 21, 1975. Pp. 6-8, 18-19. A look at the work of Mary Gregory Jewett, a leader of historic preservation efforts in the state.
60
History
HISTORIC SITES: LISTINGS AND SURVEYS
2153 Georgia Hlatorlclll Martcera. Carroll Proctor Scruggs, editor. Bay Tree Grove Publishers. Valdosta, Ga. 1973. 529 pp. Contains the complete texts of 1752 markers.
2154 The National Reglater of Hlatorlc Placas 1972. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Washington, D.C. 1972. xiv + 603 pp. Supplement 1974, viii + 664 pp. Edition of 1972 and supplement of 1974 together list properties added to the National Register to June 30, 1973. Each entry notes name, location, and pertinent dates and gives of brief description of the site. 198 sites in Georgia are listed.
2155 "National Register of Historic Places". U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Federal Reglater 40(24) : 5242-5345. February 4, 1975. A list, by state and county, of the properties included through Oecember 31, 1974. Protection of properties on the register and procedures for compliance are explained in detail. (Additions to and deletions from the register are published at intervals in the Federal Reglater).
2158 Hlatorlc Amerlclln Bulldlnga Survey: Catalog of the Meaaured Drawlnga and Photographa of the Survey In the Library of Congreu, March 1, 1941. U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Historic American Buildings Survey. Washington, D.C. 1941 (2nd edition). viii+ 470 pp. NTIS number: PB-177 632. Lists structures which have been included in the HABS program. HABS seeks to maintain permanent graphic records of selected historic buildings in the United States. The listings for Georgia are on pages 82-95.
2157 Hlatorlc American Bulldlnga Survey- Supplemenl U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Historic American Buildings Survey. Washington, D.C. 1959. NTIS number: PB-177 633.
2158 "Historic American Buildings... Number 7". Historic American Buildings Survey. ArchHeclural Forum 64(6) : 499-508. June 1936. Three early Georgia residences in photograph, plan, and working drawing. These are Davenport House in Savannah, Westover in Milledgeville, and Lowther Hall in Clinton (Jones County).
2159 Hlatorlc Spola and Placas of lntereat In Georgia. Ruby Felder Ray Thomas. Published by the author. N.p. September 1933. 133 pp.
2180 Georgia' Landmartca, Memorlala and Legenda. Lucian Lamar Knight. Published by the author. Atlanta. 1913. 2 vols. Vol. 1 - Part 1 - "Landmarks and Memorials". Part 2 - "Historical Outlines, Original Settlers, and Distinguished Residents of the Counties of Georgia". Vol. 2- Section 1 -"Under the Code Duello". Section 2- "Landm~s and Memorials." Section 3- "Historic Church-Yards and Burial Grounds". Section 4- "Myths and Legends of the Indians". Section 5- "Tales of the Revolutionary Campfires". Section 6- "Georgia Miscellanies". Section 7 - "Historic County Seats, Chief Towns, and Noted Localities".
HISTORIC SITES: MISCELLANEOUS
2181 Hlalorlc Prennratlon Dlatrlcla In Georgia. Robert Cecil Cooper. Georgia Institute of Technology, [Graduate Program in City Planning). September 1973. Unpublished [Copy available at Price Gilbert Memorial Library, Georgia Institute of Technology). Preservation programs in the following Georgia cities and towns are examined: Savannah, Columbus, Macon, Augusta, Atlanta, Roswell, Thomasville, Lumpkin, Washington, Jonesboro. and Milledgeville. Includes summary of the components of a comprehensive preservation program and recommendations for government action.
2182 "The Revolution in Georgia: A Bicentennial Guide to the Historic Sites Where American Colonials and British Troops Fought for Control of Coastal Georgia". Carroll Proctor Scruggs. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(6) : 56-61. November- December 1975.
2183 "State Capitols of Georgia". Virginia G. Bailey. Georgia Magazine 2(5) : 12-16, 29. February - March 1959. Capitol buildings in Louisville, Milledgeville and Atlanta are examined.
2184 Garden Hlatory of Georgia, 1733-1933. Loraine M. Cooney, comp. and Hattie C. Rainwater, ed. Peachtree Garden Club. Atlanta. 1933. [xvii) + 458 pp.
2185 Hlalorlc Gardena of Georgia. Lewis H. Beck. Southern States Printing Co. Griffin, Georgia. [1942). 23 pp.
2188 "Lights Along the Georgia Shore". Amy Chambliss. Georgia Life 2(2) : 14-16. Autumn 1975. Historical sketches of Georgia's lighthouses.
2187 "Old Monuments Never Die". Gayle White. Atlanta Joumal and Conatltutlon Magazine June 23, 1974. Pp. 29, 31-32, 35. Georgia's many Confederate monuments are being inventoried and examined.
2188 Some Early Epltapha In Georgia. Mrs. Peter W. Meldrim. Georgia Society of the Colonial Dames of America. Seeman Printery, Inc. Durham, N.C. 1924. 472 pp. Names. dates and epitaphs from Georgia's earliest cemeteries: Savannah's Old Colonial Cemetery, Frederica Cemetery, Vernonburg (White Bluff) Cemetery, St. Paul's of Augusta
Churchyard, Midway Cemetery, Sunbury Cemetery, the Old Jewish Cemetery in Savannah, and others.
2189 Famoua Treea. Charles E. Randall and D. Priscilla Edgerton. Miscellaneous Publication No. 295. U.S. Department of Agriculture. 1938. 116 pp. Several trees in Georgia are included.
INDIANS
General Cherokee Creek
2170 The Indiana of the Southeastern United States. John A. Swanton. Bulletin 137. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington, D. C. 1946. xiii + 943 pp. + 107 pis.+ 5 figs.+ 13 maps.
2171 "Indians of the South<fstern United States". Matthew W. Stirling. National Geographic 89(1): 53-74. January 1946.
2172 Four Centuries of Southern Indians. Charles M. Hudson, ed. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1975. [iv) + 177 pp. Nine papers originally presented at the 19th annual meeting of the American Society for Ethnohistory held in Athens. Georgia, October 13-16, 1971.
2173 The Firat Georgians- The History of This Area'a Firat Families. Bill Winn. Published by The Atlanta Journal. Atlanta. April 1968. 64 pp. An introductory history of the Indians of Georgia. Includes a list of Indian place names and their meanings.
2174 The Southam Indiana- The Story of the Civilized Tribes Before Removal. A. S. Cotterill. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1954. xiii + 259 pp.
2175 Indian Removal: The Emigration of the Five Civilized Trlbea of Indiana. Grant Foreman. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1932. 415 pp.
2176 Southern Indians In the American Revolution. James H. O'Donnell Ill. University of Tennessee Press. Knoxville. 1973. xii + 171 pp.
2177 Indians of the Southeast: Then and Now. Jesse Burt and Robert B. Ferguson. Abingdon Press. Nashville. 1973. 304 pp. The origin, history and cultures of the Indians of the southeastern United States are described.
2178 "Creek and Cherokee Culture in the Eighteenth Century." William H. Sears. American Antiquity 21 : 143-149. October 1955.
Cherokee Indians
2179 The Cherokees. Grace Steele Woodward. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1963. XV + 360 pp. A concise history.
2180 The Cherokee Nation. Marion L. Starkey. Alfred A. Knopf. New York. 1946. xiv + 355 pp.
2181 Old Frontiers. The Story of the Cherokee Indians from Earlleat Times to the Date of Their Removal to the Weal, 1838. John P. Brown. Southern Publishers. Inc. Kingsport, Tenn. 1938. xi+ 570 pp.
2182 The Story of the_Cherokees... William Robert Lee Smith. The Church of God Pub lishing House. Cleveland, Tenn. 1928. 229 pp.
2183 History of the Cherokee Indians and Their Legends and Folklore. Emmet Starr. Warden Co. Oklahoma City. 1921. Reprinted 1969 by Kraus Reprint Co., New York, 680 pp. Primarily of genealogical interest. Various official documents and records are reproduced.
2184 Starr's History of the Cherokee Indians. Indian Heritage Edition. Jack Gregory and Rennard Strickland. Indian Heritage Association. Fayetteville, Ark. 1967. 675 pp.
2185 The Cherokee Indians. Thomas Valentine Parker. Grafton Press. New York. 1907. viii+ 116 pp.
2188 The Eastern Cherokees. William Harten Gilbert, Jr. Bulletin 133, Anthropological Papers No. 23. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington. 1943. Pp. 169-413.
2187 Land Cenlona of the Cherokee Nation In Tennenee, Mlnlaslppl, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama 17851835. John H. Goff.ln: Cherokee and Creek Indians (American Indian Ethnohistory- Southern and Southeast Indians- A Garland Series), David Agee Horr, comp. and ed .. Garland Publishing Inc., New York & London, 1974, pp. 287-581.
2188 Cherokee Tragedy, The Story of the Ridge Family and the Decimation of a People. Thurman Wilkins. Macmillan Co. New York. x + 398 pp.
2189 "The Cherokee Nation of Indians: A Narrative of Their Official Relations with the
61
History
Colonial and Federal Governments". Charles C. Royce. In: Fltth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology 1883-84, Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of Ethnology, Washington, D.C .. 1887 [1888]. pp. 121-378.
2190 The Removal of the Cherokee Nation: Manlfaat Destiny or National Dishonor?. Louis Filler and Allen Guttmann, eds. Heath. Boston. [1962]. 113 pp.
2191 The Removal of the Cherokee Indians From Georgia. Wilson Lumpkin. Dodd, Mead & Co. New York. 1907. 2 vols. "His [the author's] Speeches in the United States Congress of the Indian Question, as Representative and Senator of Georgia; His Official Correspondence on the Removal of the Cherokees during his two terms as Governor of Georgia, and later as United States Commissioner to the Cherokees, 1827-1841.
2192 "New Perspectives on the Cherokees- Special Cherokee Issue". Appalachian Journal 214) : 250-356. Summer 1975.
2193 Cherokees of the Old South, A People In Tr~nsltlon. Henry Thompson Malone. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1956. xiii + 238 pp.
2194 "The Cherokees Become a Civilized Tribe". Henry T. Malone. Early Georgia 2(2) : 12-16. 1957.
2195 Torchlights to the Cherokees- The Brainerd Mission. Robert Sparks Walker. Mac-
millan Company. New York. 1931. xi+ 339 pp.
The Brainerd Mission in Chattanooga and other missionary efforts in Tennessee, Georgia
and Alabama are examined.
~
2196 The Cherokee Nation - Fort Mountain; Vann House; Chester Inns; New Echola. Ivan Allen. Ivan Allen Company. Atlanta. 1959. 59 pp.
2197 New Echola Letters, Contributions of Samuel A. Worcester to the Cherokee Phoenix. Jack Frederick Kilpatrick and Anna Grills Kilpatrick, eds. Southern Methodist University Press. Dallas. 1968. 130 pp.
2198 Sketches of Some of the First Settlers of Upper Georgia, of the Cherokees, and of the Author. George R. Gilmer. D. Appleton and Company, New York, 1855; Americus Book Company, Americus, Ga., 1926 [revised ed.[; Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 1965, 463 pp. [reprint of 1926 ed. with added index]. [Also published, New York, 1955, as Gilmer's Georgians). The author, a former Governor of Georgia, writes candidly about the Virginians' settlement on Broad River, the North Carolinians' settlement in that region now included in the counties of Wilkes and Lincoln, and the relations of the settlers with the Creek and Cherokee Indians.
2199 "Cherokee Settlement Patterns in Nineteenth Century Georgia". Douglas C. Wilms. Southeastern Geographer 14(1). 46-53. May 1974.
2200 Cherokee Indian Land Use In Georgia, 1800-1838. Douglas C. Wilms. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, University of Georgia. 215 pp.
Creek Indians
2201 Early History of the Creek Indians and their Neighbors. John R. Swanton. Bulletin 73. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington, D.C. 1922. 492 pp.
2202 Social Organization and Social Usages of the Indiana of the Creek Confederacy. John Reed Swanton. In: Forty-Second Annual Report... 1924-25, U. S. Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, 1928, pp. 23-472, pis. 1-7, figs. 1-107. Reprinted 1970 by Johnson Reprint Corp., New York.
2203 The Road to Disappearance. Angie Debo. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1941. xvii + 399 pp. History of the Creek nation of Indians, inhabitants of central and southern Georgia and Alabama before their removal to the west of the Mississippi.
2204 Relations Between the Creek Indians, Georgia, and the United States, 1783-1797. Mary Jane McDaniel. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, Mississippi State University. 348 pp.
2205 A Sketch of the Creek Country,ln the Years1798 and 1799 and Letters of Benjamin Hawkins 1796-1806. Benjamin Hawkins. Georgia Historical Society Collections, Volume 3, Part 1. Georgia Historical Society. Savannah. 1848 and 1916. Reprinted 1974 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C., 500 pp. Colonel Benjamin Hawkins was the United States Agent for Indian Affairs South of the Ohio River. His writings are an important source for the study of Creek Indian history and culture.
2206 Memoirs or A Quick Glance at My Various Travels and My Sojourn In the Creek Nation. Le Clerc Milfort. Ben C. McCary, trans. and ed. Continental Book Co. Kennesaw, Georgia. 1959. xx + 231 pp.
2207 Here the Creeks Sat Down. Walter Alexander Harris. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1958. 166 pp. The chief towns of the old Creek Confederacy were concentr'i'ted at Ocmulgee Old Fields, now Ocmulgee National Monument.
MAPS, LAND SURVEYS, AND BOUNDARIES
2208 The Southeast In Early Mapa. William P. Cumming. Princeton University Press. Princeton, N.J. 1958. ix + 275 pp. A study and descriptive bibliography of the historical cartography of the Southeast prior to the Revolution. With 67 collotype reproductions.
2209 Pre-Nineteenth Century Mapa In the Collection of the Georgia Surveyor General Department: A Catalog. Janice Gayle Blake, comp. State of Georgia, Surveyor- General Department. Atlanta. 1975. xx + 173 pp.
2210 (DeBrahm'a) Report of the General Survey In the Southern District of North America. William Gerard DeBrahm. Edited and with an introduction by Louis DeVorsey, Jr. University of South Carolina Press. Columbia. [1971, 1st publication]. xvi +325 pp. The 1773 report of the King's Surveyor General for the Southern District of North America on the geography and history of the colonies of Georgia, East Florida, and South Carolina.
2211 History of the Province of Georgia: With Mapa of Original Surveys. John Gerar William De Brahm. Edited by George Wymberley-Jones. Privately printed. Wormsloe, Georgia. 1849. 55 pp. DeBrahm was the crown's surveyor-general for the southern district of North America. His manuscript history of 1798 is reprinted.
2212 History of the Public Domain of Georgia. S. G. McLendon. Published by the author. Atlanta. 1924. 200 pp.
2213 English Crown Grants In Georgia, 1755-1775 (Series). Pat Bryant and Marion R. Hemperley. Georgia Surveyor General Department. Atlanta. 1972-1974. 9 vols. An annotated listing of royal land grants to individuals of the colony of Georgia. Issued in nine unnumbered volumes as follows: (1) St. Andrew Parish; (2) St. George P.; (3) St. John P.; (4) St. Matthew P.; (5) St. Paul P.; (6) St. PhilipP.; (7) St. David, St. Patrick, St. Thomas, and St. Mary Parishes; (8) Christ Church Parish; and (9) The Islands.
2214 Land Granting In Colonial Georgia. Robert G. Lipscomb. Masters thesis, 1970, University of Georgia. 93 pp.
2215 "An Introduction to Land Survey Systems in the Southeast". Sam B. Hilliard. West Georgia College Studies In the Social Sciences 12: 1-15. June 1973.
2216 The Indian Boundary In the Southern Colonies, 1763-1n5. Louis DeVorsey, Jr. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1961, 1966. xii + 267 pp.
2217 "Indian Boundaries in Colonial Georgia". Louis DeVorsey, Jr. Georgia Historical Quarterly 54(1): 63-78. Spring 1970.
2218 Boundaries of the United States and the Several States. Franklin K. Van Zandt. Bulletin 1212. U.S. Geological Survey. 1966. x + 291 pp. Georgia: pp 159-166. Description and history of the state's boundaries.
2219 "Florida Against Georgia: A Story of the Boundary Dispute". Frederick Cubberly. Florida Historical Society Quarterly 3(2) : 2Q-28. October t924.
2220 The Georgia- Florida Frontier, 1793-1796: Spanish Reectlon to French Intrigue and American Designs. Richard K. Murdoch. Univ. of Calif. Publications in History, Volume 40. University of California Press. Berkeley and Los Angeles. 1951. x + 208 pp.
2221 Florida Fiasco, Rampant Rebels on the Georgia- Florida Border, 1810-1815. Rembert W. Patrick. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1954. x + 359 pp.
2222 The St. Marys River, A Boundary. Lawrence Shaw Mayo. Privately Printed. Cambridge, Mass. 1914. 24 pp. How, when, and why the St. Marys River became the cornerstone of Georgia's southern boundary.
2223 "Ellicott's Rock- Where Georgia Begins". Harry R. Wright. Georgia Magazine 14(7) : 12-13, 21; 14(8): 19-21. March 1971, April 1971. An account of how the boundary between Georgia and North Carolina was determined.
2224 North Carolina Boundary Disputes Involving her Southern Line. Marvin Lucian Skaggs. James Sprunt Studies in History and Political Science, Volume 25, Number 1. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1941. x + 250 pp. On boundary controversies between North Carolina and the neighbors to her south, Georgia and South Carolina.
2225 "Boundary Between Georgia and South Carolina...". George Hillyer. Georgia Historical Quarterly 1(2) : 155-160. June 1917. Opinion by an arbitrator of The State vs. Georgia Railway and Power Company.
2226 "The Georgia- Tennessee Boundary Line". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Historical Quarterly 35(4): 269-306. December 1951. On the much-disputed northern boundary of Georgia and Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina.
2227 "Georgia's Chattahoochee River Bank Boundry: A Recapitulatory Note". Bunyan Hadley Andrew. Georgia Historical Quarterly 48(1) : 74-77. March 1964. Georgia's western boundary is, in part, the western bank of the Chattahoochee River. Thus Georgia owns the bed of the river.
62
History
NATURALIST EXPLORERS
2228 "Environmental Science in Early Georgia". Howard Ross Cramer. Bulletin of the Georgia Aaclemy of Science 25(4) : 215-221. September 1967.
2229 "Eye Witnesses to a Vanished America". Malcolm Bell, Jr. Georgia Review 10(1) : 13-23. Spring 1956. On early naturalists in Georgia - Mark Catesby, John Bartram, his son William Bartram, Andre Michaux, Alexander Wilson, John James Audubon - and what they saw.
2230 Natu1'811ats and Plant Explorera In Georgia, Until 1850 (with llluatratlona of Some Native Plants Oblarved). Martha Josephine Johnson. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, University-of Georgia. 500 pp. On Mark Catesby, John and William Bartram, John Abbott and other naturalists who visited and described early Georgia.
2231 The Natu1'811at Explorera' Interpretation of the Southeaatem United State from 1700 to 1800. Mattie M. Trussell. Doctoral dissertation, 1947, Cornell University. 197 pp.
2232 "A Sketch of the History of Science in Georgia". Schuyler Medlock Christian. Georgia Review 2(4) : 415-427. Winter 1948. From the "utilitarian sciences" of the indians to Mark Catesby, the Bartrams, John Abbott, the LeContes and others.
2233 "A Sketch of the History of Science in Georgia- Part II". Schuyler Medlock Christian. Georgia Review 3(1): 57-69. Spring 1949. On James Hamilton Couper, Thomas Spalding, John R. Coning, George White, Charles H. Herty, and other Georgia scientists.
2234 Scientific lnlerelts in the Old South. Thomas Cary Johnson, Jr. D. Appleton- Century Co. New York. 1936. vii + 217 pp.
2235 "Life and Times of John Abbot, Naturalist". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Joumal and COMtltutlon Magazine April 29, 1973. Pp. 16-17, 19, 23-24, 26, 28, 31. A little-known Georgia naturalist, John Abbot painted the State's birds and insects with an unsurpassed craftsmanship.
2236 "John Abbott, Pioneer Naturalist of Georgia". Elsa G. Allen. Georgia Historical Quarierly 41(2): 143-157. June 1957.
2237 "John Abbot's Drawings of the Birds of Georgia". Walter Faxon. Auk 13(3) : 204215, July 1896.
2238 "Some Georgia Records of John Abbot, Naturalist". Anna Stowell Bassett. Auk 55: 244-254. 1938.
2238 The Natural Hlatory of the Rarer Lepldopteroua lnaects of Georgia. Including Their Syatematlc Charactera, the Partlculara of Their Several Metamorphoua, and the Plants on Which They Feed. John Abbot (Sir James Edward Smith, ed.). Printed by T. Bensley, for J. Edwards [etc.] London. 1797. 2 vols.
2240 Travela Through North and South Carolina, Georgia, Eut and Weal Florida. William Bartram. Philadelphia. 1791. xxiv + 522 pp. London. 1792. xxiv + 520 pp. Dublin. 1793. xxiv + 520 + [12] pp. New York: Dover. 1928. 414 pp. (edited by Mark Van Doren). New Haven: Yale University Press. 1958. lxi + 727 + [20] pp. (Naturalist's Edition, edited by Francis Harper). Savannah: Beehive Press. 1973. xxiv + 534 p. (facsimile of the 1792 London edition). The southeastern wildernesses of the eighteenth century are described.
2241 Diary of a Journey Through the C.rollnaa, Georgia, and Florida, 1765-66. by John Bartram [and] Travels In Georgia and Florida,1773-74 by William Bartram, Annotated by Francis Harper. Tranuctlona of the American Phlloaophlcal Society, Phlla. N.S., vol. 33, pts. 1 & 2. December 1942 and November 1943. iv + 242 pp. + 48 plates.
2242 John and William Bariram'a America, Selection from the Writing of the Philadelphia Naturallats. Helen Gere Cruickshank, ed. Devin-Adair Company. New York. 1957. xxii + 418 pp.
2243 William Bartram: Botanical and Zoological Drawlnga, 1756-1788. Joseph Ewan, ed.
+ American Philosophical Society. Philadelphia. 1968. xii 180 pp.
2244 William Bartram; Interpreter of the American Landlcape. N. Bryllion Fagin. Johns Hopkins Press. Baltimore. 1933. xii + 229 pp.
2245 "Bartram Bibliography". John H. Barnhart. Bartonla 12 (supplement): 51-67. 1932.
2246 The Natural Hlatory of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama ialanda.. Mark Catesby. London. 1731-43 [1729-47]; 1754; 1771. 2 vols. 1771 ed. reprinted 1974 by Beehive Press, Savannah. The master work on the natural history of eighteenth-century Georgia.
2247 Flora Boruii-Americana. Andre Michaux, edited by Joseph Ewan. Hafner Press. New York. 1974. Reprint of original edition of 1803. 2 vols.
2246 "Forgotten Scientists in Georgia and South Carolina". Richard Beale Davis. Georgia Hiltorical Quarterly 27(3) : 271-284. September 1943. On Francis Gilmer and Joseph Correa, two eminent scientists who traveled in Georgia in 1815.
2249 A Sketch ol the Botany of South Carolina and Georgia . Stephen Elliott. J. R. Schenck (publisher]. Charleston, S.C. 1821-24. 2 vols. Reprinted 1971 by Hafner Publishing Company, New York.
2250 "A List.of Plants Found in the Neighbourhood of Connasarga River, Cherokee Country Where Springplace is Situated; made by Mrs. Gambold, at the request of the Rev. Elias Cornelius". Mrs. (Anna R. Kleist] Gambold. American Journal of Science 1 : 245251. 1818.
2251 A Thouund-MIIe Walk to the Gulf. John Muir. Houghton Mifflin. Boston and New York. 1916. xxvii + 219 pp. Reprinted 1969 by Norman S. Berg, Publisher, Dunwoody, Georgia: Muir's 1867 route included much of eastern and northern Georgia.
PLACE NAMES
2252 Georgia Place Names. Kenneth K. Krakow. Winship Press. Macon. 1975. xvi + 272 pp. Notes the origin of the names of thousands of places in Georgia: counties, towns, rivers & streams, mountains, islands, swamps, bridges, ferries and so on. Includes bibliography. In dictionary form.
2253 How Georgia Got Her Namea. Hal E. Brinkley. Published by the author. Atlanta. 1973. 196 pp. The origins of hundreds of the place names of Georgia are noted, from ABAC to Zoar.
2254 Placenamea of Georgia: Euaya of John H. Goff. Francis Lee Utley and Marion R. Hemperley, eds. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1975. xxxviii + 495 pp. A collection of short studies that originally appeared in the defunct Georgia Mineral Newaletter [see next entry] plus articles from the Georgia Review, .the Emory Unlveralty Quarterly, and the Georgia Magazine. Emphasis is historical rather than etymological thus making the essays of interest to "the folklorist, the cartographer, the historian, the student of Indian history and lore, the archivist, the geographer, (and] the anthropologist".
2255 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newllettar 7(2): 87-88, 1954. No. 1. The Golden Groves (Toombs, Oglethorpe, liberty and other counties). No. 2. The Longstreets (Elbert and Blackley Counties).
2256 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newaletter 7(3) : 124-128. 1954. No. 3. The Barkcamp Districts (Burke and Hall Counties). No.4. Oak Cane Branch (Jenkins County). No.5. Upatoi Creek (Harris, Talbot, Marion, Muscogee and Chattahoochee Counties).
2257 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newaletter 7(4) : 163-164. 1954. No. 6. The Stalkinghead Creeks (Burke, Candler, Jasper and Jones Counties). No. 7. Great Coat Branch (Jefferson County).
2258 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newaletter 8(1): 22-26. 1955. No. 8. Penholoway Creek (Wayne County). No. 9. Attapulgus (Decatur County). No. 10. Mars Hill (Oconee, Forsyth, Cobb, Dooly and Calhoun Counties).
2259 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newaletter 8(2). 78-81. 1955. No. 11. Withlacoochee and Willacoochee (Irwin, Berrien. Cook and Lowndes Counties). No. 12. Aucilla River (Thomas and Brooks Counties). No. 13. Plains (Sumter County).
2260 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral -letter 8(3) : 122-125. 1955. No. 14. Tobesofkee and Rocky Creeks (lamar, Monroe and Bibb Counties). No. 15. Hachasofkee and Sofkee Creeks (Talbot and Grady Counties). No. 16. Echeconnee Creek. (Crawford, Peach, Houston and Bibb Counties). No. 17. Mulberry, Ossahatchie and Sowhatchee Creeks (Harris and Early Counties).
2261 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newaletter 8(4) : 158-160. 1955. No. 18. Bad and Worse Creeks; No Man's Friend Pond; The Troublesome Creeks; Devil's Cove; Tearbritches and Rough Creeks; Hell's Half Acre; The Bad Prong of Ten-Mile; Lordamercy Cove; and Useless Bay (Rabun, Cook, Walker, Oglethorpe, Candler, Clinch, Union, and other counties). No. 19. Canoochee River (Candler, Evans, Liberty and Bryan Counties). No. 20. Oostanaula and Eastanollee (Gordon, Floyd, Stephens, and Franklin Counties). No. 21. Tukpafka, Punk Creek. Pink Creek. Rotten Wood Cree~ and New Yo~a (Heard and Cot>b Counties). No. 22. Yellow Dirt Creek (Carroll and Heard Counties).
2262 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Golf. Georgia Mineral NeWIIetter 9(1): 32-36. 1956. No. 23. Bali Ground and Ball Play Creek (Cherokee, Murray, Lumpkin Counties). No. 24. Chattooga and Guinekelokee (Chattooga, Rabun, Towns, and Walker Counties). No. 25. Taloga Creek (Chattooga County). No. 26. The Cherokee Town of "Quanasee" (Towns County).
2263 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Golf. Georgia Mineral Newaletter 9(2) : 75-80. 1956. No. 27. Hiwassee and Hiawassee. (Towns County). No. 28. The "Dividings"; the Hiawassee Trail; Timpson Creek; Racepath Creek (Rabun County).
63
History
226.4 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 9(3): 105-108. 1956. Emory University Quarterly 5(1). March 1949. No. 29. The Great Pine Barrens (Coastal Plain region).
2265 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 9(4) : 136-140. 1956. No. 30. Towaliga River (Henry, Spalding, Butts and Monroe Counties). No. 31. Four Killer Creek. (Fulton County). No. 32. Unawatti Creek; The Flat Creeks; Level Creek; Pataula Creek (Various pl,aces). No. 33. Young Deer Creek... (Forsyth County). No. 34. Tussahaw Creek (Henry and Butts Counties).
2266 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(1). 32-35. 1957. No. 35. Bolivar and Ypsilanti (Bartow and Talbot Counties). No. 36. Long Swamp Creek (Pickens County). No. 37. Lazer Creek (Talbot County). No. 38. Paramore Hill (Jenkins County). No. 39. Rincon. (Effingham County). No. 40. Egypt (Effingham and Dade Counties). No. 41. Po' Biddy Crossroads (Talbot County).
2267 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(2) . 56-60. 1957. No. 41. Some "Coined'" Names (Centralhatchee, Muckafoonee, and 'Hopeulikit, among others). No. 42. Stitchihatchie or "Tickeehatchee" Creek' and Whitley Branch (Dodge and Laurens Counties). No. 43. Gopher Town; and Goat Town (Seminole and Washington Counties). No. 44. Iron Hill and a former "Deer Lick" (Baldwin and Putnam Counties).
2268 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter
11(1): 31-35. 1958.
-
No. 45. Social Circle, Society Hill, Social Hill, Merry Hill, Fancy Hill, Jolly, others. No. 46.
Bloody Branch (Charlton County). No. 47. Salacoa Creek (Pickens, Cherokee, Bartow and
Gordon Counties). No. 48. Sumach and Holly Creeks (Murray County). No. 49. Possumtrot
Branch (Walker County). No. 50. Big Bend and the Panhandles (Charlton County, and
Warren, Clayton and Taylor Counties).
2269 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 11 (2) : 54-59. 1958. No. 51. Okefenokee (Ware and Charlton Counties). No. 52. The "Sixes" Places: Sixes Old Town; Sixes District, Sixes Mine, Sutalee and others (Cherokee County). No. 53. Catoosa (Catoosa County). No. 54. No Business Creek (Gwinnett and DeKalb Counties). No. 55. Yonah Mountain and Sillycook Mountain (White and Habersham Counties).
2270 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 11(4). 131-132. 1958. No. 56. Ochillee Creek and Halloca Creek (Marion and Chatthoochee Counties- No. 57. Schatulga (Muscogee County). No. 58. Gardi and Guard Jam Bluff (Wayne and Laurens Counties).
2271 "The Devil's Half Acre. John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(1): 27-29. 1959. Georgie Revl- 9(3) : 290-296. 1965. Numerous Georgia place names using the words "Devil" or "Hell" are examined.
2272 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(2) : 63. 1959. No. 59. Fort Buffington (Cherokee County). No. 60. Lost Town Creek and Shut-in Creek (Cherokee County). No. 61. Waleska (Cherokee County). No. 62. Buzzard Flapper Creek (Cherokee County).
2273 "The Poor Mouthing Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 12(2): 65-68. 1959. Georgia Review 12(4): 440-450. 1958. Georgia place names using words with connotations of poverty are examined. Examples: Hungry Valley, Hardscrabble, Pinchgut. Hard Labor Creek.
2274 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(1): 35-42. 1960. No. 63. Jekyll island (Glynn County). No. 64. Panola, Panola Shoals, Panola Road, South River, Cotton River, Reeves Creek and Upton Creek (DeKalb and Henry Counties). No. 65. Sileo (Camden County). No. 66. Standing Boy Creek, End Creeks, and Heiferhorn Creeks (Harris and Muscogee Counties). No. 67. Roaring Creek (Muscogee County). No. 68. Cataula and Mulberry Creek (a town and a creek in Harris County). No. 69. Mountain Creek and House Creek (Harris County). No. 70. Laingkat (Decatur County). No. 71. Cutting bone Creek (Rabun County). No. 72. Cohelee or Cahelee Creek (Early County).
2275 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newslet ter 13(2) 102-106. 1960. No. 73. The Rock Landing (Baldwin County). No. 74. Wahoo Island, Wahoo River, The Wahoo Creeks, Wahoo District, Barbour Island and Barbour Island River (Mcintosh, White, Lumpkin, Hall, Coweta and other counties). No. 75. Lewis Creek (Mcintosh County). No. 76. Fishing Creek (Baldwin County). No. 77. Oakfuskee Creek (Pike County).
2276 "'Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(3) . 129-138. 1960. No. 78. Toms Shoals, Toms Fords, Toms Path, Chehaw Path, Tuskio-Micco Path, Popes Ferry and Road, Wallers Ferry and Road, Booths Ferry and Road, Calhouns Ferry, Grays Road, the "Otaulganene" or Islands Ford of Flint River, the "Sulenojuhnene" Fords, the Creek Town of Buzzard Roost, Hootens Ferry, Cantelows Ferry, Trices Ferry and Smuteyes Trail (Baldwin, Monroe, Upson, Bibb, Talbot, Muscogee and other Piedmont Region counties from Augusta through Macon to Columbus).
2277 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 14(1): 30-34. 1961. No. 79. Anneewakee Creek (Douglas County). No. 80. The Intrenchment Creeks (Fulton,
DeKalb and Hall Counties). No. 81. Eastahatchee, Now Sanborn Creek (Decatur County). No. 82. Breastworks Branch (Early County).
2278 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 15(1-2): 31-33. 1962. No. 83. Walnut Creek (Jones County). No. 84. Christmas Branch (Stewart County). No. 85. Tallahassee Creek (Dougherty County). No. 86. Five Mile Creek (Sumter and Lee Counties).
2279 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(3-4): 95-101. 1962. No. 87. Alapaha River. . (Berrien, Irwin, Wilcox and other counties). No. 86. Yahoola Creek (Lumpkin County). No. 89. The Milksick Coves (Towns and Rabun Counties). No. 90. Pears or Perry Creek (Murray County). No. 32-A. Unawatti Creek (Franklin County).
2280 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 16(1-2) : 45-53. 1963. No. 91. Pine Log... (Cherokee and Bartow Counties). No. 92. Marbury Creek (Barrow and Oconee Counties). No. 93. Haynes Creek and Cornish Creek (Gwinnett and Rockdale Counties). No. 94. The Red Hills Region and an Early Description of Parts of Macon, Peach Crawford and Bibb Counties. No. 95. Sweetwater Creek (of Crawford County).
2281 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 16(3-4) : 88-97. 1963. No. 96. The Big Savannah, Savannah District, Savannah School, Dougherty, Palmers Creek, Russells Creek (Originally "Child Toaters Creek"), Proctors Creek, Bags Branch, Baggs Creek, Wicked Creek, Toto Creek, Dukes Creek and the Former Cherokee Town of "Tensawattee" (Dawson County). No. 97. Betty Creek, Mud or Estatoah Creek, and the Former Cherokee Settlement of "Eastertoy" (Rabun County). No. 98. Rossville (Walker County). No. 99. Spring Bluff (Camden County). No. 100. Sardis or Sardins Creek (Johnson, Jefferson and Emanuel Counties). No. 101. Spoil Cane Creek (White and Towns Counties). No. 102. Fodder Creek (Towns County). No. 103. Sopes Creek and Soap Creek (Cobb, Cherokee and Pickens Counties). No. 104. Fulsams Creek (Hancock County). No. 105. Black Creek and Iric Creek (Bulloch and Bryan Counties). No. 106. Cowpen Creek (Washington County).
2282 "Short Studies of Georgia Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 17: 55-73. 1964-1965. No. 107. Alecks Creek; Aleck Island; Doctortown; Doctors Creek; Old Doc Slough; Sansavilla Bluffs; The Williamsburg Reserve; The Dead Town of St. Savilla or Williamsburg; Fort Defense; Williams Fort; and the Indian Settlements of "Santa Sevilla" and "St. lagos Town" (Wayne County). No. 108. Beards Bluff; Beards Creek; Fort James Bluff; Five Mile Creek; Ten Mile Creek; Boundaries of the Creek Land Cession of 1773; Oglethorpe Bluff and "Mount Venture" (Long, Liberty, Bryan, Evans, Tattnell, Bulloch, Candler, Emanuel, and Jenkins Counties). No. 109. Amicelola Creek... (Dawson County). No. 110. Sterling Creek (Bryan County). No. 111. Pocataligo (Madison County). No. 112. Muckalee Creek and some of Its Tributaries (Marion, Lee, Sumter, Schley and Dougherty Counties). No. 113. The Tobler Creeks and the Poor Robin Places (Various counties). No. 114. Ossabaw Island, Wassaw Island..., The Warsaw Places and Cumberland Island, Formerly 'Wise". (Chatham, Camden and other counties). No. 115. Suomi (Dodge County).
2283 "Indian Place Nemes in Georgia". Marion R. Hemperley, ad. Georgia Historical Quarterly 57(4) : 562-579. Winter 1973.
2284 "Indian Stream-Names In Georgia". William A. Read. International Journal ol American Linguistics 15(2) : 128-132, 16(4) . 203-207. 1949-1950. On the origin and meaning of Indian names of streams in Georgia.
2285 'The Derivations of Creek Indian Place Names". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 14(2&3): 63-70. 1961.
2286 "The Rising Fawns". John H. Goff. Ernory University Quarterly 19(3) : 160-173. Fall1963. On the personal names of the Cherokee Indians who lived in Georgia before their removal to the West in 1838. Many of these names remain today in the geographic nomenclature of the northern third of the state: Rising Fawn, Dirt Seller, Kennesaw, Wahatchie, Toonigh, Yonah, Warwoman.
2287 "Some Old Road Names in Georgia". John H. Goff. Emory University Quarterly 14(1): 30-42. March 1958. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 11(3): 98-102. 1958. On the origins and significance of the names of certain early roads. Examples: Hard Money Road, Bonny Clabber Road, Shakerag Road, the Federal Roads, the Alabama Roads, the River Roads, Peachtree Road, Sunbury Road, Unicoi Turnpike, and (of course) Tobacco Road.
2286 "The Beaverdam Creeks". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(3): 117-122. 1954. On the numerous streams named Beaverdam Creek, Beaver Creek, Beaver Run, or Beaver Ruin. The locations of all are shown on a map of the state.
2289 "The Poley Bridge Creeks. John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 6(4): 133-135. 1953. The possible origins of the name of Pole Bridge Creek in DeKalb County and similarly named creeks are discussed.
2290 "The Hurricane Place Names in Georgia". John H. Goff. Georgie Review 18(2) : 224-235. Summer 1964. A survey of the many "hurricane" places of Georgia. In early Georgia hurricane was the name given to what we today call a tornado.
64
History
2291 "Ty Ty as a Geographic Name". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 7(1) : 36-38. 1954. Ty Ty is not an unusual place name in Georgia. The author presents several theories concerning its origin before concluding that it is derived from ""Tight-eye. a term used by pioneers for a thicket that was difficult to see thrr ugh.
2292 "The Buffalo in Georgia. John H. Goff. Georgie Review 11(1): 19-28. Spring 1957. On an early resident of Georgia and his legacy in the place names of the state.
2293 ""Pronunciations of Georgia Place Names. John H. Goff. Georgia Magazine 6(4) : t3-15; 6(5): 14-15. 27; 6(6) : 12-13. 1962-1963.
2294 "What is not on the Georgia Map''. James C. Bonner. Georgia Historical Quarterly 51(3): 251-263. September 1967. Place names, political boundaries and settlement patterns are scrutinized from a historian's viewpoint.
2295 "Greece in Georgia". Charilaos Lagoudakis. Georgie Historical Quarterly 47(2) : 189-192. June 1963. Greek placenames in Georgia are examined.
2296 "Origin of the Name Dry Branch, Georgia". Billie Walker Jones. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(2) : 69. 1957.
2297 An Expansible List of Georgia Place-Names. Edward Dawson. Georgia State College for Women. Milledgeville. (1952?]. 68 pp. Over 5000 place names culled mainly from maps, gazetteers, railroad bulletins, and post office listings. Lists only each place and the county of its location. No notes or source indications.
2298 Georgie County Place Names. Margaret W. Godley. Masters thesis, 1934, Emory University. vi + 95 pp.
2299 Georgia State History: Naming of the Counties In Georgia. Katherine B. Massey. 1910. Manuscript in the Georgia Collection, Atlanta Public Library.
2300 Decisions on Geographic Names In the United States. U. S. Department of the In-
terior, Board on Geographic Names. Washington, D.C. Quarterly. Lists formal decisions on new names, proposed changes in names, and names which are in conflict. Defines the spellings and applications of the names for use on maps and other publications of Federal agencies.
RAILROADS
2301 "The Railroads of Georgia, 1860-1880". Peter S. McGuire. Georgia Historical Quarterly 16(3) : 179-213. September 1932.
2302 "Civil War Railroads- Georgia and Tennessee". James G. Bogie. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 12(3) : 23-37. September 1967. Historical sketch and listing of the 34 railroads in the two states.
2303 "The Railroads of Georgia in the Confederate War Effort". Robert C. Black Ill. Journal of Southern History 13(4) : 511-534. November 1947.
2304 The Rellrosds of the Confederacy. Robert C. Black Ill. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1952. xiv + 360 pp.
2305 Georgie Railroads: Civil War end Reconstruction. Dale Hardy Peeples. Masters thesis, 1961, University of Georgia. 136 pp.
2308 Western end Atlantic Railroad of the State of Georgie. James Houston Jackson, comp. Georgia Public Service Commission. Atlanta. 1931. iii + 364 pp.
2307 "Locomotives of the Western & Atlantic Railroad". Raymond B. Carneal and James G. Bogie. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 15(1): 6-42. Spring 1970. History and detailed roster of the locomotives of the W&A Railroad of the State of Georgia (now leased as Louisville and Nashville Railroad line between Atlanta and Chattanooga). These engines include the "General" and the "Texas" of Andrews Raid fame. With many old photographs.
2308 The First Hundred Years, Ocl12-13, 1843-0ct. 12-13, 1943. Central of Georgia Railway Co. Macon. 1943. 11 pp. Reprinted from Central of Georgie Magazine, September 1943.
2309 The Central Railroad of Georgie, 1833-1892. Jefferson M. Dixon. Doctoral dissertation, 1954, George Peabody College for Teachers. Nashville, Tenn.
2310 Georgia Railroad end Banking Company, 1833-1945, An Historical Narrative. Mary G. Cumming. Walton Printing Co. Augusta. 1945. 110 pp.
2311 The Loulnllle and Naehvllle Rallroacl1850-1942. Kincaid A. Herr. La N Magazine Publisher. Louisville, Ky. No date. x + 221 pp.
2312 "Irish Catholics in the Building of the Ocmulgee and Flint Railroad". Fussell Chalker. Georgie Historical Quarterly 54(4) : 507-516. Winter 1970.
RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD
2313 The Reconstruction of Georgie. Alan Conway. University of Minnesota Press. Minneapolis. 1966. vi + 248 pp.
2314 Reconstruction In Georgia. C. Mildred Thompson. Columbia University Press. New York. 1915. Reprinted 1972 by Beehive Press, Savannah, xi+ 397 pp.
2315 The Reconstruction of Georgia. Edwin C. Woolley. Columbia University Press. New
York. 1901. 112 pp.
'
RELIGION
2316 Story of Georgia Baptists. B. D. Ragsdale. Published by the author for Georgia Baptist Convention. Atlanta. 1932-1938. 3 vols.
2317 Georgie Baptists: Historical and Biographical. Jesse H. Campbell. H. K. Ellyson [publisher]. Richmond, Va. 1847. 291 pp.
2318 History of the Baptist Denomination In Georgia. [S. Boykin]. Christian Index [publisher]. Atlanta. 1881. viii+ 613 pp. +fold. map.
2319 Inventory of the Church Archives of Georgia - Atlanta Association of Baptist Churches Affiliated with Georgia Baptist Convention. Georgia Historical Records Survey, Work Projects Administration. Atlanta. April1941. vii+ 92 pp.
2320 A History of Methodism In Georgia. Alfred M. Pierce. North Georgia Conference Historical Society. Atlanta. 1956. 345 pp. The Methodist Church in Georgia began with the arrival of John and Charles Wesley on February 5, 1736.
2321 Lest Feith Forget - The Story of Methodism In Georgia. Alfred Mann Pierce. Georgia Methodist Information. Atlanta. 1951. [vii] + 206 pp.
2322 The History of Georgia Methodism from 1786 to 1866. George G. Smith. A. B. Caldwell, Publisher. Atlanta. 1913. 430 pp.
2323 The Methodist Episcopal Church In Georgie. Edmund Jordan Hammond. [Published by the author?]. Atlanta. t935. 232 pp.
2324 A History of the Presby1erlan Church In Georgia. James Stacy. Press of the Star. Elberton, Ga. 1912. [viii] + 404 pp.
2325 Disciples of Christ In Georgia. J. Edward Moseley. Bethany Press. St. Louis. 1954. 400 pp.
2326 The Episcopal Church In Georgia 1733-1957. Henry Thompson Malone. Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Atlanta. Atlanta. 1960. xiv + 334 pp.
2327 "Shakerism and the Shakers in Georgia". Burnette Vanstory. Georgia Historical Quarterly 43(4) : 353-364. December 1959.
2328 "The Shaker Communities in Southeast Georgia" Russell H. Anderson. Georgie Historical Quarterly 50(2) : 162-172. June 1966. The United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Coming, a religious group commonly known as Shakers, briefly organized colonies in Camden and Glynn Counties during 18981902. These colonies and their failure are explored.
2329 ""The Puritan in Georgia". Orville A. Park. Georgia Historical Quarterly 13(4) : 343371. December 1929.
2330 The Moravlans In Georgia, 1735-1740. Adelaide L. Fries. Raleigh, N.C. 1905. Reprinted 1967 by Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, Md. 252 pp. History of the first attempt of the Moravian Church to establish a settlement in the Savannah River area of colonial Georgia. now Chatham and Effingham Counties.
2331 History of the Moravian Missions Among Southern Indian Tribes of the United States. Edmund Schwarze. Times Publishing Co. Bethlehem, Penn. 1923. xvii + 331 pp.
2332 Catholicity In the Carolinas end Georgie: Leaves of Its History. J. J. O'Connell. D. & J. Sadlier & Co. New York. 1879. 647 pp. Reprinted 1964, Ars Sacra, Westminster, Md.
2333 "The Origins of the Benedictine Order in Georgia". Jerome Oetgen. Georgia Historical Quarterly 53(2) : 165-183. June 1969. The history of the Benedictine communities in coastal Georgia is briefly summarized emphasizing their work at Isle of Hope and Skidaway Island (Chatham County).
2334 "Judaism in Eighteenth-Century Georgia". David T. Morgan. Georgia Historical Quarterly 58(1): 41-54. Spring 1974.
2335 Our Southern Landsmen. Harry Golden. G. P. Putnam's Sons. New York. 1974. 254 pp. History of the Jews in the South.
65
History
REVOLUTIONARY WAR
2336 Georgia and the Revolution. Ronald G. Killion and Charles T. Waller. Cherokee Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1975. xiii + 261 pp. Narrative history followed by a documentary history. For the general reader.
2337 Georgia Durtng the Revolution. Carroll Proctor Scruggs. Bay Tree Grove Publishers. Norcross, Georgia. [1975]. 176 pp.
2338 The American Revolution In Georgia, 1763-1789. Kenneth Coleman. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1958. viii+ 352 pp.
2339 Revolutionary Background, 1763-1775. Charles Downs. Georgia Commission for the National Bicentennial Celebration. Atlanta. 1974. 18 pp. The first of thirteen pamphlets to be issued by the Commission during the American revolutionary bicentennial years.
2340 "The Battle of the Riceboats: Georgia Joins the Revolution". Harvey H. Jackson. Georgia Historical Quarterty 58(2) : 229-243. Spring 1974.
2341 The Revolutionary Records of the State of Georgia. Allen D. Candler, ed. Compiled and published under authority of the Legislature of the State of Georgia. Atlanta. 1908. 3 vols.
RIVERS AND RIVER TRAVEL
2342 Georgia Rivers. George Hatcher, ed. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1962. X+ 76 pp. A collection of articles from Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine comprising brief histories of eight major rivers of Georgia: Savannah, Ogeechee. Altamaha, St. Marys, Suwannee. Coosa. Flint and Chattahoochee.
2343 "The Historic Role of the Rivers of Georgia". M. T. Thomson. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 3(2) 57-62; 3(3): 84-90; 3(4): 113-121; 3(5): 167-179; 3(6); 219-231; 4(1): 18-31; 4(2). 65-75; 4(3): 96-105; 4(4): 135-151; 4(5): 175-185; 4(6): 214-223; 5(1): 6-14; 5(2) : 33-44; 5(3) . 65-75; 5(4) : 97-110; 5(5): 140-152; 5(6); 174-186; 6(1): 1-7; 6(2) : 58-65; 6(4) : 116-122, 7(1) : 23-36; 7(2) : 61-70. 1950-1954. Summary of the importance of Georgia's rivers from Indian and Spanish times to their damming for "peaking" power and other uses. Examines early navigation, competition from the railroads, the water wheel, use of water in gold mining, stream-gaging, public water supply, industrial use, pollution, flooding, droughts, erosion, conservation, and other subjects.
2344 The Savannah. Thomas L. Stokes. Rivers of America Books, Rinehart and Co., Inc. New YOik. 1951. xi + 401 pp. The history of the river area from DeSoto's visit to the middle of the twentieth-century.
2345 River Highway lor Trade: The Savannah. Ruby A. Rahn. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. June 1968. 52 pp. + 2 appendices of 6 pp. and 31 pp. Examination of the history of the Savannah River with emphasis on the vessels that travelled it. Includes annotated lists of po\eboats and steamboats.
2346 The Suwannee. Dorothy Kaucher. Privately printed. Lake Wales, Fla. 1972. 194 pp. Numerous photographs, old and new. with various historical sketches.
2347 Suwannee River, Strange Green Land. Cecile Hulse Matschat. The Rivers of America. Literary Guild of America, Inc. New York. 1938. x + 296 pp.
2348 Rallsmen of the Altamaha. Carlton A. Morrison. Masters thesis, 1970, University of Georgia. 105 pp.
2349 "The Steamboat Period in Georgia". John H. Golf. Georgia Historical Quarterly 12(3) 236-254. September 1928. From 1816-1860 steamboats traveled Georgia's major rivers and some of the minor ones.
2350 Steamboats on the Coosa River In the Rome, Georgia - Gadsden - Greensport, Alabama Trades, 1845-1920's. Bert Neville. Published by the author. Selma, Ala. 1966. 190 pp.
2351 "Roads and Steamboats in North Georgia". Eulalie M. Lewis. Georgia Historical Quarterly 43(1) . 90-103. March 1959. Early transportation in the area of the Coosa River and its Georgia tributaries is described.
2352 "Steaming Down the Chattahoochee". J. Truman Holland. Georgia Magazine 13(2): 16-17. August- September 1969.
2353 Directory of Steamboats with Illustrations and List of Landings on ChattahoocheeApalachicola - Flint - Chlpola Rivers. Bert Neville. Published by the author. Selma, Ala. 1961. 87 pp.
2354 The Trtlogy of the Tri-Rivers: Apalachicola, Chattahoochee, and Flint, 1665-1962. Mrs. Patrick Jeremiah Lovett. Birmingham. Ala. 1962. 106 pp. [Photocopy at Georgia Department of Archives and History]. Historical sketches of the three rivers with extensive information on the steamboats that traveled them.
2355 "The Apalachicola - Chattahoochee - Flint River Water Route System in the Nineteenth Century". William N. Thurston. Georgia Hlotortcal Quarterly 57(2): 200-212. Summer 1973.
2356 Georgia Waters - Tallulah Falls, Madison Sprtngs, Scull Shoals and the Okefenokee Swamp. E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Historical Society. Athens. 1965. 208 pp.
2357 An Earty 19th Century River Improvement ProJect: The Journal of W. R. Blvlno. Joseph Fehrenbach. University of Georgia, Department of Geography. Athens. 1975. [22) pp. Paper read at Southeastern Geographers Conference, Callaway Gardens, Georgia, 1975. On an Oconee river navigation project in 1837.
ROADS, TRAILS, AND TRAVELLERS
2358 Trade and Travel Around the Southern Appalachians Before 1830. Randle Bond Truett. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1935. xii + 192 pp. A study of early roads and Indian trails in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. With an annotated list of inns and taverns along the roads.
2359 Taverns and Inns of Earty Georgia. Mrs. Kirby-Smith Anderson. State Historian, Georgia Society of Colonial Dames. 1939. Typed MS at Georgia Department of Archives and History. 139 pp.
2360 A History of Transportation In the Eastern Cotton Bell to 1860. Ulrich Bonnell Phillips. Columbia University Press. New York. 1908. xviii + 405 pp. Reprinted 1968 by Octagon Books, New York.
2361 The Transport Expansion Sequence In Georgia and the Carolinas, 1670-1900: A Search lor Spatial Regularities. David Charles Weaver. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, University of Florida. 421 pp.
2362 "Travel on the Primitive Ways". John H. Golf. Georgia Review 10(2) : 210-221. Summer 1956. An authority on early Georgia "roads" describes the perils of travel on the old thoroughfares.
2363 "Excursion Along an Old Way to the West". John H. Golf. Georgia Review 6(2) ; 189-202. Summer 1952. On the Federal Road, a historic highway that once connected Macon with a point on the lower Alabama River in today's Baldwin County, Alabama. The author retraces the roadway and summarizes its history.
2364 "Retracing the Old Federal Road". John H. Goff. Emory University Quarterly 6(3) : 159-171. October 1950. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 10(4): 150-157. 1957. On the route of a historic road that once crossed the Cherokee Nation to join Georgia and Tennessee.
2365 "The Old Sunbury Road". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(3); 116-122. 1955. The post-Revolutionary road from the "dead" town of Sunbury in Liberty County to Greenesboro in Greene County is the object of the author's search.
2366 "Indian Trails of the Southeast". William E. Myer. In: Forty-Second Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1924-25, Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, 1928, pp. 727-857 + plates 14-17.
2367 "Some Major Indian Trading Paths Across the Georgia Piedmont". John H. Golf. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 6(4) : 122-131. 1953.
2368 "Some Geographic Aspects of Arterial Indian Paths Across the Georgia Piedmont". John H. Goff. In: Short Contributions to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia - II, Bulletin No. 60, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1953, pp. 330-336.
2369 "The Path to Oakluskee, Upper Trading Route in Georgia to the Creek Indians". John H. Golf. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8: 1-36. March 1955. Georgia Historical Quarterly 39(2): 151-171. June 1955. Indian trails across the state from Augusta to the Chattahoochee, Tallapoosa and Coosa Rivers are located.
2370 "The Sandtown Trail". John H. Goff. Atlanta Hlstortcal Bulletin 11 (4) : 34-52. December 1966. The Sandtown Trail and related routes and places are located. The trail began in eastern DeKalb County and continued through Fulton, Cobb, Douglas, Carroll, and Haralson Counties to two sites in Alabama known as "Sandtown".
2371 John H. Golf Collection. Marion R. Hemperley, comp. Descriptive Inventory No. 2. Georgia Surveyor General Department. Atlanta. July 1971. v + 12 pp. Guide to the collection of maps, notes, and prints of John H. Goff, author of numerous articles on early Georgia roads and trails and place names. The collection, on file in the Georgia Surveyor General Department, includes Golf's notes on the forts of Georgia and the ferries of the state. Most of this information was never published.
2372 "With Pardo and Boyano on the Fringes of the Georgia Land". Mary Ross. Georgia Historical Quarterly 14(4) : 267-285. December 1930. On the travels of Juan Pardo and Hernando Boyano in the "back country" of Georgia
66
History
(northern and western Georgia, eastern Alabama and the western Carolinas).
2373 Final Report ol the Unlled St81es DeSoto Expedlllon CommiNion. United States DeSoto Expedition Commission. 76th Congress, 1st Session; House Document No. 71. Government Printing Office. Washington, D.C. 1939. xvi + 400 pp. Findings of a special commission to locate the 1539-1543 route of Hernando DeSoto in the southeastern states.
2374 "Tracing DeSoto's Route". John R. Swanton. Smltheonlan Institution Explorations and Field Work. In 1934, 1935, pp. 77-80.
2375 "DeSoto's Route from Confitachequi, in Georgia, to Cosa, in Alabama". Daniel Marshall Andrews. American Anthropologist 19(1): 55-67. January- March 1917. On DeSoto's probable route from the Savannah River to the Coosa River. The author suggests a route across northern Georgia from (roughly) today'sAugusta via Elberton, Homer, Dahlonega, Ellijay, Resaca, and the Chattooga River (Chattooga County).
2378 Hernando Da Solo: The Adventures Encountered and the Route Pursued by the Adelant8do during his March through the Territory Embraced within the Present Geographical Umlls of the St8te ol Georgia. Charles C. Jones, Jr. Printed for the author by J. H. Estill, Morning News Steam Printing House. Savannah. 1880. 43 pp.
2377 "The War Path Across Georgia Made by Tennessee Troops in the First Seminole War". Annette McDonald Suarez. Georgia Historical Quarterly 36(1): 29-42. March 1954. On several early trails in that section of Georgia that lies between the Chattahoochee and Flint Rivers, most particularly the War Path from old Fort Perry in Marion County to Fort Gaines in Clay County via Chattahoochee, Stewart and Randolph Counties.
2378 "Across Georgia with LaFayette". John H. Goff. Georgia Review 17(2) : 193-205. Summer 1963. The author retraces the route of the 1825 tour of Georgia by General LaFayette.
2379 "Benjamin Hawkins' Trip Across Georgia in 1796". Marion R. Hemperley. Georgia Historical Quarterly 55(1): 114-137. Spring 1971.
2380 "Benjamin Hawkins' Trip Across Western and Northern Georgia, 1798". Marion R. Hemperley, ed. Georgia Historical Quarterly 56(3): 415-431. Fall 1972.
2381 "Discovering William Bartram's Georgia". George V. R. Smith. Atlant8 Journal and Constitution Magazine May 13, 1973. Pp. 56-58,61. The Bartram Trail Society, organized 1970, has marked the pathway of William Bartram, eighteenth-century naturalist whose Travels show today's man how Georgia appeared when Indians and nature ruled the land. At Philomath, Ga., the Society has established a museum and library honoring the explorer.
2382 "Hiking Back to Early Georgia". Andrew Sparks. Atlant8 Journal and Constitution Magazine February 8,1970. Pp. 10-11,14,16,30-31. Some of \he wonders seen by eighteenth-century naturalist William Bartram are revisited.
2383 "(William Bartram and his Walk through Georgia]". Bill Cutler, Gene Moore and Carol Carstarphen. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(6) : 35-46. November - December 1975.
2384 "Aitamaha River Journey". Carol Carstarphen. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(4) 34-39. September- October 1974. The elusive 1770's trail of naturalist William Bartram is retraced along the lower Altamaha River.
2385 "The Bartram Trail Through the Southeastern States". Francis Harper. Bulletin ol the Garden Club ol America 1939: 54-64. September 1939.
2388 Travels In the Old South - A Bibliography, Volume One - The Formative Years, 1527-1783: From the Spanish Explorations through the American Revolution. Thomas D. Clark, ed. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1956. xix + 327 pp.
2387 Travels In the Old South -A Bibliography, Volume Two -The Expanding South, 1750-1825; The Ohio Valley and the Cotton Frontier. Thomas D. Clark, ed. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1956. xv + 289 pp.
2388 Travels In the Old South - A Bibliography, Volume Three - The Ante Bellum South, 1825-1880: Cotton, Slavery, and Conlllct. Thomas D. Clark, ed. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1959. xviii + 403 pp.
2389 Travels In the Confederate St8tes- A Bibliography. E. Merton Coulter. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1948. xiv + 289 pp.
2390 Travels In the Newsouth- A Bibliography, Volume One- The Postwar South, 1865-1900: An Era of Reconstruction and Readjustment. Thomas D. Clark. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1962. xvi + 263 pp.
2391 Travels In the New South - A Bibliography, Volume Two - The Twentieth-Century South, 1900-1955: An Era of Change, Depression, and Emergence. Thomas D. Clark. University of Oklahoma Press. Norman. 1962. xiii + 298 pp.
23,82 "Foreign Travellers in Georgia, 1900-1950". Lawrence S. Thompson. Georgia Historical Quarterly 36(4) : 342-349. December 1952. A bibliography of books published in foreign languages that pertain to twentieth-century Georgia.
2393 The Rambler In Georgia. Mills Lane, ed. Beehive Press. Savannah. 1973. xxxiv + 233 pp.
"Desultory Observations on the Situation, Extent, Climate, Population, Manners, Customs, Commerce. Constitution, Government, etc., of the State from the Revolution to the Civil War Recorded by Thirteen Travellers".
2394 The Southern St8tes ol North America. Edward King. Blackie and Son. London. 1875. xvi + 806 pp. This "profusely illustrated" book is the record of the author's travels through the South in 1873-74.
2395 A Second VIsit to the United States ol North America. Sir Charles Lyell. Harper & Brothers, New York and John Murray, London. 1849. 2 vols. Chapters 17-22 deal with Lyell's travels in Georgia.
SETTLEMENT PATTERNS
2398 The Early Settlement ol Georgia. James Etheridge Callaway. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1948. vii + 138 pp. The settlement trends and patterns of white Georgians over a period of one hundred years are examined. The author theorizes that the desire for land, rather than the development of manufacturing, mining and railroads, was the main impetus to the settlement of the state.
2397 The Settlement Patterns ol Georgia. Wilbur Zelinsky. Doctoral dissertation, 1953, University of California. Berkeley.
2398 "An Isochronic Map of Georgia Settlement, 1750-1850". Wilbur Zelinsky. Georgia Historical Quarterly 35(3): 191-195. September 1951. The progress of the frontier is shown at ten-year intervals.
2399 "The Rural Settlement of the Savannah Country". Sherwin H. Cooper. Papers Michigan Academy ol Science, Arts and Letters 42: 413-428. 1962.
2400 The Rural Settlement ol the Lower Savannah River Basin In Georgia. Sherwin H. Cooper. Doctoral dissertation, 1959, University of Michigan. xv + 222 pp. + 4 fold. maps.
2401 The Fall Zone Towns ol Georgia: An Historical Geography. Gerald Leon Holder. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, University of Georgia. 342 pp. The influence of the "Fall Line" on the location of certain towns in Georgia is reexamined and reaffirmed. The Fall Line is, roughly, the boundary between the Piedmont and the Coastal Plain and is the head of navigation of the larger rivers that empty into the Atlantic Ocean or Gull of Mexico.
MISCELLANEOUS
2402 The Counties ol the St8te of Georgia. Georgia Historical Society. Savannah. 1974. vi+ 40 pp. Gives dates. origin of name, population, and county seat for each of Georgia's 159 counties. Appendices show original counties, early parishes, Indian cessions and the County of Savannah.
2403 Empire: Georgia Today In Photographs and Paragraphs. Emily Woodward, ed. and comp. Ruralist Press. Atlanta. 1936. 182 pp.
2404 An Exhibition Commemorating the Settlement ol Georgia, 1733-1948. Library of Congress. Washington, D.C. 1948. iv + 92 pp. A catalog of an exhibition of rare books, manuscripts. maps, prints, photographs, newspapers, and music from the Library collections.
2405 Life and Labor In the Old South. Ulrich Bonnell Phillips. Little, Brown, and Co. Boston. 1929. xix + 375 pp.
2406 A Social History -ol Georgia: 1733-1776. Harold Earl Davis. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, Emory University. 493 pp.
2407 Plantation Slavery In Georgia. Ralph Betts Flanders. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1933. x + 326 pp.
2408 The Georgia Negro, A History. Asa H. Gordon. Edwards Brothers, Inc. Ann Arbor, Mich. 1937. Reprinted 1972 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C. xv + 426 pp.
2409 Georgia and the Union In 1850. Richard Harrison Shryock. Duke University Press. Durham, N.C. 1926. Reprinted 1968 by AMS Press, New York, 406 pp.
2410 "The Origins of the Industrial Revolution in Georgia: Cotton Textiles, 181Q-1865". Richard W. Griffin. Georgia Historical Quarterly 42(4) : 355-375. December 1958.
2411 Constructive Liberalism: The Role ol the State In Economic Development In Georgia to 1860. Milton S. Heath. Harvard University Press. Cambridge, Mass. 1954. xiv + 446 pp. On land policy, the state and the banks, roads and railroads, and education.
2412 The New Deal In Georgia: An Administrative History. Michael Stephan Holmes. Doctoral dissertation, 1969, University of Wisconsin. 690 pp. History of eight relief and recovery agencies in Georgia: the Federal Emergency Relief Administration, the Civil Works Administration, the Works Progress Administration, the Public Works Administration, the National Recovery Administration, the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, the Resettlement Administration, and the Farm Security Administration.
67
History
2413 Georgl8 In World War II: A Study of the Military end the Civilian EHorl. Lamar a.
Ball. Georgia Department of Archives and History. Atlanta. 1946. 219 pp.
2414 Georgie's Coeal81 Plein. Jack N. Averitt. Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc. New York. 1964. 3 vols.
2415 North Weal Georgie Historical and Geneeloglcal Society [Quarterly]. North West Georgia Historical and Genealogical Society, Carnegie Library, Rome, Georgia. Quarterly, began January 1969. Official publication of the Society. Concerns primarily the following counties: Floyd, Bartow. Gordon, Paulding, Polk, Haralson, Chattooga, Walker, Catoosa, Whitfield, and Murray.
2416 Pioneer Days Along the Ocmulgee. Fussell M. Chalker. Published by the author. Carrollton, Georgia. 1970. xi+ 251 pp.
2417 History of the Georgia Power Company, 18551956. Wade H. Wright. Georgia Power Company. Atlanta. 1957. xii + 386 pp.
2418 The Apalachla, Ocoee No.3, Nottely, end Chetuge Projects; A Comprehensive Report on the Planning, Design, Construction, and Initial Operations of the Four Projects, In the Hlwauee Basin, Constructed on an Emergency Beals during World War II. Technical Report No. 5, The Hiwassee Valley Projects: Volume 2. Tennessee Valley Authority. Knoxville, Tenn. 1948. xvi + 787 pp.
2419 History of Public Health In Georgia, 1733-1950. Thomas Franklin Abercrombie. State of Georgia, Department of Public Health. Atlanta. 1951. 228 pp.
2420 Drugs and Pharmacy In the Life of Georgia, 1733-1959. Robert Cumming Wilson. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1959. ix + 443 pp.
2421 The Firat Anesthetic, The Story of Crawford Long. Frank Kells Boland. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1950. xii + 160 pp.
2422 "The Gold Rush in Georgia". T. Conn Bryan. Georgia Review 9(4) : 398-404. Winter 1955. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(4) . 131-135. 1955. Dahlonega and Auraria in Lumpkin County were the primary sites of the first gold boom (1828) in the United States.
2423 "Georgia's Forgotten Industry: Gold Mining, Part 1". Fletcher M. Green. Georgia Historical Quarterly 19(2) : 93-11. June 1935.
2424 "Georgia's Forgotten Industry: Gold Mining, Part II". Fletcher M. Green. Georgia Historical Quarterly 19(3) 210-228. September 1935.
2425 "The Old-Time Stamp Mill". Garland Peyton. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 4(3) : 93-95. 1951. The stamp mill, an item of crushing equipment used to recover gold from quartz during gold-mining days in Georgia, is described.
2426 Population of Early Georgia. Harry E. DeFoor. Master's thesis, 1941, University of Georgia. Athens. 83 pp.
2427 Expansion of the Paved Road In the State Highway System of Georgia, 1923 to 1962. James A. Liesendahl. Masters thesis, 1964, University of Georgia. 62 pp.
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
2428 A Bibliography of the Writings on Georgia History. Arthur Ray Rowland. Archon Books, The Shoestring Press, Inc. N.p. 1966. 301 pp. Comprehensive coverage of books and articles on Georgia history published from 1900 to 1955.
2429 A Preliminary Bibliography of Georgia History. Robert Preston Brooks. Bulletin of the University of Georgia, Volume 10, No. 10-A. McGregor Company. Athens. 1910. 46 pp.
2430 Finding-List of Books and Pamphlets Relating to Georgia and Georgians. Ella May Thornton. State of Georgia, State Library. Atlanta. 1928. 129 pp.
2431 Catalogue of the Wymberley Jones DeRenne Georgia Library at Wormsloe, Isle of Hope near Savannah, Georgia. Azalea Clizbee, comp. Privately printed. Wormsloe, Isle of Hope, Georgia. 1931. 3 vols. Writings on Georgia history are listed. The period 1700 to 1929 is covered. Maps and newspapers are included.
2432 "Located Georgia Imprints of the Eighteenth Century Not in the DeRenne Catalogue". Douglas C. McMurtrie. Georgia Historical Quarterly 18(1): 27-65. March 1934.
2433 Georgia Bibliography- County History- 1974. Georgia Department of Education, Division of Public Library Services. Atlanta. 1974. 51 pp. Local histories and items of local historical interest are listed.
2434 "A Checklist of Source Materials tor the Counties of Georgia". Wayne Stewart Venawine. Georgia Historical Quarterly 32(3) : 179-229. September 1948. A listing of primary and secondary documents tor the study of local history in Georgia. The listing includes official histories, other histories, special editions of newspapers, compilations of county records, and various articles and papers.
2435 Supplement to Yenawlne's Checklist of Source Materials for the CounUes of Georgl8. Carroll H~rt. comp. Georgia Department of Archives and History. Atlanta. 1962. 8 pp.
2436 A Selected Bibliography end Syllabus of the History of the South, 1584-1876. William K. Boyd and Robert P. Brooks. McGregor Company. Athens, Georgia. Published as Bulletin of the University of Georgia, Volume 18, Number 6. June 1918. 133 pp.
2437 Georgia Authors. Dixie Council of Authors and Journalists. Lithonia, Ga. 1970. 173 pp. Index to 5200 titles of 2700 native authors for the period 1732-1968.
COUNTIES
Atkinson
2436 McCranie's Turpentine Still, Atkinson County, Georgia. Kenneth H. Thomas, Jr. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Published by University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development, Athens. April 1975. iv + 68 pp. +appendices. [Limited distribution]. A historical analysis of the site, with information on the naval stores industry in Georgia and elsewhere.
Bacon
2439 SUrvey of the Historical and Archaeological Impact of Selected Model Cities and Community Development Projects, Alma, Georgia. Timothy J. Crimmins, Roy S. Dickens, Jr., and Howard L. Preston. The History Group, Inc. Atlanta, Georgia. August 1975. 27 pp.
Baldwin
2440 History of Baldwin County, Georgia. Anna Maria Green Cook. Keys-Hearn Printing Company. Anderson, S.C. 1925. 464 pp.
2441 A Treasure Album of Milledgeville and Baldwin County, Georgia. Nelle Womack Hines. J. W. Burke Co. Macon. 1936. 52 pp.
2442 History Stories of Milledgeville and Baldwin County. Leola Selman Beeson. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1943. xii + 202 pp.
2443 The One Hundred Years of the Old Governors' Mansion. Leola Selman Beeson. J.W. Burke Company. Macon. 1938. [xi] + 81 pp. The history of the Old Governor's Mansion in Milledgeville.
2444 "Georgia's Early Governor's Mansion at Milledgeville, 1838-1868". H. D. Green. Antiques 94 : 864-867. December 1968.
2445 "Glory and Splendor are Restored to Georgia's Ante Bellum Governor's Mansion". Ann E. Lewis. Georgia Magazine 11(3): 17-19. October- November 1967.
2446 "The Old State Capitol in Milledgeville and Its Cost". Leola Selman Beeson. Georgia Historical Quarterly 34(3) : 195-202. September 1950.
2447 College Life at Old Oglethorpe. Allen P. Tankersley. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1951. xv + 184 pp. A history of "old" Oglethorpe University, the 1835-1870 Milledgeville school.
2446 "One Hundred One Years in Ceramics". Marie Stevens Walker Wood. Georgia Maga zine 3(2) : 16-22. August- September 1959. The Stevens-Bone Family has manufactured Georgia clay for six generations at the little town of Stevens Pottery in Baldwin County. Their clay products plant was the first in the Southeast.
Bartow
2449 The History of Bartow County, Formerly Casa. Lucy Josephine Cunyas. Tribune Publishing Company. Cartersville, Georgia. 1933. xv + 343 pp. Reprinted 1971 by Georgia Genealogical Reprints, Easley, S.C. xvi + 403 pp.
2450 Cartersville Centennial 18721972. Cartersville Centennial Committee. Cartersville, Georgia. 1972. [68] pp.
2451 "Preacher's Mansion May Be Restored". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Consll tution Magazine July 14, 1974. Pp. 8, 10, 42, 44, 46. Roselawn, evangelist Sam Jones' 1890's home in Cartersville, may become a museum or library or both.
2452 A History of Old Cassville, 1833-1864. Joseph B. Mahan. Masters thesis, 1950, University of Georgia. v + 136 pp.
2453 "Cassville - Where Historical Markers and Many Graves Reveal the Glory and the Tragedy of the Past". Lloyd Redwine. Georgia Magazine 7(4): 22-23, 27. December 1963 -January 1964.
2454 "Why Do Little Towns Die?". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and ConstltuUon
68
History
Magazine September 28, 1969. Pp. 8-9, 24, 37. The few residents of Euharlee remember the town's past importance and tell of its decline.
2455 "Euharlee's Lowry Bridge". A. M. Postag. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(2) . 40-41. Spring 1974. The Lowry Bridge in Bartow County is a 116 ft. span in the Town lattice design often used by Georgia's covered bridge builders.
2456 "Stylesboro Picnic- A 115-Year Tradition". Clyde W. Jolley. Georgia Life 1(4): 20-21. Spring 1975. The "almost-dead" town of Stilesboro, in Bartow County, carries on an old tradition in a building spared by General W. T. Sherman - the 1859 Stilesboro Academy.
2457 "Reminiscences of the Allatoona Mining District Near Cartersville, 1840-1892". H. Maddux. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 6(2) : 56-58. 1953.
2458 "Joseph E. Brown and his Georgia Mines". Derrell Roberts. Georgia Historical Quarterly 52(3) 285-292. September 1968. Georgia Governor Joseph E. Brown controlled several iron and coal mines in northwest Georgia for a period in the second half of the nineteenth century. The mining operations, in Bartow. Walker and Dade Counties. and Brown's involvement are briefly explored.
2459 "Hold the Fort [The Battle of Allatoona]". Victor Hicken. Civil War Times Illustrated 7(3) : 18-27. 1968. The Civil War Battle of Allatoona is described. The site of the battle is in Bartow County beside Lake Allatoona.
2480 "The Battle of Allatoona". Mortimer R. Flint. Magazine of History 3(5) : 275-281. May 1906. An account of a Civil War battle in eastern Bartow County at the Allatoona Pass.
2461 "Exploring the Bottom of Lake Allatoona". Margaret Perryman. Georgia Magazine 11(4): 26-29. December 1967- January 1968. Winter"s lowering of the water level permits exploration of the abundant prehistoric and historic sites flooded by impoundment. Features of mineralogical interest are also noted.
2462 'The Bartow County Confederate Saltpetre Works". Ralph W. Donnelly. Georgia Historical Quarterly 54(3) : 305-319. Fall 1970.
2463 "Barnsley Gardens". Joseph Parham. Georgia Magazine 3(3): 11-12,22. OctoberNovember 1959. The ruins of the house and gardens of Godfrey Barnsley in Bartow County are described.
Ben Hill
2464 History of Ben Hill County. lsidor Gelders and Maud Gelders. [Serially in The Fitzgerald Leader, Fitzgerald Georgia, 1951-1953. Copy at Georgia Department of Archives and History].
2465 History of Fitzgerald. lsidor Gelders and Maud Gelders. [Serially in The Fitzgerald Leader, Fitzgerald, Georgia, March 16, 1950 to June 21, 1951. Copy at Georgia Department of Archives and History).
2466 "Fitzgerald: Place of Reconciliation". Fussell M. Chalker. Georgia Historical Quarterly 55(3): 397-405. Fall1971. Fitzgerald, in Ben Hill County, was founded as a colony for veterans of the Union army. Named for its founder, the town became a symbol of blue-gray reconciliation.
2467 "Fitzgerald, Georgia: A Soldier's Colony". Maud and lsador Gelders. Georgia Review 7(2) 164-173. Summer 1953.
2466 The New Canaan! Fitzgerald and the Old Soldier Colony In Irwin County, Ga. [now Ben Hill County] , ... Jay Shrader, editor and publisher. Fitzgerald, Georgia. [Morning News Print. Savannah, 1896]. ("Commemorative Edition: Diamond Jubilee, 1896-1971, Fitzgerald, Ben Hill County, Georgia"). 58 pp.
Bibb
2469 History of Macon, Georgia. Ida Young, Julius Gholson, and Clara Nell Hargrove. Lyon, Marshall & Brooks. Macon. 1950. viii+ 728 pp.
2470 Historical Record of Macon and Central Georgia. John C. Butler. J. W. Burke Co. Macon. 1879. Reprinted 1958 by Colonial Dames of America, Macon. Reprinted 1969 by Middle Georgia Historical Society, Macon, 351 pp.
2471 Ante-Bellum Macon and Bibb County, Georgia. William Thomas Jenkins. Doctoral dissertation. 1966, University of Georgia. Athens. [iv] + 423 pp. + 4 fold. maps.
2472 Records of the Town of Macon and the Public Reserve at Macon. Marion A. Hamperley. Descriptive Inventory No. 3. Georgia Surveyor General Department. Atlanta. August 1971. vii + 7 pp. Guide to records in the Surveyor General Department pertaining to 1820's Macon and the Macon Reserve in Bibb and Jones Counties.
2473 The Macon Guide, and Ocmulgee National Monument. American Guide Series. Federal Writers' Project. Work Projects Administration. J. W. Burke Company [publisher].
Macon. 1939. 127 pp. + 1 fold. map.
2474 Some of Macon's Heritage In Archllecture. Mary Callaway Jones. Macon Chamber of Commerce. Macon. 1939. 16 pp.
2475 A Guide to Macon's Architectural and Historical Heritage. John J. McKay, Jr., ed. Middle Georgia Historical Society. Macon, Georgia. 1972. 128 pp.
2476 "White Columns of Macon". Blythe McKay. Georgia Magazine 10(6): 16-19. AprilMay 1967.
2477 Some Historic Spots of the Confederacy Period In Macon. Mary Callaway Jones. United Daughters of the Confederacy, Sidney Lanier Chapter. Macon, Georgia. 1937. 14 pp.
2478 "Macon's Beautiful Hay House is Open to Visitors". Ann E. Lewis. Georgia Magazine 9(2) : 24-27. August- September 1965.
2479 "Biking Through Historic Macon". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(2): 24-26. Spring 1973.
2480 "The Bells of Macon". M. Jemison Chestney. Georgia Review 15(4): 438-445. Winter 1961. On several historic bells of old Macon.
2481 A Historical Sketch of the Evolution of Trade and Transportation at Macon, Ga. Together with a Synopsis of the Rate Adjustment from the Eaot. E. H. Hinton. Southeastern Freight Association, Item No. 16 of Proceedings of Meetings of Executive Officers, Belleair. Fla., January 17-18. 1912.
2482 A History of Mercer University, 1833-1953. Spright Dowell. Mercer University. Macon, Ga. 1958. xv + 420 pp.
2483 "Macon's Wesleyan". Zera Pendleton Nottingham. Georgia Magazine 6(2) : 20-22. August- September 1962. Wesleyan College, the first chartered college in the world to grant degrees to women, is a Macon landmark.
2484 "Ladies Can Learn". Eunice Thomson. Georgia Review 1(2): 189-197. Summer 1947. A historical sketch of Wesleyan College in Macon.
2485 Origin and History of the Georgia Academy for the Blind. John C. Butler. J. W. Burke & Co. Macon. [1887]. [267) pp.
2486 Fort Hawkins Frontier Fort, Ocmulgee National Monument, Georgia. F. Ross Holland, Jr. U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Office of History and Historic Architecture, Eastern Service Center. N.p. June 1970. iii+ 41 pp.
2487 "Old Ocmulgee Fields: The Capital Town of the Creek Confederacy". Walter A. Harris. Georgia Historical Quarterly 19(4) : 273-290. December 1935. An argument for Old Ocmulgee Fields near Macon as capital of the Creek Confederacy.
2488 "Sidney Lanier, Georgia's Beloved Poet-Musician, Confederate Soldier is Still Remembered, Loved and Honored"". Blythe McKay. Georgia Magazine 10(5) : 25-27. February - March 1967. Macon honors Sidney Lanier at his birthplace, at two churches, two schools, a chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and at numerous other places in the city.
2489 "Middle Georgia's Colorful Past". Freda Nadler. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 2, 1969. Pp. 16-18, 20. George Beattie's historical murals in Macon's Federal Building are described and explained.
2490 The Negro In Macon, Georgia, 1865-1871. Paul Michael Johnson. Masters thesis, 1972, University of Georgia. 110 pp.
2491 "Nyandale, An Antebellum Plantation, is Near Macon". Mary M. Holtzclaw. Georgia Magazine 9(6) : 23-25. April - May 1966.
2492 Remembering Lizella. C. B. McCook. Published by the author. Lizella, Georgia. 1973. 173 pp.
Bleckley
2493 Cochran - Bleckley Centennial "Centi-Rama" Journal, 1869-1969. Cochran Bleckley Centennial Celebration, Inc. Cochran, Georgia. 1969. [52) pp.
Brantley
2494 Snow White Sanda. Martha Mizell Puckett. South Georgia College. Douglas, Georgia. 1975. ii + 243 pp. A collection of37 historical stories concerning the Great Satilla River South Basin (Brantley, Pierce, and Wayne Counties).
Brooks
2495 History of Brooks County, Georgia, 1858-1948. Folks Huxford. Daughters of the
69
History
American Revolulion, Hannah Clarke Chapter, Quitman, Georgia. 1948. xiii + 607 pp.
2496 Historic Treasures ol Brooks County. United Daughters of the Confederacy. Quitman Chapter. No. 112. Quitman, Georgia. 1974. x + 106 pp.
Bryan
2497 '"Old Canoochee- Ogeechee Chronicles". Julia E. Harn. Georgia Historical Quarterly 15-16. December 1931 -December 1932. Reminiscences of life along the Canoochee and Ogeechee Rivers before and during lhe Civil War.
2498 "Old Canoochee Backwoods Sketches". Julia E. Harn. Georgia Historical Quarterly 22-25. March 1938- September 1941. Reminiscences of life on the Canoochee River in Bryan County during the mid-1800's.
2499 '"Fort McAllister". Rebecca N. Marshall. Outdoors In Georgia 4(12) : 6-9. December 1975.
2500 "Historic Fort McAllister". Allen P. Julian. Georgia Magazine 4(1) : 10-13. JuneJuly 1960. The Confederate fortress along the Ogeechee River in Bryan County is a State Historic Site. A brief history is given.
2501 Sand and Grit: The Story ol Fort McAIIIoler; A Confederate Ealthwork on lhe Great Ogeechee Rlnr, Genesis Point, Georgia. R. Jervis Cooke. National Park Service, Fort Pulaski Nalional Monument. Savannah, Georgia. September 15, 1938. iv + 99 pp. (Unpublished; copy at Historic Preservation Section of Georgia Department ol Natural Resources].
2502 "Bombardments and Capture of Fort McAllister". Charles Coicock Jones, Jr. Magazine ol American History 14(5) : 501-508. November 1885.
Bulloch
2503 Statesboro: 1866-1966; A Century ol Progreso. Leodel Coleman. Bulloch Herald Publishing Company. Statesboro. Georgia. 1969. 506 pp.
Burke
2504 An Intelligent Student's Guide lo Burke County (Ga.) History. Nell Baldwin and A. H. Hillhouse. Published by the authors. Waynesboro, Georgia. 1956. [v] + 203 pp. [Copy at Georgia Department of Archives and History].
2505 '"The Georgian Oyster". Ivan R. Tompkins. Nature Magazine 40(8) : 432, 444. October 1947. Shell Bluff in Burke County is visited. The bluff, part of a bed of giant oystershells, was visited in 1776 by naturalist William Bartram.
Butts
2506 '"Indian Springs. Christine Park Hankinson. Georgia Review 1(4) : 500-510. Winter 1947. A history of Indian Springs State Park in Butts County.
2507 '"Chief William Mcintosh and the Indian Springs Treaties". Margaret Beauchamp Armistead. Georgia Revtew 11(3): 306-316. Fall1957. Indian Springs in Butts County is the oldest state park in the United States. This short history examines the '"Healing Water"" of the Indians and some of the events that occurred there.
2508 The "Mcintosh Inn" and Ito Place In Creek Indian History. Sherry L. Boatright. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. July 1975. (iv] + 131 + 49 pp. (Limited distribution].
Calhoun
2509 Arlington Centennial Celebration 1873-1973; "Heritage and Horizons", Arlington Centennial Corporation. Arlington, Georgia. 1973. (58] pp.
Camden
2510 History ol Camden County, Georgia. James Thomas Vocelle. Printed by Kennedy Brown - Hall Co. Jacksonville, Fla. (1914]. 156 pp. Reprinted 1967 by The Southeast Georgian, Kingsland, Georgia.
2511 Camden County, Georgia. Camden County Historical Commission and Camden County Board of Commissioners. N.p. 1972. [36] pp. Guide to Camden County historic sites.
2512 ""Historic St. Marys. Burnette Vanstory. Georgia Magazine 8(1) : 22-23. June July 1964.
2513 Historical Sketches of Old St. Marys; Complied from the Flies of the Southeast Georgian. Southeast Georgian. St. Marys, Georgia. (1909-1911]. (22] pp.
2514 Reminiscences of Old St. Marys. James Thomas Vocelle. St. Marys Publishing Co. St. Marys, Georgia. 1913. 10 pp.
2515 '"St. Marys Church". Mary Givens Bryan. Georgia Magazine 2(3) : 21, 28. OctoberNovember 1958. Organized 1808. the church in the town of St. Marys is the third oldest church building in Georgia.
2516 "Private Fastness: Tales of Wild Cumberland Island and How Modern Times Have Reached If". William W. Winn. American Heritage 23(3) : 26-32, 104. April 1972.
2517 "Cumberland Island, Ga.: An Era Ending. . One Beginning". William Voigt, Jr. Outdoor America (lzaak Walton League) 37(8) : 6 If. August 1972.
2518 "Cumberland Island - Beautiful, Unspoiled, Historic". Burnette Vanstory. Georgia Magazine 10(2) 16-19. August- September 1966.
2519 '"The British Raid on Cumberland". John F. Stegeman. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 3, 1970. Pp. 18, 20, 22.
2520 "Dungeness. B. N. Nightingale. Georgia Historical Quarterly 22(4) : 369-383. December 1938. Historical sketch of the old Cumberland Island mansion.
Carroll
2521 Georgia's Last Frontier: The Development ol Carroll County. James C. Bonner. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1971. xii + 236 pp.
2522 Carroll County and Her People. Joe Cobb. The Villa Rica Star. 1907 [vi] + 149 pp. Reprinted 1975 under auspices of the Sesquicentennial - Bicentennial Committee of Carroll County Chamber of Commerce, Carrollton, Georgia.
2523 History of Carroll County, Georgia. Leon P. Mandeville. G. F. Cheney et a/., publishers. Carrollton, Georgia. (1910?]. 99 pp.
2524 Carroll Historical Quarterly. J. R. Hamrick. ed. Carrollton, Georgia. 1968. [Only two issues published: Vol. 1, (No. 1) Winter 1968 and Vol. 1, No. 2 Spring and Summer 1968].
2525 The Educational History of Carroll County. James C. Bonner. Georgia College, Duplicating Department. Milledgeville. 1968. 40 pp.
2526 Bowdon Has a Centennial. Jessie Bartlett Digby. The Bowdon Bulletin. Bowdon, Georgia. 1954. [iv] +55 pp.
2527 ""Villa Rica- Village of Gold Since 1826"". Mary Talley Anderson. Georgia Life 1(2). 18-19. Autumn 1974.
2528 "Chattahoochee Old Town: A Footnote in Historiography". James C. Bonner. Georgia Historical Quarterly 51 (4) : 443-448. December 1967. The location of the Indians Chattahoochee Old Town is theorized to be in Carroll County on the Chattahoochee a few miles downriver from Whitesburg. The author suggests that his theory is an example of the value of linguistics in historical research.
Catoosa
2529 History In Catoosa County. William Henry Harrison Clark. Published by the author. Ringgold. Georgia. 1972. vi + 302 pp.
2530 Official History of Catoosa County, Georgia: 1853-1953. Susie Blaylock McDaniel. Gregory Printing & Office Supply. Dalton, Ga. 1953. viii + 232 pp.
2531 The Chattanooga Country, 1540-1962. Gilbert E. Govan and James W. Livingood. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1952, revised 1963. 526 pp. History of the Chattanooga region of Tennessee and Georgia including Lookout Mountain, Battle of Chickamauga, Tennessee Valley Authority, Cherokee Nation, etc.
2532 Chickamauga: Bloody Battle In the West. Glenn Tucker. Bobbs-Merrill, Inc. Indianapolis. 1961. 448 pp.
2533 Chickamauga and Chattanooga Battlefields. James R. Sullivan. Historical Handbook Series. No. 25. National Park Service. Washington, D.C. 1956. (iv] + 60 pp. History of the Civil War battles of Chickamauga and Chattanooga and guide to the battlefield parks.
2534 Dedication ol the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, September 18-20, 1895. H. V. Boynton, comp. Joint Committee to Represent the Congress. Government Printing Office. Washington, D.C. 1896. 374 pp.
2535 The National Military Park, Chickamauga - Chattanooga, An Historical Guide, With Maps and Illustrations. H. V. Boynton. Robert Clarke Co. Cincinnati. 1895. xviii + 307 pp.
2536 Storming ol the Gateway, Chattanooga, 1863. Fairfax Downey. David McKay Co.
70
History
New York. 1960. xiv + 303 pp. An account of the campaign for Chattanooga (battles of Chickamauga, Lookout Mountain, and Missionary Ridge).
2537 "The Chickamauga Campaign 1863 and Geology". Andrew Brown. Geo Times 8(6): 17-21. March 1964. Topographic influences on troop movements and defenses are described. Map shows routes of the opposing armies over Lookout Mountain and adjacent areas which brought them to battle at Chickamauga.
Charlton
2538 History of Charlton County. Alexander Stephens McQueen. Stein Printing Co. Atlanta. 1932. v + 269 pp.
2539 Charlton County, Georgia: Historical Notes, 1972. Charlton County Historical Commission. N.p. [1972]. [iv] + 538 + (12] pp.
2540 "The Creek Trading House - From Colerain to Fort Hawkins". Ray H. Mattison. Georgia Historical Quarterly 30(3) : 169-184. September 1946. The Creek Trading House was established at Colerain in Charlton County in 1796 to improve American relations with the Creek Indians. It was moved to Fort Wilkinson near Milledgeville the next year and in 1806 was moved again to Fort Hawkins near Macon.
2541 "An Old Blockhouse on the St. Mary's River". John H. Goff. Georgia Magazine 6(3): 12-13. October- November 1962. Investigated is an old log house, probably built in the 1830's, in lower Charlton County.
Chatham HISTORIES TOUR GUIDES ARCHITECTURE PRESERVATION FORTS PLANTATIONS TYBEE ISLAND MISCELLANEOUS HISTORIC SITES OTHER
HISTORIES - (chronologically)
2542 Historical Record of the City of Savannah. F. D. Lee and J. L. Agnew. J. H. Estill, Morning News Steam-Power Press. Savannah. 1869. xii + 212 pp.
2543 Historic and Picturesque Savannah. Adelaide Wilson. Boston Photogravure Company. Boston, Mass. 1889. xviii + 258 pp. An outline of Savannah history.
2544 History of Savannah, Ga. From Its Settlement to the Close of the Eighteenth Century by Charles C. Jones, Jr. From the Close of the Eighteenth Century by O.F. Vedder and Frank Weldon. D. Mason & Co. Syracuse, N.Y. 1890. 655 pp.
2545 Chronological History of Savannah, From Its Settlement by Oglethorpe Down to December, 31, 1899. Together With a Complete Record of the City and County A. E. Shol.,s, comp. Morning News Print. Savannah. 1900. 184 pp.
2548 A History of Savannah and South Georgia. William Harden. Lewis Publishing Company. Chicago. 1913. 2 vols. Reprinted 1969 by Cherokee Publishing Company, Atlanta.
2547 Anchored Yesterdays- The Log Book of Savannah's Voyage Acrou a Georgia Century. Elfrida DeRenne Barrow and Laura Palmer Bell. Review Publishing and Printing Company. Savannah, Georgia. 1923. 138 pp. Second edition printed 1966 by the Ashentilly Press of Darien, Georgia, for the Little House of Savannah, Georgia, xviii + [121] pp.
2548 Reminiscences end Recollections of Old Savannah. Charles Seton Henry Hardee. Privately printed. Savannah. [1928?]. 131 pp.
2548 Stories of Old Savannah. Second Series. Margaret Godley and Lillian C. Bragg. Privately published. 1949. 47 pp.
2550 A Present for Mr. Lincoln - The Story of Savannah from Secession to Sherman. Alexander A. Lawrence. Ardivan Press. Macon, Georgia. 1961. 321 pp.
2551 Savannah, Georgia, During the Civil War. James David Griffin. Doctoral dissertation, 1963, University of Georgia. 325 pp.
2552 Savannah In the 1850's. Richard Herbert Haunton. Doctoral dissertation, 1968, Emory University. 420 pp.
2553 Savanneh Revisited - A Pictorial History. Ships of the Sea Museum. University of Georgia Press, Athens. 1969. 96 pp.
2554 Savannah Revisited. Mills Lane. Beehive Press. Savannah. 1973. 160 pp.
TOUR GUIDES
2555 SoJourn In Savannah; An Official Guidebook and Map of Savannah and the Surrounding Countryside. Bicentennial edition. Betty Rauers and Franklin Traub. Printed by the Printcraft Press. Savannah. 1976. 128 pp. +fold. map.
2558 Savanneh: Now and Then. Cliff Sewell. Printed by the Printcraft Press. Savannah. 1974. 104 pp.
2257 Guide to Savanneh. 9th ed. Junior League of Savannah. Savannah. 1950. 44 pp. (10th ed. published 1955 with title Touring Savannah].
2258 Savannah. American Guide Series. Federal Writers Project, Works Progress Administration. Savannah. 1937. xiv + 208 pp. A history of the city and a guide to points of interest.
2559 "The Soft Beauty of Savannah". Chandler Brossard. Holiday 44(2) : 52-57, 63. August 1968. Descriptions and illustrations; walking tour.
2560 "Modern Savannah". Robert M. Hitch. Georgia Historical Quarterly 13(3) : 289341. September 1929. An illustrated tour and historical sketch.
ARCHITECTURE AND CITY PLAN
2561 Historic Savannah. Historic Savannah Foundation, Inc. Savannah. 1968. [x] + 247 pp. Identifies structures, sites and places of historic architectural importance within the 2.5 square miles of Savannah's downtown NaUonaiHistoric Landmark area.
2582 "Savannah and Its Architecture". Antiques 91 : (Whole issue). March 1967.
2583 Charleston, S.C. and Savanneh, Ga.; Examples of Colonial Architecture In South Carolina and Georgia. Edward A. Crane and E. E. Soderholtz. Bruno Hessling. Berlin and New York. [1908]. 2 pp. +52 plates.
2564 Lost Examples of Colonial Architecture. John Mead Howells. Dover Publications. New York. 1963. [xviii] pp. + 244 plates + [iv] pp. Includes photographs of lost buildings in Savannah and Augusta.
2565 Old Savannah Ironwork. Lillian Chaplin Bragg. Published by the author. Savannah. 1957. [iv] + 41 pp. Architectural ironwork in Savannah is photographed and described.
2588 Birds and Beasts of Old Savannah. Charlotte lnglesby. Privately published. 1958. [27] pp. Birds, beasts and legendary animals that exist in architectural design and sculpture in Savannah are photographed.
2567 "Charleston and Savannah". Frederic R. Stevenson. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 10(4) : 3-9. December 1951. How expansion and congestion affected the civic patterns of two old Southern coastal cities.
2588 "A New Theory on the Plan of Savannah". Laura Palmer Bell. Georgia Historical Quarterly 48(2) : 147-165. June 1964.
2569 "Oglethorpe's Sources for the Savannah Plan". Turpin C. Bannister. Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 20(2) : 47-62. May 1961.
2570 "The Squares of Savannah". Clermont H. Lee. Planning and Civic Comment17(1): 24. March 1951. On the preservation of Savannah's squares, a series of little parks that was a feature of Oglethorpe's 1733 plan for the city.
2571 "The Square Life". Gerald Chan Sieg. Allante Journal and Constitution Magazine September 24, 1972. Pp. 34, 36-37, 39. The squares of Savannah, laid out by James Oglethorpe in 1733, create a pleasing urban environment.
PRESERVATION- (chronologically)
2572 Half a Herltege. Historic Savannah Foundation, Inc. Savannah. 1968. (12] pp.
2573 "The Savannah Story". Leopold Alder II et at. Historic Preservation 21(1) : 8-21.
January-March 1969. Abstracts of speeches by officers of Historic Savannah Foundation, Inc. delivered at 22nd annual meeting of the National Trust for Historic Preservation describing the preservation efforts of the Foundation.
2574 "The Heart of Savannah". Anthony Wolff. American Herltege 22(1) : 54-61, 103. December 1970. Historical sketch of the old city and background on preservation and restoration efforts.
2575 "Criteria of Urban Design Relatedness". Paul Muldawer. Historic Preservation 23(1) : 29-35. January 1971.
71
History
Cri<P<ia tor building contemporary structures in the historic district of Savannah. Specific design elements are identified by which individual structures may be compared and evaluated.
2576 "Economic Incentives". Leopold Adler II. Historic Preservation 23(2) : 25-28. April -June 1971. The author, a past president of Historic Savannah Foundation, Inc., explains real estate practices used by his organization to further preservation and restoration in Savannah.
25n "Saving Savannah: Citizens Restore the Splendor of an Old Southern City". Life 70(17): 49-58. May 7, 1971.
2578 "Can a Famous Old City be Historic and Still Progressive?". Archie Whitfield. Georgia 15(7) : 14-15, 26, 34. January 1972. In Savannah, entrepreneurs and preservationists clash.
2579 "A Hosanna to Savannah". Newsweek 79(6) : 50-51. February 7, 1972. Describes the renovation and historic preservation efforts of the Historic Savannah Foundation.
2580 "Savannah: A Heritage Revered and Reborn". Rosemary L. Klein. American Home 76 : 53-59. March 1973.
2581 Historic Preservation Plan. Chatham County - Savannah Metropolitan Planning
Commission. Savannah, Georgia. June 1973. 39 pp.
A framework to guide development in Savannah's National Historic District is presented.
Past efforts and present status are examined.
2582 Historic Preservation Plan for the Central Area General Neighborhood Renewal Area, Savannah, Georgia. Housing Authority of Savannah. Published by U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Washington, D.C. 1973. 32 pp.
FORTS
2583 "Two Years at Fort Bartow, 1862-1864". Rogers W. Young. Georgia Historical Quarterly 23(3): 253-264. September 1939. On the Civil War fortification on Causton's Bluff near Savannah, constructed in early 1862 for the defense of the city.
2584 "Wheat, Whiskey and Ironstone - An Archaeological Excavation at Fort Jackson, Savannah". William M. Kelso. Georgia Magazine 12(3) : 24-25. October - November 1968.
2585 Fort Pulaski National Monument, Georgia. Ralston B. Lattimore. Historical Handbo~k Series, No. 18. National Park Service. Washington, D.C. 1954. [iv] +56 pp.
2586 "The Construction of Fort Pulaski". Rogers W. Young. Georgia Historical Quarterly 20(1): 41-51. March 1936. Fort Pulaski, on Cockspur Island near Savannah, is a huge masonry fortification built for coastal defense prior to the Civil War. Its construction required sixteen years.
2587 "Fort Pulaski". Charles H. Olmstead. Georgia Historical Quarterly 1(2) : 98-105. June 1917. On the fall of the Savannah River fortress in the Civil War.
2588 Official Report to the United States Engineer Department of the Siege and Reduction of Fort Pulaski, Georgia, February, March and April, 1862. 0. A. Gillmore. D. Van Nostrand, publisher. New York,. 1862. 96 pp. + maps, drawings.
PLANTATIONS
2589 Savannah River Plantations. Savannah Writers' Project [also Federal Writers' Project or Georgia Writers' Project, Savannah Unit], Works Progress Administration in Georgia. Mary Granger, ed. Georgia Historical Society. Savannah. 1947. [xiii) + 475 + XVIII pp. Reprinted 1972 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C. A reprint of a series of monographs from Georgia Historical Quarterly (volumes 22-27, 1938-1943) on old plantations of Chatham County along the Savannah River. These are: Causton's Bluff, Deptford, Brewton Hill, Mulberry Grove, Richmond Oakgrove, Drakies, Colerain, Whitehall, Rae's Hall, Brampton, Hermitage and Royal Vale.
2590 "Plantation Development in Chatham County". Federal Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Works Progress Administration of Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 22(4) : 305-330. December 1938. On the beginnings of the great colonial plantations of Chatham County: Whitehall, Hermitage, Mulberry Grove, Coleraine, Silk Hope, Drakies and others.
2591 "Causton's Bluff, Deptford, Brewton Hill: Three Allied Plantations". Federal Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Works Progress Administration of Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 23(1): 28-54; 23(2): 122-147. March 1939; June 1939. History of three of the Savannah River plantations of Chatham County.
2592 "Mulberry Grove in Colonial Times". Federal Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration of Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 23(3) : 237-252. September 1939. Early history of the Savannah River plantation.
2593 "Mulberry Grove from the Revolution to the Present Time". Georgia Writers' Pro-
ject- Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration of Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 23(4) : 315-336. December 1939. History of General Nathanael Greene's plantation on the Savannah River in Chatham County. Here in 1793 Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin.
2594 "Richmond Oakgrove Plantation, Part 1". Georgia Writers' Project- Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration of Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 24(1) : 22-42. March 1940. '' Historical sketch of the former Chatham County plantation which was created from three earlier plantations: Richmond and Kew, Morton Hall, and New Settlement, later known as Oakgrove.
2595 "Richmond Oakgrove Plantation, Part II". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 24(2) : 124144. June 1940.
2598 "Drakies Plantation". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 24(3) : 207-235. September 1940. Historical sketch of the old Savannah River plantation.
2597 "Colerain Plantation, Part 1". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 24(4) : 343-373. December 1940. Historical sketch of an old Savannah River plantation. Its site is about 7 miles upstream from Savannah.
2598 "Colerain Plantation, PaP. II". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 25(1) : 39-66. March 1941.
2599 "Colerain Plantation, Part Ill". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 25(2) : 120-140. June 1941.
2600 "Colerain Plantation, Part IV". Georgia Writers' Project- Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 25(3) : 225-243. September 1941.
2801 "Whitehall Plantation, Part 1". Georgia Writers' Project- Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 25(4) : 340-363. December 1941. Historical sketch of the old Savannah River plantation. Its site is about six miles upstream from Savannah.
2602 "Whitehall Plantation, Part II". Georgia Writers' Project- Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 26 (1): 40-64. March 1942.
2603 "Whitehall Plantation, Part Ill". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 26(2) : 129-155. June 1942.
2604 "Rae's Hall Plantation, Part 1". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia". Georgia Historical Quarterly 26(3&4) : 225-248. September- December 1942. History of an old Savannah River plantation about live miles upstream from Savannah.
2605 "Rae's Hall Plantation, Part II". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 27(1): 1-27. March 1943.
2606 "Brampton Plantation". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 27(1) : 28-55. March 1943. Brampton, the home of Revolutionary patriot Jonathan Bryan, was one of several historic plantations on the Savannah River in Chatham County.
2807 "The Hermitage Plantation". Georgia Writers' Project - Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 27(1): 56-87. March 1943. Hermitage Plantation, three miles east of old Savannah on the Savannah river was the only river estate to become noted for industrial rather than agricultural activities.
2608 "The Plantation of the Royal Vale". Georgia Writers' Project- Savannah Unit, Work Projects Administration in Georgia. Georgia Historical Quarterly 27(1): 88-110. March 1943. Royal Vale, adjacent to Savannah Township during colonial times, is now a site of intense industrial activity.
2609 Wormsloe; Two Centuries of a Georgia Family. Ellis Merton Coulter. University of Georgia Press. Athens. [1955). xv + 322 pp. Family and local history examining the Jones-DeRenne Family of Georgia's colonial revolutionary period. Their Wormsloe Plantation is at Isle of Hope near Savannah.
2610 Captain Jones' Wormslow: A Historical, Archaeological, and Architectural Study of an Eighteenth Century Plantation Site Near Savannah, Georgia. William Martin Kelso. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, Emory University. 268 pp.
2611 "Wormsloe House and Its Masters". Robert Preston Brooks. Georgia Historical Quarterly 40(2): 144-151. June 1956.
2612 "Beaulieu Plantation". Robert Walker Groves. Georgia Historical Quarterly 37(3) :
72
History
200-209. September 1953. Historical notes on William Stephens' plantation on the Vernon River, deeded in 1737 by the colonial Trustees.
2613 "Beaulieu- Remembered". Katharine H. Strong. Georgia Review 3(4). Winter 19491950. Reminiscences of Beaulieu plantation.
TYBEE ISLAND
2614 Hlatorlc Tybee leland. Margaret Godley. Savannah Beach Chamber of Commerce. Savannah Beach, Georgia. 1958. 72 pp.
2615 A History ol Tybee leland, Ga. and a Sketch ol the Savannah and Tybee R.R. B. H. Richardson. Savannah Times Publishing Co. Savannah. 1886. 30 pp.
2616 Talea ol Tybee. J. H. Estill. The Savannah Morning Newe. Savannah. 1906. 29 pp.
2617 "The Lighthouse on Tybee Island". Milton B. Smith. Georgia Historical Quarterly 49(3) : 245-263. September 1965. The colonial era lighthouse at the mouth of the Savannah is described.
MISCELLANEOUS HISTORIC SITES
2618 "Savannah's Historic Davenport House Museum". Georgia Magazine 8(4) : 26-28. December 1964- January 1965.
2619 "The Savannah Theater - Oldest in America". Margaret Beauchamp Armistead. Georgia Review 7(1) :50-55. Spring 1953. Notes on the 1818 Savannah Theater on Bull Street in downtown Savannah. The theater is the oldest in continuous use in the nation.
2620 Savannah's Pioneer Theater !rom Its Origins to 1810. J. Max Patrick. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1953. viii + 94 pp.
2621 "Historic Trustees' Garden Rescued and Restored". Georgia Magazine 4(6) : 27-29. April - May 1961. The Trustees' Garden was established in colonial Savannah to cultivate mulberry trees and spices. Later, historic Fort Wayne was built on the site. The restoration of the area is examined.
2622 "The First Garden of Georgia". Bertha Sheppard Hart. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 19(4) : 325-332. December 1935. On the Trustees' Garden in Savannah.
2623 "The Beginning of Public Agricultural Experimentation in America: The Trustees' Garden in Georgia". James W. Holland. Agricultural Hlatory 12(3) : 271-298. July 1938.
2624 "Two Savannah Cemeteries". Lillian Chaplin Bragg. Georgia Magazine 5(6) : 20-21. April - May 1962.
2625 "Savannah's Old Jewish Burial Ground". Marion Abrahams Levy. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 34(4) : 265-270. December 1950.
2626 "Bonaventure, Savannah's Silent City". Eva J. Barrington. Georgia Review 5(3) 300-304. Fa111951. A brief history of the famous cemetery.
2627 Tha Burial Place ol Button Gwlnnett: A Report to the Mayor and Aldermen ol The City of Savannah. Savannah - Chatham County Historic Site and Monument Commission. Savannah. 1959. Iii] + 34 pp. On the claim by Arthur J. Funk that he discovered, in 1957, the burial site and remains of Button Gwinnett, signer of the Declaration of Independence. The Commission concluded that the remains, found in Savannah's Colonial Park Cemetery, are those of Gwinnett.
2628 Bethesda, An Hlatorlcal Sketch of Whltelleld'a Houee ol Mercy In Georgia, and ol the Union Society, hla Associate and Succeuor In Philanthropy. Thomas Gamble, Jr. Morning News Print. Savannah, Georgia. 1902. 150 pp. Reprinted 1972 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C.
2629 "Whitefield, Habersham and the Bethesda Orphanage". Erwin C. Surrency. Georgia Historical Quarterly 34(2) : 87-105. June 1950. On one of America's first orphanages, established near Savannah in 1740, and the two men most responsible for its success.
2630 A Hlatory ol the Erection and Dedication ol the Monument to Gen'l. Jamal Edward Oglethorpe Unveiled In Savannah, Ga., November 23, 1910. Collections, Vol. 7, pt. 2. Georgia Historical Society. Savannah. 1911. 53 pp.
2631 "To Honor the. Sailors' Girl". Gerald Chan Seig. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine April 22, 1973. Pp. 30, 32, 34. Florence Martus, Savannah's "Waving Girl" is commemorated by a larger-than-life bronze statue high on the bank of the Savannah River.
2632 History of the First African Baptlat Church, from Its Organization, January 20th, 1788, to July 1st, 1888, Including the Centennial Celebration, Addreases, Sermona, Etc. E. K. Love. Morning News Print. Savannah. 1888. lxviii] + 360 pp.
2633 The First Colored BapUat Church In North America. Conatltuted at Savannah, Georgia, January 20, A.D. 1788. James M. Simms. J. B. Lippincott Co. Philadelphia. 1888. 264 pp. A history of the church.
2634 "The Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace". Frances Gibson Satterfield. Georgia Magazine 5(6) : 22-25. April- May 1962.
2635 "Telfair Academy of Arts". Alexander R. Lawton. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 1(1) : 13-24. March 1917.
2638 "Treasure House for Georgia's Past". Phinizy Spalding. Atlanta Joumaland Conatltutlon Magazine May 6, 1973. Pp. 54-58, 61. Hodgson Hall in Savannah, the headquarters of the Georgia Historical Society, holds the finest private collection of Georgia documents and items of Georgia's history anywhere.
2637 "A Profile of the Georgia Historical Society". Lilla M. Hawes. Georgia Historical Quarterly 36(2) : 132-136. June 1952. A sketch of the organization and its work.
2638 Overture to the Future at the Georgia Historical Society. AlbertS. Britt, Jr. Georgia Historical Society. Savannah. 1974. viii+ 28 pp. History of the Society and notes on its historical collections at Hodgson Hall in Savannah.
2639 "The Georgia Historical Society". [William Harden]. Georgia Historical Quarterly 1(1): 6-13. March 1917. A historical sketch of the Society 1839-1917.
2640 Cerveau's Savannah. Joseph Frederick Waring. Georgia Historical Society. Savannah. 1973. vii + 87 pp. A tempera painting of 1837 Savannah by Firmin Cerveau hangs in Hodgson Hall, the headquarters and library of the Georgia Historical Society. The painting is reproduced in this book to form the basis for a series of historical sketches by the author. Among the individual commentaries: "Market Square", "Churches", "Bay Street", "Steam", "Buzzards," "Business and Pleasure", and "Barrooms and Honor".
OTHER
2641 Savannah Harbor, 111 Origin and Development, 1733-1890. M. L. Granger. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. November 1988. 53 pp. + 5 fold. maps. History of the harbor and harbor works. Published as an annex to the District History of the Savannah District office.
2642 "Savannah: Lumber Center of the South Atlantic". John A. Eisterhold. Georgia Historical Quarterly 57(4) : 526-543. Winter 1973. The ante-bellum lumber industry of Savannah is described.
2643 "Timber Products of Colonial Georgia". Melvin Herndon. Georgia Historical Quarterly 57(1): 56-62. Spring 1973.
2644 "Naval Stores in Colonial Georgia". G. Melvin Herndon. Georgia Historical Quarterly 52(4) : 426-433. December 1968.
2645 Hlatory ol Savannah Methodism from John Wesley to Silas Johnson. Haygood S. Bowden. J. W. Burke Co. Macon, Ga. 1929. 321 pp.
2646 "New Light on the Jewish Settlement of Savannah". Malcolm H. Stern. American Jewlah Hlatorlcal Quarterly 52(3) : 169-199. March 1963.
2647 "General Robert Howe and the British Capture of Savannah in 1778". Alexander A. Lawrence. Georgia Historical Quarterly 36(4): 303-327. December 1952.
2648 Muaketa, Cannon Balls I Bomba: Nine Narratives ol the Selga ol Savannah In 1779. Benjamin Kennedy, editor and translator. Beehive Press. Savannah. 1974. xvi + 141 pp.
2649 Storm Over Savannah, The Story ol Count d'Estalng and the Siege of the Town In 1779. Alexander A. Lawrence. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1951, 1988. xii + 217 pp. + 1 fold. map.
2650 "The Great Savannah Fire of 1820". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 23(1): 1-27. March 1939.
2651 S. S. Savannah -The Elegant Steam Ship. Frank 0. Braynard. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1963. xii + 249 pp. A history of the Savannah, lirst steam-powered vessel to cross the Atlantic.
2652 "The John Randolph: America's First Commercially Successful Iron Steamboat". Alexander Crosby Brown. Georgia Historical Quarterly 36(1) : 32-45. March 1952. Historical sketch of the 1834 Savannah pioneer craft.
2653 Historical Sketch ol the Chatham Artillery during the Confederate Struggle lor Independence. Charles C. Jones. Joel Munsell. Albany, N.Y. 1867. 240 pp.
2654 The Negro In Savannah, 1865-1900. Robert E. Perdue. Exposition Press. New York. 1973. xii + 156 pp.
2655 "A Rare Picture of Black History". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Joumal and Constl-
73
' ,_!,.
History
tuUon Magazine October 5, 1975. Pp. 8-9, 24, 26, 30, 33. A look at some of the historic photographs of William E. Wilson. Wilson captured the life of black people in 1880's Savannah on glass-plate negatives. Prints of some of these are published for the first time with this article.
26S& "The Vernon River". George Noble Jones. Georgia Review 4(2) : 89-96. Summer
1950. A brief account of life along the Vernon River between 1890 and 1900, especially the summer resorts of White Bluff, Montgomery, Beaulieu, and Green Island.
2857 The Great Savannah RKft: 1908, 1910, 1911. Julian K. Quattlebaum. A. L. Bryan Co., printers. Columbia, S.C. v + 133 pp. History of the Grand Prize Race and other early automobile races in the streets of Savannah and its environs from 1908-1911. These races brought the world's best drivers and fastest cars to the city.
2858 "A Historical Sketch of the Evolution of Trade and Transportation at Savannah, Ga. Together with a Synopsis of the Rate Adjustment from the East". E. H. Hinton. In: Southeastern Freight AsiOCiaUon, Item No. 16 of Proceedings of Meeting of Executive Officers, Belleair, Fla., January 17-18, 1912.
2859 T - Hundred Years of Education, Bicentennial 1733-1933, Savannah, Chatham County, Georgia. Haygood S. Bowden. Press of the Dietz Printing Co. Richmond, Va. 1932. xvi + 381 pp. Early history of secondary education in Savannah and Chatham County.
2680 The Real Property, Land Use, and Low Income Housing Area Survey of Metropoll-
ten Savannah. Protect No. 465-34-3-343. Work Projects Administration of Georgia. 1940.
2 vols.
2661 "'The Vanishing Gardens of Savannah". Laura Palmer Bell. Georgia Historical Quarterly 28(3) : 196-208. September 1944.
2662 A Tourist Development and PromoHon Program lor the City of Savannah. H. F. Gritlies. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Division. Atlanta. April 1965. v + 34 pp.
ChaHahoochee
2663 History of Cheltehoochee County, Georgia. Norma Kate Rogers. Columbus Office Supply Co. Columbus, Georgia. 1933. 397 pp.
Chattooga
2664 "Two Church Sites in the Former Cherokee Country of Georgia". John H. Goff. Georgia Mlnerel Newsletter 15(1-2) : 29-30. 1962. The approximate locations of two Indian country churches in Chattooga and Dade Counties are indicated.
Cherokee
2685 The History of Cherokee County. Lloyd G. Marlin. Walter W. Brown Publishing Co. Atlanta. 1932. xiii + 289 pp.
2666 Ynterday In the Hills. Floyd C. Watkins and Charles Hubert Watkins. Quadrangle Books. Chicago. 1963. 192 pp. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1973. 184 pp. Reminiscences of life in northern Cherokee County before WW II.
2667 History of Reinhardt College. Bowling C. Yates. Published by the author. Marietta, Georgia. 1969. iv + 80 pp. Reinhardt College. established in 1883, is at Waleska, Ga.
2666 "History of the Franklin Gold Mine [Cherokee County]". Roy E. Bottoms. North Wnt Georgia Hlatortcaland Genealogical Society 5(4) : 3-7. October 1973.
Clarke
2669 History of Athens and Clarke County. David C. Barrow, et at., eds. H. J. Rowe.
Publisher. Athens. 1923. 180 pp.
2670 Antebellum Athens and Clarke County, Georgia. Ernest C. Hynds. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1974. viii + 200 pp.
2671 Clarke County, Ga. and the City of Athens. Charles Morton Strahan. Charles P. Byrd, printer. Atlanta. 1893. 88 pp.
2672 Papers Of the Athens Historical Society. Athens Historical Society. Athens. 1964 (Volume 1).
2673 Annals ot Athens, Georgia, 1801-1901. Augustus Longstreet Hull. Banner Job Office. Athens. 1906. xiv + 495 pp.
2674 Confederate Athens. Kenneth Coleman. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1967. ix + 214 pp. + 1 fold. map.
2675 These Men She Gave: Civil War Diary of Athens, Georgia. John F. Stegeman. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1964. viii+ 179 pp.
2676 Athens, 1661-1665, As Sean Through Letters In the University of Georgia Llbrarln. Kenneth Coleman, ed. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1969. vii + 123 pp.
26n Old South, New South: Continuity and Change In a Georgia County, 1850-1880. Frank Jackson Huffman. Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1974. Yale University. 309 pp. On life in Clarke County, Georgia before, during, and after the Civil War.
2678 Strolls About Athens During the Early Saventln. William Sylvanus Morris. The Athens Banner. 1912. 56 pp. Reprinted 1969 by Athens Historical Society, Athens. Georgia. A tour of Athens in the 1870's. Sites of historical significance are identified.
2679 The Toombs Oak, The Tree That Owned Itself, and Other Chapters of Georgia. E. Merton Coulter. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1966. vii + 264 pp. Several chapters of local history are reprinted from the Georgia Historical Quarterly. Five deal with Athens; the remaining four examine the Acadians who came to live around Savannah, the Woolfolk Murder, John Howard Payne's visit to Georgia, and Henry M. Turner, preacher-politician of Reconstruction.
2680 Athens, Georgia's Columned City. Kenneth Frederick Marsh and Blanche Marsh. Biltmore Press. Asheville. N.C. 1964. 84 pp.
2681 The Columns of Athens, Georgia's Classic City. William Columbus Davis. Foote & Davies, Inc. Atlanta. 1951. [80 pp.]. A picture book of Athens' Grecian architecture.
2682 Athens, Georgia - Home of the University of Georgia, 1801-1951. City of Athens, Georgia. Athens. 1951. 85 pp.
2683 The University of Georgia, Under Sixteen Admlnlstratlons1785-1955. Robert Preston Brooks. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1956. ix + 260 pp.
2684 College Lite In the Old South. E. Merton Coulter. Macmillan Co., New York, 1928, [xii] + 381 pp. University of Georgia Press, Athens, 1951, xiii + 320 pp. Life at the University of Georgia from 1801-1870 is described.
2685 "The University of Georgia - Old and New". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Review 5(1) : 12-21. Spring 1951.
2686 "Architecture of American Colleges: University of Georgia (1785)"'. Montgomery Schuyler. Architectural Record 30:59-61. 1911.
2687 "Franklin College as a Name for the University of Georgia". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Historical Quarterly 34(3) : 189-194. September 1950. On the confusion concerning the original name of the University of Georgia.
2688 History of the Stele Normal School, Athens, Georgia. E. S. Sell. Georgia State Teachers College. Athens. 1923. 108 pp.
2689 "Can Athens Change Its Ways?". Carrie M. Adamson. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 1, 1972. Pp. 20, 23, 26-27, 29-30. Civic interest, led by the Athens-Clarke Heritage Foundation, may save the "Classic City" from strip-zoning and land development excesses that have seen 13 historically important buildings fall within 20 years.
2690 "Old Athens Saves a New England House". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 18, 1969. Pp. 22, 26, 29. How the Athens-Clarke Heritage Foundation saved the city's New England style Brumby House.
2691 "Shall Historic Seney-Stovall Chapel Stand? ... or Fall?". William E. Asher. Georgia Magazine 3(1): 17. June- July 1959. The future of the Gothic Revival landmark in Athens is questioned.
2692 "The Confederate Monument in Athens". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Review 10(1) : 56-68. Spring 1956. A history of one of the earliest of the many tributes to the Confederate soldier.
2693 "The Double-Barrelled Cannon of Athens, Georgia". Jones M. Drewry. Georgia Historical Quarterly 48(4) : 442-450. December 1964.
2694 The Negro In Athens and Clarke County, 1872-1900. Peter Evans Schinkel. Masters thesis, 1971, University of Georgia. 109 pp.
2695 "Athens and the Railroads: The Georgia and The Northeastern, Part 1". Peter S. McGuire. Georgia Historical Quarterly 18(1): 1-26. March 1934.
2696 "Athens and the Railroads: The Northeastern Extension; The Macon and Northern; and the Georgia, Carolina, and Northern, Part II". Peter S. McGuire. Georgia Historical Quarterly 18(2): 118-144. June 1934.
2697 "A Note on a Georgia Paper Mill". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Historical Quarterly 48(2) : 239-242. June 1964. On the old Pioneer Paper Mill in Paper City, Clarke County, Georgia. When the mill gave up paper-making and converted to the manufacture of cotton yarn and rope, the name of the community was lost. It became known to later generations as the Cord Mill.
74
History
2898 Ante-Bellum M1111ulactorlea In Clarke County, Georgia. Cora Eliza O'Kelley. Masters thesis. 1941, University of Georgia. [90] pp.
Clay
28" History of Fort Gaines and Clay County, Georgia. [E. A. Greene]. Unpublished manuscript on file at Georgia Department of Archives and History. No date.
2700 "Fort Gaines". Thomas H. Akers. Georgia Magazine 15(3) : 6-9. August 1971.
Clayton
2701 Historic Clayton County. Terry Bakken. Privately published. Jonesboro, Georgia. 1975.93 pp.
2702 Around a Town Named lor Jones. J. Ellis Mundy. Published by the author. Jonesboro, Georgia. 1973. 115 pp. Jonesboro and its people are the subjects of this informal history.
2703 "The Crawford-Talmadge House, A Notable Home Since 1835". Joseph H. Moore. Georgia Magazine 12(4) : 2Q-23. December 1968 -January 1989.
2704 "Will Mundy's Mill". Earl Matthews. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(3) : 24-27. Summer 1973. The 1890 Mundy Mill in Clay1on County is still producing old-fashioned water-ground corn meal.
Clinch
2705 History of Clinch County, Georgia.... Folks Huxford. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1916. 309 pp.
2706 "Magnolia, One of the Dead Towns of Georgia". Folks Huxford. South Georgia Hlstorle~~land Genealogical Quarterly 1(1): 1-7. January 1922. In Clinch County about seven miles southwest of Homerville is the site of Magnolia, once the county seat.
2707 "Foster Marker on Suwannee". Marel Brown. Georgia Magazine 1(4): 13. December 1957 -January 1958. The first memorial to Stephen Foster, dedicated in 1928, is at Fargo, Georgia.
Cobb
2708 The First Hundred Years: A Short History of Cobb County, In Georgia. Sarah Blackwell Gober Temple. Walter W. Brown Publishing Co. Atlanta. 1935. xvi + 901 pp.
2709 Historic Cobb County. Bowling C. Yates. Cobb County Federal Savings and Loan Association. Marietta, Ga. [1985]. 35 pp.
2710 Marlette: Touchstones to the Past. BRIDGES-Cobb County, Inc. Marietta, Georgia. 1975.48 pp.
2711 "Marietta". Burnette Vanstory. Georgia Review 12(1): 41-49. Spring 1958. A historical sketch.
2712 ".Historic Homes and Churches are a Part of Marietta's Proud Heritage". B. C. Yates. Georgia Magazine 5(5) : 34-37. February- March 1982. Eleven of Marietta's antebellum structures are briefly described.
2713 Marlette, Georgia- Real Property, Land Use, and Low Income Housing Area Survey. Volume IV. Summary Report. Project No. 665-34-3-41. Works Progress Administration of Georgia. 1940. [ix] + 106 pp. + 4 fold. maps.
2714 "Vinings". Beverly M. DuBose, Jr. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 16(1) : 6Q-67. Spring 1971. A historical sketch of the Cobb County village.
2715 "Vinings History: The Way It Really Was". Wylly Folk St. John. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 26, 1970. Pp. 24-25, 27, 30-32. The Cobb County village of Vinings is planning a tourist information center, a museum, and a series of markers to describe its varied history.
2716 "Vinings - Historic and Beautiful". Margaret Perryman. Georgia Magazine 11 (2) : 18-21,28. August- September 1987.
2717 "The Battle ol Kennesaw Mountain - Long, Hard, Fair Fight". Richard McMurry. Georgia Magazine 5(5) : 26-27, 30. February- March 1962.
2718 "Kennesaw Sketches: A Collection of Descriptive Sketches and Anecdotes Sidelighting the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain". James Leo Aikman. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 19(3) : SQ-78. 1975.
2719 "Johnston's River Line". Tom Dickey. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(2) : 24-29. March - April 1975. A tour of the 1864 Confederate line of fortifications between the Chattahoochee River and
Nickajack Creek in Cobb County.
2720 "Action at Gilgal Church, Georgia, June 15-16, 1864." Sydney C. Kerksis. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 15(3) : 8-43. Fall 1970. Brief account of a Civil War battle near Due West in Cobb County.
2721 History of the Georgia Military Institute, Marlette, Georgia. Bowling C. Yates. Published by the author. Marietta, Ga. 1968. iv + 35 pp. History of the Institute from its opening in 1851 to its closing in 1864.
2722 An Historical Sketch of the Georgia Military Institute. Robert L. Rodgers. Kimsey's Book Shop. Marietta, Georgia. 1956. 74 pp.
2723 "The Georgia Military Institute in Wartime". Georgia Magazine 5(5) : 23-25. February - March 1962. The Georgia Military Institute, founded in 1851, was the "West Point of the South". The Marietta institution was destroyed by Sherman's Forces, but its cadets gained a proud combat record during the March to the Sea.
2724 Higher Education In Cobb County. Hugh T. Atkinson, David B. Kelley, Joel H. Paul, and Bowling C. Yates, Jr. Cox Printing Co., publisher. Marietta, Ga. 1966. History of Georgia Military Institute, Seventh District Agricultural and Mechanical School, Southern Technical Institute, and University of Georgia- Marietta Center.
2725 "Caution, Covered Bridge". Janice Ford Freeman. Georgia Life 2(3) : 35-42. Winter 1975-76. On the old Concord Road (Nickajack Creek) covered bridge in Cobb County.
Coffee
2726 Ward's History of Coffee County. Warren P. Ward. Foote & Davies Co. Atlanta. 1930. xiv + 354 pp.
Colquitt
2727 History of Colquitt County, Georgia, and Her Builders. Mattie Oglesby Coyle. Observer Press. Moultrie, Georgia. 1925. 62 pp.
2728 History of Colquitt County. William Alonzo Covington. Foote & Davies Co. Atlanta. 1937. xiv + 365 pp.
2729 "Colquitt County's 100 Years of Progress, 1856-1956". Centennial Edition. Moultrie Observer Vol. 51 no. 99. October 12, 1956. 190 pp.
2730 History of the Public Library of Moultrie, Georgia, 1906-1965. Ellen Payne Odum. Moultrie- Colquitt County Library. Moultrie, Ga. 1986. vi+ 89 pp.
Columbia
2731 A History of the Klokee Baptist Church In Georgia. James Donovan Mosteller. Ed wards Brothers, Inc. Ann Arbor, Mich. 1952. xv + 275 pp. The church was Georgia's first Baptist Church and is the oldest one in continuous existence.
2732 "Kiokee Baptist Church". Mary G. Jewett. Georgia Magazine 2(4) : 24-25. December 1958 - January 1959.
Cook
2733 History of Cook County, Georgia and Its Municipalities. June Jackson Parrish. Adel News Publishing Co. Adel, Georgia. 1968. 132 pp.
Coweta
2734 co-ta County Chronicles; lor One Hundred Years; With an Account of the Indians from Whom the Land was Acquired and Some Hlstorle~~l Papers Relating to Its Acquisition by Georgia, with Lineage Pages. Mary G. Jones and Lily Reynolds, eds. Stein Printing Company. Atlanta. 1928. xv + 869 pp. Bicentennial Reprint Edition by Southern Historical Press, Easley, S.C., [1975].
2735 The Newnan Times-Herald Centennial Magazine. Newnan Times-'1-lerald. Newnan, Georgia. December 16, 1985. viii+ 248 pp.
2736 "Roaming Around Roscoe". Margaret Perryman. Georgia Magazine 15.(5) : 15-17. November 1971. Old homeplaces, a mill house and the abandoned Dunaway Gardens are explored at the rural settlement of Roscoe in Coweta County.
2737 "The Battle of Brown's Mill". Gerald Smith. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(1) : 24-28. Winter 1973-74. The author narrates a tour through Coweta and Heard Counties along the route of McCook's Retreat, a little-known action of the Civil War.
75
History
Crisp
2738 History of Crisp County. Daughters of the American Revolution, Fort Early Chapter. Cordele, Georgia. 1916. 29 pp.
2739 Crisp County, Georgia Historical Sketches. William P. Fleming. Ham Printing Co. Cordele, Ga. 1932. [xviii] + 195 pp.
Dade
2740 "Celebrating Dade County's tOOth Anniversary". Dade County Times Vol. 48 no. 17. April 28, 1938. 68 pp.
2741 The Civil War Comes to Dade County. Nathaniel C. Hughes, Jr., compiler and editor. Published by N. C. Hughes, Jr., Chattanooga, Tenn. 1975. vii+ 204 pp.
2742 Lookout: The Story of a Mountain. Robert Sparks Walker. Southern Publishers, Inc. Kingsport, Tenn. 1941. Lookout Mountain is an eighty-three mile long segment of the Cumberland Plateau in Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee. It lies in portions of Chattooga, Dade, and Walker counties in northwest Georgia. The author writes of the historical and natural heritage of the mountain.
Decatur
2743 History of Decatur County, Georgia. FrankS. Jones. Published by the author. 1971. 420 pp. [Index available from Southwest Regional Library, Bainbridge, Georgia].
2744 "Historic Sites in and around the Jim Woodruff Reservoir Area, Florida- Georgia". Mark F. Boyd. In: Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 169, River Basin Surveys Papers, No. 13. Government Printing Office. Washington, D.C. 1958. 119 pp. + 10 pis. + 2 figs. + 1 map. Fourteen sites of historical importance are briefly described. Four of these are submerged below the present reservoir. The sites are in Decatur and Seminole Counties.
DeKalb
2745 "Early History of DeKalb County". Richard McMurry. Georgia Magazine 5(2) 18-22. August - September 1961.
2746 Early DeKalb County History. [Nell Roach Hollifield]. DeKalb Chamber of Commerce. Decatur, Georgia. October 1970. [ii] + 24 pp.
2747 Collections of the DeKalb Historical Society - Volume 1, The Year Book- 1952. Elizabeth Austin Ford and Austin McNeill Ford, eds. DeKalb Historical Society. Decatur, Georgia. 1952. vi+ 106 pp. Short articles and extracts from historic documents. Examines: Indians, Indian trails, Hightower Trail, early churches, Stone Mountain, old buildings, schools and colleges, medicine, and other subjects.
2746 The Story of Decatur, 1823-1899. Caroline McKinney Clarke. Published by the author. Decatur, Georgia. 1973. xii + 274 pp.
2749 "The Oldest House in Decatur". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine December 10, 1972. Pp. 14-16, 18, 21. The Swanton House is a classic pioneer era home restored by the DeKalb County Historical Society.
2750 Emory University, 1915-1965, A Semicentennial History. Thomas H. English. Emory University. Atlanta. 1966. xi+ 269 pp.
2751 A History of Emory University. Henry Morton Bullock. Parthenon Press. Nashville, Tenn. 1936. 391 pp.
2752 The Oglethorpe Story. Thornwell Jacobs. Oglethorpe University Bulletin Vol. 1, No.8. Oglethorpe University. Atlanta. July 1916. 154 pp. A history of Oglethorpe University.
2753 The Story of Agnes Scott College, 1889-1939. James Ross McCain. Agnes Scott College. Bulletin, ser. 36, no. 3. Decatur, Georgia. 1939. 71 pp.
2754 The Story of Agnes Scott College, 1889-1921. F. H. Gaines. No place. No date. 68 pp.
2755 Georgia's Stone Mountain. Willard Neal. Stone Mountain Memorial Association. 1970. 46 pp. The history, geology and flora of the granite monolith in DeKalb County are summarized.
2756 The Story of Stone Mountain. Willard Neal. American Lithograph Company, Inc. Atlanta. 1963. 33 pp.
2757 "The Early Days of Stone Mountain". Franklin M. Garrett. Georgia Magazine 13(6): 14-17, 24. April- May 1970.
2758 Stone Mountain. Elizabeth Austin Ford. Published by the Author. 1959. 66 pp. The history, flora and fauna, minerals and various other features of the mountain are briefly described.
2759 Stone Mountain. Leila Venable Mason Eldridge. DeKalb County Chamber of Commerce. Decatur, Georgia. [1951?]. 31 pp.
2760 The History of the Stone Mountain Memorial. Mildred Lewis Rutherford. United Daughters of the Confederacy, Georgia Division. [Athens, Georgia, 1924?]. 15 pp.
276t" "Man On the Mountain". Willard Neal. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 3, 1970. Pp. 32, 36, 42, 44, 46. The great carving of Stone Mountain is completed -after 47 years of controversy.
2762 The Undefeated. Gerald W. Johnson. Minton, Balch & Company. New York. 1927. 120 pp. On Gutzon Borglum and the Stone Mountain memorial.
2763 "Magnolia Hall - Ante-bellum Plantation at Stone Mountain Memorial Park Will Show Way of Life in Old South". Ann E. Lewis. Georgia Magazine 6(2): 12-15. AugustSeptember 1962. Magnolia Hall and several other historic structures have been restored and assembled at Stone Mountain Park.
2764 "History in Houses: The Redman Thornton House in Atlanta, Georgia". James A. Nonemaker. Antiques 81 (3) : 292-295. March 1962. The Thornton House of the early 1780's, moved from its original site in Union Point to the grounds of the Atlanta Art Association, is described. (The house was later moved to Stone Mountain Park).
2765 "Thornton House Restored at Atlanta Art Museum". Abby Foss. Georgia Magazine 5(1): 24-27. June- July 1961. Thornton House, built around 1780, is an example of the cottage architecture used by early Piedmont settlers. (The house is now at Stone Mountain Park).
2766 "Lithonia - Place of Stone -A Brief History". Cecil Cobb Wesley. Georgia Magazine 5(2): 47. August- September 1961.
2767 Oakdale Road, Atlanta, Ga., DeKalb County: Ill History and Ill People. Antoinette Johnson Matthews. Atlanta Historical Society. 1972. A house-by-house survey, with photographs of most of the homes, this detailed history lists occupants and notes the more important dates. Genealogies of the two pioneer families, Medlock and Johnson, are given in detail.
2768 "The Battle of Atlanta". Bruce Catton. Georgia Review 10(3) : 256-264. Fall 1956. The editor of American Heritage, a Civil War authority, re-examines the July 22, 1864 battle.
2769 "31 Decorators Update a Mansion". Gayle White. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 22, 1973. Pp. 24-25, 27, 29. Callanwolde, purchased by DeKalb County for conversion to a recreation and arts center, was built in 1920 for Charles Howard Candler, a president of the Coca-Cola Company..
Dodge
2n0 History of Dodge County. Addie Davis [Mrs. W.P.J Cobb. Foote & Davies Co., Atlanta. 1932. xiv + 258 pp.
Dooly
2771 History of Dooly County. Dooly County Sesquicentennial Corporation. [Vienna?, Georgia]. 1971. 68 pp.
2772 Historical and Genealogical Collections of Dooly County, Georgia, Volume I. Nora Powell and Watts Powell, eds. Published by the editors. Vienna, Georgia. 1973. [vi] + 373 pp.
2773 Greater VIenna. [J. D.] Norris. No place. 1903. 75 pp. Illustrated guide to Vienna and Dooly County at the turn of the century, with descriptions and photographs of notable citizens, businesses, homes, and public buildings.
2774 A Tabernacle of Living Water. Jacquelyn Cook. Dooly Campground Trustees. Vienna. Georgia. 1974. iv + 146 pp. History of the Dooly County Campground, an 1874 Methodist gathering-place.
2775 "The Old Drayton House is Now the New Odum Home". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Life 1(3) : 40-42. Winter 1974. Relocation and restoration of two antebellum homes in Dooly County is described. The two were moved from Drayton and the Snow Community to a tract beside Interstate Highway 75 north of Unadilla.
2776 "Hog Crawl Creek". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 7(1) : 38-40. 1954. The origin of the name of Hog Crawl Creek in Dooly and Macon Counties is explained.
Dougherty
2777 History and Reminiscences of Dougherly County, Georgia. Daughters of the American Revolution. Thronateeska Chapter. Albany, Georgia. 1924. xvi + 411 pp.
2778 Albany on the Flint: Indiana to Industry, 1836-1936. Mary Ellen Bacon. Colonial
76
History
Dames of America in the State of Georgia, Albany Town Committee. [Albany, Georgia]. [1970]. 124 pp.
2n1 "Albany on the Flint". Mary Ellen Bacon. Georgia Magazine 14(3) : 14-15. October - November 1970.
2780 "Albany". Pauline Tyson Stephens. Georgia Review 4(1) : 30-42. Spring 1950. A historical sketch.
2781 The Negro In Albany. Aaron Brown. Published by the author. Albany, Georgia. 1945. 70 pp.
2782 The Public Bleck College In Georgia: A History of Albany State College, 1903-1965. Berkley Carlyle Ramsey. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, Florida State University. 310 pp.
2783 "Albany's Famous Radium Springs". lrmgard Mclendon. Georgia Magazine 4(2) : 34-36. August - September 1960.
Douglas
2784 "Csardas at Salt Springs: Southern Culture in 1888". Benjamin W. Griffith. Georgia Review 26(1): 53-59. Spring 1972. On the offerings of the Piedmont Chatauqua at Salt Springs, now Lithia Springs, in Douglas County.
2785 "30-Day Miracle at Salt Springs". Benjamin W. Griffith. Atlanta Journal and Conatttutfon Magazine January 31, 1971. Pp. 12, 16, 22, 26. A mound of earth near Lithia Springs (Douglas County) marks the site of the Piedmont Chatauqua, a large cultural complex built in 30 days in the summer of 1888.
2786 "Lithia Springs: Recollections of the Golden Age of a Southern Health Resort". Inez Watson Croft. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 13(1): 9-16. March 1968.
Early
2787 Collections of the Early County Historical Society, 1971. Volume 1. Early County Historical Society, inc. Blakely, Georgia. 1971. xvi + 439 pp.
2768 Some Pioneer History of Early County, 1818-1871. Joel W. Perry, comp. The Early County News. 1871. Reprinted, no place or date indicated, 59 pp.
Effingham
2789 "Ebenezer, Georgia: An Eighteenth Century Utopia". Gilbert P. Voigt. Georgia Review 9(2) : 109-215. Summer 1955. A brief history of the former Salzburger settlement in present-day Effingham County.
2790 "Jerusalem Church". Mary G. Jewett Georgia Magazine 2(1): 17. June- July 1958. A proud monument to the Salzburger colony in Effingham County, Jerusalem Church is the oldest church building in Georgia.
2791 "The Saizburgers in Georgia". R. L. Brantley. Georgia Historical Quarterly 14(3) : 214-224. September 1930. The Salzburgers were a group of immigrants who came to colonial Georgia to escape religious persecution. They settled at Ebenezer, in Effingham County.
2792 Detailed Reports on the Salzburger Emigrants Who Settled In America... Edited by Samuel Urlaperger. George Fenwick Jones and Marie Hahn, eds. Wormsloe Foundation Publications, Nos. 9, 10, 11. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1968-1972.3 vols. The Reports contain the diaries and letters of the Lutheran pastors who ministered to the Salzburger exiles and other German settlers in the colony of Georgia. Salzburger settlement centered around Ebenezer, near Savannah.
2793 A Social and Economic History of the Salzburgera In Colonial Georgia. Betty Ruth Morrison. Masters thesis, 1951, University of Georgia. [186] pp.
2794 "The Agricultural Activities of the Salzburgers in Colonial Georgia". Hester Walton Newton. Georgia Historical Quarterly 18(3) : 248-263. September 1934. On farming at Ebenezer, the Salzburger settlement in Effingham County.
2795 The Salzburgera and their Descendants. P. A. Strobel. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1953. vii+ 318 pp. A reprint of an 1855 volume (published in Baltimore by T. Newton Kurtz) "being the history of a colony of German (Lutheran) protestants, who emigrated to Georgia in 1734, and settled at Ebenezer, twenty-five miles above the city of Savannah".
2796 "Early American Orphanages: Ebenezer and Bethesda". Clyde E. Buckingham. Social Forces 26(3): 311-321. March 1948.
Elbert
2797 The Official History of Elbart County, 1790-1935. John H. Mcintosh. Daughters of the American Revolution, Stephen Heard Chapter. Elberton, Ga. 1940. x + 558 pp. Reprinted 1968 by Cherokee Publishing Co., Atlanta.
2798 "Early Days of Elbert County". JannelleJones McRee. Georgia Magazlne8(5): 14-17 February - March 1965.
2799 "Rivers and Creeks Play Important Part in Elbert County's History". Herbert Wilcox. Georgia Magazine 8(5) : 18. February- March 1965.
2800 " 'Dutchy' Didn't Last. .. But the Business He Started Grew, and Grew, and. GrewGranite by Millions". Herbert Wilcox. Georgia Magazine 8(5) : 20-21. February - March 1965. The story of Elberton's unloved granite soldier and the granite industry in Elbert County.
2801 "Since 1785 Churches Have Played a Great Role in the Lives of Elbert Countians". Jannelle Jones McRee. Georgia Magazine 8(5) : 26-27. February- March 1965. Several historic Elbert churches are examined.
2802 "Proud Old Homes of Elbert County". Jannelle Jones McRee. Georgia Magazine 8(5) . 32-33. February- March 1965.
2803 Old Petersburg and the Broad River Valley ol Georgia, Their Rlae and Decline. Ellis Merton Coulter. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1965. viii + 228 pp. Old Petersburg, now among the ranks of Georgia's "dead towns", was situated at the confluence of the Broad and Savannah rivers. The author examine$ the rise and tall of the town and its satellites in the upper Savannah River country.
2804 Georgia Scribe, Selected Columna by Herbert Wilcox. Herbert Wilcox. Cherokee Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1974. [ix] + 272 pp. Persons, places and other pleasures of life in Georgia, particularly Elbert County, are examined. Among the places- Hotel Roberts, Globe Hotel, Old Petersburg, Jarrett Manor, the town of Bowman, the old Cleveland horne, Beaverdam Creek, Coldwater. Creek, the Broad River, the Savannah River, "Stone Age" Mill, and the Old Rock House.
Emanuel
2805 A VIsual Salute to Emanuel County. James Dorsey and John Derden. Swainsboro Agribusiness Council. Swainsboro, Georgia. 1976. 88 pp.
Evans
2806 A History of Our Locale, Mainly Evans County, Georgia. Lucille Hodges. Southern Press. Macon. [1965]. x + 322 pp.
Fayette
2807 "Fayetteville... A Town of the Old South". Marie Wikstrom Ovrevik. Georgia Magazine 7(2) : 12-13. August- September 1963.
Floyd
2808 History of Rome and Floyd County, State of Georgia, Unllad States ol America, Including Numerous Incidents ol More than Local Interest, 1540-1922. George Magruder Battey, Jr. Webb & Vary Co. Atlanta. 1922. 640 pp. Reprinted 1969 by Cherokee Publishing Company, Atlanta.
2809 The Coosa River Valley From DeSoto to Hydroelectric Power. Hughes Reynolds. Hobson Book Press. Cynthiana, Ky. 1944. xxvi + 351 pp.
2810 "Rome: Georgia's "City of Seven Hills". McDill McCown Gassman. Georgia Review 5(3): 369-377. Fall1951.
2811 "Where Civilized Georgia Indians Lived". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 19, 1969. Pp. 26-30. The Chieftains, on a bluff overlooking the Oostanaula River in Rome, is one of north Georgia's oldest houses. Archaeological investigations at the house are described.
2812 "Grave of Graves- Known Soldier". McDill McCown Gassman. Georgia Magazine 2(3) : 24-25. October - November 1958. Charles Graves of Rome, Georgia was "America's Known Soldier" according to Roman history. The peculiar aspects of his burial and the establishment of a National Shrine at his tomb are described.
2813 "The Capitoline Wolf". James Harvey Young. Emory University Quarterly. 10(4) : 241-251. December 1954. On the most famous (or infamous) statue of Rome, Georgia- the replica of the wolf and her human twins that was given to the city by Mussolini's Italy.
2814 "The She-Wolf and the Twins". James Harvey Young. Georgia Review 9(2) : 190208. Summer 1955. The story of the Capitoline Wolf of Rome, Georgia, a replica of the famous sculpture of ancient Rome, which was given to the northwest Georgia city by Mussolini's Italy.
2815 Miracle In the Mountains. Harnett T. Kane and Inez Henry. Doubleday & Co. Garden City, N.Y. 1956. 320 pp. On Martha Berry and the Berry schools.
2816 Martha Berry, The Sunday Lady ol Ponum Trot. Tracy Byers. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
77
History
New York. 1932. 268 pp. A history of the Berry Schools and its founder.
2817 "The Berry Schools of Georgia". Harvey Roberts. Georgia Review 9(2) : 179-189. Summer 1955.
2818 "In Search of Martha Berry". Bill Cutler. Brown' Guide to Georgia 2(3) : 40-44. Summer 1974. Berry Schools' 30,00Q-acre domain is a bicyclists' paradise. A tour route to connect the major points of interest is described.
2818 On the Hill: The Story of Shorter College. Robert G. Gardner. Shorter College. Rome, Georgia. 1972. 476 pp.
2820 Cave Spring and Van' Valley. James Coffee Harris. Published by the author. Cave Spring, Georgia. 1927. 51 pp. The natural features and history of this area of Floyd County are affectionately described.
2821 A Hlatory of Georgia School for the Deaf. Esther Cathy. Georgia School for the Deaf. Cave Spring, Ga. 1939. [iv] + 63 pp.
2822 Centennial Celebration, 100 Yeara of Education for the Deaf In Georgia, 1848-1848. Georgia School for the Deaf. Cave Spring, Georgia. [1948]. 105 pp.
Forsyth
2823 Forayth County' Hlatorlcal Heritage. Don L. Shadburn. Forsyth County Historical and Genealogical Society. Cumming, Georgia. 1972. [18] pp.
2824 "History of Gold Mining in Forsyth County, Georgia During the 1800's". Roy E. Bottoms. North Wast Georgia Hlatorlcal and Genealogical Society 5(2) : 2-5. July 1973.
Franklin
2825 History of Franklin County, Georgia Celebrating the 150th Annlverury of the Creation of the County. .. The Lavonia Times. Lavonia, Georgia. 1934. 56 pp.
2828 "Ty Cobb Memorial". Allen D. Coggins and Donald C. Pendergrast. Ouldoora In Georgia 2(3) : 7-10. March 1973. The Ty Cobb Memorial and Museum is in Royston.
2827 The Background and Founding of Emmanuel College. Harold Vinson Synan. Masters thesis, 1964, University of Georgia. 101 pp.
GENERAL ATLANTA NORTH FULTON SOUTH FULTON
Fulton
GENERAL
2828 Official Hlatory of Fulton County. Walter G. Cooper. Walter W. Brown Publishing Co. Atlanta. 1934. xvi + 912 pp.
2828 Hlatory of Fulton County, Georgia, Narrative and Biographical. Lucian Lamar Knight. A. H. Cawston, publ. Atlanta. 1930. 514 pp.
2830 Fulton County Centennial, 1854-1854. Fulton County Commissioners of Roads and Revenues. Atlanta. 1954. viii+ 130 pp.
2831 "The Old Ferries and the Ferry Roads". Stephens Mitchell. Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin 2(7) : 33-42. June 1933. On the ten ferries of the Chattahoochee River in old Fulton County and the roads to them.
ATLANTA
2832 Atlanta and Envlrona, A Chronicle of Ita People and Eventa. Franklin M. Garrett. Lewis Historical Publishing Company, Inc. New York. 1954. 3 vols. Reprinted 1969, University of Georgia Press, Athens, 2 vols.
2833 Pioneer Cltlzena' Hlatory of Atlanta, 1833-1902. Pioneer Citizens' Society of Atlanta. Atlanta. 1902. 400 pp.
2834 Atlanta and Ita Bulldera, A Comprehenalve Hlatory of the Gate City of the South. Thomas H. Martin. Century Memorial Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1902. 2 vols.
2835 Hlllory of AUanta, Georgia. Wallace P. Reed. D. Mason & Co., Publishers. Syracuse, N.Y. 1689. 211 pp.
2838 Atlanta Centennial Year Book, 1837-1937. Atlanta Child's Home Edition. Gregg Murphy, Publisher. Franklin Printing Company, Printers. Atlanta. 1937. 170 pp.
2837 Atlanta Rasurgena - The Firat Hundred Yeara of a Clty'a Progras~, Promise and PhiiOIOphy. First National Bank of Atlanta. Atlanta. 1971. v + 96 pp.
2838 AUanta - Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. John R. Hornady. American Cities Book Company. Atlanta. 1922. [vi] + 442 pp.
2838 Atlanta - Ita Lore, Legenda, and Laughter. Elise Reid Boylston. Published by the author. Atlanta. 1968. xi + 238 pp.
2840 Atlanta AI It Ia. John Stainback Wilson. Little, Rennie & Co. New York. 1871. Reprinted 1941 by Atlanta Historical Society and issued as vol. 6, no. 24 of Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin. 161 pp. A description of the city at the end of Reconstruction, "Being a sketch of its Early Settlers, Growth; Society, Health, Morals, Publications, Churches, Associations, Educational Institutions, Prominent Officials, Principal Business Enterprises, Public Buildings, etc., etc.".
2841 Yesterday' Atlanta. Franklin M. Garrett. E. A. Seeman Publishing, Inc. Miami, Florida. 1974. 168 pp. Atlanta's history is depicted in this collection of old photographs.
2842 Atlanta and the Old South, Palntlnga and Drawlnga by Wilbur G. Kurtz. Annie Pye Kurtz, comp. American Lithograph Co. Atlanta. 1969. 64 pp. Kurtz' authentic paintings recreate many Atlanta scenes which preceded photography or were bypassed by the early camera men.
2843 Atlanta, Gate City of the South, 1847 to 1885. James Michael Russell. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, Princeton University. 402 pp.
2844 Atlanta During the Progreulve Era. Thomas Mashburn Deaton. Doctoral dissertation, 1969, University of Georgia. 479 pp.
2845 Peachtru Street, U.S.A. Celestine Sibley. Doubleday & Co. Garden City, N.Y. 1963. An affectionate portrait of Atlanta.
2848 Peachtree Street Atlanta. William Bailey Williford. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1962. x + 176 pp. A history of the famous thoroughfare.
2847 Atlanta - A City of the Modem South. American Guide Series. Federal Writers Project, Work Projects Administration. Smith and Durrell, Publishers. New York. 1942. xxvi + 266 pp. General background information and brief descriptions of points of interest in Atlanta and its environs.
2848 Hlatorlc Atlanta; A Briel Story of Atlanta and Ita Landmarka. Wilbur G. Kurtz. Conger Printing Co. Atlanta. [1929?]. 33 pp.
2849 Locations and Deacrlptlona of 117 Hlatorlc Places In Atlanta, Georgia and VIcinity. Wilbur Kurtz. Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, Historic Markers Committee. September 1937. 23 pp.
2850 An-Other Atlanta, The Black Heritage: A Bicentennial Tour. Dan Durell and Dana F. White. The History Group and Atlanta Bicentennial Commission. Atlanta. 1975.48 pp.
2851 "Atlanta's Monuments". Ruth Blair. Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin 5(23) : 273-277. October 1940. Historic notes on each of seventeen monuments, statues, or other memorials in Atlanta.
2852 The American lnatltute of Archltacta Guide to Atlanta. Kermit B. Marsh, ed. Atlanta Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Atlanta. 1975. iv + 173 pp. Illustrated guide to the development of architecture in Atlanta and its environs. Chapters: Urban Patterns; Historic Business Buildings; Contemporary Commercial Architecture; Urban Centers and the Forces Shaping Them; Most Interesting Square Mile in Atlanta (downtown railroad gulch); Industrial; Governmental and Public; Institutional; Residential; Educational; Entertainment and Culture; Parks and Open Spaces. With maps-index.
2853 Bualneu Bulldlnga In Atlanta; A Study In Urban Growth and Form. Elizabeth Anne Lyon. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, Emory University. xvii + 551 pp.
2854 Skyacrapera In Atlanta, 1890-1815. Elizabeth Anne Lyon. Masters thesis, 1962, Emory University. iv + 123 pp.
2855 "Architecture in Atlanta". Harold Bush-Brown. Atlanta Historical Bulletin 5(23) : 278-283. October 1940. A sketch of the mainstream of architectural development in the United States noting Atlanta's examples of various styles.
2858 "Reminiscences of the Architecture and Architects of Atlanta". Thomas H. Morgan. Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin 2(10) : 5-14. June 1937.
2857 "Atlanta's Early Builders". Spencer Bidwell King, Jr. Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin 15(4) : 88-96. Winter 1970. On Atlanta's physical recovery from its 1864 destruction. Builders and their buildings are listed.
2858 "Should Old Atlanta Be Forgot?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and ConaUtutlon Magazine November 4, 1973. Pp. 30.32, 34, 42. A group of architects, historians and urban designers survey the city and select land-
78
History
marks that should be preserved.
2851 "Tear It Down and Build It Bigger". Elizabeth A. Lyon. Atlanta Journal ilnd Conatltutlon M8pzlne October 20, 1974. Pp. 42-44, 46. An authority on Atlanta's architecture examines the city's lack of concern for its historic buildings.
2880 "Atlanta's Pioneer Skyscraper". Elizabeth A. Lyon. Georgia Review 19(2) : 204210. Summer 1965. The eight-story Equitable Building at the corner of Pryor and Edgewood Streets was, when completed in 1892, considered by many Atlantans to be a "white elephant".
2811 "The Victorians Rise Again". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and ConatltuUon M8pzlne September 17, 1972. Pp. 8-9, 38-39. The 1885 Peters House in Atlanta is an irreplaceable example of High Victorian architecture- but it is threatened. The author examines the house and the culture of its times.
2882 "Fire Station Architecture on Display". John Pennington. AU.nta Journal and Conllltutlon Megulne August 12, 1973. Pp. 34, 37, 39. An old and a new Atlanta fire station are examined and compared. The historic Station No. 6 was built during 1894 after the design of Thomas Henry Morgan, architect of many of Atlanta's fine old buildings.
2813 "Marble at Your Doorstep". Janie Morris. Georgia Mineral NeW8Ietter 10(1): 17-25. 1957. The use of marble in buildings in Atlanta is summarized in the text and in a listing. The variety of marble, its source, and its location within 84 buildings in the city are indicated.
2814 "A Fading Paradise on Peachtree Street". Henry Woodhead. Atlanta Journel and ConaUtutlon Magazine June 16, 1974. Pp. 16-18, 22, 24-26. Atlanta's Fox Theater, a monument to an opulent era, is one of the last of the movie palaces.
2885 "The Roxy Theatre - Recollections of Vaudeville in Atlanta". John Clark McCall, Jr. Atlanta Hlatorlcall Bulletin 18(1) : 2o-26. Spring - Summer 1973. Historical sketch of an Atlanta movie "palace" demolished in 1972. The Italian rococo theatre stood at the site of today's Peachtree Plaza hotel.
2886 "Swan House, Home of Atlanta Historical Society". Ann E. Lewis. Georgia Magezlne 11 (6) : 18-20. April - May 1968.
2887 "Tullie Smith's Housewarming". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Megulne April 2, 1972. Pp. 12-14, 17, 29. The Atlanta Historical Society has restored the 1840's Tullie Smith farmhouse.
2888 "'Oldest House' Comes to Town". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Conatllutlon Megulne November 9, 1969. Pp. 10-12, 14, 22, 24. The history of the Tullia Smith house, now on the Atlanta Historical Society's Buckhead grounds, is summarized.
2811 "History of West End". Cornelia E. Cooper. Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin 8(31) : 6594. January 1947. West End was annexed by Atlanta in 1893.
2870 "The West End Story; Atlanta Neighborhood Leads the Way for a Major Rehabilitation Project". Bruce Galphin. Nation' CltiH 5(1) : 18-20. January 1967.
2871 Inman Park ReatoraUon - Houalng Strateglea for Revitalization of Inman Park. Georgia Institute of Technology, Graduate City Planning Program. Atlanta. June 1971. 156pp.
2872 "Turmoil Among the Turrets". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and ConautuUon Magazine March 7, 1971. Pp. 24-26, 28, 30, 32, 34, 42. Inman Park, Atlanta's planned suburb of the late 1800's, undergoes restoration and a highway fight.
2873 Joel Hurt and the Development of Atlanta. Sarah Simms Edge. Atlanta Historical Society. Atlanta. 1955. x + 347 pp. On Inman Park, the Hurt Building, and other historic features of Atlanta built by Joel Hurt.
2874 "The Shrine of the Immaculate Conception Celebrates its Centenary". Agnes Hulsey. Georgia Magazine 13(4) : 28-29. December 1969- January 1970. North Georgia's oldest Catholic church is near the state capitol in Atlanta.
2875 "The Origin of and Distinction Between the Two Protestant Episcopal Churches Known as St. Luke's Church, Atlanta". Alex M. Hitz. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 34(1) : 1-7. March 1950.
2878 The Georgia Governor' Manalon. Carroll Proctor Scruggs, Paul Fogarty, Ken Witt, and Elsie Crutchfield Moses. [Georgia Building Authority]. Atlanta. 1973. [26] pp. A pictorial room-by-room tour of the Governor's Mansion in Atlanta.
2877 "Georgia's New Governor's Mansion at Atlanta, 1968". K. G. Farnham. AntlquH 94 : 854-863. December 1968.
2878 Official Report of the Capitol Commlulon of Georgia, 1883 to 1889. Evan P. Howell and W. H. Harrison. Atlanta.j1889?J. 175 pp. All official reports of the Capitol Commission made during the construction of the building
are reprinted.
2871 "Georgia Gold For the Capitol Dome". Madeline Anthony. Georgia Magazine 2(5) : 17-20, 33. February- March 1959.
2880 "The Year 2000 on Capitol Hill". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Conatltu lion Magazine February 9, 1975. Pp. 18-17, 20, 24, 26. Summary of the Capitol Hill Master Plan for Georgia's governmental complex in Atlanta.
2881 The Story of Georgie Tech. Marion Luther Brittain. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1948. xiv + 385 pp.
2882 A New Frontier In Education, The Story of the Atlanta Dlvlalon, Unlvenlty of Georgie. Bertram Holland Flanders. Atlanta Division, University of Georgia. Atlanta. 1955. iii+ 169 pp. A history of the college, now Georgia State University.
2883 The Story of Atlanta Untvenlty, A Century of Service, 1865-1985. Clarence A. Bacote. Atlanta University. Atlanta. 1969. ix + 449 pp.
2884 "Spelman College". Lucy Hale Tapley. Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin 1(3): 38-56. May 1930. A historical sketch.
2865 The Story of Spelman College. Florence Matilda Read. Princeton University Press. Princeton, N.J. 1961. xv + 399 pp.
2888 A Candle In the Dark: A Hlatory of MorehouH College. Edward A. Jones. Judson Press. Valley Forge, Pa. 1967. 380 pp. History of Morehouse College.
2887 Hlatory of MorehouH College. Benjamin Brawley. Morehouse College. Atlanta. 1917. 218 pp.
2888 "Piedmont Park". Jack J. Spalding. Atlanta Hlatorleal Bulletin 2(11): 5-13. September 1937. A historical sketch of the Atlanta park.
2881 "Public Housing in Atlanta: A National First". Peter E. Arnold. Atlanta Hlatorleal BulleUn 13(3) : 8-18. September 1968. Historical sketch of Techwood Homes, the first federally financed public housing project in the United States.
2810 AU.nta ,Cyclorama, the Story of the Famed Battle of Atlanta. Wilbur G. Kurtz. City of Atlanta. Atlanta. [1954]. 32 pp.
2891 "The Cyclorama of the Battle of Atlanta". Alma Hill Jamison. Atlanta Hlatorlcal Bulletin 2(10) : 58-75. June 1937. A history of the huge panorama which was created by a team of German artists in 18851886.
2892 "The Cyclorama". Lucy Justus. AUanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine September 7, 1969. Pp. 27-30, 33-34, 38.
2813 Atlanta, Battle of July 22d, 1884 RHume of Situation Shown In the Panorama with Map of Dtagrilm. Detroit Cyclorama Co. Detroit, Mich. [1887]. 21 pp. A guidebook to the Battle of Atlanta Cyclorama. Compiled during the time of exhibition of the painting in Detroit.
2894 Laat Train From AU.nta. A. A. Hoehling. Thomas Yoseloff, Publisher. New York
and London. 1958. 558 pp.
Story of the civilian population of Atlanta during the 1864 seige.
2895 "The Wren's Nest". Margaret Beauchamp Armistead. Georgia Magazine 2(4): 1o-12. December 1958 - January 1959. The Atlanta home of Joel Chandler Harris is explored.
2898 "More Than Bricks & Mortar". Gayle White. Atlanta Journal and ConotltuUon Magllizlne March 9, 1975. Pp. 8-9, 26-30. On a "living memorial" in Atlanta to Martin Luther King, Jr., the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Social Change which is proposed lor the Auburn Avenue neighborhood where King was born.
2887 "Historic Craigie House". Ann E. Lewis. Georgia Magazine 9(5) : 2o-23. FebruaryMarch 1966. Craigie House is the home of the Atlanta Chapter ol the Daughters of the American Revolution.
2888 "Underground Atlanta". Henri V. Jova. AlA Journal 58 : 38-42. August 1972. Underground Atlanta is a unique district at the historical center of Atlanta. During the 1920's viaducts were built over the existing streets of the area, shutting off the original storefronts from normal traffic patterns. Recently this "underground" level has been restored as a historical-tourist district.
2891 "Creating Underground Atlanta, 1898-1932". Phillip Hoffman. Atlanta Hlotorlcal Bulletin 13(3) : 54-66. September 1968.
2810 Underground Atlanta. Norman Shavin. Capricorn Corporation, pub. Atlanta. 1970. 32 pp.
79
History
Old photographs of the historic Underground Atlanta area are combined with various historical notes.
28111 "The Story of the Standing Peachtree". Eugene M. Mitchell. Atlenta Hletorlc81 Bulletin 1(2) : 8-19. January 1928. On the Creek Indian town "Standing Peachtree" which was situated on the Chattahoochee River at Peachtree Creek and possible origins of the name.
2882 Mule to MARTA- Jean Martin. Atlanta Historical Society. Atlanta. 1975-1976. 2 vols. Also published in AU.nta Hletorlcel Bulletin, Volume XIX (1975), and Volume XX (1976). A history of Atlanta transit systems.
2813 Georgia Power Compt~ny lntarurbllne. Alton Lanier. Atlanta Chapter - National Railway Historical Society. Atlanta. No date. [13] pp. Historical sketches of the electric rail lines from Atlanta to Marietta, Stone Mountain, and Camp Gordon (Chamblee), with photographs of some of the cars.
2814 An Introduction to N.R.H.S. - AU.nta; Bulletin No. 2, Including Rail Excurelone end Picture C.tatog of the Southeaetem Rallwey Mueeum Exhlblte. George E. Rice, Jr., ed. Atlanta Chapter - National Railway Historical Society, Inc. Atlanta. [1964?]. [19] pp. [Copy at Georgia Department of Archives and History].
2895 Prompt to Action, AUenta Fire Dept~rlment, 1880-1880. Steve B. Campbell, Atlanta Fire Department. City of Atlanta. No date. 276 pp. A history of the department, including brief descriptions of Atlanta's most notable fires of the period 1882-1960.
28M "The Great Fire of Atlanta, May 21. 1917". Steve B. Campbell. Atlenta Hllllorlcel BulleUn 13(2) : 8-48. June 1968.
28117 From Ivy Street to Kennedy canter; C.ntennlel Hletory of the Atlanta Public School Syetem. Melvin W. Ecke. Atlanta Board of Education. Atlanta. 1972. x + 477 pp.
2898 "Development of the Library in Atlanta". Alma Hill Jamison. Atlenta Hletorlcal BulleUn 4(17): 96-111. April1939. A historical sketch of the public library in Atlanta to 1939.
281111 The Georgie State Llbrery, 1928-1935. Ella May Thornton. Stein Printing Company. Atlanta. 1936. 24 pp.
21100 "The Georgia Department of Archives and History". Mary G. Bryan. Georgia Hletorlcel Querterly 36(2) : 137-143. June 1952. On the past, present and future of Georgia's Archives. By a director of the department.
2801 "Story of Confederacy... Portrayed by Stained Glass Windows at Rhodes Memorial HaH". Evelyn C. Bash. Georgie Magazine 2(5) : 23. February- March 1959. The memorial windows which portray the "Rise and Fall of the Confederacy" are described and their history is elucidated. (The windows have since been moved to the newer State Archives Building on Capitol Avenue in Atlanta.
2802 "Pleasure Spots of Old Atlanta". Doreen McMahon. Atlanta Hletorlcal Bulletin 7(29) : 22Q-234. October 1944. On the parks, springs, bathing spots, resorts, picnic grounds, and other retreats of nineteenth-century Atlanta.
2803 "Queer Place Names in Old Atlanta". Eugene M. Mitchell. Atlanta Hletorlcal Bulletin 1(5): 22-31. April1931. On Lick Skillet, Tight Squeeze, Bull Sluice, Snake Nation, Humbug Square and other places.
2804 The Fort McPhereon Story, 1885-1983. U. S. Army, Staff History Officer, Headquarters, Third United States Army. Fort McPherson, Atlanta, Georgia. 1964. vii+ 178 pp.
2805 "History of the Negro Upper Class in Atlanta, Georgia, 189Q-1958." August Meier and David Lewis. Joumel of Negro Education 28(2) : 128-139. Spring 1959.
21108 The Bleck Side - A Partial Hletory of the Buelnen, Rellgloue end Educetlonel Side of the Negro In Atlanta, Ge. E. R. Carter. Atlanta. 1894. Reprinted 1971 by Books for Libraries Press, Freeport, New York. 323 pp.
2807 Black AU.nta: An lnterdleclpllnery Study of Blecke on the Eut Side of Atlenta, 1890-1830. Michael Leroy Porter. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, Emory University. 401 pp. Examines the development of a black city-within-a-city, a separate socio-economic infrastructure reinforced by white segregation practices.
2808 Some Contribution of Negro Leedere to the Progreee of Atlente. John Henry Calhoun. Masters thesis, 1988, Atlanta University. 120 pp.
2808 Frederick Lew Olmeted: A Southem Expoeure; Pepere Preeented at the Southeut American Studl Conference, April 27-28, 1972, Atlanta, Georgie. Dana F. White, ed. Atlanta. 1972. Various pagings. Five papers are printed: (1) "The Uncommon Man: An Introduction to Frederick Law Olmsted" and (2) "Room for Growth: Open Space Provisions for Metropolitan America, 1865-1900" by Dana F. White; (3) ''Frederick Law Olmsted and Joel Hurt; Planning the Environment in Atlanta, 1892-1894" by Elizabeth A. M. Lyon; (4) "Hurt's Deserted Village: Atlanta's Inman Park, 1885-1911" by Rick Beard; and (5) "Proposed Pleasure Parkways: New South Realities in Atlanta, 188Q-1910" by Howard L. Preston.
2810 A N- Kind of Horizontal City: Automoblllty In Atlenta, 1900-1930. Howard Law-
renee Preston. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, Emory University. 329 pp.
2811 City Builder. Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. Atlanta. Monthly, 1916-1936. Official publication of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. News and features, illustrated.
2812 Plennlng MetropoHtan Atlenta, 191)9.1973: An Indexed, Chronological Bibliography. James C. St11r,buck. Exchange Bibliography no. 578. Council of Planning Librarians. Monticello, Illinois. May 1974. 80 pp. Lists books, articles, and unpublished works on land use, housing, transportation, water pollution, and other subjects concerning the greater Atlanta area (Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton and Gwinnett Counties).
2813 Background to Plennlng Metropolitan Atlenta, 19Q9.1873: An Indexed, Chronologi-
cal Blbllogrephy. James C. Starbuck. Exchange Bibliography no. 588. Council of Planning
Librarians. Monticello, Illinois. June 1974. 94 pp.
Supplement to Pfenning Metropolitan Atlanta, 191)9.1873 (above).
2814 Hletorlc AU.nta to 1830: An Indexed, Chronological Blbltogrephy. James C. Star-
buck. Exchange Bibliography 606 & 607. Council of Planning Librarians. Monticello, Illinois. July 1974. 90 pp.
2815 Metropolitan Atlanta Updeta, 18711-1874. James C. Starbuck. Exchange Bibliography 765 & 766. Council of Planning Librarians. Monticello, Illinois. March 1975. 85 pp.
NORTH FULTON
2818 Sandy Springe: Put TenM. Lois Coogle. Decor Master Company. Atlanta. 1971. 117 pp. A collection of historical notes on Sandy Springs, a large community at Atlanta's northern boundary.
2817 Vlewe on the Origin end History of Alpherelta. James Born et a/. Seventh Grade Social Studies Project 1975 [Alpharetta Elementary School]. Alpharetta, Georgia. 1975. 32 pp. Compilation of various records and reminiscences relating to the town of Alpharetta in northern Fulton County.
2818 "Old Times at Crabapple". Elizabeth B. Proffitt. Georgia Megezlne 13(6) : 2Q-21. April - May 1970. The 140 year old Crabapple community lies in north Fulton County.
2818 R-11- Hletorlc Homee end Lendmerke. Ernest E. DeVane (drawings) and Clarece Martin (text). Roswell Historical Society, Inc. Roswell, Ga. 1974. 62 pp.
2820 Hletorlc Aree Study, A Plen to Preeerve Roewell'e Hletorlcal Character. Kidd & Associates [for] City of Roswell, Georgia and Georgia Department of Community Development. 1973. 72 pp.
2821 Roe-ll. 4th ed. Roswell Unit, League of Women Voters of Atlanta-Fulton County. Roswell Georgia. [1973?]. 24 pp. + 1 fold. map. General information on history, local government, planning, education, recreation, organizations, and various civic functions. A foldout street map is included.
2822 A Gllmpee of the Put -The Hletory of Bulloch HeU end Roe-ll, Georgia. Clarece Martin. Historic Roswell, Inc. Roswell, Georgia. 1973. [iii] + 40 pp.
2823 "Bulloch Hall, I Love You". Virginia W. Power. AU.nta Joumel end ConeUtutlon Megezlne August 15, 1971. Pp. 14, 24-28. Theodore Roosevelt's visit to Roswell's historic Bulloch Hall is remembered.
2824 "Bulloch Hall in Roswell, Georgia". William Seale. AnUquee 105(6) : 1322-29. June 1974.
2825 "Roswell's Bulloch Hall". Clarece Martin. Georgie Life 1(2): SQ-51. Autumn 1974.
2828 "The High Cost of Nostalgia". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Joumelend ConeUtutlon Megezlne December 22, 1974. Pp. 5-7. The owner of Roswell's 1841 Bulloch Hall explains why he wants to sell the Greek Revival house museum.
2827 "The Kings of Barrington Hall". Louise McHenry Hicky. Georgie Megezlne 9(4) : 26-27. December 1985- January 1966. Roswell and Barrington King built the stately Greek Revival mansion Barrington Hall during the years 1837-1842. Father and son, the two founded a cotton mill around which the Fulton County town of Roswell was created.
SOUTH FULTON
2828 College Perk Heritage. Rachael Mays Dempsey. College Park Woman's Club. College Park, Georgia. 1958. iv + 33 pp.
2828 Eut Point Georgie: A History, 1821-1830. Rebecca Foltz Dodd. Masters thesis, 1971, Georgia State University. Atlanta. vii + 121 pp.
2830 "The Owl Rock Methodist Church". Margaret Perryman. Georgia Megezlne 13(2) : 13. August- September 1969.
80
History
2131 "Hiking to Cochran's Mills". Allred Brown. Brown'a Guide to Georgie 1(1) : 28-29. Winter 1972-73. The ruins of two nineteenth-century grist mills may be visited near Fairburn.
2132 "Ghost Town 20 Miles From Atlanta". Mark C. Lindsay. All8nl8 Joumel end Conllltutlon Megulne February 11, 1973. Pp. 28, 30. Campbellton was once the county seat of Campbell County - now both gone. Campbell County merged with Fulton County in 1932. Campbellton disappeared when railroads bypassed the town.
2133 "I Like Old Campbellton". Margaret Perryman. Georgie Megezlne 10(4) : 18-19, 33, December 1966- January 1967.
2934 "Oldest House in Palmetto". Brown'a Guide to Georgie 3(5) : 60-61. September October 1975.
Gilmer
2135 A Little HIIICII')' of Gilmer County. Lawrence L. Stanley. Published by the author. Ellijay, Georgia. 1975. 215 pp.
2131 The Annell of Upper Qeorgl8 Cenl...cl In Gilmer County. George Gordon Ward. Thomasson Printing & Office Equipment Co. Cerrollton, Georgia. 1985. viii + 692 pp. "Narrative reminiscences, incidents and general data, some ancient but mainly lor the first 129 years of the political existence of the region of Georgia comprising Gilmer County and its neighbors, 1833 to 1965."
Glascock
2137 Centennlel of GIMcock County, Georgie, 1857-1957. Glascock County Centennial Corporation. Gibson, Georgia. 1957. 38 pp.
Glynn
2131 The SII'Hia end Squarea of Olde Brunawlck. Mrs. Albrecht Reu and Mrs. Nathan Atkinson Brown, eds. Daughters of the American Revolution, Brunswick Chapter. Brunswick, Georgia. October 1975. [12] pp.
29311 Annela end S18Uatlcl of Glynn County, Georgie. Charles Spalding Wylly. Press of H. A. Wrench & Sons. Brunswick, Georgia. 1897. 27 pp.
2140 Our Todeya end Yeaterdeya - A Story of Brunawlck end the Coeal81 lalenda. Margaret Davis Cate. Glover Bros.. Inc. Brunswick, Georgia. 1930 [revised edition]. xii + 302 pp.
2141 Vlllll to Brunawlck, Georgie end Travela South. Joseph W. Smith. Addison C. Getchell & Son. Boston. 1907. 105 pp.
2142 The Reel Property, Lend Uae, end Low Income Houllng Aree Survey of Brun-Ick, Georgl8. Project No. 885-34-3-41. Work Project Administration of Georgia. 1939.
2143 "The Blessing of the Fleet". Burnette Vanstory. Georgie Magazine 11 (6) : 22-23. April - May 1968. Brunswick's annual ceremony marks the opening of the shrimping season.
2144 Hlatorlc Gllmpaea of St. Simona tal8nd, Georgie, 1738-1924. Coastal Georgia Historic~! Society. Brunswick, Georgia. 1973. [iv] + 68 pp. Old photographs and other illustrations.
2145 SL Simona lalend. Burnette Lightle (Vanstory). Published by the author. 1950. 31 pp.
2140 St. Simona lalend, Georgie, Brunawlck end VIcinity: DeecrlpUon end Hlatory, 1825. William W. Hazzard. Edited by Virginia Steele Wood. Oak Hill Press. Belmont, Mass. 1974. 36 pp. Reprint of an 1825 work with introduction by the editor.
2147 Petrlerchel Pleni8Uona of St. Slm- lal8nd. Bessie Lewis and Mildred Huie. Published by the authors. N.p. 1974. (49] pp.
2140 "St Simons Island During the War Between the States". George Alexander Heard. Georgl8 Hlltortcel Quarterly 22(3) : 249-272. September 1938.
2141 Paget from the Peat: Sl Simona lalend, 1880-1888. Beth Engel and Geneva Stebbins. Sentinel Press. Jesup, Georgia. 1974. [iv] + 112 pp.
2950 "Christ Episcopal Church, Frederica". Mary G. Jewett. Georgie Magazine 2(5) : 24-25. February - March 1959. The historic church on St. Simon's Island is a local point of Georgia's religious history.
2951 "The Mysterious Pink Chapel". Elise J. Permar. Georgl8 Magazine 4(6): 17. AprilMay 1961. The origin of the ruined chapel on St. Simons Island is a matter of dispute. Two different versions of its history are briefly retold.
2952 Fredertce: Colonlel Fort end Town; Ill Piece In Hlltory. Trevor R. Reese. Fort Frede-
rica Association. St. Simons Island, Georgia. 1969. 78 pp.
2953 The Fort et Frederica. Albert C. Manucy. Department of Anthropology, Florida State University. Notes in Anthropology, Volume 5. Florida State University Press. Tallahassee. 1962. vi+ 150 pp.
2954 "Fort Frederica National Monument". Charles H. Fairbanks. Emili')' Unlverllty Quarterly 4(1): 8-14. March 1948. Historical summary and description of archaeological investigations of 1947.
2155 "Fort Frederica and the Battle of Bloody Marsh". Margaret Davis Cate. Georgie Hlatortcel Quarterly 27(2): 111-174. June 1943.
2158 "The Battle of Bloody Marsh". Marion R. Hemperley. Allente Joumel end Conatltutton Magazine May 9, 1971. Pp. 8-9, 11, 26.
2957 "The Part Played by the Colonial Dames in Establishing the Fort Frederica National Monument". S. Price Gilbert. Georgie Hlatorlcel Quarterly 27(2): 175-181. June 1943.
2158 "Oglethorpe's Home at Frederica". M. H. Floyd and D. B. Floyd. Georgie Hlatorlcel Quarterly 20(3) : 239-249. September 1936.
2151 "The Original Houses of Frederica, Georgia: The Hawkins-Davison Houses". Margaret Davis Cate. Georgie Hlltortcel Querterty 40(3) : 203-212. September 1956.
2180 "The Excavation of the Hawkins-Davison Houses, Frederica National Monument, St. Simons Island, Georgia". Charles H. Fairbanks. Georgl8 Hlatorlcel Querterly 40(3) : 213-229. September 1956.
2181 The Story of See lllend. Eugene W. Lewis. The Cloister. Sea Island, Georgia. 1949. 26 pp. + 1 fold. map.
2182 Jekylllalencl'a Hlatorlcel Herll8ge. Dorothy R. Gibson. Gibson-Griffith Publication. Jekyll Island, Georgia. 1970. [28] pp.
2183 The Jekyll lalend Story. Eddie Barker. Golf Guides, Inc. N.p. 1985. [ii] + 32 pp. Historical sketches and other information.
2164 Jekyll lalend. Elizabeth Austin Ford. Published by the author. Decatur, Georgia. 1960.68 pp.
2185 Once Upon en lllend -The Story of Febuloua Jekyll. Tallu Fish. Published by the author. Brunswick, Georgia. 1959. 20 pp.
2968 "Jekyll Island: A Living Past - A Glowing Future". J. Hall. Outdoora In Georgie 1(1) : 14-20. July 1972. A general tour and historical sketch.
2187 "Historic Jekyll Island". Mary Givens Bryan. Georgie Magazine 2(2): 21'23. August -September 1958.
2188 "Tracing Jekyll Title (1763-1947)". Earl F. Westerfield. Georgie Magazine 2(2) 26-27, 39. August - September 1958. A chronology of Jekyll Island history.
2181 The Sieve Ship Wenderer. Tom Henderson Wells. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1967. [iv] + 107 pp. At Jekyll Island can be seen the mess kettle from the Wanderer, the ship that in 1858 landed on Jekyll with the last load of African slaves to be brought into the United States.
2170 "Ferryboat to Jekyll". Andrew Sparks. Atlenl8 Joumel end Conatltutlon Megezlne
May 23, 1971. Pp. 40-41.
.
The Robert E. Lee, a Mississippi River stern wheeler, served as a ferryboat to Jekyll Is-
land during 1948-49~
2171 "Historical Report on Evelyn Plantation". Norman J. Cobb and Don McWaters. Georgie Hlltorlcel Quarterly 55(3): 417-436. Fall 19.71. The 19th-century plantation in northern Glynn County is iiwestigated.
2172 Plenter Menegement end Cepl1811am In Ante-Bellum Georgie: The Joumel of Hugh Fraaer Grant: Rlcegrower. Hugh Fraser Grant; edited by Albert Virgil House. Columbia University Press. New York. 1954. xvii + 329 pp. The journal and account book of Elizalield Plantation is reprinted with an interpretative analysis affording a unique view of Elizalield, Evelyn, and Grantly plantations on the Altamaha River in Glynn County.
2173 Hofwyl Pl8n18tlon. Victoria Reeves Gunn. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. July 1, 1975. Various pagings. [Limited distribution].
2174 "Holwyl Plantation in Brunswick, Georgia". Mrs. Charlton M. Theus. Antlquea 92(2) : 194-197. August 1967. Description and illustrations.
Gordon
2175 Storlea of Gordon County end Calhoun, Georgie. Volume One. (Climb the Hilla of Gordon). Jewell B. Reeve. Published by the author. Calhoun, Georgia. 1962. 304 pp.
81
History
2978 Hlatory of Gordon County, Georgia. Lulie Pitts. The Calhoun Times. Calhoun, Georgia. 1933. 480 pp.
2977 "New Echola". Aaron Pass. Outdoor In Georgia 4(3) : 14-19. March 1975. Photos and description.
2978 "New Echola- Last Capitol of the Cherokee Nation is Now Being Restored". Franklin Fenenga. Georgia Magazine 5(3): 14-16. October-November 1961.
2979 "New England Missionaries Came to Georgia". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine October 17. 1971. Pp. 34-36. 39-40. The Samuel Worcester house at New Echola has been restored by the Georgia Historical Commission (now Historic Preservation Section of DNA) to look much the way it did when Samuel and Ann Worcester ministered to the Cherokee Indians.
2980 "The Cherokee Phoenix: Supreme Expression of Cherokee Nationalism". Henry T. Malone. Georgia Hlslorlcal Quarterly 34(3) : 163-188. September 1950. On the historic newspaper which was issued weekly beginning February 21.1828 at New Echola. the capital of the Cherokee Nation.
Grady
2981 "Creeks Return to Tama". Edward Davin Vickers. Georgia Lite 2(1) : 32-33. Summer 1975. On the history of and plans for restoration of Tama, an ancestral home of the Creek Indians in Georgia. The Grady County site has been purchased by descendants of the Creeks, marking for the first time since 1825 a possession of land east of the Mississippi by Creek Indians.
Greene
2982 Hlatory of Greena County, Georgia, 1788-1888. Thaddeus Brockett Rice. Edited by Carolyn White Williams. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1961.648 pp.
2983 Tenanll of the Almighty. Arthur F. Raper. Macmillan Co. New York. 1943. xii + 79 plates + 403 pp. Greene County from prehistory to the New Deal - an examination of its people. their farms and small towns, the ruining of the land and the fall of the cotton plantations.
2984 Preface to Peaaantry, A Tale of Two Black Belt Counties. Arthur F. Raper. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1936. xiii + 423 pp. A study of the cotton plantation economies of Greene and Macon counties, their wornout lands. and their impoverished tenant farmers.
2985 Greene County, Georgia - The Story of One Southern County. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Farm Security Administration. Washington, D.C. 1941. 20 pp. A unified social and economic rehabilitation program for Greene County was begun in 1937 under the Farm Security Administration. That effort and the subsequent economic progress of the county are described.
2988 Oconee: Temporary Boundary. Caroline C. Hunt. Edited by Margaret Clayton Russell. University of Georgia Laboratory of Archaeology Series, Report No. 10. University of Georgia, Department of Anthropology. Athens. 1973. 85 pp. Historical study of the area of the proposed Lake Wallace Reservoir in Greene, Morgan, and Putnam Counties.
2987 "Scull Shoals: An Extinct Georgia Manufacturing and Farming Community". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 48(1) : 33-63. March 1964.
2988 "Pneumatology, Voodoo, and a Fabulous Georgia Doctor... Who Lived at Scull Shoals, Now a Ghost Town". Louise McHenry Hicky. Georgia Magazine 7(3) : 12-14. October- November 1963.
2989 "Find Fort Phillips". Charles Aguar. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(3) : 28-29. Summer 1973. When Wallace Dam is completed rising waters will cover the site of old Fort Phillips. The exact location of the Greene County fortification is unknown.
Gwlnnett
2990 Hlatory of GwlnneH County, Georgia, 1818-1943, Volume I. James C. Flanigan. Tyler & Co. Hapeville, Ga. 1943. viii + 446 pp.
2991 Hlatory of GwlnneH County, Georgia, 1818-1960, Volume 11. James C. Flanigan. Longino & Porter. Hapeville, Ga. 1959. [iv] + 629 pp.
2992 GwtnneH Churchea, A Complete Hlatory of Every Church In GwlnneH County, Georgia, With Short Biographical Sketchea of Ill Ministers. James C. Flanigan. Published by the author. Lawrenceville, Georgia. 1911.388 pp.
2993 "A New Life For the Oldest Thing in Town". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constl tutlon Magazine September 29, 1974. Pp. 20-21, 26, 29. Gwinnett County's 1855 Lawrenceville Academy, restored for use as a museum and community center, is described.
2994 "The First Public Use of Georgia Marble". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral News-
leiter 6(3) : 8. 1953. In a common grave on the public square in Lawrenceville, eight young men are buried; all were killed by the Creek Indians at the battle of Shepherd's Plantation. The monument at this gravesite is believed to be the first (1840) public use of Georgia marble.
2995 "The Story of Old Lilburn". Dick Pettys. Georgia Magazine 9(5): 14-15. FebruaryMarch 1966.
2998 A Compilation of Fact and Legend Pertaining to the Hlatory of Norcron In Gwln nell County, Georgia. Allen Philip Francis. Harper Printing Co. Norcross, Georgia. 1967. 94 pp.
Habersham
2997 The Hills of Haberaham. Mary L. Church. Published by the author. Clarksville, Georgia. 1962. xvi + 165 pp.
2998 "Summers in Clarkesville". John Kollock. Georgia Magazine 10(6) : 10-13. April -
May 1967.
.
Clarkesville has been a notable resort town since the 1830's.
2999 Demoreat In the Piedmont. Isabel Chrisler as told to Loren W. Burch (Pastor, Demorest Federated Church and Instructor at Piedmont College). Privately printed [N.d. (alter 1965)]. 36 pp.
Hall
3000 This 'N That: History of Hall County, Georgia. Sybil Wood McRay. Peeples Printing Service. Gainesville, Georgia. 1973. 135 pp.
3001 "Gainesville's First 150 Years". Mrs. James E. Bates. Georgia Magazine 14(9) 14-16. May 1971.
3002 A City Laid Waate: Tornado Devaatatlon at Galneavllle, Ga., April 8, 1936. William Malcolm Brice. Published by the author. Gainesville, Georgia. 1936. 127 pp. Illustrated account of the destruction and reconstruction in the city.
3003 "White Sulphur Springs". Ted Oglesby. Georgia Magazine 14(9): 26-27. May 1971.
Hancock
3004 The Hlatory of Hancock County, Georgia. Elizabeth Wiley Smith (assisted by Sara S. Carnes). Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1974. 2 vols.
3005 "Historic Sparta and Hancock County". Virginia H. Moore. Georgia Magazine 9(3) : 16-17. October- November 1965.
3008 "Proud Old Homes of Sparta". Virginia H. Moore. Georgia Magazine 9(3) : 18-21, 32. October- November 1965.
3007 "Restoration of Rock Mill". Vinnie Williams. Atlanta Journal and ConaUtutlon Magazine July 16, 1972. Pp. 12-14, 16-17. The 17-room house, built in 1820 near the Ogeechee River in Hancock County, is being restored.
3008 "A Georgia County's Historical Assets". James C. Bonner. Emory Unlveralty Quarterly 9(1): 24-30. March 1953.
Haralson
3009 The Firat Hundred Yaara of Tallapoooe, Georgia. Frances Greene, Published by the author. Tallapoosa, Georgia. 1972. iv + 102 pp.
3010 "Tallapoosa - Celebrates Centennial". Georgia Magazine 4(2) : 12-18. AugustSeptember 1960.
3011 "A Connecticut Yankee in Tallapoosa". LeeS. Trimble. Georgia Ravlew 6(3) : 352. Fallt952. On the promotion of Tallapoosa as a "Yankee City Under the Southern Sun" and as a winemaking capital, in the 1880-90's.
3012 "Coal Miners Sought Peace in Haralson's Red Hills". Barbara Rivers. Georgia Life 1(1): 18-21. Summer 1974. Buda and Nitra in Haralson County, now among Georgia's "dead towns", were once sites of a thriving wine-making industry.
Harris
3013 Hlatory of Harris County, Georgia, 1827-1981. Louise Calhoun Barfield. Columbus Office Supply Co. Columbus, Georgia. 1961. 766 pp.
3014 "Historic Hamilton Takes on New Old Look and Stops Traffic". Doris Gann Williams. Gaorgla Magazine 13(1): 36-36. June- July 1969. Hamilton, in Harris County, has become Hamilton-On-The-Square, a restoration of a
82
History
town of the 1800s.
3015 "Town Square Becomes a Museum". Doris Lockerman. Atlenta Joumal and Constitution ~ne March 1, 1970. Pp. 14-16, 18. Hamilton on the Square is the restoration of a lively turn-of-the-century Southern town. The formerly decaying "cotton town" has become a notable attraction for tourists.
3018 "It Ail Happened in Pine Mountain Valley". Paul K. Conkin. Georgia Hl8torlcal Quarlarty 47(1) : 1-42. March 1963. A New Deal community experiment in Harris County is examined.
Hart
3017 H18tory of Hart County. John William Baker. Foote & Davies Co. Atlanta. 1933. xii + 426 pp.
Heard
3018 A Short History of Haard County. James C. Bonner. Woman's College of Georgia. Milledgeville. 1958, revised 1962. [ii] + 24 pp.
3019 Our Town, Franklin, Georgia. Stannye Wilkinson. Published by the author. Franklin, Georgia. 1965. 48 pp.
3020 "Old Chattahoochee Town- An Early Muscogee Indian Settlement". John H. Goff. Georgie Mineral Newsletter 6(2): 51-54. 1953. The author's attempts to locate the precise site of the town are described. He concludes that the site is in Heard County on the Chattahoochee River below Franklin.
Henry
3021 Henry County, Georgia. The Mother of Counties. Vessie Thrasher Rainer. Henry County Historical Foundation, Inc. McDonough, Georgia. 1971. xxii + 374 pp.
Houston
3022 "Two Plantations and a County of Antebellum Georgia". Ralph B. Flanders. Georgia Historical Quarterly 12(1): t-37. March 1928. On the Tooke and Everett plantations and old Houston County (present Houston and Peach counties).
3023 "Historic Mossy Hill Is in Houston County". Maxine Thompson. Georgia Life I (4) : 41-42. Spring 1975. Mossy Hill, a unique antebellum house near Perry, was built by a slave carpenter who was freed for his effort.
Irwin
3024 History of Irwin County. James Bagley Clements. Foote & Davies. Atlanta. 1932. 539 pp.
Jackson
3025 Historical Notes on Jackaon County, Georgia. Frary Elrod. Privately printed. Jefferson, Georgia. 1967. 234 pp.
3028 The Early History of Jackson County, Georgia. Gustavus James Nash Wilson. W. E. White, ed. and publ. Foote and Davies, printers. Atlanta. 1914. 343 pp.
3027 Gone to Georgia: Jackaon and Gwlnnatt Counties and Their Neighbors In the Western Migration. William C. Stewart. National Genealogical Society. Washington, D.C. 1965. 326 pp.
3028 History of Harmony Grove - Commerce, Jackson County, Georgia, 1810-1949. Thomas Colquitt Hardman. McGregor Company. Athens. 1949. xii + 219 pp.
Jefferson
3029 Hl8tory of Jefferson County. Mrs. Z. V. Thomas. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1927. 144 pp.
3030 "Louisville: Georgia's First Capital". Virginia Polhill Price. Georgia Review 6(1) : 31-37. Spring 1952.
3031 "Oueensborough Township: Scotch- Irish Emigration and the Expansion of Georgia, 1763-1776". E. R. R. Green. William and Mary Quarterly 17(2) : 183-199. April 1960. On an Ogeechee River settlement which once stood about two miles from Louisville in Jefferson County.
3032 "A Little Railroad Thinks Big". Vinnie Williams. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine April 30, 1972, Pp. 34-35, 39-40. The tO-mile Louisville and Wadley Railroad, owned by the American Railroad Heritage
Foundation, may be preserved as a tourist attraction - for the benefit of retarded children.
Jenkins
3033 "Birdsville". C. D. Hollingsworth. Georgie Hl8torlcal Quarterly 41(1): 42-47. March 1957. A historical sketch of Birdsville in Jenkins County and its associated Jones family is presented.
3034 "Birdsville Plantation - A Gem of Many Facets". Margaret Perryman. Georgia Magazine 7(3) : 21-25. October- November 1963. The Jones Mansion of Birdsville Plantation, built around 1762, is one of the oldest mansions in Georgia. The Birdsville settlement is in Jenkins County northwest of Millen.
3035 Camp Lawton, Magnolia Springs State Park [Georgia]. Billy Townsend. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Parks and Historic Sites Division. Atlanta. July 1975. iii+ 23 + [27] pp. [Unpublished. Copy at Georgia Department of Archives and History]. History of a Civil War prison. Camp Lawton was located about five miles north of Millen al the site of today's Magnolia Springs State Park.
Jones
3038 History of Jones County: For One Hundred Years, Specifically 1807-1907. Carolyn White Williams. J. W. Burke Co. Macon. 1957. xxii + 1103 pp.
3037 "Clinton - A Unique Part of Georgia's Heritage". William Lamar Cawthon, Jr.
Georgia Ute 2(3) : 20-22. Winter 1975-76.
3038 "A Town Progress Passed By". Gayle White. Atlanta Joumaland Constitution Magazine June 22, 1975. Pp. 12-14, 19-20. A report on the plans of some citizens of Clinton, Georgia, to preserve the heritage of their town. Eleven miles from Macon, Clinton is a once-important town now serving as a residential community. The town has ten houses built before 1830.
3039 Jarrell Plantation: A History. Victoria Reeves Gunn. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. July 1974. [iv] + 48 pp. + 48 pp. + 167 pp. [Limited distribution].
3040 The Battle of GrlswoldviUe. Charles F. Wells, comp. Privately printed. Macon. No date. 17 pp. A little-known Civil War battle occurred at the community of Griswold in Jones County. Then known as Griswoldville, the place had perhaps 500 inhabitants.
Lamar
3041 History of Lamar County. Augusta Lambdin, ed. Barnesville N-s-Gazette. Barnesville, Georgia. 1932. 516 pp. + [48] pp. photo appendix.
Laurens
3042 The Official History of Laurens County, 1807-1941. Bertha Sheppard Hart. Daughters of the American Revolution., John Laurens Chapter. Dublin, Georgia. 1941. xiv + 546 pp. Reprinted 1972 by Cherokee Publishing Company, Atlanta.
Lee
3043 "The Chehaw Affair". E. Merton Coulter. Georgie Historical Quarterly 49(4) : 369-395. December 1965. The Chehaw Massacre of 1818 is investigated. The site is in the southern portion of present-day Lee County.
Liberty
3044 Midway, Georgie In History and Lagend. Josephine Bacon Martin. Southern Pub-
lishers. Savannah. 1932. 25 pp.
3045 "The Midway Settlement". Mary G. Bryan. Georgia Magazine 2(2) : 37-38. AugustSeptember 1958. The Midway settlement in Liberty County, the home of many of Georgia's most famous patriots, is known as the state's "Cradle of Liberty".
3048 "Midway: Cradle of Revolution". Rebecca N. Marshall. Outdoors In Georgia 4(10) : 24-27. October 1975.
3047 History of the Midway Congregational Church, Liberty County, Georgia. James Stacy. S. W. Murray, printer. Newnan, Georgia. [1903]. 283 pp. Reprinted with addenda t95t by Albert Lundy Baker; n.p.
3048 Midway Congregational Church; A Patriotic Paragon, 1630-1732-1929. H. B. Folsom. Published by the author. MI. Vernon, Georgia. No date. 50 pp.
83
History
3049 "The Romance of the Medway Society". Lewis H. Beck. Georgia Review 6(4) : 444449. Winter 1952. On the Medway Society, the group of Pilgrims who founded the Midway colony in Georgia.
3050 "Midway District : A Study of Puritanism in Colonial Georgia". Allen P. Tankersley. Georgia Historical Quarterly 32 (3) : 149-157. September 1948.
3051 Report on Midway, Liberty County, Georgia. James W. Holland. National Park Service, Historic Site Survey. Washington, D.C. Unpublished. No date. [Photocopies at Historical Preservation Section of Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Atlanta].
3052 "The Midway Museum". Charlotte Hale Smith. Georgia Magazine 4 (1) : 17-19. June - July 1960. The museum, near historic Midway Church in Liberty County houses mementoes of Old Midway, Georgia's Cradle of Liberty.
3053 The Dead Towns of Sunbury, Ga. and Dorcheeter, S.C. 2nd ed. Paul Mcilvaine. Published by the author. Hendersonville, N.C. 1975. 82 pp.
3054 The Dead Town of Sunbury, Georgia. Paul Mcilvaine. Published by the author. Hendersonville, N.C. 1971. 64 pp.
3055 A Short Hletorlcal Study of the Earthwork Near Sunbury, In Liberty County, Georgia. Tom Agnew. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. September 1975. [viii] + 29 pp. +appendix. [Limited distribution].
3058 "Fort Morris at Sunbury - Survey and First Excavations". Gordon M. Midgette. Masters thesis, 1974, University of Georgia.
3057 Taylors Creek; Story of the Community and Her People Through 200 Years. Bird Yarbrough and Paul Yarbrough, eds. Press of the Atkinson County Citizen. Pearson, Georgia. 1963. viii+ 278 pp.
3058 "St. Catherines Island". J. 0. Tryon. Catholic World 163: 42-50. April 1946.
Lowndes
3059 Hletory of Lowndes County, Georgia, 1825-1941. Daughters of the American Revolution, General James Jackson Chapter. Valdosta, Ga. 1942. xiv + 400 pp.
3080 "The Story of Valdosta". Sapelo Treanor. Georgia Review 9(1) : 92-103. Spring 1955.
Lumpkin
3081 Hlllory of Lumpkin County For the First Hundred Years, 1832-1932. Andrew W. Cain. Stein Printing Company. Atlanta. 1932. 506 pp.
3082 A Study of the Preeervatlon of Historical Features and Promotion of Tourism In Dahlonega and Lumpkin County, Georgia. Georgia Department of Commerce. July 1962. ii + 19 pp. +appendix.
3083 "Dahlonega's Gold Rush Museum". Staff, Gold Rush Museum of Dahlonega. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1 (2) : 9-14. Spring 1973.
3084 "Thar's Gold On That Thar Steeple". Larry Mitchell. Atlanta Journal and ConatltuUon Megazlne October 15, 1972. pp. 12, 15, 17-18. Dahlonega citizens have gilded the steeple of Price Memorial Hall, the North Georgia College administration building which rises on the foundations of the old U.S. gold mint.
3085 Auraria- The Story of a Georgia Gold-Mining Town. E. Merton Coulter. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1956. x + 149 pp. Auraria in Lumpkin County is one of the "dead towns" of Georgia. The author, using as his primary source the town's short-lived newspaper Western Herald, examines its short history and describes its life and death.
3088 "Auraria Was My Friend". Margaret Inman Meaders. Georgia Review 13 (4) : 402408. Winter 1959. Memories of an abandoned gold rush town near Dahlonega.
3087 The John C. Calhoun Gold Mine: An Introductory Report on Ita Historical Significance. Sherry L. Boatright. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Ollice of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. June 1974. [ii] + 42 pp. [Limited distribution]. The Calhoun Gold Mine is in Lumpkin County, Georgia, about four miles south of Dahlonega.
McDuffie
3088 A Handbook of Hlatory: McDuffie County, Georgia, 1870-1970. Pearl Baker. Progress-News Publishing Company. [Thomson, Georgia?]. No date. [iv] + 238 pp.
3089 Hlltory of McDuffie County, Georgia. No date. Typed MS at Georgia Department of Archives and History. 500 pp.
3070 The Story of Wrlghtaboro, 1788-1964. Pearl Baker. Wrightsboro Restoration Foun-
dation, Thomson, Georgia. Warrenton Clipper [publisher[. Warrenton, Georgia. August 1965. [40] pp.
3071 "The Quaker Settlement of Wrightsborough, Georgia". Ralph C. Scott, Jr. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 56(2) : 210-223. Summer 1972. Wrightsborough, one of the "dead towns" of Georgia, was the first and last major settlement of Qu;~~ers in Georgia.
3072 "Quakers in Georgia: The Rise and Fall of the Wrightsboro Community". Lucien E. Roberts. Georgia Review 4(4) : 297-303. Winter 1950.
3073 "The Quakers of Wrightsborough, Georgia". Mark Allen Candler. Megazlne of History 14(2): 17-23. August 1911.
3074 "A Log Cabin Mystery". Pearl Baker and Vinnie Williams. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 12, 1971. pp. 10, 12, 14, 24. A log house near Wrightsboro, Ga., was thought to be the home of a daughter of Betsy Ross.
3075 A Hlatory of Dearing, McDuffie County, Georgia, From 1850 to 1904 by A. J. Taylor, With an Additional Chapter on Twenty-five Years of Progreu by A Citizen. Robert Printup, publisher. Dearing, Georgia. 1929. Reprinted 1969. 16 pp.
3078 The Rock Houae, McDuffie County, Georgia: An Analyala of a Historic Slle. Kenneth H. Thomas, Jr. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. June 1974. [iv] + 164 pp. [Limited distribution].
Mcintosh
3077 They Called Their Town Darien. Bessie Lewis. The Darien Newa. Darien, Georgia. August 1975. 60 pp. A historical sketch of Darien and Mcintosh County.
3078 [Darien and] Mclntoah County. Bessie Lewis. Ashantilly Press and Darien Newa. Darien, Georgia. 1966. 24 pp.
3079 "When Darien Was Queen". Spencer Bidwell King. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine February 7, 1971. pp. 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 36. Darien, in Mcintosh County, was a major transatlantic port prior to the Civil War.
3080 "Darien, A Symbol of Defiance and Achievement". Bessie Mary Lewis. Georgia Historical Quarterly 20 (3) : 185-198. September 1936. On the early history of Darien, Georgia.
3081 "The Settlement of the Scotch Highlanders at Darien". Alexander R. MacDonell. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 20(3) : 250-262. September 1936.
3082 "The Arrival of the Scotch Highlanders at Darien". G. Arthur Gordon. Georgia Historical Quarterly 20(3) : 199-209. September 1936. Text of an address at the unveiling of a monument at Darien, Georgia.
3083 "Sapelo Island". Mary L. Waters. Outdoors In Georgia 1(4) : 14-18. October 1972. Description and historical sketch.
Macon
3084 History of Macon County, Georgia. Louise Frederick Hays, Stein Printing Co. Atlanta. 1933. 803 pp.
3085 History of Andersonville Prleon. Ovid L. Futch. University of Florida Press. Gainesville. 1968. v + 146 pp. The purposes of this scholarly study are "to determine what happened at Andersonville, to examine the conditions which resulted in high mortality among the prisoners, and to consider the question of responsibility for those conditions." Includes a thorough bibliographical essay.
3086 "Andersonville Revisited". William B. Hesseltine. Georgia Review 10(1) : 92-101. Spring 1956. An authority on Civil War prisons looks at MacKinlay Kantor's historical novel Ander sonville and finds the perpetuation of a myth.
3087 Andersonville Hlator'lcal Complex Preliminary Development Study. Robert J. Hill and William B. Keeling. University of Georgia, Bureau of Business and Economic Research and Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. February 1965. [x] + 36 pp.
3088 Andersonville National Hletorlc Site; Historic Resource Study and Hlatorlcal Baae Map. Edwin C. Bearss. National Park Service, Office of History and Historic Architecture, Eastern Service Center. Washington. 1970. xv + 184 pp.
3089 "Georgia's Last Ferry Lures Nostalgia Seeking Travelers". Max Hunn. Georgia Life 1(1): 24-25. Summer 1974. The last ferry in Georgia traverses the Flint River near Marshallville.
3090 "The Ferry on the Flint". Tina Simms. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(3) : 46-47. Summer 1974. Georgia's last state-owned river ferry is visited.
84
History
3091 "In the Neighborhood of St. Paul's". Kate F. Edwards. Georgie Review 4(4) : 263272. Winter 1950. Historical notes on St. Paul's Methodist Church. It stood in Macon County about six miles from Marshallville.
Madison
3082 "Madison Springs, Georgia Watering Place". E. Merton Coulter. Georgie Hletorlcel Quarterly 47(4) : 375-407. December 1963. The mineral springs locality of Madison County, one of the principal health resorts of the nineteenth century, is the subject of a historical sketch.
3093 "Carlton- The Town that had Two Names- An Epitaph for Berkley". Mrs. W. Whitehead. Georgie Megezlne 3(6): 16-18. April- May 1960. The small town of Carlton in Madison County was once named Berkley and Carlton at the same time.
3014 Hletorlcel Sketchn: Prnbyterlan Churchill end Early Settlerlln Northet Georgie. Groves Harrison Cartledge. University of Georgia Printing Department. Atheris. 1960. 208 pp.
Marion
3095 Hlltory of Merion County, Georgia. Nettie Powell. Historical Publishing Company. Columbus, Georgia. [1931]. 178 + [46] pp.
Meriwether
3018 Hlatorlcel Account of Meriwether County, 1827-1g74. Regina P. Pinkston, comp. Gresham Printing Company, Greenville, Georgia. 1974. 448 pp.
3097 Brooke ol Honey end Butter - Plantatlone end People of Meriwether County, Georgia. William H. Davidson. Outlook Publishing Company. Alexander City, Alabama. 1971. 2 vols.
3098 The History of Warm Springe, Georgia. Ella Godwin Hill. Hillcroft Press. Chastain, Arkansas. 1934. 136 pp.
3099 "Warm Springs". Etta Blanchard Worsley. Georgie Review 3(2) : 233-244. Summer 1949. A brief history.
3100 AOOMvelt end the Warm Springe Story. Turnley Walker. A. A. Wyn [publisher]. New York. 1953.311 pp.
3101 The Story of the Little White House. Franklin D. Roosevelt Warm Springs Memorial-Commission. Warm Springs, Georgia. 1948. [26] pp.
3102 "The Little White House Twenty-five Years Later". Carolyn Carter. Georgie Magazine 13(6) : 22-24. April- May 1970. The Little White House was the Warm Springs home of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Miller
3103 "An Indian to Remember - Hungarian's Gift to Georgia". Charles Postell. Atlanta Journal and ConltltuUon Magazine November 18, 1973. Pp. 40-42, 44. Peter Toth, a young Hungarian sculptor, has carved a huge monument to the American Indian from a large oak in Colquitt, county seat of Miller County.
Monroe
3104 The Hletory of Education In Monroe County. T. E. Smith. Monroe Advertiser. Forsyth, Ga. 1934. 162 pp,
3105 Ye~terdey at Tift. Eugenia Wootten Stone. Foote & Davies. Doraville, Georgia. 1969. 292 pp. A history of Tift College.
3106 "Run Your Own Plantation". Browl!'l Guide to Georgia 3(3) :, 52, 54. May- June 1975. On the Great Hill Place near Macon, a nineteenth-century plantation that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. (At the time of this article, the plantation was for sale).
3107 The Story of Culloden. Thomas M. Norwood. Braid & Hutton. Savannah. 1909. 54 pp.
Morgan
3108 Aemblel Through Morgen County. Her Hlatory, Century-Old Hou... end Churchee end Telee to Remember. Louise McHenry Hicky, Morgan County Historical Society. Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1971. xiii + 211 pp.
3109 "Madison: Middle Georgia Minerva". Inez Parker Cumming. Georgie Review 5(1)
: 121-136. Spring 1951. A historical sketch of the town of Madison.
3110 "Madison's Century Old Homes Have Tales to Tell". Louise McHenry Hicky. Georlile
Magazine 6(6): 12-15. April- May 1964.
3111 "Boxwood-of Stage Coach Days". Louise McHenry Hicky. Georgia Magezlne 4(1) : 14-16. June- July 1960. Boxwood, an antebellum mansion in Madison, Georgia, is explored.
3112 "Three Churches in Madison ate More than a Century Old". Louise McHenry Hicky.
Georgia Magazine 6(6) : 16-17. April- May 1964. Madison's First Baptist Church (1858), Episcopal Church ofthe Advent (1840), and First Presbyterian Church (1821) are explored.
3113 The Story of Apalachel.' Etta S. Few. Apalachee Improvement Club. Apalachee, Ga. 1926. 56 pp. Historical sketch of the Morgan County town.
3114 "Paradise for 50". Bill Turner. Georgle'Lita 2(1) : ~27, 40:Summer 1975. Description of High Shoals, on the Apalachee River in Morgan and Walton Counties. The historic landmark, mentioned by Adiel Sherwood in his 1827 Gazetteer of Georgia, is curr~ntiy called "Paradise Falls and Beach Club".
Murray
3115 Hlltory of Murray County. Charles H..Shriner. A. J. Showalter Co.; printers. Dallon,
Georgia. 1911. 48 pp.
'
3116 "Mystery Shrouds Fort Mountain". Edwin Holman. Georgia Magazine 9(2) :'20-22. August- September 1965. An old rock wall extends 885 feet at the top of Fort Mountain In MurrayCounty. AlthOUgh theories concerning its origin abound, no certain answerexists.
3117 "Georgiology [Fort Mountain]". Allen R. Coggins. Outdooraln Georgle1(5): 16-20. November 1972. Description and historical sketch of Fort Mountain's mysterious "fort".
3118 "The Lost Gold Mines of Fort Mountain". A. S. Furcron. Georgie Mineral SOCiety Newaletter 2(1) : 2-6. 1949.
3119 "James Vann, A Cherokee Chief". Clemens de Baillou. Georgie Review 17(3) : 271283. 1963. A look at the Chief Vann House and its owner.
3120 "The Old Vann House in Georgia". Mrs. B. J. Bandy. Chronlclea of Oldehome 32.: 94-98. Spring 1954.
3121 "The Chief Vann House at Spring Place, Georgia". Clemens de Baillou. Early Geor gle 2(2): 3-11. 1957.
3122 "The Chief Joseph Vann House". Joseph B. Mahan. Early Georgie 1(3), 4pp. 1954.
Muscogee
3123 Columbue on the Chattshoochee. Etta Blanchard Worsley. Columbus Office Supply Company. Columbus, Georgia. 1951. xvi + 513 pp. + appendices, references, index, and biographical sketches.
3124 A Hletory of Columbua, Georgie, 1828-1928. Nancy Telfair [pseud. of Louise Jiines DuBose]. Historical Publishing Company. Columbus. 1929. 368 pp.
3125 Columbua, Geo.: from Ill Sel8cHon u'a "Trading Town" In 1827 to III.Parllel Deltructlon by Wlleon'a Raid In 1865. John H. Martin. Ttios. Gilbert, Book Printer and Binder. Columbus, Georgia. 1874. [370] pp. Reprinted 1972 by Georgia Genealogical Reprints, Easley, S.C. under cover title The Making of a Modem City: Columbue, Georgia, 1827-1865.
3126 "WilsOn's Raiders Reach Georgia: The Fall of Columbus, 1865". James P. Jones. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 59(3) : 313-329. Fall 1975.
3127 Cofumbue, Georgia, In the Conlederai:y. The Social and lnduatrlal Life of the Chat-
tahoochee River Port. Diffee William Standard. William - Frederick Press. New York.
1954. 77 pp.
.
3128 Home Town and Other Sketchee. W. C. Woodall. Columbus Office Supply Co. Columbus, Georgia. 1935. iv + 269 pp. A collection of the author's writings from various Georgia newspapers on Columbus, Georgia history and other subjects.
3129 "Columbus- A Brief Histo,Y'. w. C. Woodall. Georgie Magazine 6(5) : 26-24: Feb-
ruary- March 1963.
3130 Recorda of the Town of Columbua end the Coweta Fella A - . Frank Holder, comp. Descriptive inventory No. 1. Georgia St~tveyor General Department. Atlanta. June 1971. vi+ 4 pp. Guide to records in the Surveyor General Department pertaining to 1820's Columbus and Muscogee County.
85
History
3131 "The Proud Old Homes of Columbus- Have Historical and Architectural Interest". Clason. Kyle. Georgia Mq~~zlne 6(5): 28-31. February- March 1963.
3132 "Columbus' Historic Springer Opera House Is 100 Years Old". William J. Stubbs. Georgia M8f8Zine 14(7) : 1D-11, 21. March 1971.
3133 "Springer Opera House". Mary Margaret Byrne. Geo'lJia Magazine 6(5) : 26. February- March 1963.
3134 "The Ssga of the Muscogee. .. And How a City and a State Co-operated to Rescue It From Its Watery Grave". Joel Turner. Georgia Magazine 6(5) : 16-19. February- March 1963. The search lor and salvage of the Confederate ironclad M..cogee is recounted. The ship Is now the principal exhibit at the Confederate Naval Museum in Columbus.
3135 "Confederate Naval Museum". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Geo'lJia 4(6) : 14-15. June 1975.
3138 "The Christian Commonwealth Colony: A Georgia Experiment, 1896-1900". John 0. Fish. Geo'lJia Historical Quarterly 57(2) : 213-226. Summer 1973. On an experimental community founded in 1896 near Columbus.
3137 "The Christian Commonwealth in Georgia". Ralph Albertson. Geo'lJia Historical Qullrterly 29(3) : 125-142. September 1945. On an experimental community established in Muscogee County in the 1890's, by a participant.
3138 "Christian Socialism Comes to Georgia: The Christian Commonwealth Colony". Paul D. Bolster. Georgia Revtew 26(1): SD-70. Spring 1972.
3131 Tile Eerty Deya of Chrtallan Soclallam In America. James Dombrowski. Columbia University Press. New York. 1936. x + 208 pp. Chapter 12 Is an examination of Christian Commonwealth Colony at Commonwealth, Georgia. The experimental community of Christian socialists, about twelve miles east of Columbus, disbanded in 1900.
Newton
3140 Tile Glory of Covington. William Bailey Williford. Cherokee Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1973. xiii + 320 pp. Describes Covington, Georgia, some of its line houses, and the persons who have lived in them.
3141 Oxford EchoH. Charles C. Jarrell. Privately Printed. [Oxford, Georgia?]. 1967. 104 pp. History of Oxford, Georgia and Emory College at Oxford. First published as a series in Wnleylln Chrlatlan Advocate.
3142 "Old Oxford". Ernest L. Snodgrass. Geo'lJia Magazine 1(4) : 20-23, 49. December 1957 -January 1958.
3143 "Sslem Camp Meeting: Symbol of an Era". Webb B. Garrison. Geolllla Review 5(4): 445-453. Winter 1951. Selem Camp Ground, ten miles west of Covington, has been a place ol"old-time religion" since 1828.
Oglethorpe
3144 Tile Hlatory of Oglethorpe County, Geo'lJia. Florrie Carter Smith. Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1970. [x] + 286 pp.
3145 Supplement to the History of Oglethorpe County, Geo'lJia. Florrie Carter Smith. Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1972. viii + 346 pp.
3146 A History of Oglethorpe County. Lena Smith Wise. Project in Applied Education (M. Ed.), 1953, University of Georgia. xiv + 152 pp.
3147 Oglethorpe County, Georgia During the Formative Period, 1773-1830. Clarence Lee Mohr. Masters thesis, 1970, University of Georgia. 220 pp.
3146 "Who'll Ssve the Gilmer House". Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(5) : 32-33. November - December 1974. The Oglethorpe County birthplace of Georgia Governor George Gilmer is a 1785 remnant of the old Goose Pond settlement.
3149 The Housing of Oglethorpe County, G80'lJia, 171D-1880. Ava D. Rodgers. Florida State University Press. Tallahassee. 1971. xi + 79 pp. A systematic written and visual record of the domestic architecture of Oglethorpe County.
3150 Tile Housing of Oglethorpe County, Geo'lJia: 1790-1880. Ava Darcy Rodgers. Doctoral dissertation, 1967, Florida State University. xi+ 326 pp.
Paulding
3151 A History of Paulding County. Lucien E. Roberts. Dallas, Georgia. July 15, 1933. Typed MS. at Georgia Department of Archives and History. [306] pp.
Peach
3152 History of Peach County, Georgia. Daughters of the American Revolution, Governor Treutlen Chapter, Fort Valley, Georgia. Cherokee Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1972. [viii) + 591 pp. + pages 592-624: "Addenda and Errata", in pocket.
3153 "Fort Valley: Its Century of Progress". Thelma Wilson. Georgia Review 12(3) : 334344. Fall 1958.
Pickens
3154 History of Pickens County. Lucius Eugene Tate. Walter W. Brown Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1935. 322 pp.
3155 "We Re-Discover the Talking Rock". A. S. Furcron. Geo'lJia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(11): 18-22. 1948. Talking Rock in Pickens County is investigated.
3158 The Dedication of Mount Oglethorpe [October 23, 1930]. Sam Tate, Price Gilbert, and Randolph Anderson. Privately published. No date. 32 pp. On the dedication of a monument to James Oglethorpe on the summit of Mount Oglethorpe in Pickens County. Includes a brief history of Oglethorpe's efforts in Georgia.
Pierce
3157 History of Pierce County, Georgia. Dean Broome. Broome Printing and Office Supplies. Blackshear, Georgia. 1973. vi + 645 pp.
3158 "The Ladies vs. The Commissioners". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 18, 1975. Pp. 6-7. 28-32. On a light to preserve Pierce County's 1903 courthouse.
Pike
3159 History of Pike County, Georgia, 1822-1932. Lizzie R. Mitchell. [Privately published?]. [1932). ix + 160 pp.
3160 History of Pike County From 1822 to 1922. R. W. Rogers. Published by the author. Zebulon, Georgia. 1922. 72 pp.
3161 Pike County, Georgia, Sesquicentennial 1822-1972. Pike County Sesquicentennial Association, Historical Committee. Zebulon, Georgia. 1972. 96 pp.
Polk
3162 "Memories of Early Rockmart". Mary Lane. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 20, 1972. Pp. 18-20, 23, 26. Rockmart, or Rock Market as it once was known, grew up at the site of an extensive deposit of slate which was first quarried in the 1850's by a group of Welshmen.
3163 The Real Property, Land Use, and Low Income Housing Area Survey- Cedartown, Geo'lJia. Work Projects Administration of Georgia. 1940. 4 vols.
Pulaski
3164 History of Pulaski and Bleckley Counties, Geo'lJia, 1808-1958. Mrs. Wallace (Virginia Speer) Harris, comp. Daughters of the American Revolution, Hawkinsville Chapter. J. W. Burke Co. Macon. 1957-58. 2 vols.
3165 History of Pulaski County, Georgia; Official History. Daughters of the American Revolution, Hawkinsville Chapter. Walter W. Brown Publishing Company. Atlanta. [1935]. 599 pp.
3168 "Historic Homes of Hawkinsville". Skippy Lawson. Georgia Magazine 12(6): 23-24. April- May 1969.
Putnam
3167 "Eatonton's Southern Accent". Inez Parker Cumming. Georgia Review 13(2) : 206216. Summer 1959. A historical sketch.
3168 "Brer Rabbit's Briar Patch Blooms Again". Patty Carpenter Almy. Georgia Magazine 2(4) : 13-14. December 1958- January 1959. Turnwold Plantation near Eatonton, an early home of Joel Chandler Harris, was the "site" of his Uncle Remus stories.
3169 The History and Development of Rock Eagle 4-H Center. James William Southerland. Masters thesis, 1963, University of Georgia. 69 pp.
Rabun
3170 Sketches of Rabun County History, 1819-1948. Andrew Jackson Ritchie. Foote &
86
History
Davies, Atlanta. [Clayton, Georgia]. 1948. Reprinted 1959. 503 pp.
3171 "The Sixtieth Anniversary of a Dream Come True". Sydney K. Davis. Georgia Magazine 7(3): 16-18. October- November 1963. The Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School was established in 1903 for children in the Blue Ridge Mountains.
3172 "Hiking the Bartram Trail from Rabun Bald to Warwoman Dell". Carol Carstarphen. Brown' Guide to Georgia 1(4): 26-29. Fall1973. A portion of the route through Georgia taken by naturalist William Bartram can be retraced in Rabun County.
Randolph
3173 A Hllloly of Andrew College. lrby Dell Engram. Masters thesis, 1939, Emory University. 120 pp.
Richmond
3174 "'-ling a Pictorial Hl1tory of Auguale, Georgia. C. Doughty Sylvester. Weicom-in Publications. Augusta. 1962. [58] pp.
3175 Autoblog111phy of a Colony- The First Hall-Century of Augu11e, Georgia. Berry Fleming, comp. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1957. xii + 204 pp.
3178 Auguale Blcenlennlal Pegunt Book, 1735-1935. Bicentennial Commission, City of Augusta. Augusta, Georgia. 1935. 133 pp.
3177 T - Centurln of Augu11e - A Sketch. Mary G. Smith Cumming. Published by the author. Augusta, Georgia. 1926. 51 pp.
3178 Memorial Hletory of Augu11e, Georgia, from Ill Settlement In 1735 to the Cloee of the Eighteenth Century. Charles C. Jones, Jr. From the Cloee of the Eighteenth Century
to the " ' - 1 Time. Salem Dutcher. D. Mason & Co.. Publishers. Syracuse, N.Y. 1890.
512 +57 pp. Reprinted 1966 by The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, S.C.
3179 Augu111and the Revolution: Event1ln the Georgia Beck Country 1773-1783. Edward J. Cashin, Jr. and Heard Robertson. Richmond County Historical Society. Augusta. 1975. 107 pp.
3180 Confedll'llte City: Augu111, Georgia, 1880-1885. Florence Fleming Corley. University of South Carolina Press. Columbia. 1960. xiv + 130 pp.
3181 "Autobiography of a City in Arms: Augusta, Georgia 1861-1865". Berry Fleming. Richmond County Hllloly 7(1): (Whole issue). Winter 1975. 90 pp.
3182 Bulletin. Richmond County Historical Society. Augusta, Georgia. December 1957. 28 pp. An illustrated guidebook to historic sites in Augusta and Richmond County.
3183 Augu111- Ynterday and Today. 2nd ed. Junior League of Augusta. Augusta, Georgia. 1951. 64 pp. + 1 fold. map.
3184 Auguste. American Guide Series. Federal Writers' Project, Works Progress Administration. Augusta, 1938. x + 218 pp. + 2 fold. maps.
3185 Hl1torlc Augu11e, A Brief DeiCrlptlon of the Monumenll and Plecee of Hlltorlcal lnle'"t In and around AugUIII, Ga. Augustus Wilfrid Dellquest. A. W. Dellquest Book Company. Augusta, Georgia. 1917. 20 pp.
3188 Hl1torlcel Markers of Richmond County, Georgia. A. Ray Rowland, ed. Richmond County Historical Society. Augusta, Georgia. 1966, revised 1971. 39 pp.
3187 A Guida to the Study of Augu11e and Richmond County, Georgia. A. Ray Rowland. Richmond County Historical Society. Augusta, Georgia. 1967. 69 pp.
3188 A LOll Arcadia, Or Tha Story of My Old Community. Walter A. Clark. Chronicle Job Print. Augusta. 1909. viii + 200 pp. Reminiscences of the Hephzibah-Brothersville area of Richmond County.
3189 The Auguste Canal: A Plan and Prog111m for Ill Revitalization. Eric Hill Associates. Prepared for Georgia Department of Natural Resources; City of Augusta; and County of Richmond. Atlanta. March 1974. x + 42 pp.
3180 "A Grand Assemblage: George W. Rains and the Augusta Powder Works". Maurice Melton. Civil War Tlmnlllu111'11ted 11 (9) : 28-37. January 1973.
3191 Hl1tory of the Confedal'llle Powder Workl. George W. Rains. Newburgh Daily News Print. Newburgh, N.Y. 1882. 29 pp. The Confederate Powder Works in Augusta stood beside the Augusta Canal producing in its three years of operation 1375 tons of gunpowder for the Confederacy. The author was in charge of gunpowder manufacture for the Confederate government.
3182 "History of Augusta Arsenal" Ruby Mabry McCrary Pladenhauer. Richmond County Hl1tory 2(2) : 5-32. Summer 1970.
3183 George Walton and "College Hill", Augu11e, Georgia. Edwin C. Bridges. Geor9ia
Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preserva-
tion Section. Atlanta. March 1975. iv + 45 pp. [Limited distribution[.
A preliminary historical evaluation of the Harper house in Augusta. The author concludes
that it probably is not George Walton's "College Hill".
.
3194 199 Years of Augu11e'1 Ubrary - A Chronology. Berry Fleming, comp. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1949. xvi + 86 pp.
3195 "They've Torn Old Union Down". George G. Weiss and AI Langley, Jr. Tralne 33 (4) : 42-47. February 1973. Description and photographs of the ornate Augusta Union Station, a Spanish Renaissance style building demolished in 1972.
3198 The Founding of Paine College - A Unique Venture In Inter-Racial Cooperation In the New South, (1882-1803). George Esmond Clary, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1965, University of Georgia. [vi] + 177 pp.
3197 The Hl1tory of the Medical Department of the Unlveralty of Georgia. William Henry Goodrich. Ridgely-Tidwell Co. Augusta. 1928. 215 pp. Early history of the Medical College of Georgia.
3188 "Augusta's Bartram Trail". Carol Carstarphen. Brown' Guide to Georgia 3(3) 48-50, 68, 70. May- June 1975. Guide to an "urban hike" through Augusta, a jumping-off point for naturalist William Bartram's travels in the wildernesses of eighteenth-century Georgia. The route described here follows the Augusta Canal and the Savannah River.
3199 A Hletory of the Whlla Houee Tract, Richmond County, Georgia, 175&-1175. Martha F. Norwood. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Resaarch, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. Augusta 1975. [viii[ + 136 pp. [Limited distribution[. A history of the house and property at 1822 Broad Street, Augusta. Although the house is not the "White House" or "Mackay House", the author concludes, it is standing on historic ground. The tract is the site of events and buildings spanning Augusta history from 1756 to the present.
3200 "The Mackay House - A Historical Mistake?". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Conllltutlon Magazine September 14, 1975. Pp. 20-22, 24, 26, 28, 30. The landmark Mackay House in Augusta and the controversy surrounding its authenticity are examined.
3201 "Mackay House". Rebecca N. Marshall. Outdoors In Georgia 4(4) : 27-30. April 1975.
3202 "America's Most Haunted House". John Mebane. Georgia Magazine 1(6) : 16-17. April - May 1958. Augusta's White House is investigated. Also examined is the city's Haunted Column, a remnant of the old city market house.
3203 "The White House in Augusta, Georgia". Clemens de Baillou. Early Georgia 1(3), 3 pp. 1954.
3204 "Historic Spots in Summerville". Lawton B. Evans. Georgia Hletorlcal Quarlarly 1(2): 135-141. June 1917. Summerville is a section of Augusta. Formerly an independent village, the community was the home of many eminent Georgians.
3205 "In Search of Summerville". Berrien Cheatham. Georgia Ute 1(4) : 16-19. Spring 1975. A look back at the little village of Summerville, now merged into Augusta.
3208 A Hundred Years of Methodllm In Augu11e, Ga. George G. Smith. Richards & Shaver, Printers. Augusta. Georgia. 1898. 59 pp.
3207 "A Workshop on Changing Augusta: A Study of Neighborhood Cultures". Richmond County Hletory 5(2) : (Whole issue). Summer 1973. 85 pp. Six papers on Augusta neighborhood history: "A Study of Dublin: The Irish in Augusta" by Helen Callahan; "Augusta Entrepreneurs, Artisans and Politicians" by Richard H. L. German; "A Study of the Chinese Community" by Sally Ken and Eileen Law; "Summerville, Retreat of the Old South" by Edward J. Cashin, Jr.; "The Terri, Augusta's Black Enclave" by Diane Harvey; and "Beyond the Folklore of Individualism" by Creighton Peden.
3208 "1888 - The Flood Threatens Augusta's Efforts to Become 'The Lowell of the South'. Helen Callahan. Richmond County Hletory 7(2) : 47-63. Summer 1975. On a severe flood in 1868 Augusta, several subsequent floods, and resulting flood control measures.
3209 "The 1916 Augusta Fire: An Unnecessary Tragedy". Calvin J. Billman. Richmond County Hlltory 7(2) : 77-102. Summer 1975.
3210 "A Historical Sketch of the Evolution of Trade and Transportation at Augusta, Ga. Together with a Synopsis of the Rate Adjustment from the East". E. H. Hinton. In: Southeatem Freight A11oclatlon, Item No. 18 of Proceeding of Meetlnge of Executive Offl cers, Belleair, Fla., January 17-18, 1912.
3211 The Real Property, Land Use, and Low Income Houelng Area Survey of Augu1ta, Georgia. ProJect No. 865-34-3-339. Work Projects Administration of Georgia. 1939.
87
History
Rockdale
3212 The Rock-. Citizen; Rockc181e COunty Cenlenn181 Edition, 11711171. [Cerol Crowe]. Citizen Publishing Company. Conyers, Georgia. [1971]. 104 pp.
3213 "Memories of the Mill". Phil Garner. Atlanl8 Journal and ConatltuUon Mqezlne September 14, 1975. Pp. 8-9, 12, 1718. A look at Milstead, a Rockdale County mill town, fifteen years alter the mill that built it was abandoned.
Schley
3214 History of Schley County. Mrs. H. J. Williams. Published by the author. [Ellaville, Ga.?). 1933. 33 pp.
Screven
3215 Pioneer Days: A History of the Early Yra In Screven County. Clyde Hollingsworth. Privately published. Sylvania, Ga. 1947. 72 pp.
3216 "Little Ogeechee Baptist Church, A Brief History, 1790-1966". Hester Newton. Georgia Magazine 10(3): 14-17. October- November 1966.
3217 "The Goodall House". Dorothy G. Boyer. Georgia Ute 1(3) : 20-2t. Winter 1974. Restoration of the 1815 Goodall House will preserve the only structure left standing in old Jacksonborough, the original county seat of Screven County.
Spalding
3218 History of Griffin, 1840-1900. Quimby Melton, Jr. Griffin Dally News. Griffin, Georgia. 1959. 222 pp.
3219 "Griffin: Early Cultural and Military Center of Georgia". Lewis H. Beck. Geor gla Review 4(4) : 331-339. Winter 1950.
3231 "Americus". Daisy 0. Mallard and Virginia M. Culpepper. Georgia Ravl8w 4(2) : 89-96. Summer 1950. A historical sketch.
3232 Andersonville, Georgia, U.S.A.. Peggy Sheppard. Privately publish8d. Leslie, Georgia. 1973. 95 pp. Twelve storie' of Andersonville: the infamous prison, the trial of keeper Henry Wirz, the controversial Wirz monument, the report of Clara Barton, the Hodges Plantation, Andersonville mining activities, and other chapters of the little town's history.
3233 "Andersonville Today". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Magazine 7(2) : 8-11. AugustSeptember 1963.
3234 From VIolence to Love: Tha History of DeSoto, Georgia. Jacquelyn Cook. Publis~ed by the author. DeSoto, Georgia. 1969. viii+ 118 pp.
3235 "The Ladies of Liberty Hall". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Uta 1(2) : 40-42. Autumn 1974. Liberty Hall, a Civil War era plantation home in Sumter County, is visited.
3236 The Cotton Patch Evidence. Dallas Lee. Harper & Row. New York. 1971. x + 240 pp. An account of Koinonia Farm, an experimental community in Sumter County.
3237 Koinonia: A Twentieth Century Experiment In Communal Uving. Juanita Frances Deatrick. Masters thesis, 1968, University of Georgia. 109 pp.
Talbot
3238 There Wu 1 Land; A Story of Talbot County, Georgia and Its People. Robert H.
Jordan. Columbus Office Supply Company. Columbus, Georgia. 1971.383 pp.
Tattnall
3239 Sketchaa of By-Gone Days: Historical Facts of Taffnall County Joseph T. Grice. Published by the author. Glennville, Georgia. 1958. 58 pp.
Stephens
3220 The History of Stephens County, Georgia (1715-1972). Kathryn Curtis Trogdon, ed. Toccoa Woman's Club. Toccoa, Georgia. [1973]. xi+ 568 pp.
3221 "Jarrett Manor". John Kollock. Georgia Magazine 11(1): 18-19, 31. June- July 1967. The history of Jarrett Manor (also known as Traveler's Rest) is summarized. The 1874 structure, six miles east of Toccoa, is a state historic site.
3222 "Traveler's Rest". Rebecca N. Marshall. Outdoors In Georgia 4(7): 20-22. July 1975.
Stewart
3223 History of Stewart County, Georgia. Helen Eliza Terrill and Sarah Robertson Dixon. Daughters of the American Revolution, Roanoke Chapter. Columbus Office Supply Co. Columbus, Georgia. 1958. 804 pp.
Taylor
3240 "The Creek Village of Cooccohapofe on Flint River". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newaleffer 14(1): 34-35. 1961. The former Indian settlement is located in Taylor County. The name is conjectured to be Creek, meaning "by the canebrake".
3241 "An 'Indian Fort' on Flint River". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newaleffer 16(12) : 53. 1963. An earthen embankment located 2.2 miles to the east of Reynolds in Taylor County is referred to by some local people as an old "Indian Fort". The author suggests that it was a Confederate fortification to guard the nearby Central of Georgia Railroad.
Telfair
3242 History of Telfair County From 1812 to 1949. Floris Perkins Mann. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1949. xvi + 204 pp.
3224 History of Stewart County, Volume II by Sarah Robertson Dixon, With Family Histortes Edited, Annotated and Indexed by Agnew Hitsman Clark and Marean Moncrief Clark. Published by A. H. Clark, Waycross, Georgia. 1975. xxiv + 1172 pp.
3225 Westville VIllage: Georgia's Major Outdoor Living History Museum; "Where It's Always 1850". [Joseph B. Mahan?]. Westville Historic Handicrafts, Inc. Lumpkin, Georgia. [1973]. [14] pp. Description of the project, its progress, and its needs.
3226 "Joe Mahan's Westville". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and ConstltuUon Map zlne October 27, 1974. Pp. 24-26, 29-30, 32, 35. Westville, in Stewart County near Lumpkin, is a recreated museum village similar to Old Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts and Greenfield Village at Dearborn, Michigan. Joseph B. Mahan, a Georgia historian, is the village's executive director.
3227 "Westville - Where It Will Never Be Later than 1850- Is the Newest Town in Georgia". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Magazine 14(1): 22-24. June- July 1970.
3228 "Return of the Mule-Powered Gin". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanl8 Journal and Constltu tlon Magazine November 9, 1975. Pp. 36 fl. A cotton gin at Westville, near Lumpkin, Georgia, is examined. The gin was moved from Cusseta and restored to operating condition.
3229 "Lumpkin's Bedingfield Inn Has Been Restored". Margaret Perryman. Georgia Magazine 11(4): 20-21. December 1967- January 1968.
Sumter
3230 Americus Through the Years: The Story of a Georgia Town and Its People, 1832 1975. William Bailey Williford. Cherokee Publishing Company. Atlanta. 1975. xviii + 544 pp.
Terrell
3243 Terrell County's Centennial Panorama, 1856-1956. Terrell County Centennial Executive Committee. Dawson, Georgia. 1956. 76 pp. An album of historical photographs. Text material is primarily of genealogical interest.
3244 "Terrell County's Most Unusual Home". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Ufe1(1): 41-43. Summer 1974. The Stapleton home, built in 1840, may be the oldest house in Terrell County.
Thomas
3245 History of Thomes County, Georgie; From the Time of DeSoto to the Civil War. W. Irwin Macintyre, comp. Privately published. Thomasville, Georgia. 1923. [ii] + 56 pp.
3246 The Negro In Antebellum Thomas County, Georgia (18251860). George Lewis, Jr. Masters thesis, 1963, Atlanta University.
3247 Ante-Bellum Thoma County, 18251861. William Warren Rogers. Florida State University Studies, Number 39. Florida State University Press. Tallahassee. 1963. xvi + 136 pp.
3248 Thomas County During tha Civil War. William Warren Rogers. Florida State University Studies, No. 41. Florida State University Press. Tallahassee. 1964. xvi + 112 pp.
3249 Thomas County, 1865-1900. William Warren Rogers. Florida State University Press. Tallahassee, Fla. 1973. xiv + 486 pp.
3250 "Thomasville - The Health Resort". Peggy Sheppard and Mary Grubbs. Georgia Magazine 13(5) : 13-16. February- March 1970.
88
History
3251 Hlatorlc Tbom..,.lle: An Inventory of Historic Bulldlnga and Sit-. Progrems, Recommandatlona to Tbomanllle Ulndmarks. Carl Feiss and Russell Wright. Thomasville Landmarks. Inc. Thomasville, Georgia. November 1969.
3252 "Thomasville Takes a Look at Its Past". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Mapzlne December 5, 1971. Pp. 24-26, 28, 31, 34, 38. Thomasville Landmarks Inc. and Downtown Thomasville, Inc. have joined with the city's government to preserve historic landmarks and to plan for the future.
3253 "Lapham-Petterson: A Victorian Prize". Bob Wind. Outdoo1'111n Georgia 3(12) : 2-6. December 1974. A look at Thomasville's historic Lapham-Patterson House.
3254 "The Plantations of Thomas County". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Magazine 13(5) : 17-19. February- March 1970.
TIH
3255 Hlatory of Tift County. Ida Belle Williams. J. W. Burke Co. Macon. 1948. xxiv + 503 pp.
Troup
3258 History of Troup County. Clifford Lewis Smith. Foote- Davies. Atlanta. 1933. vii+ 323 pp.
3257 LIIGrenge, City of Elma and A - : A Sketch Book. Lucille Bryant Johnson and Amanda Watkins. Privately printed. 1935. [26] pp. Twelve drawings of LaGrange landmarks, with descriptive text for each.
3258 Wt Point on the Chattahoochea. Bulletin No. 3. Chattahoochee Valley Historic
Society. [West Point, Georgia]. 1957. [iv] + 122 pp. Consists of "The Battle of West Point" by Earl Edwards, "History of Banking in West Point" by J. E. Robinson, "The First 100 Years" by William H. Davidson, "The Schools of West Point" by Janie Lovelace Heard, and "West Point Churches" by Dorothy Neal Young.
3259 "Fort Tyler". Dorothy N. Young. Georgia Magazine 8(6) : 16-17. April- May 1965. Fort Tyler, at West Point, Georgia, was the scene of one of the most one-sided battles of the Civil War.
32t0 Proudeat Inheritance, A Bicentennial Tribute. William H. Davidson, ed. Chattahoochee Valley Historical Society. West Point, Georgia. 1975.
3281. Pine Log and Greek Revival - Hou- and People of Three Countlln Georgia and Alabama. William H. Davidson. Chattahoochee Valley Historical Society Publication No. 6. Outlook Publishing Company. Alexander City, Alabama. November 1964. vii + 396 pp. + 1 fold. map. An architectural, historical and genealogical survey of existing pioneer, antebellum and postbellum houses in the three-county area around West Point, Georgia (Troup County and Harris County, Georgia and Chambers County, Alabama).
3282 Valley Historical Screpbook. William H. Davidson, ed. Publication No.9. Chattahoochee Valley Historical Society. West Point, Georgia. September 1970. 76 pp. Compilation of articles concerning Troup and Harris Counties, Georgia, and Chambers County, Alabama. Includes an article on the covered bridges of the area by Katherine Hyde.
3213 Tbls W Our Valley: Photo-Grevures of 1901. William H. Davidson, ed. Publication No. 11. Chattahoochee Valley Historical Society. [West Point, Georgia]. 1973. iv + 60 pp.
3284 "Air Force Family Restores Ancestral Home". Roberta Lyndon Mayes. Georgia Magazine 8(3) : 26-29. October - November 1964. Restoration of the Boddie home near LaGrange is described.
3215 "The Homes of Benjamin Harvey Hill". Lucille McMaster. Georgia Magazine 7(4). December 1963- January 1964. Three homes of Ben Hill still exist in Georgia. These are Long Cane and Bellevue in Troup County, and the Athens house now owned by the University of Georgia that is used as the President's Home.
3281 Hogansville Screp Book. Fred D. Cooper, Hogansville, Georgia. 1959-1961.33 pp. [A compilation of clippings from a series of articles in the Hogansville Herald, at Georgia Department of Archives and History].
3267 The History of UIGrenge College. Irene B. Birdsong. Masters thesis, 1955, University of Georgia. iv + 213 pp.
turner
3281 History of Tumer County. John Ben Pate. Stein Printing Company. Atlanta. 1933. 198 pp.
Twiggs
3269 CoUectlons of Twiggs Countlans, Here and There. Katherine Jones Carswell. Pri-
vately printed. Jeffersonville, Georgia. [1973]. 170 + [13] pp.
3270 History of Twiggs County, Georgia; Seaqulcentennlal, 1809-1959. J. Lanette O'Neal Faulk and Billy Walker Jones. Daughters of the American Revolution, Major General John Twiggs Chapter. Jeffersonville, Georgia. 1960. 479 pp.
Union
3271 History of Union County, Georgia. Preston Turner. Unpublished. Microfilm copy in University of Georgia Libraries. 1959.
3272 "Choestoe- Birthplace of Famous Georgians". Cecil Cobb Wesley. Georgia Magazine 8(3) : 14-15. October- November 1964.
3273 Blood Mountain. Edward Leander Shuler. Published by the author. Jacksonville, Fla. 1953. A first-person history of the Choestoe rural district of Union County and its inhabitants focusing primarily on the "upward moral, social and intellectual trend of the white people" who lived in the area after the Cherokee expulsion of 1838.
3274 "Early Settlement and Land Use in the Present Toccoa Experimental Forest". Ernst V. Brender and Elliott Merrick. Scientific Monthly 71 : 318-325. November 1950. Story of the development, peak, decline, and final abandonment of an Appalachian wilderness community in the valley of Mulky Creek, a tributary of Coopers Creek in Union County.
Upson
3275 Hlatory of Upeon County, Georgia. Carolyn Walker Nottingham and Evelyn Hannah. Daughters of the American Revolution, John Houston Chapter. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1930. 1122 pp.
3276 Seaqulcentennlal: Upaon County 1824-1974; Thomton 1825-1975. [Mrs. J. M. M. Kellum; Mrs. W. H. Hightower, Jr.; Mrs. C. W. Greene; and Mrs. George Miller]. Thomaston Upson County Sesquicentennial Committee. Thomaston, Georgia. [1975]. 64 pp.
3277 "History Comes Alive in Thomaston Home". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Magazine 13(3): 16-19. October- November 1969. The Weaver-Dallas house in Thomaston was built in 1825.
Walker
3278 Hlatory of Walker County, Georgia. James Alfred Sartain. A. J. Showalter Company. Dalton, Georgia. 1932. 519 pp.
3279 Chickamauga Yesteryear. Tsikimagi Garden Club. Chickamauga, Georgia. [1973?]. 82 pp.
3280 "North Georgia's Most Historic House". Gertrude Ruskin. Georgia Magazine 1(5) : 27-29. February- March 1958. The Ross House in Rossville is examined.
Walton
3281 Wayfare1'11 In Walton. A History of Walton County, Georgia 1818-1967. Anita B. Sams. General Charitable Foundation of Monroe, Georgia, Inc. Monroe, Georgia. 1967. XX+ 885 pp.
3282 Celebretlng Walton County's Seaqui-Centennlal. Supplement to the Walton Tribune, December 11, 1968. Monroe, Georgia. 251 pp.
3283 History of Walton County. John L. McKinnon. Byrd Printing Company. Atlanta. 1911. 389 pp.
3284 "The Mystery of the Secret Room". Wylly Folk St. John. Atlanta Joumaland Constl Iutton Magazine November 5, 1972. Pp. 30-32, 34, 42-43. The 1845 Davis-Edwards House in Monroe, purchased by the Walton County Historical Society for restoration, has a mysterious room which at one time had no doors.
Ware
3285 History of Ware County, Georgia. Laura Singleton Walker. J. W. Burke Company. Macon, Georgia. 1934. xx + 547 pp.
3286 Tbls Magic Wlldemeu; Historical Features of the Wlregreu. Robert Latimer Hurst. Sponsored by The Waycross-Ware County Centennial Committee. Printed by Sentinel Press, Jesup, Georgia. 1974. [iv] + 194 pp.
3287 "Waycross: Gateway to the Okefenokee". Sara Singleton King. Georgia Review 4(3) : 217-223. Fall 1950.
3288 "Ruskin: Ware County's Vanished City". Mary Louise Bennett. Georgia Review 5(2) : 193-199. Summer 1951.
89
Land Use
Washington
3289 History of Wahlngton County. Ella Mitchell. Byrd Printing Company. Atlanta. 1924. 171 pp. Reprinted 1973 by Cherokee Press, Atlanta.
Wayne (See Brantley)
White
3290 Historical Facta and L"llenda, While County, 1857-1957. Historical Facts Committee, White County Centennial Committee. [Cleveland, Georgia?]. 1957. 24 pp.
3291 History of the Public Schools of While County, Georgia, 1870 thru 1938. John Benjamin Simmons. Privately printed. N.p. 1938. [24] pp. Primarily biographical sketches.
3292 "The Vale of Nacoochee". John Kollock. Georgia Magazine 10(1) : 16-20. JuneJuly 1966. The history of White County's Nacoochee Valley is briefly summarized.
3293 "The Old Sautee Store". John C. Kollock. Georgia Magazine 9(1): 18-19. JuneJuly 1965. The historic establishment beside the Unicoi Turnpike in White County has been restocked with articles of time past, creating a unique museum.
Whitfield
3294 Official History of Whitfield County, Georgia. Whitfield County History Commission. A. J. Showalter Co. [printer]. [Dalton, Georgia]. 1936. viii + 238 pp.
3295 "The Valley of the Conasauga". Eulalie M. Lewis. Georgia Historical Quarterly 42(3) : 313-323. September 1958. The author combines personal reminiscences with historical research to describe the Conasauga River Region.
3296 "Tilton: Life in a Small Georgia Town". Eulalie M. Lewis. Georgia Historical Quarterly 42(4) : 427-440. December 1958. A historical sketch of a small town on the Conasauga River in Whitfield County.
3297 "Dalton". WalterS. Bogie. Georgia Review 15(1): 100-106. Spring 1961. A historical and social sketch of the town.
3298 Red Clay Council Grounds: Georgia or Tenne....? A Historical Analysis. Barbara Sayer Duffe. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. April 1975. 64 pp. [Limited distribution].
Wilcox
3299 Our Herll"lle, Wilcox County. Reuviel Newman Roberts and Lula Keen Cook. Wilcox Heritage Association. Abbeville, Georgia. 1975. [54] pp.
Wilkes
3300 We Have Thla Heritage: The History of Wilkes County, Georgia; Beginnings to 1860. Robert Marion Willingham, Jr. Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1969. [viii] + 234 pp.
3301 The Story of Wilkes County, Georgia. Eliza A. Bowen. Edited by Louise Frederick Hays. Continental Book Co. Marietta, Georgia. 1950. iii+ 192 pp.
3302 Wilkes County Scrapbook - Volume A. Janet Harvill Standard. Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1970. [vi] + 151 pp.
3303 The Story of Washington -Wilkes. American Guide Series. Georgia Writers' Project, Work Projects Administration of Georgia. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1941. xiv + 136 pp. A history of and guide to the town and county. Points of interest are well described. Includes chronology of events, bibliography, and index.
3304 "Historic Washington - Wilkes". Janet Harvill Standard. Georgia Review 5(4) 455-471. Winter 1951.
3305 "The Earliest Settlements in Wilkes County". Alex M. Hitz. Georgia Historical Quarterly 40(3) : 260-280. September 1956.
3308 "Washington - Wilkes Historical Museum". S. Rowland Smith. Georgia Magazine 5(1): 28-29. June- July 1961. The museum, an ante-bellum house in Washington, Georgia, is described.
3307 The Historic Homes of Washington, Georgia. Janet Harvill Standard. Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1973. 61 pp.
3308 The Robert Toombs House, Washington, Georgia: A Historic Landmark. Kenneth H. Thomas, Jr. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Re-
search, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. February 1974. [iii] + 90 pp. + appendix. [Limited distribution].
3309 "A Rebel's Home for the Heritage Trust". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine March 31, 1974. Pp. 30-32, 34, 42-43. The state has purchased and plans to restore Robert Toombs' home in Washington, Georgia.
3310 "Trees of Legend and Lore in Historic Washington - Wilkes". Janet Harvill Standard. Georgia Review 21 (3) : 345-353. Fall 1967.
3311 KeHie Creak: The Battle of the Cane Brakes, Wilkes County, Georgia. RobertS. Davis, Jr. and Kenneth H. Thomas, Jr. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Historic Preservation Section. Atlanta. April 1975. vi + 176 pp. [Limited distribution]. The Revolutionary War battle in Wilkes County is examined.
3312 The Battle of Kettle Creak. Janet Harvil Standard, comp. Wilkes Publishing Company. Washington, Georgia. 1973.
3313 "The Battles of Kettle Creek and Brier Creek". Otis Ashmore and Charles H. Olmstead. Georgia Historical Quarterly 10(2) : 85-125. June 1926. On two battles of the Revolution in Georgia. Kettle Creek occurred in Wilkes County, Brier Creek in Screven County.
3314 "Patriots Come Back to the Battlefield". Gayle White. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine December 1, 1974. Pp. 60-62. A ceremony at Kettle Creek battleground in Wilkes County is described.
3315 A Social and Economic History of the Danburg Community In Wilkes County, G.Orgla. Charles Danforth Saggus. Masters thesis, 1951, University of Georgia. [175] pp.
Wilkinson
3318 History of Wilkinson County. Victor Davidson. Daughters of the American Revolution, John Ball Chapter. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. [1930]. 645 pp.
Worth
3317 History of Worth County, Georgia, For the Firat Eighty Years, 1854-1934. Lillie Martin Grubbs. J. W. Burke Company. Macon. 1934. xviii + 594 pp.
LAND TAXATION
3318 An Annotated Compilation of The Property Taxation Laws of Georgia. 3rd Edition. University of Georgia, Institute of Government. Athens. 1975. xvi + 273 pp.
3319 Status of Ad Valorem Taxation of Rural Land In Georgia. C. B. Osborn, R. W. Jones, and L.A. Hargreaves, Jr. Research Paper No. 75. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. January 1974. 9 pp.
3320 Forest Property Taxation. L. A. Hargreaves, Jr. and Richard W. Jones. Report No. 29. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon, Ga. May 1972. 27 pp.
3321 Ad Valorem Taxes on Georgia's Rural Landa 1970. Richard W. Jones and L. A. Hargreaves, Jr. Research Paper No. 67. Georgia Forest Research Council. Macon. March 1971. 12 pp.
3322 "Seven-Year Property Tax Trends on Georgia's Forest Lands". Richard W. Jones and L. H. Hargreaves, Jr. Joumal of Forestry 71 (6) : 349-352. June 1973.
3323 Factors AlfecUng the Value of Rural Property In North Georgia. James 0. Wise, H. Jackson Dover, and Bill R. Miller. Research Bulletin 103. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. February 1972. 31 pp.
LAND USE
3324 Georgia Land Use Problema. W. A. Hartman and H. H. Wooten. Bulletin 191. University of Georgia, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. 1935. 195 pp.
3325 "From Forest to Farm to Forest Again". E. V. Brender. American Foresta 58(1) : 24-25, 40-41, 43. January 1952. "Parts of Georgia's lower Piedmont, once mostly in hardwoods, then homesteads, are
90
Natural Areas
completing a cycle to loblolly pine".
3328 OpUmum lnlenllty of F - t und Uae on a Regional Beale with AppllcaUon to a PorUon of the Georgia Piedmont. Albert C. Worrell. Doctoral dissertation, 1953, University of Michigan. 149 pp.
3327 "The Distribution of the Rural Nonfarm Population in Georgia". John Fraser Hart. Georgia Mlnarel Nawatetter 9(2): 69-72. 1956.
3328 Rurel Occupance In Trenalllon: L8e and Sumter CounUea, Georgia. David E. Christensen. Doctoral dissertation, 1956, University of Chicago. Published 1956 by University of Chicago Press.
3321 The DlatrlbuUon of Rurel Idle und In Madlaon County, Georgia, and Photo lnterpreteUon Keya for Ita Identification. Carolyn E. Tyner. Masters thesis, 1957, University of Georgia. vi + 102 pp.
3330 Expreuway Influence on und Uae and Value, Atlanta, 1941-1956. James H. Lemly. Georgia State College of Business Administration. Atlanta. November 1958. xi + 137 pp.
3331 Vacant L8nd In Athena, Georgia: Ita DlatrlbuUon and Cauaea. Masters thesis, 1959, University of Georgia. 103 pp.
3332 "Land-Use Change in Georgia, 1909-1954". Sanford H. Bederman. Atlanta Economic Review 10: 11-14. December 1960.
3333 Size Group and FuncUonal Varlatlona In the L8nd Occupance Pattema of Part-Time Farma In Walton County, Georgia. Nelson R. Nunnally. Masters thesis, 1960, University of Georgia. 120 pp.
3334 Blrdaong: Sequent Occupance on 1 Soulhwutem Georgia Plantation. Sam Bowers Hilliard. Masters thesis, 1961, University of Georgia. 148 pp. Birdsong Plantation in Grady County is studied.
3335 "Idle Rural Land Phenomena in Madison County, Georgia". Merle C. Prunty. SouthHitem Geogrepher 1:39-49. 1961.
3338 Abandoned Houaealn Oconee County, Georgia: lndlcel of Changing und Uae. Harry F. Lane. Masters thesis, 1963, University of Georgia.
3337 Changea In L8nd Uae and Population In Georgia, 1930-1960. R. F. Anderson. Mimeo Series N.S. 179. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. July 1963. [viii] + 22 pp.
3338 Impact of Farm Pondl on the Morphology of L8ndholdlnga In Elbert County, Georgie. Arthur John Hawley. Masters thesis, 1963, University of Georgia. 68 pp.
3339 "The Woodland Plantation as a Contemporary Occupance Type in the South". Merle Prunty, Jr. Geogrephlcal Revl- 53(1) : 1-21. January 1963. Altamaha, or Hopeton, Plantation near Brunswick and Greenwood Plantation near Thomasville are used as case studies in this examination of the emergence and operation of commercial forestry plantations, most of which were formerly cropland plantations.
3340 The PlenteUon Occupance Complex In Dougherty, Lee and Sumter Countlea, Georgia. William T. Mealor. Masters thesis, 1964, University of Georgia. 126 pp.
3341 Chengea In und Uae Pattern After the Opening of lnteratate 75 In the Area of Tifton, _Georgia. Philip D. Koos. Masters thesis, 1965, University of Georgia. 82 pp.
3342 The Modification of Rurel und Occupance Syatema: The Central Georgia Piedmont. James Samuel Fisher. Doctoral dissertation, 1967, University of Georgia. 251 pp.
3343 Geogrephlc Analyllla of Single Dwelling Settlement In Norlhuat Georgia. James R. Bohland. Doctoral dissertation, 1970, University of Georgia. 225 pp. "Single dwellings are defined as rural dwellings separated from the nearest dwelling by a distance of at least .15 miles."
3344 "Recent Changes in Agrarian Land Use in Georgia". Sanford H. Bederman. SouthHitem Geographer 10(2): 72-82. November 1970.
3345 An Analyllll of und Uae Pattern of Georgia Uplanda. Joel Henry Braswell. Doctoral dissertation, 1972, University of Georgia. 245 pp. "Land-use of upland sites in 5 regional ecosystems of Georgia (designated Mountains, Ridge and Valley, Piedmont, Upper Coastal Plain and Lower Coastal Plain) was sampled by means of the line intercept method. Twelve land-use categories or community types were recognized: deciduous, native pine, planted pine, post-broomsedge, broomsedge, pre-broomsedge, orchard, pasture, cropland, residential, commercial and industrial. .. importance values were used to characterize upland land-use types." Dispersal patterns and sizes of communities were measured as was community diversity and influence of man. Man was found to make the least use of land at high elevations and below 150 feet.
3348 Llnd-Uae Changn Which Affected Georgia' Foreat und, 1961-1972. Herbert A. Knight. Research Note SE-189. USDA Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. Asheville, N.C. March 1973. 4 pp.
3347 The RelaUonlhlp of und Uae to Domeetlc Surfece Water Supply In Georgia. Wade
L. Nutter and Douglas W. Shaw. Report No. ERC-0873. Georgia Institute of Technology, EQvironmental Resources Center. Atlanta. June 1973. 61 pp. NTIS number: PB-236 429.
3348 Rural Occupance Changn In Eeatem Mecon County, Georgia from 1948 to 1967. Paul Fred Ries. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, University of Georgia. 206 pp.
3349 Rural Site Selection and the Formation of Rural Settlement P-m In North Eatem Georgie. James R. Bohland. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. 1973. 39 pp.
3350 "Impact of Past Land Use on the Lower Piedmont Forest". E. V. Brender. Journal of
ForHtry 72(1): 34-36. January 1974. Past land use in the lower Piedmont province of Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina has exerted much influence on the present forest. Indians, early settlers, and cotton planters extensively altered the landscape prior to the creation of today's great forest of pine.
NATURAL AREAS
GENERAL
3351 "The Search tor Unspoiled Georgia". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and ConatltuUon Magazine November 21, 1971. Pp. 8-9, 36, 38, 40. The author accompanies two members of the Georgia Natural Areas Council (now within
DNR) on a trip to several places of natural beauty.
3352 Actlvlllee Report 1970. Georgia Natural Areas Council. Atlanta. 1970. A description of registered natural areas in Georgia noting size, owner, outstanding fea-
ture, location and access, and restrictions on use for each.
3353 Georgia Council for the Preaervatlon of Natural Arne: Report on the Firat Yur of Operetlon, 15 September 1967 - 15 September 1968. Georgia Council for the Preservation of Natural Areas. Decatur, Georgia. [1968]. v + 41 pp.
3354 "National Registry of Natural Landmarks". National Park Service. Federal Regllter 40(87) : 19503-19508. May 5, 1975. A list of nationally significant natural areas. Revises the registry as published in the Federal Register of September 5, 1973 at page 23982. Program criteria, objectives, and procedures are explained. Eight sites in Georgia are listed: (1) Camp E. F. Boyd Natural Area, Emanuel County; (2) Cason J. Callaway Memorial Forest, Harris County: (3) Lewis Island Tract, Mcintosh County; (4) Marshall Forest, Floyd County; (5) Okefenokee Swamp, Ware, Charlton, and Clinch counties; (6) Sag Ponds Natural Area, Bartow County; (7) Spooner Springs, Seminole County; and (8) Wassaw Island, Chatham County. Additions to and deletions from the registry are published at intervals in the Federal Register.
3355 Survey of Propoled Neturel Forell Area In the Southeaat. F. H. Eyre. Society of American Foresters. Washington, D.C. 1960. 40 pp.
3356 "Natural Areas of the Southeast". Laurence C. Walker. Journal of Foreatry 61 (9) : 670-673. September 1963. On the status of the natural areas program of the Society of American Foresters in Georgia, Alabama, and Florida. The areas in Georgia: Blackbeard Island; Okefenokee Swamp; Piedmont National Wildlife Refuge; Sapelo Island; Edgehill (at Rome in Floyd County); and Millpond Plantation.
3357 "Georgia's Wilderness". Wayne Parker. Outdoora In Georgia 4(4) : 4-8. April 1975. On Georgia's official wild areas: Blackbeard Island, Chattooga River, Cohutta Mountains, Cumberland Island, Ellicott's Rock, Okefenokee Swamp, and Wolf Island.
3358 Georgie Scenic Rlvara Report - Preliminary Study. A. Stephen Johnson. Georgia Natural Areas Council. Atlanta. 1971. 20 pp. Identifies those rivers of Georgia having exceptional esthetic, recreational, and scientific values.
3359 "Georgia Granite". William A. Baker, Jr. Natural Hlatory 79(8): 32-37. October 1970. On the granite outcrops of Georgia's Piedmont, "islands" of geologic and botanical interest.
INDIVIDUAL AREAS
3360 Suwannu River, Florida- Georgia; A National Wild and Scenic River Study. U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Outdoor Recreation. Atlanta. December 1973. xiii + 112 pp.
3361 "River of the Trembling Earth: The Suwannee". Chapter Six of Wild Rivera of North America, Michael Jenkinson. E. P. Dutton and Co., New York. 1973. Pp. 144-166.
3362 A Propoul: The Chattooga; "A Wild and Scenic River''. USDA Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. 1970. 31 pp.
3363 "Turnabout on the Chattooga". Don G. Cullimore. American ForHta 77(2) : 12-15,
91
Plants
55, 56. February 1971. On 1he 1970 change of position by the Corps of Engineers concerning inclusion of the Chattooga River in the Wild and Scenic Rivers system. Also a look at the U.S. Forest Service's proposals to retain and enhance the "wild" qualities of the river.
3384 s.tllla - A Report of the Setllla River Expedition, 23-25 May, 1969. Robert Hanie and Marion Hay, eds. Georgia Natural Areas Council. Atlanta. 1969. 82 pp. Observations on past and present ecology of the river and recommendations for its future use.
3385 "The Preservation". Gene Moore. Georgia 16(4): 67-71. November 1972. Protection of Lewis Island, five miles inland on the Altamaha River, is foreseen.
3368 "Atlanta's Lost Green Island". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine July 28, 1974. Pp. 8-9, 27, 29, 31. Soapstone Ridge, in DeKalb, Fulton and Clayton Counties, isn't soapstone - but it is one of the more important archaeological sites in the Southeast. A basically rural area surrounded by urbanization, Soapstone Ridge's green island open space is threatened by the expanding city.
3387 "Georgiology- Panola Mountain". Allen A. Coggins. Outdoora In Georgia 1(6) : 17-19. December 1972. A look at Panola Mountain State Park, a natural preserve featuring an unspoiled granite outcrop that is the abode of several rare plants and animals.
3368 "Georgia's First Wilderness Park". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine June 20, 1971. Pp. 16-18, 20, 22. Panola Mountain, an unspoiled granite outcrop near Atlanta, is Georgia's first park to be maintained as a natural preservation area. The unique ecosystem is described.
3389 "Tallulah Falls, Georgia's Natural Wonder From Creation to Destruction. [Part] I, Creation". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 47(2): 121-157. June 1963.
3370 "Tallulah Falls, Georgia's Natural Wonder, from Creation to Destruction. [Part] II, Destruction". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Hlatorlcal Quarterly 47(3) : 249-275. September 1963.
3371 "The Falls of Tallulah". Charles Lanman. Magazine of History 19(6) : 249-53. December 1914.
3372 "He'll Walk a High Wire Across Tallulah Gorge". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and ConatltuUon Magazine AprilS, 1970. Pp. 1D-11, 53-55. In an attempt to revive an old resort, Karl Wallenda will attempt to duplicate a stunt accomplished at the gorge in 1886.
3373 Tha Tallulah Study - Tallulah Gorge, Phaae I. Georgia Power Company, North Georgia Mountains Authority and Designers Collaborative, Inc. Atlanta. September 1971. 240 pp. An assessment of the development potential of land owned by the Georgia Power Company at Tallulah Gorge in northeast Georgia, the study emphasizes ecological suitability with economic feasibility.
3374 "Ellicott's Rock". Wayne Parker. Outdoora In Georgia 4(7) : 2-5. July 1975. Ellicott's Rock Wilderness Area, in Georgia's northeastern corner, is described.
3375 "Wimberley's Wilderness". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine August 10, 1975. Pp. 18-19, 21-24. A look at the Jacks River area of the Cohutta Mountains and a fisherman who fears that the Cohuttas' designation as "wilderness" will bring hordes of backpackers to his favorite river.
3376 "Planning a Future for the Cohuttas". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine July 23, 1972. Pp. 14-16, 22. Several alternatives for use of the Cohuttas Mountains are aired, including clearcutting, designation as a wilderness area, and designation as a scenic river area.
33n "Cohutta Comeback?". Jim Morrison. Georgia Game and Flah 3(5) : 8-12. May 1966. On the reactivation of the Cohutta Game Management Area. The area was closed in 1960 due to lack of cooperation by the local residents.
PESTICIDES
3381 Peatlclde Uaege and Ita Impact on the Aquatic Environment In the Southeaat. Robert A. Baker. Pesticide Study Series 68-Q1-Q118. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency. Washington, D.C. September 1972. 411 pp.
3382 "Pesticide Pollution in Estuaries". William E. Odum. Sea Frontlera [International Oceanographic Foundation, Miami, Fla. ] 14 : 234-245. 1968.
3383 Survey of Touph- Lavela In Georgia Eatuarl- Robert J. Reimold and Charles J. Durant. Technical Report Series, No. 72-2. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. February 1972. 51 pp.
3384 "Effects of Estuarine Dredging of Toxaphene-Contaminated Sediments in Terry Creek, Brunswick, Ga. - 1971". Charles J. Durant and Robert J. Reimold. Ptlcldes Monitoring Journal 6(2) : 94 fl. September 1972.
3385 Monitoring Toxaphene Contamination In a Georgia Eatuary. Robert Reimold and Charles Durant. Technical Report Series, No. 72-8. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. November 1972. 20 pp.
3368 Effecta of Toxa~ Contamination on Eatuarlne Ecology. Robert J. Reimold, Patrick C. Adams, and Charles J. Durant. Technical Report Series, No. 73-8. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. September 1973. 100 pp. NTIS number: COM-74-10408.
3387 Touph- lnteractlona In Eatuarlne Ecoayatema. Robert J. Reimold. Technical Report Series, No. 74-6. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. 1974.
3368 "Alternatives to Pesticides in the Southeastern United States". G. C. Sharma and B.S. Mangat. The Science of tha Total Environment 2: 21-44. 1973.
3389 "Can We Win the Fire Ant War?". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine May 23, 1971. Pp. 8-7, 14, 18-17. The "cure" for fire ants may be worse than the problem -and the problem may not be as severe as commonly thought.
3390 "Big Schemes for Little Ants". Anthony Wolff. Audubon 73(2): 12D-124. March 1971. On the lire ant (So/enopsis saevissima) in the South and attempts to control it with controversial insecticides.
3391 "Mirex in Milk from Southeastern United States". Joseph C. Hawthorne et al. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 11 (3) : 238-240. March 1974.
3392 "Levels of Mirex and Some Other Organochlorine Residues in Seafood from Atlantic and Gulf Coastal States". G. P. Markin et a/. Peatlcldea Monitoring Journal 7(3-4) : 139-143. March 1974. All mirex-contaminated samples were from the Savannah area.
3393 "Effects of Mirex on Litter Organisms and Leaf Decomposition in a Mixed Hardwood Forest in Athens, Georgia". Beatrice Joy Lee. Journal of Environmental Quality 3(4): 305-311. October- December 1974.
3394 "The Overkill of Pesticides". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Conatltutlon Magazine August 31, 1969. Pp. 8, 13-14.
3395 Handbook on Toxicity of Peatlcldea to Wildlife. Richard K. Tucker and D. Glen Crabtree. Resource Publication No. 84. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. [1970?]. [iv] + 131 pp. Toxicity information is given separately for each of 108 pesticides.
3396 "Effects of Field Applications of Heptachlor on Bobwhite Quail and Other Wild Animals". Walter Rosene, Jr. Journal of Wildlife Management 29(3) : 554-580. July 1965. Study of wildlife on two areas of Decatur County, Georgia that had been treated with heptachlor for eradication of the imported fire ant. Harmful effects of the chemical on the quail and other species are documented.
3397 "The Last Boll Weevil". Kevin P. Shea. Environment 16(5) : 8-10. June 1974. The largest insect eradication program ever undertaken in the United States may be the effort to eliminate the boll weevil in the South.
3378 "Some Vanishing Scenic Features of the Southeastern States". Roland M. Harper. Natural Hlatory 19(2) : 192-204. 1919. Stone Mountain, Okefenokee Swamp, and Tallulah Falls are examined.
3379 "Exploring a Georgia Wonderland". A. S. Furcron. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 5(5) : 135-137. 1952. Panther Creek and Davidson Creek in Stephens and Habersham Counties are described and recommended as being suitable for state or national parks.
3380 "Georgia's Own Mountain Wilderness- The Cooper Creek Scenic Area". C. H. Wharton. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 13(2) : 57-65. 1960. The 124D-acre tract in Union County, Georgia, a small watershed of near-virgin timber, is a unique, largely undisturbed natural area.
GENERAL REGIONS
Highlands Northwest Piedmont Coastal Plain
PLANTS
92
Plants
At.GAE AQUATIC PLANTS BRYOPHYTE$ FERNS FUNGI GARDENING AND LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE GRANITE OUTCROP PLANTS MEDICINAL AND POISONOUS PLANTS
AND WILD FOODS ORIGINAL VEGETATION TREES WEEDS WILDFLOWERS MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL
3318 M..,ual ollhe Southualern Flore. John Kunkel Small. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill, N.C. 1933. 1576 pp.
33911 Flore of lhe Southern United St81e1. Third Edition. A. W. Chapman. American Book Company. New York. 1897. xl + 655 pp.
3400 ReiOUrcet of the Southern Field end Forette, Medical, Economical, ..,d Agricultural. Being Al.o Medical Botany of the Conteclerste Stalel; WHh Pr8c:Ucallnform811on on the U.mul ProperUee of the T,..., Plante, end Shrube. Francis Peyre Porcher. SteamPower Press ol Evans & Cogswell. Charleston, S.C. 1863. Reprinted 1970 by Arno Press, New York, xxv + 601 pp.
3401 Genera of lhe Soulhee1tem Plante; A Guide to the Genera of NeUve end Commonly Introduced Fem1 end Seed Pl..,te otlhe Soulhe..tern United Stalel Excluding Penln1ule Florlcle. Wade T. Batson. Published by the author. Printed by The State Printing Co., Columbia, S.C. 1972. 151 pp. Guide for the identification of the 1100 genera of the region.
3402 UMr'l Guide: VegeteUon; The Georgie RetOUrce ANeumenl Program. [Robert T. Segrest and Bruce Q. Rado]. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section. Atlanta. 1975. [iv] + 21 pp. Guide to use of vegetation maps prepared as part of the Resource Assessment Program. Issued at scales of 1 : 63,360 and 1 : 250,000, these maps delineate vegetational associations for all areas of the state.
3403 "Bibliography of Georgia Botany". Haskell Venard. Ctanee 34(3) : 267-306. September 1969.
REGIONS
Highlands
3404. "Toward a Natural Delineation of the Area Known as the Southern Appalachian Highlands". D. S. Blauch. Ce1tanee 40(3) : 197-201. September 1975. "An attempt is made to delimit the Southern Appalachian Highlands on a natural ecological basis rather than using political or physiographical boundaries".
3405 The Biological Survey of the Ch81tehoochee N811onel Foret!. Marie B. MeII inger [Route 1, Tiger, Georgia 30576]. 1970. Unpublished. In three parts: (1) Flora; (2) Fauna; (3) Areas and recommendations for recreational areas and natural areas within the National Forest.
3408 A Supplementary Report of the Committee lor the Biological Survey of the Chattahoochee Netlonel F - t for 1971-1972. Marie B. Mellinger, comp. [Route 1, Tiger, Georgia 30576]. No date. Unpublished.
3407 "Floristic and Vegetational Survey of the Chattooga River Gorge". David M. DuMond. Ce1tanu 35(4) : 201-244. December 1970.
3408 "The Vascular Flora of the Olivine Deposits of North Carolina and Georgia". Albert E. Radford. Journel of lhe Ellehe MltcheH Science Socl81y 64: 45-106. 1948. One of the several areas studied is in Rabun County, Georgia.
3409 The Veeculer Flore of lhe Olivine Depoelte of North Caroline end Georgie. Albert E. Radford. Doctoral dissertation, 1948, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, N.C.
3410 "Southern Appalachian Grass Balds". B. W. Wells. Journal of the Ell1he Mitchell Science Society 53: 1-26. 1937.
c... 3411 A Geographic Approach to Vege1811on Problem: The
of the Southern Appe-
lechlen Greuy Beida. Philip Joel Gersmehl. Doctoral dissertation, 1970, University of
Georgia. 477 pp.
3412 An Ecological Study of lhe Grsu Baldi of the Southern Appelechlen Mountain. Alan Francis Mark. Doctoral dissertation, 1958, Duke University. Durham, N.C. 379 pp.
3413 "The Ecology of the Southern Appalachian Grass Balds". A. F. Mark. Ecological Monograph 28(4) : 293-336. October 1958.
Northwest Georgia
3414 Compoeltlon, Dlveralty, end Structure of the VegetaUon of Some Natural Pond In North-1 Georgie. Philip French-Carson Greear. Doctoral dissertation, 1967, University of Georgia. 215 pp.
3415 Plent Communlt... of a PorUon of Floyd County, Georgie - Elpeclally the Mershell F - l Emma Lewis Lipps. Doctoral dissertation, 1966, University of Tennessee. Knoxville. 228 pp.
3416 "The Vascular Flora of the Marshall Forest, Rome, Georgia". E. L. Lipps and H. R.
c.. DeSelm. tanu 34(4) : 414-432. December 1969.
3417 Plant Ecology of the Berry School Property, Floyd County, Georgie. Harold C. Jones. Doctoral dissertation, 1941, George Peabody College for Teachers. Nashville, Tenn.
3418 "The Full-Glacial Vegetation of Northwestern Georgia". W. A. Watts. Ecology 51(1): 17-33. Winter 1970.
Piedmont
3419 "Notes on the Flora of Middle Georgia". Roland M. Harper. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 27(6) : 320-341. June 1900. The area studied lies within portions of Clarke, Jackson, Oconee, Walton, and Morgan counties.
3420 Analyeu of Urban Plant Communltlel of Atlanta, Georgie. Anne Casteen Lund. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, Emory University. "The naturally occurring vascula plant communities of urban Atlanta, Georgia, are described, and an attempt is made to explain their composition in terms of biological properties, geographical origin, and ethnobotanical signitifance of component species. Three community types are distinguished and described on the basis of: severity of disturbance, habitats, species composition, and life duration of common and conspicuous species."
3421 "The Flora and Phytogeography of the Pine Mountain Region of Georgia". Samuel B. Jones, Jr. Ceatanee 39(2): 113-149. June 1974. "The Pine Mountain region of West-Central Georgia [Meriwether, Harris, Talbot, and Upson counties] has been of interest to plant scientists since R. M. Harper called attention to the interesting admixture of Coastal Plain and Mountain species in 1903. The geology, physiography, soils, climate, and regional land-use history are discussed. Included is a floristic checklist of the vascular flora of the western p~rtion of the region ... The phytogeographical implications of the flora are compared with reference to several features of the environment, history, and biota of the area".
3422 "Plant Species Diversity in Old-Field Succession on the Georgia Piedmont". Stuart A. Nicholson and Carl D. Monk. EcolOgy 55(5) : 1075-1085. 1974.
3423 Special DIYeralty In Old Field Succeulon on the Georgie Piedmont. Stuart Adams Nicholson. Doctoral dissertation, 1970, University of Georgia. 115 pp.
3424 AqueUc Vaacular Flore ol Soma Arttflclel Pond of the We~tern Piedmont of Georgia. Willie David Gunn. Doctoral dissertation, 1974, University of Georgia. 230 pp.
3425 "Colonization of an Isolated Pine Plantation by Woody Plants". Wilbur Duncan and Willie Gunri. BulleUn of the Georgie Academy of Science 29(3) : 191-199. June 1971. Eighteen species of woody plants were found to be colonizing an isolated loblolly pine plantation near Athens. Sixteen percent were species with winged propagules; wind was found to be the major distributor of these. Of non-winged species it was found that distribution was accomplished solely by birds, mostly blue jays, robins, catbirds, and mockingbirds.
3426 Flore of lhe AquaUc Hebftate of Clerke County, Georgia. Marion Bennett Duncan. Masters thesis, 1942, University of Georgia. [40] pp.
3427 "Vascular Flora of the Crevices of Paved Surfaces of Athens, Georgia". Wilbur H. Duncan and Eric C. Meyer. Bulletin of the Georgia Acedemy of Science 27(1) : 22-40. January 1969.
3428 The Sympetalae of Clarke County, Georgie. Kathleen Merry Drewry. Masters thesis, 1929, University of Georgia. 36 pp.
3429 "Some Coastal Plain Plants in the Piedmont Region of Georgia". Roland M. Harper. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 36 : 563-593. 1909.
3430 "A Disjunct Stand of Hemlock in the Georgia Piedmont". F. H. Borman and Robert B. Platt. Ecology 39(1) : 16-23. January 1958. A stand of hemlock in Hall County, the southernmost outlier of hemlock known in the state, was investigated prior to its submergence under Lake Lanier.
93
Plants
3431 The Standing Crop and Producttvlty of a Rock Outcrop In the Middle Oconee River, Georgia. Daniel J. Nelson. Doctoral dissertation, 1957, University of Georgia. 118 pp.
Coastal Plain
3432 Native Flora of the Golden Isles. Gladys Fendig and Esther Stewart. Published by the authors. N.p. 1970. [iii]+ 144 pp.
3433 Vagetatton of St. Catherlnes Island, Ga. Jack McCormick and Associates, Inc. for American Museum of Natural History. New York. 1972. 46 pp.
3434 Studies on the VagetaUon of Cerlaln Coastal Islands In the Mouth of the Savannah River, Georgia. Don Edgar Eyles. Masters thesis, 1939, Emory University. 225 pp.
3435 The Vaacular Flora of Central South Georgia. Wayne R. Faircloth. Doctoral dissertation, 1971. University of Georgia. 224 pp. The region studied includes the following counties: Ben Hill, Berrien, Brooks, Colquitt, Cook, Decatur, Echols, Grady, Irwin, Lanier, Lowndes, Mitchell, Thomas, Tift, Turner, and Worth.
3436 "The Vascular Plants of Southwestern Georgia". Robert F. Thorne. American Midland Naturalist 52(2) : 257-327. October 1954. Included in the area studied are all or parts of the following counties: Baker, Calhoun, Clay, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Grady, Lee, Miller, Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Seminole, Stewart, Sumter, Terrell, Webster, and Worth.
3437 The Flora ot Southwestern Georgia. Robert F. Thorne. Doctoral dissertation, 1950, Cornell University.
3438 "Inland Plants on the Gulf Coastal Plain of Georgia". Robert F. Thorne. Caatanea 14(2) : 88-97. 1949.
3439 "Notes on the Flora of South Georgia". Roland M. Harper. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 27(8): 413-436. August 1900. Plants in Sumter County, Georgia are listed by habitat.
3440 "Explorations in the Coastal Plain of Georgia During the Season of 1902". Roland M. Harper. Bullattn of the Torrey Botanical Club 31 : 9-27. 1904.
3441 "Phytogeographical Explorations in the Coastal Plain of Georgia in 1903". Roland M. Harper. BulleUn of the Torrey Botanical Club 32: 141-171. 1905.
3442 "Phytogeographical Explorations in the Coastal Plain of Georgia in 1904". Roland M. Harper. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 32: 451-467. 1905.
3443 "Some New or Otherwise Noteworthy Plants from the Coastal Plain of Georgia". Roland M. Harper. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 33: 229-245. 1906.
3444 "A Phytogeographical Sketch of the Altamaha Grit Region of the Coastal Plain of Georgia". Roland M. Harper. Annals of the New York Academy of Science 17(Part 1) : 1-414. 1906. A study of the vegetational-geological relationships of the area. The Altamaha Grit region (an obsolete term) lies generally within the area of Miocene rocks of the middle portion of the Georgia Coastal Plain.
3445 A Sociologic and Geographic Study of the Sand Ridge Vegetation In the Coastal Plain of Georgia. John Russell Bozeman. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, N.C. 272 pp.
3448 "Floristic and Edaphic Studies of the Altamaha River Sand Ridge, Georgia". John R. Bozeman. Elllotua (Notes from the Herbarium of Georgia Southern College) 3 : 1-74. 1965.
3447 Floristic and Edaphlc Studies of the Altamaha River Sand Ridge, Georgia. John R. Bozeman. Masters thesis, 1964, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, N.C.
3448 "Ecological Problems of the Southeastern United States Coastal Plain". B. W. Wells. Botanical Review 8(8): 533-561. October 1942.
3449 "Southern Mixed Hardwood Forest: Climax in the Southeastern Coastal Plain, U.S.A.". Elsie Quarterman and Catherine Keever. Ecological Monographs 32(2): 167-185. Spring 1962.
3450 "The Role of Magnolia and Beech in Forest Processes in the Tallahassee, Florida [and] Thomasville, Georgia Area". Robert S. Blaisdell, Jean Wooten, and R. K. Godfrey. Proceedings Annual Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference (Tallahassee) 13 : 363-397. 1973.
3451 "Forest Associations in the Uplands of the Lower Gulf Coastal Plain (Longleaf Pine Belt)". L. J. Pessin. Ecology 14(1): 1-14. January 1933. The region described includes the Coastal Plain of Georgia.
3452 "The Moss Forest". Archie Carr. Audubon 73(5): 36-51. September 1971. The ecology of the live oak-Spanish moss forests of the Southeastern coastal plain is examined.
3453 "The Ecology of Spanish Moss (Tillandsia usneoides): Its Growth and Distribution". R. E. Garth. Ecology 45(3): 70-81. Summer 1964.
3454 "A Phytosociological Study of the Castalia-Myriophyllum Community of Georgia Coastal Plain Boggy Ponds". Don Edgar Eyles. American Midland Naturalist 26:421-438. 1941.
ALGAE
3455 "A Qualitative and Quantitative Study of the Plankton Algae in Southwestern Georgia". George J. Schumacher. American Midland Naturalist 56(1) : 68-115. July 1956.
3458 A Qualllatlve and QuantltaUge Study of the Plankton Algae In Southwestam Georgia. George J. Schumacher. Doctoral dissertation, 1953, Cornell University. Ithaca, N.Y. 190 pp.
3457 "The Macroscopic Marine Algae of Sapelo Island and Other Sites on the Georgia Coast". Russell L. Chapman. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 29(1) : 77-89. January 1971.
3458 "An Addition to the Macroscopic Marine Algal Flora of Georgia, the Genus Cladophora". Russell L. Chapman. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 31(3) : 147150. June 1973. "Five species of Cladophora collected from Sapelo Island and other sites along the Georgia coast are added to the list of macroscopic marine algae previously reported for these localities. Brief comments on distribution are presented...
3459 ln-tlgaUon and Report of Brown Dinoflagellate Occurring In Lake Sidney Lanier, Georgia. U. S. Army Engineer District, Mobile. Mobile, Alabama. October 1970. 7 pp. The report describes the investigation of a nuisance white to brown algal bloom which recurs in Lake Sidney Lanier. The rare alga has not been taxonomically classified. The report describes the mechanism of the bloom and attempts to ascertain the toxicity, life cycle, nutritional requirements and control measures of the algae.
AQUATIC PLANTS
3480 A Guide and Kay to the Aquatic Plants of the Southstem Unllad Statae. Don E. Eyles and J. Lynne Robertson, Jr. Public Health Bulletin No. 286. U.S. Public Health Service. 1944. Reprinted 1963 by U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife as Circular 158. Guide for identification of Southeastern freshwater plants.
3461 Underwater and Ftoattng-Laaved Plants of the United States and Canada. Neil Hotchkiss. Resource Publication No. 44. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. Washington, D.C. May 1967. viii+ 124 pp.
3482 Common Marsh Plants of the Unllad States and Canada. Neil Hotchkiss. Resource Publication No. 93. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife. Washington, D. C. December 1970. vi+ 99 pp.
3483 Common Marsh, Underwater and Floatlng-Lved Plants of the United States and Canada. Neil Hotchkiss. Dover Publications, Inc. New York. 1972. vi+ 124 pp. Unabridged and unaltered republication of Resource Publication 44 and Resource Publication 93 of the U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife (see above).
3484 Planning for Comprehensive Program for AquaUc Plant Control: State General Design Memorandum lor Georgia. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. September 1968. 50 pp.
BRYOPHYTES
3485 "Mosses of Georgia; A Check List of Species Which Have Been Collected Within the State". Robert K. Lampton. Bullettn of the Georgia Academy of Science 28(3) : 81-98. June 1970.
3468 "More Mosses from Stone Mountain, Georgia and vicinity". Ruth S. Breen and Ronald A. Pursell. Bryologlat 59: 184-186. 1956.
3467 "Liverworts of Georgia - An Annotated List". Don L. Jacobs. American Midland Naturalist 52(1): 68-74. July 1954.
3468 "Bryological Note on Stone Mountain, Georgia". Alfred Clebsh. Bryologlst 57 : 20-21. 1954.
3489 "Additional Mosses of Stone Mountain, Georgia". Irma Schnooberger. Bryologlst 51 : 32. 1948.
3470 "The Mosses of Georgia II. The Coastal Plain". Ruth Olive Schornherst. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 73: 155-166. 1946.
3471 "The Bryophytes of the Appalachian Plateau in Northern Georgia". Gladys Carroll. Bryologlst 48: 11-24. 1945.
3472 "Mosses of Stone Mountain, Georgia". Ruth 0. Schornherst. Bryologlst 48 : 29-33. 1945.
3473 "Bryology in the Okelinokee". Abel Joel Grout. Bryologlst 44: 120-122. 1941.
3474 "Some Hepaticae from Northeastern Georgia". Dorothy Parker. Bryologlst 44: 154. 1941.
94
Plants
FERNS
3475 Ferns of Georgie. Rogers McVaughn and Joseph H. Pyron. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1951. 202 pp.
3478 "New Records for Georgia Ferns". Wilbur H. Duncan. American Fem Joumal 45 : 1-10. January- March 1955. Partially updates McVaugh and Pyron (above].
3477 "The Fern Flora of Georgia". Roland M. Harper. Fem Bulletin 13: 1-17. 1905.
3478 Fems of the Southeaatem States. John Kunkel Small. Science Press. Lancaster. Pa. 1938. 517 pp.
3479 "Ferns and Other Primitive Vascular Plants of Central South Georgia". Wayne R. Faircloth. Castanea 40(3) : 217-228. September 1975. The area studied involves all or portions of the following counties: Ben Hill, Berrien, Brooks, Colquitt, Cook, Decatur, Echols, Grady, Irwin, Lanier, Lowndes, Mitchell, Thomas, Tilt, Turner, and Worth.
3480 "Fern Records for Echols County and the State of Georgia". Juanita Norsworthy. American Fem Joumal56: 55-57. 1966.
FUNGI
3481 "Georgia Pyrenomycetes 1". J. H. Miller and G. E. Thompson. Mycologla 32: 1-15. January - February 1940.
3482 "Georgia Pyrenomycetes II". J. H. Miller. Mycotogla 33 : 74-81. January- February 1941.
3483 "Georgia Pyrenomycetes Ill". J. H. Miller and G. Burton. Mycologla 34: 1-7. 1942.
3484 "Notes on the Tremellales of Georgia". Lindsay S. Olive. Mycologla 39 : 90-108. 1947.
3485 "A Survey of the Fungi of Forest and Cultivated Soils of Georgia". J. H. Miller, J.E. Giddens and A. A. Foster. Mycologla 49: 779-808. 1957.
3488 A Revlllon of the Ascomycetes of Georgia. Richard T. Hanlin. Mimeo Series N.S. 175. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. July 1963. 68 pp.
3487 "Ascomycetes of Georgia". Julian Howell Miller. Plant Disease Reporter Supplement 131 :31-93. 1941.
3488 Host Index to the Ascomycetes of Georgia. Richard T. Hanlin. Mimeo Series N.S. 185. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. February 1964. 65 pp.
3489 The Buidlomycetea of Georgia. Richard T. Hanlin. Mimeo Series N.S. 257. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. July 1968.36 pp.
3490 Host Index to the Basidiomycetes of Georgia. Richard T. Hanlin. Mimeo Series N.S. 280. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. November 1968. 30 pp.
3499 Ornamental Grasses for Georgia. W. L. Corley. Research Report 217. University of Georgia [College of Agriculture Experiment Stations]. Athens. December 1975. 14 pp.
3500 Garden Gateways. Garden Club of Georgia, Inc. Atlanta. Bi-monthly, except July and August. The official bulletin of the Garden Club of Georgia.
GRANITE OUTCROP PLANTS
3501 A Study of the Flora of Stone Mountain and Vicinity. Mattie Lou McCullough Smith. Masters thesis, 1938, Emory University. 71 pp.
3502 "Some Aspects of Stone Mountain and its Vegetation." Elmer Grant Campbell. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science 31 : 91-100. 1921.
3503 "Some Interesting Plants on the Granite Outcrops of Georgia". W. B. Baker. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 9(1): 10-19. 1956.
3504 "Lichen Growth on Granite Flatrocks in Georgia". Gayther L. Plummer and J.B. Moncrief, Jr. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 22: 58-63. September 1964.
3505 Analylls of Diamorpha Systems on Granite Outcrops. J. D. Hay. Emory University. Atlanta. 1973. 111 pp. NTIS number: OR0-2412-46.
3506 A Study of Certain Environmental and Physlologlcel Factors Influencing the Adaptation of Three Granite Outcrop Endemics: Amphianthus pusillus Torr., /soetes melanospora Engelm., and Diamorpha cymosa (Null.) Britton. William T. Lammers. Doctoral dissertation, 1958, Emory University. Atlanta. 92 pp.
3507 Ecological Life Cycle of Viguiera porteri and Factors Responsible for Its Endemism to Granite Outcrops of Georgia and Alabama. Abram Clair Mellinger. Doctoral dissertation. 1972. University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, N.C. 140 pp.
3508 "The Vegetation of the Granitic Flat-Rocks of the Southeastern United States". Rogers McVaugh. Ecological Monographs 13: 119-166. 1943.
3509 A Survey of the Flora of Mount Panola. Mary Jeanne Matthews. Masters thesis, 1941, Emory University. 94 pp.
3510 "Vascular Plants of Panola Mountain, Georgia". P. E. Bostick. Castanea 36(3). 194209. September 1971. "Panola Mountain, a granite outcrop southeast of Atlanta in DeKalb County, Georgia, has been conserved as one of the last undisturbed habitats of its kind in the southeast. The 471-acre tract is invaluable in teaching and research. Little change in the vegetation of the rock outcrop has occurred over a thirty year period. Four hundred and six vascular plant taxa were identified in the area in 1970".
3511 "Granite Outcrop Communities of the Piedmont Plateau in Georgia." Madeline P. Burbanck and Robert B. Platt. Ecology 45(2) : 292-306. Spring 1964. The characteristic plant communities of granite outcrops near Atlanta are studied with emphasis upon their seasonal aspects, the relative abundance of component species, and the role of succession in their composition.
3512 The Vascular Flora of Echols Mill Granitic Outcrop. Florence Montgomery Givens. Masters thesis. 1971. University of Georgia. 157 pp. The study area is in Oglethorpe County, Georgia.
GARDENING AND LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
3491 Trees and Shrubs for the Southeast. Brooks E. Wigginton. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1963. viii + 296 pp. Manual for landscape architects.
3492 Trees and Shrubs In the Heart of Dixie. Revised ed. Blanche Evans Dean. Southern University Press. Birmingham, Ala. 1968. xviii + 246 pp.
3493 Shade and Ornamental Trees for Georgia. Circular 448. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. October 1973.
3494 Landscape Plant Materials for Georgia. Rev. ed. Thomas G. Williams. Bulletin 625. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. May 1968. 31 pp.
3495 Native Plant Materials. Thomas G. Williams. Leaflet No. 125. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. December 1971.
3496 A Selected List of Trees, Shrubs, Groundcovers and Vines for Georgia Landscapes. Thomas Griffith Williams. Masters thesis, 1962, University of Georgia. 48 pp.
3497 Gardening In the Lower South. Revised ed. H. Harold Hume. Macmillan. New York. 1954. xii + 377 pp.
3498 Hudson's Southern Gardening. Charles J. Hudson. Tupper & Love. Atlanta. 1953. XV+ 464 pp.
3513 "Studies on the Ecological Life History of Portulaca smallir'. David J. Cotter and Robert B. Platt. Ecology 40(4) : 651-668. October 1959. Portulaca smallii (purslane or rock moss) is one of about 15 species endemic to the granite outcrops of the Piedmont Plateau of the Southeast.
3514 "Ecology of Diamorpha cymosa". Deems N. Wiggs and Robert B. Platt. Ecology 43(4) : 654-670. Autumn 1962. The life history of Diamorpha cymosa was investigated to determine why the distribution of this plant species is limited to granite outcrops. Outcrops selected for study included Mount Arabia, Mount Rollaway, and Stone Mountain.
3515 "Studies of the Flora of the Granite Outcrops of Georgia". Woolford B. Baker. Emory University Quarterly 1(3) . 162-171. October 1945. The endemic plants of the exposed granite masses of the Piedmont region are described briefly. These include Diamorpha cymosa, Sabulina brevitolia, Viguiera porteri, and the rare Amphianthus pusillus.
3516 "Heggie Rock Flowers Like a Garden" Vinnie Williams. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 10, 1974. Pp. 12-14, 17. Diamorpha cymosa is one of the beautiful plants found on Heggie Rock, an impressive granite outcropping in Columbia County. Viguiera porteri and Spanish moss are surpris ingly found here. The rock is also a notable historic site.
3517 stone Mountain's September Gold". William A. Bake, Jr. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 9, 1973. Pp. 16-17,20-21. An amateur botanist, the Reverend Thomas C. Porter collected a specimen of the previously little known daisy, Viguiera porteri, from Stone Mountain in 1846. Today the unique. spectacular flower can still be seen on its only habitat, the granite outcrops of Georgia and neighboring states.
95
Plants
MEDICINAL AND POISONOUS PLANTS AND WILD FOODS
3518 Poisonous Plants of the Southeastern United States. Wilbur H. Duncan, Professor of Botany, University of Georgia. Published by the author. Athens, Georgia. 1955, revised 1958. 43 pp.
3519 Poisonous Plants of Georgia. Wilbur H. Duncan and Thomas J. Jones. Bulletin of the University of Georgia 49(13). 1949. iv + 46 pp.
3520 Some Medicinal and Poisonous Plants of Georgia. Robert Sherman Justice. Bulletin of the University of Georgia 39(9). July 1939. iii+ 49 pp.
3521 A Guide to Medicinal Plants of Appalachia. U. S. Forest Service. Handbook No. 400. U.S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D.C. 1971. 291 pp.
3522 Compendium of Medicinal Plants of Southeastern United States. Seldon D. Feurt. University of Georgia, School of Pharmacy. Athens. [1959]. 4 vols. Unpublished.
3523 "Medicinal Plants". Ann Barber. Outdoors In Georgia 3(12): 21-24. December 1974.
3524 "Old Remedies Kill or Cure?". Jeannie Roe Gilmore. Georgia Magazine 13(3) 20-21. October- November 1969. Plants used for medicinal purposes in Georgia are described.
3525 "What Danger Lurks?". Gibson Johnston, Jr. Outdoors In Georgia 4(3) : 24-27. March 1975. Common poisonous plants found in Georgia are listed; their toxic parts and the symptoms from eating or touching them are indicated.
3526 stalking the Wild Ginseng". Henry Woodhead. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 26, 1975. Pp. 8, 10, 13-14. On hunting the medicinal plant Panax quinquefolium, or wild ginseng, in the north Georgta mountains.
3527 "Pretty Deadly". Leonard Foote. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 17, 1969. Pp. 20-21, 23, 30. Georgia has about 100 poisonous plants. The author photographs and describes several of these dangerous species.
3528 Edible Wild Plants of Eastern North America. Revised ed. Merritt Lyndon Fernald and Alfred Charles Kinsey, revised by Reed C. Rollins. Harper & Row. New York and Evanston. 1958. xvi + 452 pp.
3529 "Wild Food on the Coast". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 6, 1973. Pp. 10-12, 14, 46. Euell Gibbons, a wild-foods enthusiast, tours Cumberland and St. Simons Islands searching for natural delicacies.
ORIGINAL VEGETATION
3530 "The Original Forests of the Georgia Piedmont". Thomas C. Nelson. Ecology 38(3) : 390-397. July 1957.
3531 "18th Century Forests in Georgia". Gayther L. Plummer. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 33. 1-19. 1975.
3532 "The Great Pine Barrens". John H. Goff. Emory University Quarterly 5(1) : 20-31. March 1949. Historical sketch of the great pine forest of the Southeast's Coastal Plain, early settlers' and visitors' reactions to it, and what it is today.
3539 Trees of the Southeaotern Stateo. William Chambers Coker and H. R. Totten. Universtty of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill, N.C. 1945. ~19 pp.
3540 Guide to Southern Trees. Ellwood S. Harrar and J. George Harrar. Dover Publications Inc. New York. 1946, 1962. 709 pp.
3541 Sllvlco qf Forest Trees of the United States. U. S. Forest Service. Agriculture Hand-
book No. 271. U.S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D.C. 1965. 762 pp.
Life histories and habitat conditions of tree species are summarized. For most species
distribution maps are included. These show detail to the county level. Also include lists of
references for each species.
3542 Important Trees of Eastern Forests. R. W. Neelands, ed. U.S. Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. 1973. 111 pp.
3543 "AFA's Social Register of Big Trees". American Forests 79(4) : 21-47. April 1973. A listing of the largest reported specimens of the native and naturalized trees of the United States.
3544 State and National Tree Champlono. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon, Georgia. Frequently revised listing available from the Georgia Forestry Commission. A listing of the largest reported specimens of the native and naturalized trees of Georgia. Those trees that are also "National Champions" are noted.
3545 Native Trees of Georgia, 2nd ed. G. Norman Bishop. Georgia Department of Forestry; Georgia Agricultural Extension Service; and University of Georgia School of Forestry. Atlanta and Athens. November 1948. 96 pp. First edition published December 1940. See
also entry no. 3534.
3546 Keys to Common Trees of the Southeast. Bulletin No. 730. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. July 1974.
3547 Trees of the South. Charlotte Hilton Green. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1939. xiv + 551 pp.
3548 "Preliminary Reports on the Flora of Georgia. 2. Distribution of 87 Trees". Wilbur H. Duncan. American Midland Naturalist 43(3) : 742-761. May 1950.
WEEDS
3549 Georgia Weeds and How to Control Them. Edwin James and E. D. Alexander. Bulletin 502. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Agricultural Extension Service. Athens. 1952. 99 pp.
3550 "More and More Weeds in Georgia". Wilbur H. Duncan. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 12(4) : 99-103. September 1954. Additions to the lists of Georgia weeds by James and Alexander (1943 and 1952).
3551 Weeds of the Southern United Stateo. University of Georgia, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. [1969?]. 44 pp. An aid for recognition of 120 of the more common weeds. With color photographs, descriptions, and common and botanical names.
3552 Weed Identification. James F. Miller. Bulletin 632. University of Georgia College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. 1964. 97 pp. Techniques for identification. Includes general descriptions for 27 families, lists the 233 most common genera to be encountered as weeds, and uses 100 species to illustrate special characteristics.
3553 Common Weeds of the United States. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. Dover Publications. New York. 1971. An unaltered republication of Selected Weeds of the United States, U. S. Government Printing Office, 1970. Arranged by type, with descriptions, maps and drawings, glossary, and index.
TREES
3533 Guide to Georgia Trees. Wilbur H. Duncan. Universi.ty of Georgia Press. Athens. 1941. 63 pp. Aid to identification with notes on abundance, habitat, and distribution.
3534 Native Trees of Georgia, 3rd ed. G. Norman Bishop. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon. 1973. [48] pp.
3535 Key to Georgia Trees. Charles Newton Elliott. Bulletin 13. Georgia Forest Service. Atlanta. 1931. 54+ xvi pp.
3536 Georgia Trees. Wilson H. Wright. Georgia Forestry Commission. Macon. No date. 24 pp.
3537 Common Forest Trees of Georgia: How to Know Them. A Pocket Manual. W. R. Mattoon and Thomas D. Burleigh. Bulletin No. 291. Georgia State College of Agriculture. Athens. 1923. 80 pp. Reprinted 1936 by Georgia Department of Forestry and Geological Development.
3538 "Forests and Trees of Georgia". Roland M. Harper. In: Proceedings of the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Georgia State Horticultural Society, October, 1929, pp. 45-54.
WILDFLOWERS
3554 Wildflowers of the Southeastern United States. Wilbur H. Duncan and Leonard E. Foote. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1975. viii+ 296 pp. Comprehensive reference work and field guide. Gives for each species: common and scientific names; photograph; recognition characteristics; abundance; ecological and geographical distribution; flowering period; and economic value, if any. Also notes poisonous species.
3355 Wild Flowers of the United States- Volume Two- The Southeastern States. Harold William Rickett. Publication of the New York Botanical Garden. McGraw-Hill Book Company. New York. 1968. 2 vols.
3556 Southern Wild Flowers and Trees. Alice Lounsberry and Mrs. Ellis Rowan. Frederick A. Stokes Company. New York. 1901. xxxi + 570 pp.
3557 Wild Flowers of Georgia. 2d ed. Woolford B. Baker. Published by Mrs. Edmund Francis Cook, West Point, Georgia. 1956. 15 pp.
3558 Wildflowers of Alabama and Adjoining States. Blanche E. Dean, Amy Mason, and Joab L. Thomas. University of Alabama Press. [c1973]. xxii + 230 pp.
96
Population and Growth
3559 Flowers of the South; Native and Exotic. Wilhelmina F. Greene and Hugo L. Blomquist. University of North Carolina Press. Chapel Hill. 1953. xvi + 208 pp.
35*' A Prog111mmecl Guida to Selected Spring Wild Flowe,. of North Georgia. Marion Angelo Skelton. Doctoral dissertation, 1968. University of Georgia. viii+ 164 pp.
3561 "The Importance of Wild Flowers'' Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Conotltutlon Magazine May 23. 1971. Pp. 24-26, 28. 30. Dozens of species. some important to man. may become extinct due to controversial uses of the land such as channelization and clearcutting.
3562 "Sky-Paint Flowers of the Cherokees". Martha Fort Prince. Atlanta Journal and Conotltutlon Magazine April 15, 1973. Pp. 14-16, 18, 21-22. Georgia has eleven different species of native azaleas. the most of any state, thanks to many variations in elevation and climate. The flame azalea (Rhododendron calendulaceum), known to the Cherokees as the Sky-Paint Flower, was probably discovered first among white men by John or William Bartram.
3563 "A Passion For Wild Flowers". Para Lee Brock. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 14, 1974. Pp. 16-18, 22, 24-25. A "nature lover" discusses Georgia's variety of blooms and an artist who painted them, Mary Motz Wills.
MISCELLANEOUS
3564 "Noteworthy Plants of Georgia". Arthur Cronquist. Castanea 14 . 101-108. 1949.
3565 "Vascular Plants Previously Unreported from Georgia". Robert F. Thorne. Castanea 16 : 29-48. 1951.
3566 "Some Popular Plant-Names Used in Georgia". Roland M. Harper: Torreya 1 : 115117. 1901.
3567 "On a Collection of Plants Made in Georgia in the Summer of 1900". Roland M. Harper. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 28 . 454-484. 1901.
3568 "Botanical Explorations in Georgia in the Summer of 1901". Roland M. Harper. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 30: 282-295, 319-342. 1903.
3569 "Effects of Fire on Vegetation of the Southeastern United States". Kenneth H. Garren. Botanical Review 9(9). 617-654. November 1943.
3570 "Fire in the Southeastern Grasslands". Richard J. Vogl. Proceedings Annual Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference 12: 175-198. 1972.
3571 "The Cherokee Rose". Paul Tabor. Georgia Review 14(3) : 231-236. Fall 1960. Historical notes on Georgia's State Flower.
3572 "An Annotated Checklist of Carex (Cyperaceae) in Georgia". G. E. Gibbs Russell and Wilbur H. Duncan. Caotanea 37(3) . 200-214. September 1972.
3573 "The Characeae of Southeastern United States". Madhav C. Chaudhary and R.D. Wood. American Midland Naturalist 90(2): 413-446. October 1973.
3574 "The Genus Gay/ussacia (Ericaceae) in Georgia". Wilbur H. Duncan and Nell E. Brittain. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 24(1). 13-26. January 1966. "In Georgia, the genus consists of six species of erect deciduous or occasionally persistentleaved shrubs. They are'commonly called Huckleberries. Gopherberries. or Buckberries".
3575 ''Preliminary Reports on the Flora of Georgia - I. The Distribution in Georgia of Spermatophytes New to or Rare in the State". Wilbur H. Duncan. Castanea 13(2): 70-83. June 1948.
3576 "Preliminary Reports on the Flora of Georgia: Ill. The Distribution of Seven Lycopsida". Wilbur H. Duncan. American Fern Journal 40: 169-173. 1950.
3577 "Preliminary Reports on the Flora of Georgia. 4. Notes on the Distribution of Flowering Plants, Including Species New to the State". Wilbur H. Duncan. Castanea 15 . 145159. 1950.
3578 Woody VInes of the Southeastern United States. Wilbur Howard Duncan. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1975. 75 pp.
3579 "Woody Vines of the Southeastern States". Wilbur H. Cuncan. SIDA Contributions to Botany 3(1): 1-76. 1967.
3580 "Rise and Decline of the 'Miracle Vine': Kudzu in the Southern Landscape". John J. Winberry and David M. Jones. Southeastern Geographer 13(2) . 61-70. November 1973.
3581 100 Native Forage Grasses In 11 Southern States. Agricultural Handbook No. 389. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Washington, D.C. 1971.
3582 "Into the Woods With Bot Soc-ers". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine December 31, 1972. Pp. 5, 10-11. The Georgia Botanical Society promotes the study of plants and their relationship to the environment, leads field trips for research and enjoyment, and supports the preservation of certain areas for the unhindered growth of wild and cultivated flora. A recent accomplishment is the wildflower garden on the grounds of Georgia's Governor's Mansion.
3583 "Doing What Comes Naturally". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 24, 1975. Pp. 16-18, 20-22, 24. On the conservation efforts of Marie Mellinger, a free-lance naturalist from Rabun County, a past-president of the Georgia Botanical Society and a lecturer at the Hambidge Center near Dillard. Her activities center around the identification and preservation of wildflowers.
POPULATION AND GROWTH
POPULATION
3584 Annual Estimate of Population lor the State of Georgia, 1974. Ron Crowe and Tom Wagner. Georgia Office of Planning and Budget, State Data Center. Atlanta. July 1975. 13 pp.
3585 Estimates of Population of Georgia Counties and Metropolitan Areas, July 1, 1973 and 1974. Current Population Reports: Series P-26. U.S. Bureau of Census. Suitland, Md. July 1975. 8 pp.
3586 City Population Estimates 1974. Ron Crowe and Tom Wagner. Georgia Office of Planning and Budget, State Data Center. Atlanta. July 1975. [36] pp.
3587 Population Projections lor Georgia Counties, 1980-2000. Ron Crowe and Tom Wagner. Georgia Office of Planning and Budget, State Data Center. Atlanta. July 1975. 8 pp.
3588 County Population Projections, Georgia: 1980. Georgia Office of Planning and Budget, State Data Center. Atlanta. September 1972. 200 pp.
3589 Population Trends of Georgia Cities and Towns: A Hall Century of Population Growth. James D. Tarver and John W. Nixon. Research Report 145. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. October 1972. 78 pp.
3590 Migration In Georgia. James D. Tarver. Research Report 26. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. May 1968. 62 pp.
3591 Georgia County Migration Patterns- 1960 to 1970. Georgia Office of Planning and Budget, State Data Center. Atlanta. June 1972. 159 pp.
3592 Net Geographic Migration In Georgia: 1960 to 1970. Georgia Office of Planning and Budget. State Demographic Data Center. Atlanta. June 1972. 44 pp.
3593 Effect of Changes In Land Use, Mechanization and Other Selected Factors Upon MIgration from Georgia Farms, 1950-1960. Prakash C. Sharma. James D. Tarver, and E. Evan Brown. Research Bulletin 96. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1971. 27 pp.
3594 "Mapping Georgia's 1970 Population. Borden D. Dent. Atlanta Economic Review 22(3) 44-45. March 1972. Includes population distribution map of Georgia (dot distribution map with each dot representing 400 persons).
3595 Georgia Population Report: July 1973. General Assembly of Georgia. [University of Georgia, Institute of Government]. Athens. 1973. 2 vols.
3596 A Geographic Analysis of Population and Functional Change In the Smaller Incorporated Places of Eastern Georgia: 1960-1970. Richard Hill-Rowley. Masters thesis, 1973, University of Georgia. 102 pp.
3597 "Optimum Population and Environment: A Georgian Microcosm". Eugene P. Odum. Current History 58. 355-359, 365. June 1970.. The author sees Georgia as an epitome of the nation and the world in an explanation of h1s theory of optimum population. He suggests total space requirements rather than food requirements alone should be the basis for determining optimum population.
GROWTH
3588 "Recent Metropolitan Growth in the Southern United States". Clifton W. Pannell. Southeastern Geographer 14(1) : 7-16. May 1974.
3599 Southern Regional Conference on Urbanization, Proceedings, May 28-31, 1967, Atlanta, Georgia. University of Georgia and North Carolina State University at Raleigh, sponsors. University of Georgia Center for Continuing Education. Athens. 1967. vi + 205 pp.
3600 Atlanta 2000. Norman Shavin. ed. Atlanta Magazine 13(4). August. 1973. 256 pp. What will Atlanta be in the year 2000? Many possibilities are outlined in this special issue of the magazine of Atlanta's Chamber of Commerce.
3601 Atlas of Atlanta: The 1970's. Malcolm A. Murray. University of Alabama Press. University. Ala. 1974. 64 pp. Social and economic data is displayed using computer-generated maps (SYMAP).
97
Recreation
3602 The People of Atlanta, A Demographic Study of Georgia's Capital City. C. A. McMahan. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1950. xxiii + 257 pp.
3603 The Feasibility of Developing a Satellite City lor Atlanta. John E. Mock. Georgia Science and Technology Commission. Atlanta. 1971. [vi]+ 117 pp.
3604 A New Town Feasibility lor the Coosa Valley. Coosa Valley Area Planning and Development Commission. Rome, Georgia. April1972. 101 pp. NTIS number: PB-211 112.
3605 "New Cities for Georgia". Dudley S. Hinds. Atlanta Economic Review 21(10): 8-15. October 1971. A look at population growth in Georgia and a proposal for a "new towns" alternative.
3606 "Provisional Affluence Ratings of Georgia Counties". E. Lamar White. Atlanta Economic Review 22(3) . 40-43. March 1972.
3607 "Chattahoochee's Destiny?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine March 14, 1971. Pp. 8, 10, 28.30-31. The beautiful and historic Chattahoochee River is threatened by overdevelopment along its banks. Sensations of the present river from Buford Dam to Peachtree Creek are compared with an ugly future stream.
3608 "Buckhead, Ga. - Boom or Bust?". Vinnie Williams. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine November 9, 1969. Pp. 26, 28, 38, 40, 42. An interchange of Interstate highway 20 and the $46 million Laurens Shoals dam will surely affect the little town of Buckhead. To see that the effects are beneficial and that the town's heritage is not lost. Mayor Emmett Alford is planning and building lor the future.
3609 "Rural Greenway Has Growing Pains". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine April 16, 1972. Pp. 40, 42-44, 46. The Greenway community in north Fulton County is feeling the encroachment of suburbia.
RECLAMATION
3610 Symposium Proceedings: Rehabilitallon of Drastically Disturbed Surface Mined Lands, November 4-5, 1971, Macon Hilton Hotel, Macon, Georgia. Georgia Surface Mined Land Use Board. Macon, Georgia. No date. [iv] + 126 pp.
3611 Reclamation of Pits, Mines, and Quarries. Middle Georgia Area Planning Commission. Macon. July 1969. 44 pp. NTIS number: PB-186 019.
3612 "Mined Land Reclamation Makes New Life for Georgia Acres". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 2(7) : 24-27. July 1973.
3613 "Kaolin Wastelands of Middle Georgia". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine August 29, 1971. Pp. 16-20. Surface mining of kaolin has left giant scars on Georgia's landscapes but a 1968 law requires future reclamation.
3614 Rough Compostlng lor Surface Mine Reclamallon In Georgia. Clark Gregory. Doctoral dissertation. 1973, Georgia State University. 151 pp. Proposes rough composting techniques to convert Georgia's urban solid waste into topsoil regenerating material for reclamation of surface-mined areas.
3615 "Mining Georgia's Black Sands for the Whitest White". Gene Lindberg. Atlanta Joumaland Constitution Magazine June 4, 1972. Pp. 18, 20, 22. A Charlton County titanium mining company carefully restores its surface-mined land to utility with pines.
3616 'The Return to Nature". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Maga. zlne May 20, 1973. Pp. 54, 56, 58, 61. A Banks County landowner allows his worn-out land to renew itself into a garden of wildflowers.
RECREATION
GENERAL BICYCLING CANOEING AND RAFTING HIKING LAKES AND RESERVOIRS
PARKS TOURISM MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL
3617 Georgia State Comprehensive Outdoor Recreation Plan -1972. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Atlanta. 1972. 6 vols. State and regional analysis of recreation demands and needs. Includes plans for acquisition and development.
3618 A Guide for the Development of City and/or County Recreallon In Georgia. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Parks and Recreation Division and Georgia Power Company, Community Development Department. Atlanta [1973]. v + 110 pp. looseleaf.
3619 Access and Quality of the Environment. James R. Champlin. Outdoor Recreation Research Study No. 6. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Prepared for Georgia State Planning Bureau. Athens. June 1967. vi + 142 pp. On the problems of accessibility to outdoor recreation sources in Georgia.
3620 Environmental Resources lor Outdoor Recreation. R. James Heyl. Outdoor Recreation Research Study No. 1. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. May 1967. viii+ 122 pp. Representative features of the Georgia environment and trends in its use are identified, and analyzed. Suggestions for outdoor recreation uses are made. In seven sections: (1) Climate; (2) Geology; (3) Land Use; (4) Flora and Fauna; (5) History; (6) Scenic Resources; (7) Conclusion.
3621 Trends In Outdoor Recreation Participation [In Georgia]. John R. Thompson. Outdoor Recreation Research Study No.4. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. June 1967. vii+ 74 pp.
3622 Bibliography of Trends In Recreation - With National and Georgia Coastal References. Linda L. Christensen. Exchange Bibliography 627. Council of Planning Librarians. Monticello, Illinois. August 1974. 10 pp.
3623 Park, Parkway and Recreational Area Study. State of Georgia. Georgia State Planning Board and U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service with assistance of Works Progress Administration of Georgia. Atlanta. 1938-1940. [3 vols.?]. Includes "Tentative Final Report" (June, 1938), "Report on Outdoor Recreation in Georgia" (February, 1939), and "Report on Organized Camping in Georgia" (February, 1940.).
3624 "Public Recreation on Private Lands in the Southeast". Raymond D. Moody. In: Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Conference, Southeastern Association of Game and Fish Commissioners, October 25-27, 1959, Baltimore, Maryland, pp. 50-54.
3625 "Recreational Policies of the Major Pulp and Paper Companies in the South". Harold K. Cordell and Stephen J. Maddock. Joumal of Forestry 67(4) : 229-231. April 1969. Forest lands owned by the southern pulp and paper industry are important recreational resources in the region. All of the major companies permit hunting; some manage wildlife to increase hunting opportunities. Most companies permit recreational activities other than hunting. The primary problem connected with public use of these private lands is property damage. Education of the public may be the solution.
3626 "Can We Love the Woods to Death?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine June 17, 1973. Pp. 44-45, 47. Overcrowding in state and federal parks has reached serious levels in Georgia and many other parts of the nation. Over-use has destroyed much of what people have come to see.
BICYCLING
3627 "Athens, City of Hills: A Double Loop Bike Route for Touring Athens and the Surrounding Countryside". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(5) : 34-37. SeptemberOctober 1975.
3628 "Bicycle Comeback Hits High Gear". Dorothy Davenport Stafford. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine July 23, 1972. Pp. 10, 13, 26. Bicycling is popular on Glynn County's coastal islands where federally funded bicycle trails are Georgia's first.
3629 The Bicycle - A Plan and Program for Its Use as a Mode of Transportation and Recreation; Atlanta Metropolitan Region. Atlanta Regional Commission. Atlanta. July 1973. 2 vols.
3630 "Bicycling Through Washington and Wilkes County". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(2) : 36-39. Spring 1974.
3631 "Biking Morgan County". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(3): 30-33. Summer 1973.
3632 "The Great Chattahoochee Bike Trail". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(4) : 26-37. July - August 1975. Guide to a 450-mile bicycle route across Georgia. Eleven maps show landmarks and turning places on the north-south route connecting the following cities and towns: Clayton, Cleveland, Gainesville, Buford, Atlanta, Franklin, LaGrange, Talbotton, Buena Vista, Lumpkin, Fort Gaines, Blakely, and Donalsonville.
98
Recreation
3633 "The Helen-Sautee-Unicoi Loop". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(4) : 26-30. September- October 1974. This bicycle tour takes in Helen, Robertstown, Unicoi Station, Anna Ruby Falls, Sautee and many other scenic features of the White County landscape.
3634 "The Indian Springs- High Falls Bike Loop". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(3): 28-31. May- June 1975. Guide to a bicycle tour from High Falls State Park in Monroe County to Indian Springs State Park in Butts County.
3635 "Jekyll Island: Cyclists' Paradise". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(1) : 42-46. January - February 1975.
3636 "Pedalin' Back to 1850". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(5): 58-62. November- December 1974. Providence Canyon State Park and the recreated 1850's village of Westville are the highlights of this bicycle tour.
3637 "Pedaling Through Uncle Remus Country". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(1): 30-32. )Ninter 1973-74. This bicycle tour allows leisurely exploration of Eatonton and Putnam County, the home of Joel Chandler Harris.
3638 "Two Atlanta Bike Trails". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(1): 10-11. Winter 1972-73. Two unofficial bicycle trails, in east Atlanta and south Cobb County, are outlined.
3639 "Two-Wheeling Savannah". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(4) : 38-41, Fall1973. A bicyclist's guide to Georgia's oldest city.
3640 "Where the Old's Good as New: From Fort Gaines to the Chattahoochee to the Kolomoki Mounds". Bill Cutler. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(6) : 47-51. November- December 1975. Description of a bicycle tour of Fort Gaines, Kolomoki Mounds State Park and. an area of Clay County that includes the old William Tconey House.
CANOEING AND RAFTING
3641 "Go Ride A Wild River". Anna Belle Close. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 20, 1969. Pp. 10, 12, 14, 18. Canoeing adventures on Georgia's rivers are examined.
3642 "The Flint,. Now". Claude Terry. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(4): 36-37. Fall1973. Canoeing skills may. be tested on the Flint, the premier whitewater stream of middle Georgia. The section of the river within Talbot, Upson and Meriwether Counties is described.
3643 "Flint River Float Trip". Bob Wilson. Georgia Game and Fish 5(8) : 7-10. August 1970. An Upson County stretch of the Flint River offers fine scenery and an opportunity to fish for the Flint River Smallmouth Bass, a unique type found only in the Flint and its tributaries.
3644 "River Picnic: A Summertime Float Trip on Peaceful Whitewater Creek". Margaret Tucker. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(4) : 44-47. July- August 1975. Guide to a canoe trip on Whitewater Creek and the Flint River from Whitewater Creek State Park to Montezuma.
3645 ."Oconee Float Trip". Margaret Tucker. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(5) : 46~49. November- December 1974. A Greene County portion of the Oconee River is the place for a leisurely canoe trip.
3646 "The Ocmulgee River". Claude Terry. Outdoors in Georgia 3(11): 12-15. November 1974. Tips on canoeing the river in Jones, Monroe, and Bibb counties.
3647 "Down River on the Great Altamaha". Kerry Dawson. Outdoors in Georgia 4(7) : 10-13. July 1975. Brief guide to canoeing the lower Altamaha River in Lo.ng, Wayne and Mcintosh counties.
3648 "The Ogeechee Experience". Dick Murlless. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(6): 52-55. November- December 1975. Guide to canoeing the Ogeechee River in Bryan and Chatham counties.
3649 "Down Upon the suwanee". Dick Murless. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(1) : 34-37. January- February 1975. A guide to canoeing on Georgia's most famous stream.
3650 "Canoeing the Chestatee". Claude Terry and Margaret Tucker. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(3) : 26-30. Summer 1974. Lumpkin County's Chestatee River is a small but fine canoeing stream.
3651 "Spring White Water". Cl~ude Terry. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(2): 78-81. March
-April 1975. A canoeing guide to the Toccoa River from Coopers Creek to Blue Ridge Lake.
3652 "Canoeing the Etowah". Claude Terry. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(3): 18-19. Summer 1973.
A stretch of the Etowah River in Lumpkin County offers challenging rapids for the beginning canoeist and the expert.
3653 "Canoeing the Upper Chattahoochee". Claude Terry. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(1) : 34-36. Winter 1973-74.
3654 "100 Miles on the Chattahoochee". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 1, 1975. Pp. 16-17, 20, 22-25. With two participants in the Helen-to-Atlanta canoe race on the Chattahoochee River.
3655 "Huckleberry Who?". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Conititution Magazine July 4, 1971. Pp. 8-9, 12. The Great Raft Race, on a 9-mile stretch of the Chattahoochee River adjacent to Atlanta, is the major event of a new urban sport.
3656 "Taking a Trip on the Chattooga". Claude Terry. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(1) : 7-9. Winter 1972-73. An expert canoeist tells how to shoot Georgia's finest whitewater river.
3657 "Riding the Wild Cha!tooga (Part Two)". Claude Terry. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(2) 27-31. Spring 1973.
3658 "Shooting Georgia's Wildest Rapids". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine Septemb~r 17, 1971. Pp. 20-22, 27. Experts in canoes, kayaks and a raft find adventure on the Chattooga River in northeast Georgia.
3659 "The Deliverance Syndrome". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine November 18, 1973. Pp. 16-18, 23-24. Thousands are trying their hand at white-water canoeing on the Chattooga River in northeast Georgia. But the wild river, made famous in the film version of James Dickey's novel Deliverance, hold~ many dangers for the ill-prepared.
3660 "The Great White Chattooga". Wayne Fears. Georgia Game and Fish 6(10): 16-18. October 1971.
3661 Appalachian Water -Volume 2. Walter F. Burmeister. Canoe Cruisers Association. Washington, D.C. 1962. 289 pp.
3662 Bibliography of Canoeing Information for Southeastern United States. U. S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Outdoor Recreation, Southeast Region. Atlanta. January 1975. [12] pp.
HIKING
3663 A Backpacking Guide to the Southern Mountains. Samuel M. Blankenship. Ballantine Books. New York. 1975. Paperback.
3664 Trail Guide to the Mountains of North Georgia. .. Georgia Appalachian Trail Club. Gainesville, Georgia. 1931. 62 pp.
3665 "Come Along the Rough Ridge Trail". Margaret Tucker. Brown's COuide to Georgia 2(2) : 24-28. Spring 1974. A trip over Rough Ridge to Jacks River Falls is one of many hiking opportunities in the Cohuttas wilderness.
3666 "Walking the Jacks". Margaret Tucker. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(5) : 26-29. September- October 1975. Description of a hike on the Jack's River trail in the Cohuttas wilderness.
3667 "A Winter Hike on Blood Mountain". Margaret Tucker. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(1). 42-45. Winter 1973-74.
3668 "Cliffs of Tallulah". Margaret Tucker. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(1) : 38-41. January - February 1975. A hiker's guide to Tallulah Gorge.
3669 "One Day Walk to Ellicott's Rock". Margaret Tucker. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(4) : 44-47. September- October 1974. A hike to Georgia's northeast corner is described.
3670 Guide to the Appalachian Trail in the Great Smokies, the Nantahalas, and Georgia. 3rd ed. Publication No. 23. Appalachian Trail Conference. Washington, D.C. 1971.352 pp. Detailed guide to all sections of the trail. Replaces Guide to the Appalachian Trail in the Southern Appalachians (Appalachian Trail Conference Publication No. 8, several editions).
3671 Appalachian Trail, Chattahoochee National Forest, Georgia. [Map]. USDA Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. 1971.
3672 "Georgia's Appalachian Trail". T. Craig Martin. Outdoors in Georgia 3(4) 2-5. April1974.
3673 "The Appalachian Trail Ends in Georgia". Barbara Deane. Georgia Magazine 7(1) : 20-23. June,- July 1963.
3674 Hiking The Appalachian Trail. James A. Hare, ed. Rodale Press. Emmaus, Pa. 1975. 2 vols.
99
Recreation
3875 ..., ne Appalachian Trail - Through Wilderness and Real Estate". Peter H. Dunning. National Parka and Conoervatlon 46(7) : 21-24. July 1972. On the threatened transformation of the Appalachian Trail from a wilderness trail to a "footpath through the backyards or urban sprawl".
3876 "Skyline Trail from Maine to Georgia". Andrew H. Brown. National Geographic 96(2) : 219-251. August 1949. A look at the Appalachian Trail.
38n Outdoors In the Cumberland. Robert Sparks Walker, ed. Chattanooga Community Association. Chattanooga, Tenn. 1933. 56 pp. Information for hikers in the Chattanooga area of Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama. Includes: hiking trails, scenic points, trees and flowers, birds, snakes, insects and spiders, mushrooms, archaeology, and geological history.
LAKES AND RESERVOIRS
3878 "West Point Lake". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 4(2) : 21-24. February 1975. Description and map. West Point Reservoir is in Troup and Heard Counties, Georgia and Chambers County, Alabama.
3879 "A $115 Million Dam Built for Fun". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 25, 1974. Pp. 8, 10, 17, 34. The 26,900-acre West Point lake may signal a trend - its primarily lor recreation.
3880 "Lake Walter F. George". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 4(10) : 28-29. October 1975.
3881 "Seminole!". T. Craig Martin. Outdoors In Georgia 2(12) : 12-15. December 1973. Lake Seminole in the southwestern corner of the state is briefly described.
3882 "Clark Hill Reservoir". Aaron Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 3(6) : 26-28. June 1974.
3683 "Lake Sinclair". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 2(5) : 7-10. May 1973.
3884 "Bibb's Fun Place: Tobesofkee". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 9, 1971. Pp. 18-20, 23. Lake Tobesofkee near Macon, a 1750-acre impoundment built with almost $5 million of federal assistance, is a watershed project intended primarily for recreation.
3885 "Tobesofkee, Sport for Today". Dean Wohlgemuth. Georgia Game and Fish 5(3) : 1-3. March 1970. Lake Tobesofkee in Bibb County provides varied recreation opportunities: hunting, fishing, camping, picnicking, and swimming.
3886 "In Central Georgia Who Needs the Ocean?". R. C. Robison. Soli Conoervatlon 36(10). 219-22. May 1971. Lake Tobesofkee in Bibb County is described. It is part of a Public Law 566 watershed project.
3887 Planning Development for the Curry Creek Reservoir and Recreation Area [Jackson County, Ga.]. William A. B. Dempsey. Masters thesis, 1971, University of Georgia. 62 pp.
3888 "Sidney Lanier: No. 1 Lake Attraction". Robert L. Solheim. Water Spectrum 4(2) : 10-17. Summer 1972. A look at recreation on Lake Lanier.
3889 "A New Place to Go". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 17, 1974. Pp. 16-18,21,23. Lake Lanier Islands is a $50 million recreation area on Georgia's most popular lake.
3890 "Lake Chatuge". Dick Davis. Outdoors In Georgia 2(11): 22-25. November 1973.
3891 "Recreation in the Tennessee Valley: A Partnership Approach". Jack H. Hendrix. Parks & Recreation 8(4) : 40-46. April 1973. Three TVA lakes are entirely or partially in Georgia: Blue Ridge Lake; Nottely Lake; and Chatuge Lake.
PARKS
3892 "Georgia's Scenic Parks". Elliot L. Lipson. Parks & Recreation 3(2): 47, 58. February, 1968. Brief historical summary of the state park system.
3893 The Story of Georgia's State Parks. Charles Newton Elliott. National Park Service, Branch of Planning and State Co-operation, Fourth Regional Office. Atlanta. 1935-1936. A series of radio broadcasts telling the stories of Georgia's state parks is printed. The parks existing at the time and described in the series are: Indian Springs in Butts County; Vogel in Union County; Alexander H. Stephens in Taliaferro County; Fort Mountain in Murray County; Santo Domingo in Glynn County; Pine Mountain in Harris County; Chehaw in Dougherty County and Little Ocmulgee in Telfair County.
3694 Georgia Forest Parks. C. A. Whittle and Ben nell H. Stone. Bulletin 6. Georgia Forest Service. Atlanta. 1929. 22 pp. On a series of forest-parks in Georgia with a look at two, Vogel in Union County and Indian Springs in Butts County.
3895 "Day Use Parks". Lonice Barrett. Outdoors In Georgia 4(2) : 5-9. February 1975. List of State "day-use" - as opposed to "stay-use" - parks, historic sites, and fishing areas. (Some of these were closed or transferred to local governments in mid-1975).
3896 "State Parks Are Open in Winter Too". Mabel Wilkins. Outdoors In Georgia 1(3) : 13-15. September 1972. On the advantages of winter visits to the State Parks.
3897 The Stata Parka of Northeast Georgia: A Survey with Recommendations and PropoHis for Future Uoe and Development. Paul Lay Russell. Masters thesis, 1963, University of Georgia. 106 pp.
38118 "Fort Vargo State Park". Aaron F. Pass. Outdoors In Georgia 3(11) : 16-18. November 1974.
3899 "A Night in the Eagle's Nest". J. Hall. Georgia Game and Fish 7(6): 2-5. June 1972. A tour of Black Rock Mountain State Park in Rabun County, the highest of Georgia's state parks.
3700 "Providence Canyon-Exciting Hole in the Ground". Jacquelyn Cook. Georgia Mage zlne 15(5): 26-27. November 1971. Providence Canyon, created by erosion during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, is a state park near Lumpkin.
3701 "Providence Canyons". Allen R. Coggins. Outdoors In Georgia 2(2): 7-11. February 1973.
3702 "Providence Canyon: Georgia's Big Beautiful Gully". Lloyd Williams. Georgia Life 2(2) : 23-27. Autumn 1975.
3703 ''This State Park Keeps Growing". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 27, 1973. Pp. 14-16, 18. Several gorges in Stewart County's Providence Canyon State Park are rapidly growing larger due to the continuation of the modern erosion that created the canyons. New trails are being added to permit visitors to see the unusual formations recently uncovered.
3704 "Discovering Sweetwater Creek". Lynn Hill. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(2) : 32-33. Spring 1973. Sweetwater Creek State Park in Douglas County is a natural and historic area featuring impressive shoals and ruins of a Confederate uniform factory.
3705 "Cioudland Canyon State Park and Lookout Mountain". Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1(10): 22-26. 1948.
3706 "Franklin D. Roosevelt State Park, Georgia". In: The State Parks: Their Meaning In American Life, Freeman Tilden, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1962, pp. 193-199.
3707 "Bobby Brown State Park". Rebecca N. Marshall. Outdoors In Georgia 4(11): 27-28. November 1975.
3708 "Indian Springs State Park". Mabel Wilkins. Outdoors In Georgla1(2): 16-21. August 1972.
3709 "Will-A-Way". Connie Steele. Outdoors In Georgia 4(8) : 7-9. August 1975. Describes Will-A-Way State Park, a special park lor the disabled and their families. WillA-Way is a 350-acre segment of Fort Vargo State Park.
3710 "State's Park for Disabled". Wylly Folk St. John. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine, October 4, 1970. Pp. 8 fl. An innovative "park within a state park" leads the nation in outdoor recreation facilities for handicapped persons. The park [now known as Will-a-way) is part of Fort Vargo State Park.
3711 "John Tanner State Park". Bill Morehead. Outdoors In Georgia 4(3) : 10-13. March 1975.
3712 "Mistletoe State Park". Joe Cullens. Outdoors In Georgia 4(9) : 30-32. September 1975.
3713 PICkett's Mill State Park Mutar Plan. Richard MacKenzie Williams. Masters thesis, 1974, University of Georgia.
3714 Unicoi - A Master Plan Report. Designers' Collaborative, Inc. for North Georgia Mountains Authority, Unicoi Outdoor Recreation Experiment Station, Helen, Georgia. 1971. 86 pp. Unicoi is a state park-recreational research facility in White County.
3715 "The Highs and Lows of Unicoi Station". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 5, 1974. Pp. 17-18, 21, 25. Unicoi Outdoor Recreation Experiment Station in White County is Georgia's research center for parks and recreation.
3716 "Experiment at Unicoi". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 12, 1972. Pp. 10, 43-44, 47. The Unicoi Outdoor Recreation Experiment Station is trying out new ideas in camping and outdoor fun. Cabins of. unusual shapes and sleeping platforms on hillsides are being built.
3717 Callaway Gardans - The Unending Season. Caleb Pirtle Ill and Gerald Crawford.
100
Remote Sensing
Southern Living Books. Birmingham, Ala. 1973. iii+ 90 pp.
3718 "Callaway Gardens - A Brief Account of Cason Callaway and His Legacy to His State". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Magazine 12(6) : 16-19. April- May 1969.
3719 "Climbing Mount Yonah". Dennis Mays. Brown's Guide to Georgia 1(1) : 30-31. Winter 1972-73.
3720 "Skiing in Sky Valley". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 25, 1973. Pp. 20-21, 23-24, 26, 28. Sky Valley is a private venture in Rabun County utilizing sroowmaking machines to bring skiers from as far as Asheville and Atlanta.
3721 "Kennesaw Park". Leo Aikman. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine November 9. 1969. Pp. 58-59. The Illinois Monument on Cheatham Hill was the beginning effort in the creation of Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park. Today the 3000-acre park is a historical and recreational treasure that would surely have been bulldozed over if preservation attempts had waited.
3722 "The Eco-politics of Palisades Park". Phil Garner. AHanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 1. 1972. Pp. 12-13, 17-18. Georgia's governor canoes the Palisades section of the Chattahoochee River to encourage funding for a unique park.
3723 Index of the National Park System and Affiliated Areas as of January 1, 1975. U.S. Department of the Interior. National Park Service. Washington, D.C. 1975. 134 pp. Basic information for National Park Service areas including acreage, date[s] of authorization, outstanding characteristics, and address.
3724 National Park Guide lor the Handicapped. U. S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Washington D.C. [1971 ]. 79 pp. Notes facilities for and barriers to the handicapped in each NPS park. (In Georgia: Chickamauga, Fort Frederica. Fort Pulaski, Kennesaw Mountain, and Ocmulgee).
TOURISM
3725 The Georgla-Trevellnduatry 1960-1972. Polly W. Hein and Adolph Sanders. Travel Research Study No. 16, University of Georgia, College of Business Administration, Division of Research, for Georgia Department of Community Development, Tourist Division. Athens. 1974. xii + 108 pp.
3726 Recreation Travel and Mobility [In Georgia]. Charles D. Clement and Robert E. Tritt. Outdoor Recreation Research Study No. 3. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. June 1967. vii+ 54 pp.
3727 Georgia: So Much, So Near. Georgia Department of Community Development. Atlanta. 1974. 40 pp. Twenty-five "mini-tours", beginning and ending in Albany, Athens, Atlanta, Augusta, Brunswick. Columbus. Macon, Rome, Savannah, Thomasville, or Valdosta. With short descriptions of each point of interest.
3728 Georgia Days. Georgia Department of Community Development, Tourist Division. Atlanta. 1973. 48 pp. Guidebook for tourists. Divides the state into mountains, Piedmont, and Coastal Plain, gives map and information (attractions, historic sites, camping areas, hunting areas, golf courses, lakes, colleges, and annual events} for each.
3729 Tourism Development In the Coastal Plain Area. Travel Research Study No.8. University of Georgia, Graduate School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Athens. 1967. 2 vols.
3730 A Program lor Optimizing the Tourist Industry as an Integral Part of Economic Growth In the Coastal Plains Region. Leisure Systems, Inc. for Coastal Plains Regional Commission, Washington, D.C. April 1969. 150 pp.
3731 Reference Handbook of Travel Investment Factors In the Georgia's [sic] Coastal Plains. Conway Research, Inc. for Georgia Department of Industry and Trade. Atlanta. May 1971. iv + 350 pp. +appendices.
3732 Tourist and Recreation Potential: The Cumberland Plateau Area (Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia). James N. Lowe eta/. U.S. Bureau of Outdoor Recreation for U. S. Department of Commerce, Area Redevelopment Administration. Washington, D.C. May 1965. iv + 111 pp. + 5 fold. maps.
3733 Tourism Development In the Georgia Mountains Area. Travel Research Study No.6. University of Georgia, Graduate School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Athens. April 1970. 2 vols.
3734 Tourism Development In Chattahoochee-Flint Area. Travel Research Study No. 7. University of Georgia. Graduate School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Athens. 1967. 2 vols.
3735 Tourism Development In the Georgia Southern Area. Travel Research Study No.9. University of Georgia, Graduate School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Athens. 1968. 2 vols.
3736 Tourism Development In Dublin and Laurens County, Georgia. William B. Keeling
and Adolph Sanders. Travel Research Study No. 14. University of Georgia College of Business Administration, Division of Research. Athens. 1972. [v] + 44 pp. Study of Dublin-Laurens County market potential and recommended program for increasing tourism.
3737 "Action in Andersonville". Peggy Sheppard. Georgia Life 1(4) : 26-29. Spring 1975. Tourism is on the increase in Andersonville thanks to the village's restoration and beautification program, arts and crafts shows, and the creation of the Andersonville Trail.
3738 Georgia Welcome Center Research Report Series. University of Georgia, Graduate School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Athens. 1968-1970. 3 vols.
MISCELLANEOUS
3739 Private Campground Operations In Georgia. E. Evan Brown and Fred J, Holemo. Research Bulletin 89. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. March 1971. 26 pp. Interviews were conducted at ten private campgrounds in Georgia to determine (1) characteristics of users; (2) activities they prefer; (3) methods of advertising; (4) preferred locations; (5) desirable facilities; (6) fees that can be charged; and (7) benefits of encouragement of private campgrounds.
3740 "Brown's Guide to Southeastern Camps for Boys and Girls". Sally Hawie and Mary O'Connor. Brown's Guide to Georgia 3(2) : 35-63. March -April 1975.
3741 "Average Costs of Recreation on National Forests in the South". Gary L. Tyre, Journal of Leisure Research 7(2): 114-120. 1975.
3742 Recreational Development Opportunities of the Intracoastal Waterway In North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Leisure Systems, Inc. for Coastal Plains Regional Commission, Washington, D.C. April 1969. 250 pp.
3743 "Georgia's Special Olympics Program". Frank Spence. Parks & Recreation 7(3) : 42, 62-63. March 1972. Describes a recreation program for the retarded in Georgia.
3744 Recreation Programs In Metropolitan Atlanta. Community Council of the Atlanta Area. Atlanta. May 1967. 91 pp. + appendices.
3745 Open Land- Regional Problems and Opportunities. Regional Parks and Open Space Study: Part II. Atlanta Region Metropolitan Planning Commission. Atlanta. June 1964. viii+ 77 pp.
3741 "The Shrimper in Us All". Wes Pittman. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(4) : 20-25. September- October 1974. A guide to one-man shrimp fishing in the tidal marshes of Mcintosh County.
3747 "Boating as a Sport in the Old South". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Historical Quarterly 27(3): 231-247. September 1943.
3748 Georgia's Fabulous Treasure Hoards. Earnest M. Andrews. Published by the author. Hapeville, Georgia. 1966. 110 pp. The subtitle reads, "A Compendium for Rockhounds, Prospectors and various seekers of Gold, Silver, Diamonds, etc. with known and historic locations. Complete with Maps, Charts. etc." Seventy-one buried treasures are roughly located and their stories are told.
3749 Cry of the Eagle - History and Legends of the Cherokee Indians and their Burled Treasures. Forest C. Wade. Published by the author. Cumming, Georgia. 1969. (xii) + 151 pp. Forsyth County, eastern Cherokee County, and parts of Fulton and Dawson Counties make up the scene of the author's research. Numerous photographs and sketches of Cherokee treasure signs and symbols are reproduced.
3750 Gold Lust. Wayne W. Blackburn. Dorrance & Company. Philadelphia. 1965. vi+ 114 pp. On prospecting for gold in north Georgia and the western United States.
REMOTE SENSING
3751 "Georgia From 570 Miles Up". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 24, 1974. Pp. 12-13, 17. The Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS) is giving state geologists a new perspective on Georgia, permitting views of features unseen from below and assisting in the discovery of new features.
3752 "Georgia's Portrait from Space". Sam Pickering and Bill Morehead. Outdoors In Georgia 2(11): 15-21. November 1973. The Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS) photographs Georgia every 18 days from 570 miles high. The value of these photographs to environmental research is ex-
101
Soils and Soil Erosion
plained. Sample color photographs illustrate natural features that were previously not observable at a comprehensive scale.
3753 An Ae-sment of the Potential Value to Georgia of the Earth Resources Technology Satellite Program. Georgia Science and Technology Commission. Atlanta. 1972. [ii] + 30 pp.
3754 Computer Land Use Mapping from ERTS, Final Technical Report: Project A-1557. G. William Spann and N. L. Faust. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. For Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research. Atlanta. March 25, 1974. [iii] + 20 pp. The results of a pilot project to determine the usefulness of Earth Resources Technology Satellite data for a statewide or regional land-use survey are summarized. Automatic processing of EATS digital tapes is contrasted with the use of EATS photographs in gathering land-use information.
3755 Study of USGS/NASA Land-Use Classification System; Interim Technical Report: Project A-1621. G. William Spann and N. L. Faust. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. Prepared for National Aeronautics and Space Administration. December 1974. [iv] + 43 pp. "It is known from several previous investigations that many categories of land-use can be mapped via computer processing of Earth Resources Technology Satellite Data. This report presents the results of one such experiment using the USGS/NASA land-use classification system. Douglas County, Georgia, was chosen as the test site for this project. It was chosen primarily because of its recent rapid growth and future growth potential."
3756 ERTS Monic of the State of Georgia. Arnold C. Zisa, Richard C. Jones, and William Z. Clark. Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Earth and Water Division. 1974. 1 . 1,000,000. "An uncontrolled mosaic constructed from the National Aeronautic and Space Administration's Earth Resources Technology Satellite 1 (EATS) negative transparenCies of multispectral scanner band 5 (600-700 nm)".
3757 "Geologic Evaluation and Applications of ERTS-1 Imagery Over Georgia". S. M. Pickering and R. C. Jones. In: Third Earth Resources Technology Satelllte-1 Symposium;
t. Volume 1: Technical Presentations, Section A, Stanley Freden and Margaret A. Becker,
eds.. Special Publication No. 351, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1974, pp. 857-868.
3756 "Color Infrared Photography, Land-Use Patterns and Plant Sciences". Gayther L. Plummer. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 26(1) : 23-32. January 1968. Color infrared photography using Ektachrome Infrared Aerial Film is described. Winter and summer aerial imagery of the same subjects. land-use patterns on the Little River watershed between Ashburn and Tifton, are illustrated and compared for such purposes as mapping soils. vegetation, land-use patterns, and crop identification. Additionally, the location of chlorophyll-bearing algae in several lichens is shown to be determinable by this type of photography.
3759 "Color Infrared Photography: Land Use Patterns. II". Gayther L. Plummer. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 27(3) : 127-140. June 1969.
3760 Existing Aerial Photographic Resources of Coastal Georgia and a Briel Listing of Interpretative Aids. R. A. Linthurst and Robert J. Reimold. Technical Report Series, No. 73-4. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. June 1973. 41 pp. + 4 fold. sheets.
3761 "Photographic Imagery and Spectral Properties of Salt Marsh Vegetation as Indicators of Canopy Characteristics". John L. Gallagher. W. J. Pfeiffer and R. A. Linthurst. In: Symposium on Remote Sensing In Oceanography, American Society of Photogrammetry, Washington D.C., 1973, pp. 1004-1016.
3762 "Coastal Mapping With Remote Sensors". Robert J. Reimold, John L. Gallagher, and Donald E. Thompson. In: Proceedings of the Coastal Mapping Symposium, American Society of Photogrammetry, Washington, D.C., 1972, pp. 99-112. Summarizes techniques employed and information obtained. The study site is on the Duplin Estuary adjacent to Sapelo Island.
3763 "Mapping Atlantic Coastal Marshlands, Maryland, Georgia, Using ERTS-1 Imagery". Richard R. Anderson. Virginia Carter. and John McGinness. In: Symposium on Significant Results Obtained From the Earth Resources Technology Satelllte-1; Volume 1: Technical Prenntatlons, Section A, Stanley C. Freden, E. P. Mercanti, and M.A. Becker. eds., Special Publication No. 327, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1973, pp. 603613.
3764 use of Remote Sensing for Mapping Wetlands". Robert J. Reimold and Rick A. Linthurst. Transportation Engineering Journal of ASCE (Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers) 101 (TE2): 189-198. May 1975. NTIS number: COM-75-10843.
SOILS AND SOIL EROSION
3765 Solie of Georgia. P. J. Bergeaux. Bulletin 662. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. June 1972.
3766 "Soils of Georgia". Joel E. Giddens. H. F. Perkins, and R. L. Carter. Soli Science 89(4) : 229-238. April 1960.
3767 Solis of Georgia - Their Formation, Classification, and Use. Robert L. Carter and Joel E. Giddens. Bulletin 52, Georgia Coastal Plain Experiment Station. Bulletin 2, University of Georgia College of Agriculture Experiment Station. 1953. 68 pp.
3768 Soli Associations of Georgia. H. F. Perkins and F. T. Ritchie, Jr. Georgia Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. 1965, revised 1968. Color map 39 x 47 em on sheet 58 x 89 em folded to 23 x 15 em. Includes descriptive text.
3769 Solis and Fertlllzere In Georgia. P. J. Bergeaux. Bulletin 656. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Cooperative Extension Service. Athens. 1967. 103 pp.
3770 Soli Survey of- -County [or Counties], Georgia (Series). U. S. Department of Agriculture. Soil Conservation Service. Athens, Georgia. [1958 to date]. Detailed soils information, includes: (1) General Soil Map: (2) Descriptions of each association and series: (3) Information on uses of soils for crops, pasture, and woodlands: (4) Soil interpretations for wildlife habitat: (5) Soil properties considered in town and country planning; (6) Engineering uses; (7) Formation and classification of the soils, and (8) Detailed soil maps of numerous sheets made from aerial photographs. For a listing of these surveys, see Appendix.
3771 Soli Survey of - - County [or Counties or Area], Georgia (Series). U. S. Department of Agriculture. Bureau of Soils [and successors Bureau of Chemistry and Soils, Bureau of Plant Industry, and Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering]. Washington. D.C. [1901-1954]. The "old series" of county soil surveys. The detail and quality of these surveys and their accompanying maps improves from poor in the early ones to good in later ones. See Appendix lor list of the individual surveys.
3772 Solis Resource Guide: Southern Region. USDA Forest Service, Southern Region. Atlanta. April 1972. 48 pp.
3773 Ueer's Guide: Solis; The Georgia Resource Assessment Program. [Robert T. Segrest and Bruce 0. Rado]. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research, Resource Planning Section. Atlanta. 1975. [iv + 75] pp. Guide to use of soils maps prepared as part of the Resource Assessment Program. Issued at scales of 1 : 63,360 and 1 : 250,000, these maps delineate soil associations for all areas of the state.
3774 "The Engineering Properties of Georgia Soils". George F. Sowers. In: Short Contribution to the Geology, Geography and Archaeology of Georgia - II, Bulletin No. 60, Georgia Department of Mines, Mining and Geology (Geological Survey), 1953, pp. 172178.
3775 Some Morphological, Physical, Chemical and Clay Mineral Characteristics of Several Agriculturally Important Georgia Solis. H. F. Perkins. C. B. England, and J. A. Gibbs. Technical Bulletin N.S. 26. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1962. 37 pp.
3776 Morphological, Chemical, and Physical Characteristics of Eighteen Representative Solis of the Atlantic Coast Flatwoods. F. Leslie Long et a/. Research Bulletin 59. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. May 1969. 74 pp.
3777 Selected Coastal Plain Soli Properties. John G. A. Fiskell and H. F. Perkins, eds. Southern Cooperative Bulletin No. 148. University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. Gainesville, Fla. May 1970. 141 pp. Describes morphological. physical, chemical, and mineralogical properties of selected Coastal Plain soils in Georgia and five other southeastern coastal states.
3778 Soli Survey Interpretation lor Woodlands In the Southern Coastal Plain and Associated Areas of Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina with Average Rainfall of 30 to 40 Inches During the Frost Free Period. USDA Soil Conservation Service. Fort Worth, Texas. 1970. 26 pp. Includes data on soil ratings for woodland use, guide for woodland suitability classes, and soil groupings according to woodland suitability. Tables and explanations relate soils information to the establishment, growth, management, and harvesting of woodland crops.
3779 Soli Survey Interpretations lor Woodlands In the Southern Piedmont Area of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. USDA Soil Conservation Service. Washington, D.C. 1969. 20 pp. Includes data on soil ratings for woodland use, guide for woodland suitability classes, and soil groupings according to woodland suitability. Tables and explanations relate soils information to the establishment, growth management and harvesting of woodland crops.
3780 Solis Survey Interpretation for Woodlands In the Cumberland Plateau and Mountains and the Southern Appalachian Ridges and Valleys of Alabama, Georgia and Tennessee. USDA Soil Conservation Service. Fort Worth, Texas. 1969. 30 pp. Concerns the following counties: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Polk, Walker, Whitfield. Includes data on soil ratings for woodland use. guide for woodland suitability classes, and soil groupings according to woodland suitability. Tables and explanations relate soils information to the establishment, growth, management, and harvesting of woodland crops.
3781 Soli Survey Interpretations lor Woodlands In the Sand Mountain Area of Alabama
102
Solid Waste
and Georgia. USDA Soil Conservation Service. Fort Worth, Texas. 1969. 30 pp. Concerns the following counties: Catoosa. Chattooga, Dade, Walker. Data largely in form of tables with explanations on soil ratings for woodland use, guide for woodland suitability classes, and soil groupings according to woodland suitability. Relates soils information to the establishment, management and harvesting of woodland crops.
3782 Soli Survey Interpretations for Woodland In the Southam Blue Ridge Area of Georgia, North Cerollna, South Carolina, and Tenneuee. USDA Soil Conservation Service. Fort Worth, Texas. 1969. 22 pp. Concerns the following counties: Murray, Gordon, Bartow, Paulding, Fannin, Gilmer, Pickens, Cherokee, Cobb, Dawson, Lumpkin, Union, Towns, White, Rabun, Habersham, Stephens, Franklin, Hart. Data include soil ratings for woodland use, guide for woodland suitability classes, and soil groupings according to woodland suitability. Tables and explanations relate soils information to the establishment, growth, management, and harvesting of wood crops.
3783 "The Variability of Forest Soils of the Georgia Blue Ridge Mountains". A. F. Ike, Jr. . and J. L. Clutter. Soli Science Society of America Proceedings 32: 284-288. 1968.
3784 General Soli and Slope Interpretation Guide, Part II - North Georgia Area. North Georgia Area Planning and Development Commission. Dalton. Georgia. March 1974. 61 pp. Describes the 28 soil associations of the area, identifies soil properties appropriate in generalizing soil suitability for each of eight selected land use functions, discusses development considerations in flood plain areas, and characterizes topographic features of the area according to general slope categories.
3785 Soli Survey Laboratory Data and Descriptions for Some Solis of Georgia, North Carolina, South Cerollna. Soil Survey Investigations Report No. 16. USDA Soil Conservation Service. September 1967. 164 pp. Includes information for some soils of Dooly, Liberty, Houston, Macon, Mcintosh, Peach, and Tift Counties, Georgia.
3786 "Soils of Twiggs, Decatur, Grady and Thomas Counties, Georgia". Frank T. Ritchie, Jr. and James C. Powell. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 16(1)2): 29-38. 1963.
3787 "Properties and Genesis of the Hayesville and Cecil Series of Georgia". J. A. Gibbs and H. F. Perkins. Soli Science Society ol America Proceedings 30(2) : 256-260. MarchApril1966.
3788 "Characteristics of Three Reddish-brown Lateritic Soils of Georgia". C. B. England and H. F. Perkins. Soli Science 88(5) : 294-302. November 1959. Describes soil profiles and physical and clay mineral characteristics of Davidson, Greenville. and Decatur soil series.
3789 "Mineralogical and Chemical Properties of Piedmont-Derived Entisols". H. F. Perkins. D. D. Jinks, and K. H. Tan. Bulletin ol the Georgia Academy ol Science 29(4) : 229240. September 1971.
3790 Moisture Characteristics ol Three Fuquay Solis Supporting Two Vegetation Types. Carole A. Ritchie. Masters thesis, 1968, University of Georgia. 57 pp.
3791 Solis Interpretation lor Regional Planning In Metropolitan Atlanta. Atlanta Region Metropolitan Planning Commission. Atlanta. September 1967. 71 pp. NTIS number: PB183 501.
3792 "The Occurrence and Distribution of Algae in Some Soils of the Piedmont Region of Georgia". Juan F. Celecia and H. D. Morris. Bulletin ol the Georgia Academy ol Science 24(3&4) . 83-92. September 1966.
3793 The Occurrence and Distribution ol Algae In Some Solis ol the Piedmont Region ol Georgia. Juan F. Celecia. Doctoral dissertation, 1964, University of Georgia. 110 pp.
3794 "The Distribution of Some Soil Fungi on a Georgia Granite Outcrop". P. E. Bostick. Bulletin ol the Georgia Academy ol Science 26(4) : 149-154. September 1968. The soil fungi of a typical granite outcrop, Rock Chapel Mountain in DeKalb County, are described. Particular attention is given to the distribution of the species and the numbers of fungi at various soil depths in several sera/ communities.
3795 Changes In Soli Orgenl1m1 Auoclated with Fore1t Communltl" In the Georgia Pledmonl David Kuang-Hung Kuo. Doctoral dissertation, 1965, University ol Georgia. 85 pp.
3796 Moisture Depletion In Soli-Crop Ecosystems. Robert H. Rivers. Masters thesis, 1968, University of Georgia. 56 pp.
3797 "Soils of the Pitcher Plant Habitats in the Georgia Coastal Plain". Gayther L. Plummer. Ecology 44(4) : 727-734. Autumn 1963. The habitats of the insectivorous pitcher plant in the middle Georgia Coastal Plain are the moist pine barrens (MPB) and the intermediate pine barrens (IPB): Both are associated with the Myatt, Plummer, and Rains soil series. The variations in available nutrients of both and the edaphic relationships which permit high plant production in the MPB are examined.
3798 Solis and Land Use Correlation ol the Outer Atlantic Coastal Plain ol VIrginia, the Carolinas, and Northern Georgia. Charles H. V. Ebert. Doctoral dissertation, 1957, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill.
3799 "Influence of Soil Types on Stabilization of the Savannah River". William J. Wall.
Proceedings ol the American Society ol Civil Engineers 91; Joumal ol the Waterways and Harbors Division, (No. WW3, Part 1): 7-23. August 1965. Study of the gradations of soil that comprise the bottom, banks, and bluffs ol the river and the influence of these gradations on channel stabilization problems.
3800 Soil Erosion and Agriculture In the Southern Piedmont: A History. Arthur R. Hall. Doctoral dissertation, 1948, Duke University.
3801 Culturally Accelerated Sedimentation on the Middle Georgia Pledmonl Stanley W. Trimble. Masters thesis, 1970, University of Georgia. 110 pp.
3802 A Geographic Analysis ol Erosive Land Use on the Southern Piedmont, 1700-1900. Stanley Wayne Trimble. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, University ol Georgia. 190 pp.
3803 Man-Induced Soli Erosion on the Southern Piedmont, 1700-1970. Stanley Wayne Trimble. Soil Conservation Society-of America. Ankeny, Iowa. 1974. ix + 180 pp.
3804 "A New Song on the Muddy Chattahoochee". Frank A. Albert and Albert H. Spector. In: Water; Yearbook ol Agriculture 1955, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington. D.C., pp. 205-210. The contributions of conservation practices in reducing the turbidity of the Chattahoochee River are discussed.
3805 "The Chattahoochee's Ravaged Banks". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magezlne April 19, 1970. Pp. 8-10, 40. Intermittent release of water from Buford Dam has caused softening and erosion of the Chattahoochee River's banks below the dam.
3806 "The Murder of a Landscape". Edwin Way Teale. Natural History 60(8) : 352-356. October 1951. Photographs and description of a man-made desert, the Copper Basin or Ducktown Desert of the area where Georgia, Tennessee, and North Carolina join. The wasteland was created by copper-smelting operations.
3807 Georgia Conservation Needs Inventory, April 1970. Georgia State Soil and Water Conservation Needs Committee (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, Athens). 1970. 209 pp. Types and uses of land in each county are summarized. Amount of land needing treatment for erosion prevention is estimated.
3808 Handbook lor Control ol Soli Erosion and Sediment in Areas Undergoing Urban Development. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Athens, Ga. 1972. Various pagings.
3809 "Vegetation for Erosion Control in the Southern Coastal Plain of the United States". D. C. McClurkin. In: Proceedings, International Symposium on Forest Hydrology, Pergamon Press. New York, 1967, pp. 655-661.
3810 Selection, Establishment and Maintenance ol Vegetation lor Erosion Control ol Roadside Areas In Georgia. R. A. McCreery, Ellis G. Diseker, and R. M. Lawrence, Jr. Cooperative Research GDOT Research Project No. 6907, GAES Research Project No. 3-413. Interim Report. Phase 2. Georgia Department of Transportation and University of Georgia Department of Agronomy. Atlanta and Athens. March 1974. ix + 120 pp. NTIS number: PB-235 288. [See also Phase 1 Report: PB-198 782].
3811 "Practices for Erosion Control on Roadside Areas in Georgia". E. C. Richardson, Ellis G. Diseker, and Joseph M. Sheridan Highway Research Record No. 335: 35-44..1970.
3812 "Revegetation of Road Cuts in Georgia". P. V. Tabor and C. L. Veatch. Joumal ol Soli and Water Conservation 13:279. 1958.
3813 Conservation Methods lor Solis ol the Southern Piedmont. B. H. Hendrickson, A. P. Barnett, and 0. W. Beale. Agriculture Information Bulletin No. 269. U.S. Department of Agriculture, AgricuUural Research Service. Washington, D.C. May 1963. fii] + 18 pp.
SOLID WASTE
3814 Handling Solid Waste Materials In Urban-Fringe and Rural Communities In Georgia. D. H. Carley. Research Bulletin 149. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. 1973. 46 pp. Summarizes laws and regulations, determines types and costs of collection and disposal systems currently used by local governments in Georgia. and projects solid waste disposal volumes and needs for planning.
3815 Planning lor Management ol Solid Waste Materials In Rural Areas. D. H. Carley. Research Bulletin 158. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. July 1974. 23 pp.
3816 Fea1lblllty ol Developing Sanitary Landfills at Abandoned Surface Mines In Georgia. Larry J. Picciola. [Unpublished] Special Research Problem. Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Civil Engineering. August 1972. v + 36 pp.
3817 "Pine Bark- From Trash to Treasure". Virgil Adams. Atlanta Joumal & Constitution
103
Swamps
Magazine March 17, 1974. Pp. 24- 28, 31, 34. Formerly a source of pollution, Georgia pine bark is now being used in gardens and nurseries across the eastern U.S. in the manufacture of charcoal, particle board, and plastic; and in numerous scientific investigations.
3818 "Garbage by the Swampful". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 17, 1970. Pp. 28-31, 33. Heavy April rains sent the Flint River swirling through Albany's landfill -creating a landscape of pollution that caricatured messy modern man.
SWAMPS
GENERAL CHANNELIZATION ALCOVY SWAMPS OKEFENOKEE
General History Recreation and Education Natural Environments
GENERAL
3819 Swamps, River Bottoms and Canebrakes. Brooke Meanly. Barre Publishers. Barre, Mass. 1972. 142 pp. The great swamplands of the South are explored and explained. Georgia swamps visited are the Okefenokee, the lower Altamaha, the Ocmulgee, Brier Creek (Screven County), and Dudley's Hammock (within Grand Bay which lies in Lanier and Lowndes Counties).
3820 The Southern River Swamp - A Multiple-Use Environment. Charles H. Wharton. Georgia State University, School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Atlanta. May 1~70. [iv] + 48 pp. Tangible and intangible benefits of the river swamp ecosystem are summarized. These include biological productivity, water quality and quantity, recreation, and education. The harmful effects of channelization on the swamp ecosystem are examined.
3821 "Southern Swamps and Marshes". William T. Penfound. Botanical Review 18(6) : 413-446. June 1952.
3822 Wetlands of the U.S. Circular 39. U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Washington, D.C. 1971. 67 pp. + 21 plates. General information on the extent and value of wetlands in each of the states.
3823 'Timber Potentials in the Wetland Hardwoods". Stephen G. Boyce and Noel D. Cost. In: Water Resources, Utilization, and Conservation, M. C. Blount, ed., Taylor Printing Co., Reynolds, Georgia, 1974, pp. 130-151. On the value of the hardwoods of the wetland forests of Georgia, Florida, the Carolinas, and Virginia as a timber resource.
CHANNELIZATION
3824 "Should We Drain the Swamps?". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine March 4, 1973. Pp. 8-9, 20-23. Channelization of streams to drain swamps is a practice carried out by the Soil Conservation Service of the U. S. Department of Agriculture under authority of Public Law 566. The controversial activity is examined with the Ten Mile- Briar Creek Project in Bacon County taken as an example.
3825 "Wilderness or Wasteland? The Blights of Channelization". Ben B. Blackburn. LivIng Wilderness 34(109) . 27-32. Spring 1970.
3826 "Our Ruined Rivers". George T. Bagby. Georgia Game and Fish 4(7) : 1-16. July 1969. On the adverse effects on fish and wildlife of small watershed projects, including stream channelization and draining of wetlands, as carried out by the U. S. Soil Conservation Service under Public Law 566. Special attention is given to projects on the Alcovy River and two of its tributaries, Cornish Creek and Flat Creek (Gwinnett, Newton and Walton Counties).
3827 "The Battle of the Ditches". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 15, 1975. Pp. 14-19. A report on the controversy surrounding the Big Mortar - Snuff Box Swamp Watershed Project, a $6 million program involving channelization, diking, and erosion control measures in 240,000 acres of Mcintosh and Long Counties.
3828 "How They Tamed Bull Creek". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 8, 1971. Pp. 8-9, 30. Bull Creek in Muscogee County was proclaimed the best watershed project in the nation in 1971 by the National Watershed Congress. 12 miles of channel alteration, 11 dams, and 50 miles of roadbank stabilization make up the $6.5 million project.
3829 Evaluation of Planning lor Wetlands Drainage Projects In the Southeastern Coastal Plains. Michael Rulison and Constance B. Martin. Research Triangl.e Planning Commission, Research Triangle Park, N.C. December 1972. 128 pp. NTIS number: PB-214 587.
3830 The Ex Post Measurement of Benefits and Costs In Small Watershed Projects. Phillip A. R. Maxwell. University of Georgia, Institute of Natural Resources. Athens. May 1973. 149 pp. NTIS number: PB-226 108. The ex post performances of two small watershed projects in Georgia, Little Tallapoosa River Project and Rooty Creek Project, are measured. Discrepancies between ex ante and ex post estimates of costs and benefits from these projects are discussed and ways to improve future benefit-cost analyses are suggested.
3831 Survey of Economic - Ecologic Impacts of Small Watershed Development. Ronald M. North et a/. Report No. ERC-0974. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center and University of Georgia, Institute of Natural Resources. Atlanta and Athens. June 1974. xii + 122 pp. NTIS number: PB-235 407.
3832 A Preliminary Report on Drainage Reclamation In Georgia. S. W. McCallie and U.S. Department of Agriculture. Bulletin No. 25. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1911. 123 pp. + 7 plates + 5 maps. Summaries of surveys of swamp drainage possibilities in Bryan, Chatham, Clinch, Echols, Glynn, Liberty, Mcintosh, Telfair. Floyd, and Jackson counties. Includes plans for drainage project on McRae Branch in Telfair County, the Berry School farm in Floyd County, and the Mulberry River in Jackson County.
3833 Agricultural Drainage In Georgia. H. H. Barrows, J. V. Phillips, and J. E. Brantly. Bulletin No. 32. Geological Survey of Georgia. 1917. xii + 122 pp. + 9 plates+ 6 maps. Summarizes natural drainage and potential for artificial drainage in the Piedmont and Coastal Plain. Typical projects in each are described. Lands in each county needing artificial drainage are classified.
ALCOVY SWAMPS
3834 "The Alcovy River- A Unique Natural Heritage". Charles H. Wharton. ASB Bulletin (Association of Southeastern Biologists) 16 79-88. 1969.
3835 "The Fight to Save Alcovy Swamp". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 4. 1969. Pp. 24-26, 28, 31, 71.
3836 "The Alcovy River Swamps: The Result of Culturally Accelerated Sedimentation". Stanley W. Trimble. Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science 28(4): 131-141. September 1970.
3837 "Age of Swamps in the Alcovy River Drainage Basin". Albert C. Staheli, David E. Ogren, and Charles H. Wharton. Southeastern Geology 16(2): 103-106. November 1974. Carbon-14 tests on samples from the swamps return dates that range from 1785 A.D. to 6750 B.C., a period that precedes European colonization and agricultural activity. It is concluded that Alcovy swamps were caused by natural rather than human activities.
OKEFENOKEE SWAMP
General History Recreation and Education Natural Environments
General
3838 "Okefenokee, The Magical Swamp". Francois Leydet. National Geographic 145(2) : 169-175. February 1974.
3839 The Okefenokee Swamp. Franklin Russell. Photographs by Patricia Caulfield. The American Wilderness [series]. Time-Life Books. New York. 1973. 184 pp.
3840 "Lost in the Okefenokee". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 7, 1970. Pp. 8, 10, 12, 14, 17, 19. Experiences and discoveries of a three-day trip through the Okefenokee are described.
3841 "Mystique of the Big Swamp". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 31, 1970. Pp. 16-18. 20. Adventure in the Okefenokee Swamp.
3842 "Okefenokee". Julian Rhinehart. National Parks 42(254) . 6:8. November 1968.
3843 "Okefenokee- Wild and Weird". Sara J. Covington. Georgia Magazine 1(4): 26-27. 34. December 1957- January 1958.
104
Water P.olkltion
3844 "The Okefenokee". Robbie Mclean. Georgia Mineral Newstenar 8(1): 17-20, 1955. The natural features of the swamp are briefly described.
3845 "Okefenokee". Living Wlldemeos 19: 1-7. 1954.
3846 "The Okefenokee Swamp - Land of Trembling Earth". Woolford B. Baker. Emory Unlverolty Quarterly 5(2) : 110-119. June 1949. Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 2(6) : 15-22. 1949. General description and historical sketch.
3847 "Eternal Swamp [Qkefenokee]'". Charles Elliott. American Foreots 55(2) : 4-9, 48. February 1949.
3848 "A Day in the Okefenokee Swamp". Sapelo Treanor. Georgia Review 1(1): 126-135. Spring 1947.
3849 "The Okefinokee Wilderness: Exploring the Mystery Land of the Suwannee River Reveals Natural Wonders and Fascinating Folklore". Francis Harper. National Geographic 65(5) : 597-624. May 1934.
3850 "Okefinokee Swamp". Roland M. Harper. Popular Science Monthly 74 : 596-614. 1909.
3851 "A Visit to Okefinokee Swamp in Southern Georgia". Roland M. Harper. Torreya 2: 156-158. 1902.
History
3852 Hlotory of Okefenokee Swamp. A. S. McQueen and Hamp Mizell. Jacobs and Company. Clinton, S.C. 1926. 191 pp.
3853 "The Okefenokee Swamp, Its History and Legends, 1". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Hlotorlcal Quarterly 48(2) : 166-192. June 1964.
3854 "The Okefenokee Swamp: Its History and Legends, II". E. Merton Coulter. Georgia Hlotorlcal Quarterly 48(3) : 291-312. September 1964.
3855 Our Georgia-Florida Frontier, The Okellnokee Swamp, Ill Hlotory and Cartography, Volume I. Albert Hazen Wright. A. H. Wright, publisher. Ithaca, New York. 1945. [250) pp.
3858 Forty-live Yearo With the Okefenokee Swamp, 1900-1945. John M. Hopkins. Bulletin No.4. Georgia Society of Naturalists. [Atlanta]. (1946?]. [vi] + 69 pp.
3857 About "Old Okefenok". Laura Singleton Walker and Sara Singleton King. Published by the authors. Waycross, Ga. 1947. viii+ 73 pp. Articles on the Okefenokee Swamp from the Atlanta Constitution, the Atlanta Journal Magazine, and the Waycross Journal-Herald are reprinted. All are historical sketches or human interest stories.
3858 SeHiero of the Okefenokee: Seven Biographical Sketches. Lois Barefoot Mays. Published by the author. Folkston, Georgia[?]. 1975. xvi + 192 pp.
3859 "Struggle for an Okefenokee Homestead". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine July 13, 1969. Pp. 10-11, 26, 28-30. The Tom Chesser homestead within the Okefenokee Swamp may become a museum to show visitors how swamp settlers lived 100 years ago.
3860 "The Last Indian Town of Georgia". John H. Goff. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 15(3-4,) . 93-95. 1962. An old land map in the records of the Surveyor General Office at the Georgia Department of Archives and History shows possibly the last Indian settlement of Georgia. This "town" consisted of two houses on Mitchell's Island in the Okefenokee Swamp (present-day Ware County). Supposedly every Indian had been driven out of the state before this area was surveyed (1850). This "fact" is the most interesting aspect of the settlement within the Okefenokee.
3861 "Okefinokee Swamp as a Reservation". Francis Harper. Natural History 20: 28-41. 1920.
Recreation and Education
3862 Tips from Tau: The Okefenokee Swamp; An Educational Opportunity. Tau Chapter, Psi State Delta Kappa Gamma. Hebardville Printing Company. Waycross, Georgia. No date. [32] pp.
3863 A Regional Recreation Feasibility Study (Okefenokee Theme Park). Slash Pine Area Planning and Development Commission. Waycross, Georgia. February 1971. 48 pp. NTIS number: PB-198 535. A commercial "theme park" related to the Okefenokee environment is proposed. Includes a general physical plan.
3864 "Canoeing in the Wilderness". John Pennington. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine May 14, 1972. Pp. 10, 36, 38. Canoe trails into the Okefenokee have been established. These routes make possible a wilderness experience of up to six days.
3865 "Canoeing the Okefenokee". Claude Terry. Brown's Guide to Georgia 2(2) : 42-45. Spring 1974.
3866 "Wildlrte and Recreational Opportunities in the Okefenokee". Donald W. Plitzer. Forest Farmer 31 (7) . 22 If. April 1972.
3867 "Big Swamp Wildlife". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 25. 1971. Pp. 14-16, 18. 20. 22. A new museum at Stephen Foster State Park depicts the Okefenokee Swamp's wildlife in natural settings.
Natural Environments
3868 "The Habitats and Composition of the Vegetation of Okelinokee Swamp, Georgia". A H. Wright and A. A. Wright. Ecological Monographs 2 109-232, 75 figures. 1932.
3869 "The Vertebrate Life of Okefinokee Swamp in Relation to the Atlantic Coastal Plain". A. H. Wright. Ecology 7(1) . 77-95. January 1926.
3870 "The Origin of Houses in the Okefenokee Prairies". Eugene Cypert. American Midland Naturalist 87(2) 448-458. April 1972. Clumps of trees and shrubs in the open marshes of the Okefenokee Swamp are known locally as "houses" These are thought to have been formed from partially floating masses of peat.
3871 An Analysis of Primary Productivity of Two Okefenokee Swamp Prairies. Sandra Adams Smith. Masters thesis, 1973, Georgia State University_. v + 42 pp.
3872 "The Effect of Fires in the Okefenokee Swamp in 1954 and 1955". Eugene Cypert. American Midland Naturalist 66(2): 485-503. October 1961.
3873 "Plant Succession on Burned Areas in Okefenokee Swamp Following the Fires of 1954 and 1955". Eugene Cypert. Proceedings Annual Tall Timbers Fire Ecology Conference 12. 199-217. 1972.
3874 "The Magnificent Okefenokee: A Feeling of Constancy". J. Hall. Georgia Game and Fish 3(8). 1-4. August 1968. The Okefenokee Swamp is visited during a period of drought.
3875 "Petrography and Paleoecology of Holocene Peats from the Okefenokee SwampMarsh Complex of Georgia". Arthur D. Cohen. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 44(3) : 716-726. September 1974.
3876 "Petrology of Some Holocene Peat Sediments from the Okefenokee Swamp-Marsh Complex of Southern Georgia". Arthur D. Cohen. Geological Society of America Bulletin 84(12). 3867-3878. December 1973.
3877 "Possible Influences of Subpeat Topography and Sediment Type upon the Development of the Okefenokee Swamp-Marsh Complex of Georgia". Arthur D. Cohen. Southeastem Geology 15(3): 141-151. 1973.
WATER POLLUTION
GENERAL
3878 Water Quality Monitoring Data For Georgia Streams. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division. Annual. Annual compilation of water quality data for all larger streams. Replaces earlier reports on individual basins or regions.
3879 Community Environment Analysis (Series]. Georgia Department of Human Resources, Division of Physical Health. Atlanta. Irregular. Surveys of water supply and waste disposal systems loT cities and counties. Titles vary, e.g .. Environmental Health Report, Housing and Environmental Condition Report, and Residential Environmental Profile.
3880 Journal Southeastern Section, American Water Works Association. American Water Works Association, Southeastern Section. Annual. Each issue consists of papers from the annual meeting of the Southeastern Section, AWWA. The usually brief papers deal with various aspects of public water systems and sewage systems in Georgia and South Carolina.
SPECIFIC (Chronologically)
3881 Twenty-Five Years of Stream Pollutlonal Control Progress In Georgia; A Review of Sewage Treatment Planning and Plant Construction, 1930-1955. Georgia Department of Public Health, Division of Water Pollution Control. Atlanta. (1955?]. 29 pp.
3882 Clean Streams In Georgia. Georgia Department of Public Health. Atlanta. [1960?]. 32 pp.
3883 Stream Pollution In the Coosa Valley of Northwest Georgia. Robert S. Ingalls and George I. Whitlatch. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station. 1963. 17 pp.
105
Water Pollution
3884 Report on Pollution of Interstate Waters of the Mouth of the Savannah River, Georgia - South Carolina. U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, U. S. Public Health Service. Cincinnati. November 1964.
3885 Proceedings. Conference In the Matter of Pollution of the Interstate Waters of the Chattahoochee Rl- and Its Tributaries, from Atlanta, Georgia to Fort Gaines, Georgia; Atlanta. July 14-15, 1966. Federal Water Pollution Control Administration. Washington, D.C. 1966. 2 vols.
3886 "The Effects of Cold Water Discharge on a Downstream Reservoir's Temperature and Oxygen Levels... John E. Frey and Phillip C. Pierce. In: Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Conference, Southeastern Association of Game and Fish Commissioners, October 24-26. 1966, Asheville. North Carolina, pp. 357-363. The effects of cold water discharge from Hartwell Dam to the Lake below (Clark Hill) are 1nvest1gated.
3887 Water Quality Study of Chatham County Waters; Technical Report No. 2. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. December 1966. 256 pp.
3888 Clean Water for the Nation's Estuaries; Proceedings of the Georgia Public Meeting, Jekyll Island, Georgia, February 29, 1968. Federal Water Pollution Control Administration. Atlanta. 1968. Various pagings.
3889 Proceedings. Conference In the Matter of Pollution of the Interstate Waters of the
Coosa River and Its Trlbutariea - Georgia - Alabama. Second Session, Rome, Georgia,
April 11, 1968. Federal Water Pollution Control Administration. Washington, D.C. 1968.
166 pp.
-
3890 "Our Drinking Water". Andrew Sparks. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 4, 1969. Pp. 14, 16, 32. The problems of keeping Georgia's water clean enough to drink are examined.
3891 Water Quality Investigations at Two Marinas on Lake Lanier. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. August 1969. 32 pp.
3892 Dalton Water Quality Survey. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. September 1969. 63 pp. + appendoces.
3893 A Study of Fecal Coliform Levels In Georgia Recreational Waters. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. September 1969. 16 pp. +appendices.
3894 Cabin Creek Water Quality Survey. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. December 1969. 41 pp.
3895 Quality of Ogeechee River- Bulloch County. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. December 1969. 37 pp.
3896 Savannah River Basin, Georgia and South Carolina; Reservoir Water Quality Investigations; Data Report. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Savannah District. Savannah Georgia. 1969-1971. 5 vols.
3897 Second Session of the Conference In the Matter of Pollution of the Chattahoochee River and Its Tributaries In the States of Georgia and Alabama; Civic Center, Atlanta, Georgia, Tuesday, February 17, 1970. Federal Water Pollution Control Administration. Washington. D.C. 1970. [iv] + 227 pp.
3898 Water Quality Data - Atlanta Area; Chattahoochee, Flint and South Rivers. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. January 1970.
3899 Water Quality Data - Columbus Area Chattahoochee River. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. February 1970. 32 pp.
3900 Biological Investigation of Tennessee Basin Streams of Northwestern Georgia. Geargoa Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. March 1970.
3901 A Biological Investigation of Streams of the Chattooga River Basin (Savannah). Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1970. 29 pp.
3902 Water Quality Data- Lower Savannah River. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1970. 74 pp.
3903 Water Quality Data- Valdosta Area. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1970.
3904 Lake Water Swimming Areas - Water Quality Investigations at Lake Water Swimming Areas In Georgia, Summer 1969. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. June 1970. 30 pp.
3905 A Water Quality Investigation of Tobesofkee Creek (Ocmulgee). Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. June 1970.
3906 A Water Quality Survey of Jackson Lake Upper Reservoir, Georgia- 1969. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. August 1970. 36 pp.
3907 Augusta Water Quality Survey. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. September 1970. 83 pp.
3908 An Instance of Thermal Pollution and the Effect on Temperature and Oxygen Levels in a Middle Georgia Reservoir [Lake Sinclair]". John E. Frey. In: Proceedings of the
Twenty-Fourth Annual Conference, Southeastern Association of Game and Fish Commissioners, September 27-30, 1970, Atlanta, Georgia, pp. 408-418.
3909 Coosa River Basin Study. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. October 1970. 226 pp.
3910 Sacond Seaslon of the Conference In the Matter of Pollution of the Interstate Waters of the Lower Savannah River.. Savannah, Georgia, October 29, 1969. Proceedings. Federal Water Pollution Control Administration. Washington, D.C. 1970. x + 187 pp.
3911 Atlanta Coastal Region Multi-Agency 011 and Hazardous Materials Pollution Contingency Plan - Region IV. U. S. Coast Guard, Seventh District. Miami. December 1970. 440 pp. NTIS number: AD-756 231.
3912 Flint River Water Quality Study, Atlanta-Griffin. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. January 1971.
3913 An Ecological Survey of the North and South Newport Rivers and Adjacent Waters with Respect to Possible Effects of Treated Kraft Mill Effluent; Final Report. Michael D. Dahlberg. et at. University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia. Prepared for Georgia Water Quality Control Board, Atlanta. April 1971. viii + 280 pp.
3914 Chattahoochee River Basin. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. May 1971. 206 pp.
3915 Fecal Coliform Reduction In Stabilization Ponds. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. May 1971.48 pp.
3916 Water Quality Study of Chatham County Recreational Waters. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. May 1971.62 pp.
3917 Proceedings of Public Hearing on Pollution of the Upper Ocmulgee River Basin. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. 1971. 47 pp. +appendices.
3918 "Protective Pumping to Reduce Aquifer Pollution, Glynn County, Georgia". D. 0. Gregg. Ground Water 9(5) 21-29. 1971.
3919 Upper Ocmulgee River Basin Water Quality Study. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. May 1971. 86 pp.
3920 A Report on Pollution In the Middle Reach of the Savannah River, Georgia - South Carolina. Technical Study Report No. TS 03-71-208-003. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Southeast Water Laboratory, Technical Services Program. Athens, Georgia. August 1971 [1972?]. 223 pp. NTIS number: PB-230 063.
3921 Report on Pollution of the SL Marya and Amelia Eatuarlel, Georgia - Florida. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Southeast Water Laboratory. Athens, Georgia. August 1971. 52 pp. NTIS number: PB-213 394.
3922 A Study of Public Attitudes and Multiple Objective Decision Criteria for Water Pollution Control Projects. Gerald J. Thuesen. Report No. ERC-1071. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. October 1971. 75 pp. NTIS number: PB-205 181.
3923 Gainesville Area Water Quality Study. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. November 1971. 71 pp. +appendices.
3924 Storm and Combined Sewer Pollution Sources and Abatement, Atlanta, Ga. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Water Programs Office. Washington, D.C. 1971. 181 pp.
3925 The Water Lords: Ralph Nader's Study Group Report on Industry and Environmental Crisis In Savannah, Georgia. James M. Fallows. Grossman Publishers. New York. 1971. xxiv + 294 pp.
3926 Inventory of Water Pollution Control FacUlties. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. 1972. 4 vols.
3927 "Industry Can Do It!". Bob Wilson. Georgia Game and Fish 7(1) : 10-13. January 1972. In Riceboro, Georgia, Interstate Paper Corporation has proven that pollution effluent from a kraft paper mill can be cleaned up.
3928 Mercury Pollution Investigation In Georgia 1970-1971. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. January 1972. 117 pp.
3929 Prelmpoundment Study of West Point Lake, Georgia. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Southeast Water Laboratory. Athens, Georgia. January 1972. 200 pp. NTIS number: PB-213 306. A study of water quality of the Chattahoochee at West Point Dam before impoundment.
3930 Water Quality Data- Valdosta Area. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. January 1972. 35 pp.
3931 "Reclaiming Georgia's Streams". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 13, 1972. Pp. 8-9, 16, 18. Tough new laws are making water polluters change their destructive ways.
3932 Water Quality Investigation of Big Indian Creek (Ocmulgee). Georgia Water Quality
106
Water Pollution
Control Board. Atlanta. 1972. 15 pp.
3933 Cedar Creek Water Quality Investigation (Oconee). Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1972.
3934 Chattahoochee River - Buford Dam to Atlanta. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1972. 57 pp.
3935 Chattahoochee River- Columbus Area 19701971. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1972. 26 pp.
3936 Flint River Basin Study. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1972. 210 pp.
3937 Water Quality Data - Atlanta Area; Chattahoochee, Flint and South River. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1972. 65 pp.
3938 Water Quality Data- Lower Savannah River. Georgia Water Quality Control Board.
Atlanta. April 1972. 54 pp.
3939 A Water Quality Investigation of Mud Creek (Chattahoochee). Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. April 1972.
3940 "River's Friends and Enemies". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 4, 1972. Pp. 2425, 27, 29-30, 32, 34. A French television crew films a documentary on the Chattahoochee River and efforts to clean it up.
3941 Brier Creek Report. Georgia Water Quality Control Board. Atlanta. July 1972. 35 pp.
3942 Noonday Creek Basin Study (Etowah). Georgia Water Quality Control Board. At lanta. July 1972. 32 pp.
3943 Dog River Basin (Chattahoochee) Water Quality Investigation. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. August 1972. 25 pp.
3944 A Study of the Effects of Island Development on Lake Water Quality (Lake Lanier]. Mark A. McClanahan and Alfred W. Hoadley. Report No. ERC-1172. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. September 1972. 49 pp. NTIS number: PB-213 161.
3945 "Water, Water. .".Jim Doherty. Outdoors in Georgia 1(3) : 9-11. September 1972. Summaries of revisions in water quality standards, three new categories of stream classification, and designations of a use classification for all reaches of nine intrastate streams that went into effect July 1, 1972. Chart shows classifications (fishing, drinking water, industrial, recreation, urban) of various sections of the following rivers: Ogeechee, Little Ogeechee, Oconee, North Oconee, Middle Oconee, Ocmulgee. South, Yellow, Alcovy, Altamaha, Ohoopee. Satilla. Conasauga, Coosawattee, Oostanaula, and Etowah.
3946 "Wastewater Treatment, 1972 Style". Ira C. Kelley and J. E. Sams. American City 87(10): 108110, 112. October 1972. Illustrations ~nd descriptions of Atlanta's ten wastewater treatment plants.
3947 Altamaha River Basin Study. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. December 1972. 89 pp.
3948 "The Great Acid Dump" George Reiger. Field & Stream 77(8) 14, 16, 18, 121. December 1972. "Since the mid-1950's, the American Cyanamid Company has dumped millions of gallons of su1furic acid . .. , ferrous sulfate. .., and other wastes from its titanium dioxide paint~ pigment producing plant directly into the Savannah River".
3949 Ocmulgee River Basin Study. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. December 1972. 93 pp.
3950 "Putting the Closed Loop Into Practice". [Carol Knapp Lewicke]. Environmental Science and Technology 6(13) 1072-1073. December 1972. Dow Chemical Company's latex plant in Dalton was built for complete water reuse.
3951 Water Quality Investigation of the Oconee. Georgia Department of Natural Re sources. Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. December 1972. 113 pp.
3952 Preimpoundment Study, Carters Lake. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency. Athens, Georgia. 1972. 65 pp. NTIS number: PB-213 307. Water quality at the siteof Carters Dam on the Coosawattee River was investigated.
3953 Conference on Pollution of Interstate Waters of Lower Savannah River and its Tributaries, South Carolina, Georgia. February 2, 1965. U. S. Public Health Service. 1973. 158 pp.
3954 An Examination of the Economic Impact of Pollution Control upon Georgia's WaterUsing Industries. Winfred G. Dodson and Robert B. Cassell. Report No. ERC-0173. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. February 1973. 51 pp. NTIS number: PB-220 006.
3955 Water Use Classifications and Water Quality Criteria for the State of Georgia. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division and U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region IV. Atlanta. February 1973. ii + 39 pp. Includes classifications of river and streams relative to the following uses: (1) Drinking
Water; (2) Recreation; (3) Fishing; (4) Agricultural; (5) Industrial; (6) Navigation; (7) Wild River; (8) Scenic River; and (9) Urban Stream.
3956 Evaluation of Water Quality Management Planning in Georgia. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. April 1973. 122 pp.
3957 "How Atlanta Keeps the Chattahoochee Free of Water-Treatment Waste". Paul Weir and George C. Hornsby. American City 88(4) :57, 59, 112. April 1973. A pioneering settled-solids removal system is described.
3958 Water Quality Investigation of the Tennessee River Basin in Georgia. Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division. Atlanta. April 1973. VI + 76 pp.
3959 Transport, Fate, and Geochemical Interactions of Mercury, Cadmium, and Other Inorganic Pollutants in the Coastal Littoral-Salt Marsh Environment of the Southeastern United States. Georgia Marine Science Center. Skidaway Island, Georgia. May 1973 and January 1974. NTIS numbers: PB-227 035 and PB-230 037.
3960 .. Mercury Distribution in Estuarine - Nearshore Environment". H. L. Windom. Journal of lhe Waterways, Harbors and Coastal Engineering Division ASCE 99 : 257264. 1973.
3961 Microbial Changes and Possible Ground Water Pollution from Poultry Manure and Beef Cattle Feedlots in Georgia. Joel Giddens, A.M. Rao, and Herbert W. Fordham. Report No. ERC-0573. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. May 1973. NTIS number: PB-220 956.
3962 Soil Pollution from Cattle Feedlots in Georgia. Herbert Wayne Fordham. Masters thesis, 1973, University of Georgia. 55 pp. NTIS number: PB-226 083.
3963 Evaluation of the Georgia Water Supply Program. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region IV. Atlanta. July 1973. 198 pp. NTIS number: PB 227 215. An investigation of (1) drinking water quality and (2) the adequacy of water system facilities as related to the Georgia Water Supply Program.
3964 "How to Mix Oil and Water. Maybe." Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 5, 1973. Pp. 28, 30, 32-33. Environmentalists and petroleum producers meet to try to understand each other's interests and problems.
3965 Interstate Highway Environmental Health Survey - State of Georgia. Georgia De partment of Human Resources, Division of Physical Health. Atlanta. October 1973. iii + 73 pp. Water-supply and sewage-disposal systems of tourist-related establishments along Georgia's interstate highways are investigated.
3966 Water Quality Investigation of Estuaries of Georgia. Interim Report to Environmental Protection Division, Georgia Department of Natural Resources. Brunswick Junior College. Brunswick, Georgia. January 1974. 70 pp.
3967 Disposal of Liquid Sewage Sludge in the Southern Piedmont. Larry D. King and H.D. Morris. Research Report 186 [Agricultural Experiment Stations]. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture. Department of Agronomy. Athens. February 1974. [19] pp.
3968 Land Disposal of Wastewater: Processes, Design Criteria, and Planning Considera tions. John P. Hartigan, Jr. Report No. ERC-1074. Georgia Institute of Technology, En v~ronmental Resources Center. Atlanta. August 1974. 166 pp. NTIS number: PB-235 311.
3969 A Pilot Study of Drinking Water Systems in the U. S. Forest Service System. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water and Hazardous Materials, Water Supply Division. Washington. D.C. November 1974. iv + 121 pp. Wate-r systems m nine National Forests, including the Chattahoochee and Oconee National Forests in GeOrgia, were studied.
3970 "Mercury and Marsh Hens". Ron Odum. Outdoors in Georgia 3(11): 22-25. November 1974. On the effects of mercury pollution on coastal wildlife.
3971 Richard B. Russell Lake Water Quality Investigation; Hydraulic Model Investigation. Darrell G. Fontane and Joseph P. Bohan. Technical Report H-74-14. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station. Vicksburg, Miss. December 1974. 26 pp. + 25 plates. Investigation of thermal and dissolved oxygen regimes of the proposed Trotters Shoals (Richard B. Russell) Reservoir and the effects of the reservoir upon the thermal and dissolved oxygen regimes of the downstream Clark Hill Reservoir.
3972 Water Quality Inventory of the Southern Coastal Plain and Atlantic Coast Flatwoods of Georgia. Loris E. Asmussen, Joseph M. Sheridan, and Homer D. Allison. ARSS-49. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. Washington, D.C. Feb ruary 1975. 1i + 27 pp.
3973 Effects of Urbanization on Water Quality. Robert P. Shubinski and Steven N. Nel son. American Society of Civil Engineers, New York in cooperation with DeKalb County Planning Department, Decatur, Georgia. March 1975. 44 pp. NTIS number: PB-242 297.
3974 Seasonal Variation in Water Quality of Streamflow in the Coastal Plain of Georgia. Loris E. Asmussen. Research Bulletin 168. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. April 1975. 15 pp.
107
Water Resource Development
"Streamflow from urban-suburban watersheds and rural-agricultural watersheds with definite urban influences in the Coastal Plain of Georgia exhibited seasonal variation [which is] not apparent in runoff quality from rural-agricultural watersheds. The quality
of water from rural-agricultural watersheds with some urban-suburban influence was
judged to be good ..
3975 Control of Water Pollution from Cropland; Volume I - A Manual lor Guideline Development. B. A. Stewart et al. Report No. ARS-H-5-1. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service in cooperation with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Environmental Research Laboratory, Athens, Georgia (EPA Report Number: EPA-600/2-75-026a). July 1975. viii+ 112 pp. Includes an example problem using the Suwannee River basin of Georgia and Florida.
3976 ''A Little Town Leads the Way". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 17, 1975. Pp. 10, 12, 17-18. Land treatment of waste water is being tried by Braselton, a small town in Jackson County. The town is the first in Georgia to use the process.
Each report examines a river basin or group of river basins in a particular region identifying existing water resource developments, potential developments. past and current planning studies, and needs for additional planning.
3988 Development of Water Resources In Appalachia. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Office of Appalachian Studies. Cincinnati, Ohio. 1969. 26 vols. A comprehensive plan for development and utilization of water and related resources of the Appalachian Region (including the following Georgia counties: Banks, Barrow, Bartow, Carroll, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cherokee, Dade, Dawson, Douglas, Fannin, Floyd, Forsyth, Franklin, Gilmer, Gordon, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Haralson, Heard, Jackson, Lumpkin, Madison, Murray. Paulding, Pickens. Polk. Rabun, Stephens, Towns. Union, Walker, White, Whitfield).
391!9 National Program of Inspection of Dams. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Washington, D.C. 1975. 5 vols. Includes an inventory of dams in the United States.
SPECIFIC
WATER RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT
3990 "Aitamaha Close-Up". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 23, 1972. Pp. 8-9, 22. A boat trip on a river threatened by dams and dredging reveals a multitude of natural wonders.
GENERAL
3977 ''Development of Rivers in Georgia". C. P. Lindner. Georgia Review 3(1) : 10-21. Spring 1949.
3978 Report on the Conservation and Utilization of Water Resources In the State of Georgia. Frederick R. Harris, Inc. New York. 1945. xiv + 90 pp. +53 plates.
3979 Aggregate Returns from Water Resource Development In Georgia, 1946-1965. Abdullah Ersoz and Bill R. Miller. Research Report 133. University of Georgia. College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. July 1972. 32 pp.
3980 Water Resources Development by the U. S. Army Corp of Engineers In Georgia. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, South Atlantic Division. Atlanta. March 1975 [Revision of January 1973 and earlier editions]. vi+ 105 pp. Describes for the public the projects and activities of the Corps of Engineers in connection with the development of water resources in Georgia. These include projects in navigation, flood control, beach erosion control, hurricane protection, water supply, water pollution control, hydroelectric power, flood plain information, and recreation. Narrative and' statistical summaries of each project are given.
3981 Annual Report of the Chief of Engineers on Civil Works Activities. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Washington, D.C. Includes reports of each District (4 Districts in Georgia: Mobile, Savannah, Nashville, Jacksonville) with summaries of work and expenditures, index to authorizing legislation and pertinent Congressional documents, and other data for each project.
3982 Mobile District Stream Mileage Tables with Drainage Areas. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile District. Mobile, Ala. January 1970 (2nd printing May 1972). A-E + 165 pp. + 1 fold. map. Tables indicate number of river miles and number of navigation miles (where applicable) between points on rivers and larger streams. Number of square miles of drainage is indicated at some of the points.
3983 Project Maps. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile District. Mobile, Ala. 1972.
215 sheets.
Maps of Corps of Engineers projects in the Mobile District (Most of the western one-third
of Georgia lies within this district). Includes dams, reservoirs, navigation projects, flood-
control projects, and other activities completed, under construction, or proposed.
3991 "Leave This River Alone". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 5, 1971. Pp. 12-13, 15-17. Sportsmen, conservationists, and some of Georgia's best-known scientists rally at Darien to express opposition to the proposed damming and dredging of the Altamaha River.
3992 Rally lor the Protection of The Altamaha River Basin, A Conference Concerning the Adverse Effects of Damming and Channelization within the Altamaha Basin, Held at. Darien on July 30, 1971. William G. Haynes, Jr., ed. Darien, Georgia. 1971, iv + 77 pp.
3993 "Is This Dam Necessary?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine January 5, 1975. Pp. 10-14. On the controversial Richard B. Russell Dam Project. formerly called Trotters Shoals Project, on the Savannah River.
381M "First Voyage of the Bacon II". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journ81 and ConsUtutlon Magazlns February 4, 1973. Pp. 18-20, 23-25. Should the Savannah River channel between Augusta and Savannah be deepened to support increased barge traffic? The question is approached by an engineer, a conservationist, an archaeologist, and others during a voyage upstream.
3995 Economic Benefits and Environmental Issues Related to Channel Improvements on the Savannah River. University of Georgia. Institute of Community and Area Development. Prepared for Savannah River Basin Development Commission. Athens, Georgia. 1973. xvi + [174] pp. +appendices.
3996 Kinchaloonee Reservoir Development; Webster, Marion and Stewart Counties, Georgia. U. S. Department of Commerce, Economic Development Administration (Hammer, Greene, Siler Associates). Washington, D.C. June 1972. ix +51 pp, Analysis of feasibility of recreation development on the proposed lake.
3997 Klnchaloonee Lake: An Evaluation of Hydrology, Soils and Geology. James W. Smith. Kinchaloonee Lake Authority and Middle Flint Area Planning and Development Commission. Ellaville, Georgia. February 1973. 142 pp. The proposed 4450-acre lake would be located on Kinchafoonee Creek to the northwest of Preston, Webster County, Georgia. Small portions of the lake would extend into Marion and Stewart Counties.
3998 Klnchaloonee Lake: A Preliminary Evaluation of Environmental Impact. James W. Smith et al. Kinchafoonee Lake Authority and Middle Flint Area Planning and Development Commission. Ellaville, Georgia. June 1974. 85 pp.
3984 The Identification and Quantification of the Net Effects of Multiple-Purpose River Basin Development. Ronald M. North and Jackie Sellers. Report No. ERC-0773. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. June 1973. 155 pp. NTIS number: PB-228 588.
3985 Plan for Development of the Land and Water Resources of the Southeast River Basins. United States Study Commission, Southeast River Basins. Atlanta. 1963. 14 vols. A comprehensive plan of improvement for the conservation, utilization, and development of the land and water resources of the Southeast River Basins". Issued as a summary report with 13 appendix volumes as follows: (1) Savannah Basin; (2) Ogeechee Basin; (3) Altamaha Basin; (4) Satilla-St. Marys Basin; (5) Suwannee Basin; (6) Ochlockonee Basin; (7) Apalachicola - Chattahoochee - Flint Basins; (8) Choctawhatchee - Perdido Basins; (9) Economics; (10) Hydrology; (11) Engineering and Cost; (12) Planning; (13) History and Organization of the Commission. Concerns all basins of Georgia except the Tennessee, Coosa, and Tallapoosa drainages.
3986 Organization and Methodology lor River Basin Planning: Proceedings of a Seminar Based on the U. S. Study Commission - Southeast River Basins. Carl E. Kindsvater. ed. Water Resource Center, Georgia Institute of Technology. Atlanta. 1964. 561 pp.
3987 Water Resources Appraisal for Hydroelectric Licensing [Series] [Planning Status Report or Evaluation Report]. Federal Power Commission. Bureau of Power. Washington, D. C. [c1964 to date?].
3999 "Storm Over Hurricane Creek". Margaret Shannon. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine August 4, 1974. Pp. 20-22, 25, 28. Public dump or serene retreat? A controversy rages over the proposed 180Q-acre Lake Alma in Bacon County.
4000 "The Hidden Truth About Groveland Lake". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 28, 1972. Pp. 10-13, 15. An unpublicized study raises new questions about plans to impound the Canoochee River near Claxton.
4001 "Groveland Controversy", Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 30, 1971. Pp. 8-9,28,30-31. The Canoochee River Valley Association leads the opposition to a proposed 23,00Q-acre lake in Evans County.
4002 Groveland Lake; An Evaluation of Hydrology, Soils, and Ecology. Groveland Lake Development Authority (Mayes, Suddeth, and Etheredge, Inc. and Kidd and Associates, Inc., Atlanta). November 1971. ix + 96 pp. +appendices.
4003 "Flint River Speaks - But Do We Listen?". John Pennington. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 10, 1971. Pp. 12,28-30, 32. What would three proposed dams do to the Flint River? A group of ecologists float down the threatened river and point out the potential for disaster.
108
Water Resource Planning
4004 Public Meeting Held at Thomaston, Georgia, Georgia Army National Guard Armory, 28 September 1972, Sprewrell Bluff Lake, Flint River Georgia, Transcript of Meeting and Exhibits. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile District. Mobile. Ala. [1972 or 1973]. 3 vols.
4005 Study of Alternative Uses: Upper Flint River, State of Georgia. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile District (Stanley Consultants, Muscatine, Iowa). Mobile, Ala. April 1973. [152] pp. Defines three alternative use possibilities: (1) protection as a scenic preserve, (2) development of a state scenic river park, and (3) anticipated development by the local sector. The area is the site of the proposed Sprewell Bluff Dam and Reservoir.
4006 Survey Report on Appalachlcola, Chattahoochee and Flint Rivers, Ala., Fla. and Ga. U.S. Army Engineer District, Mobile. Mobile, Alabama. June 1973. 48 pp. Report on comprehensive survey of water resource needs. District Engineer does not recommend additional work beyond authorized projects. Includes general maps and river profiles, flood damage statistics and project data.
4007 Preliminary Report on the Comprehensive Development of the Chattahoochee River System. Frederic R. Harris Engineering Corporation. New York. September 1945. 36 pp. Report to the Agricultural and Industrial Development Board of Georgia on a proposed reservoir system and navigation channel to Atlanta.
4008 "Wallace Dam". Major H. Thompson, Jr. Journal of the Power Division, ASCE 98 (P02) 333-348. October 1972. Wallace Dam on the Oconee River at Laurens Shoals is Georgia Power Company's first pumped storage project. Some of the history, economic justification, and other features of the project are examined.
4009 An Evaluation of the Economic Impact from Recreation and Land Enhancement as related to the Development of the Oconee River Between Athens and Milledgeville. Philip D. Koos, Jr., Amy Collins, and Winfred G. Dodson. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Division. June 1972. [vi] + 91 pp. Prepared for Department of Natural Resources, Earth and Water Division and Altamaha River Basin Commission. An examination of potential benefits from the Wallace Dam and Reservoir project on the Oconee River.
4010 ''This Dam is a Mountain". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine July 26, 1970. Pp. 14-16. Carters Dam, on the Coosawattee River, is the largest earth-rock structure east of the Mississippi.
4011 Development Considerations for the Carters Dam and Reservoir Area. North Georgia Area Planning and Development Commission. Dalton, Georgia. January 1972. 64 pp.
4012 Satilla River, Georgia, St. Marys and Suwannee Rivers, Georgia and Florida. Review Report. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. January 1965. [318] pp. Examination of water resource development potentials for the three rivers.
4013 Survey Report on Alapaha River and Tributaries, Georgia. U. S. Army Engineer District, Jacksonville. Jacksonville, Fla. November 1972. 6 pp. The District Engineer finds that local interests oppose an Alapaha River project on the grounds that recreational and water conservation benefits derived from water impoundment would not offset the loss of scenic and recreational values afforded by the river in 1ts natural state. Includes maps and other pertinent data.
4014 Public Meeting Held at Tifton, Georgia, Alapaha River and Tributaries - Transcript and Record Volume I, II, and Ill. U. S. Army Engineer District. Jacksonville. Jacksonville, Fla. Vol. I - 41 pp.; Vol. II - 119 pp.; Vol. Ill - 438 pp. With detailed project map, summary of beneficial and adverse environmental and other effects, and pertinent project data.
WATER RESOURCE PLANNING
GENERAL
4015 A Program for Metropolitan Water Management. Gene E. Willeke and F. William Kroeck. Report No. ERC - 0772. Georgia lnst1tute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. July 1972. 214 pp. NTIS number: PB-212 717.
4016 Metropolitan Planning and River Basin Planning: Some Interrelationships. Guy J. Kelnhofer, Jr. Report No. WRC-0268. Georgia Institute of Technology, Water Resources Center. Atlanta. July 1968. 218 pp.
4017 Chattahoochee Corridor Study. Atlanta Regional Commission. Atlanta. July 1972. vi+ 73 pp. A land use plan for the Chattahoochee River corridor from Buford Dam (Lake Lanier) to Peachtree Creek (Northwest Atlanta).
4018 River Corridor Studies of the Upper Chattahoochee, Chestatee, and Etowah Rivers.
Georgia Mountains Planning and Development Commission. Atlanta. March 1973. 254 pp. NTIS number: PB-221 891. Studies of water quality, development pressures, and protection needs. Includes land development and river corridor protection plans and summary of research concerning legal and planning bases for the protection plan.
4019 Development of Guidelines for the Effective Planning and Development of Reservoir Shoreline in Georgia. James Douglas McAlister. Doctoral dissertation, 1973, University of Georgia. 285 pp. Analysis of lakeshore controls in Georgia, with recommendations concerning further needs.
4020 "Are Our Public Lakes Too Private?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine September 30, 1973. Pp. 8, 11, 14, 17, 32. Federal shorelines belong to everybody ~ or do they? The question of public versus private uses of the shorelines of federally-built reservoirs is examined.
4021 Identification of Publics in Water Resources Planning. Gene E. Willeke. Report No. ERC-1774. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. September 1974. 37 pp. NTIS number: PB-236 789.
4022 Citizen Enforcers: Influencing Water Resources Allocation Decisions. J. Owens Smith. University of Georgia, Institute of Government and Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. August 1975. xii + [280] pp. "This report describes a public citizen in the context of his or her function as a privc>.te attorney general or enforcer of water resources protection statutes. Opportunities for this ktnd of mvolvement, derived primarily from the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, are listed and explained"
METROPOLITAN ATLANTA WATER RESOURCES STUDY
4023 Metropolitan Atlanta Area Water Resources Management Study. Plan of Study. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. July 1973. Various pagings
4024 Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Groups Newsletter. Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District, 100 Peachtree St., Atlanta). Monthly. [Began November 1973].
4025 'The Water Cnses in Metro Atlanta". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 7, 1974. Pp. 24, 27, 30, 33. The Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group, an intergovernmental body of state, regional, federal and local agencies, is looking into the area's water problems.
4026 Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study, Atlanta, Georgia; Minutes of Public Meetings Held in ... July 1974. U. S. Army Engineer District, Savannah [For Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group, Atlanta]. No date. Various pagings.
4027 Reservoir Project Reauthorization: Examples of Past Use and Analysis of Application to Lake Lanier. Kenneth R. Holley and Edward P. Kane. Report No. ERC-1374. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. August 1974. 170 pp NTIS number: PB-236 408.
4028 Metropolitan Atlanta Area: Preliminary Background Appendix. [Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group]. Atlanta. October 1974. 447 pp.
4029 A Survey of Local Water Management Institutions. Metropolitan Atlanta Area Water Resources Management Study. Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group. Atlanta. October 1974. 85 pp.
4030 "Who Needs Lake Lanier?". Lucy Justus. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 6. 1974. Pp. 14-16, 18, 21-22. The competing demands for use of Lake Lanier's water supply ?.re examined.
4031 Lake Sidney Lanier Restudy, Chattahoochee River, Georgia; Minutes of Public Meeting Held in Gainesville Civic Center, Gainesville, Georgia, 17 July 1974. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georgia. 1974. Various pagings.
4032 Lake Sidney Lanier Restudy, Chattahoochee River, Georgia; Minutes of Public Meeting Held in Holiday Hall, Gainesville, Georgia, 30 September 1975. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District. Savannah, Georg1a. 1975. Various pagings.
4033 Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study; Water Supply Study Phase II Alternatives. [Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group]. Atlanta. April 1975.
4034 Non-Point Pollution Evaluation, Atlanta Urban Area; A Report Submitted to the Savannah District Corps of Engineers, Savannah, Georgia 31402 for the Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group. [By] Black, Crow and Eidsness, Inc. and Jordan, Jones, and Goulding, Inc. Atlanta. May 1975.
4035 Studies of Interim Water Supply Solutions in Metropolitan Atlanta - A Report Submilled to the Executive Group of the Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Management Study. Operations Group: Atlanta Regional Commission, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, U. S. Envtronmental Protection Agency, and U.S. Army Corps of Engmeers. Atlanta. June 1975.
109
Waterways and Ports
4036 Wastewater Management Alternatives: Design and Cost Estimating Methodology; A Report Submitted to the Savannah District Corps of Engineers. . for the Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group by Stanley Consultants. Atlanta. October 1975.
4037 '"Atlanta's Water Crisis Spreads to the Mountains'". Phil Garner. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine November 30, 1975. Pp. 8-9, 48-50, 52. Two proposed dams, one on the Chestatee River near Dahlonega, the other on the Chattahoochee above Lake Lanier, ignite a controversy among residents of the affected areas.
4038 Chattahoochee River Water Quality Analysis. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Hydrologic Engineering Center. [For Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group]. Davis, California. December 1975.
WATER: MISCELLANEOUS
4039 Georgia's Water Problems and Related Research Needs. Gene E. Willeke et at. Report No. ERC-1173. Georgia Institute of Technology, Environmental Resources Center. Atlanta. August 1973. 100 pp. NTIS number: PB-224 433.
4040 1975 National Water Assessment; Technical Memorandum: South Atlantic - Gulf Water Resources Region- Georgia. Southeast Basins Inter-Agency Committee. Atlanta. December 1975. ii + 22 pp. +appendices.
4041 Water Resources of Middle Georgia. Middle Georgia Area Planning Commission. Macon. March 1972. 261 pp. NTIS number: PB-211 286. Concerns the following counties: Bibb, Crawford, Houston, Jones, Monroe, Peach, and Twiggs.
4042 The Price and Consumption of Water for Residential Use In Georgia. James E. Ware and Ronald M. North. Research Monograph No. 40. Georgia State University, School of Business Administration. Atlanta. 1967. 19 pp. Water systems were studied in thirteen Georgia cities: Athens. Baxley, Blue Ridge, Columbus. Conyers, Dublin, Forest Park, Fort Valley, Gray, Lawrenceville, Millen, Thomasville, and Watkinsville.
4043 Georgia Water Law. Robert Clark Kates. University of Georgia, Institute of Government. Athens. 1969. 385 pp.
4044 Water Law and Polley In the Southeast. University of Georgia, Institute of Law and Government. Athens. 1962. 338 pp.
4045 A Study of the Riparian and Prior Appropriation Doctrines of Water Law, With Particular Reference to the Situation In Georgia. Bryan M. Storey. University of Georgia, Institute of Law and Government. 1955. 200 pp.
4046 Georgia Laws, Policies and Programs Pertaining to Water and Related Land Resources. George Roy Elmore. Jr. Report No. WRC-0667. Georgia Institute of Technology, Water Resources Center. Atlanta. June 1967. xii + 112 pp.
4047 '"What Water Law for Georgia?'". M. T. Thomson. Georgia Mineral Newsletter 8(1) : 9-12. 1955. Existing water law in Georgia is summarized as it relates to hydrologic concepts.
4048 Effect of the Small Watershed Program on Major Uses of Land: Examination of 60 Projects In the Southeast, Mississippi Delta, and Missouri River Tributaries Regions. C. Dudley Mattson. Agricultural Economic Report No. 279. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service. Washington. D.C. February 1975. vi + 58 pp.
WATERWAYS AND PORTS
4049 Georgia Anchorage. Georgia Ports Authority. Atlanta. Bi-monthly. Official publication of the Authority. News and features on Georgia shipping and trade development. The Georgia Ports Authority operates ocean terminals at Savannah and Brunswick and inland barge terminals at Augusta, Bainbridge, and Columbus.
COAST
4050 The Coastal Plains Deepwater Terminal Study. Coastal Plains Regional Commission. Washington, D.C. January 1975. 2 vols. NTIS number: COM-75-10772 (Vol I) and COM-75-10773 (Vol. II). Examines the feasibility of building deepwater ports for the petroleum industry on the coasts of Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. emphasizing economic and environmental impacts.
4051 The Georgia Deepwater Ports and their Role In the Economy of the State. Lon Melson
Carnes, Jr. Doctoral dissertation, 1971, Georgia State University. 290 pp.
4052 The Economic Impact of Georgia's Deepwater Ports. David S. Clifton and Larry R. Edens. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Division. Atlanta. December 1973. 41 pp.
4053 The Impact of Georgia Ports Upon the Economy of the State. Georgia State College of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research. Atlanta. January 1960. 61 pp.
4054 Savannah Seaport Study. Chatham County-Savannah Metropolitan Planning Commission. Savannah. July 1972. 2 vols.
4055 A Study of the Port of Savannah, Georgia. Chatham County- Savannah Metropolitan Planning Commission. Savannah. April 1970. 76 pp. NTIS number: PB-196 668.
4056 Savannah Harbor Investigation and Model Study: Volume Ill Results of Model Investigation. Technical Report No. 2-580. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station. Vicksburg, Miss. 1961-1965. 6 vols. NTIS number: AD 724 927 through AD 724 932.
4057 Pollution Studies, Savannah Harbor; Hydraulic Model Investigation. Miscellaneous Papers. No. 2-633. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Waterways Experiment Station. Vicksburg, Miss. March 1964. NTIS number: AD 734 090.
4058 The Port of Savannah, Georgia. Port Series, No. 14 (Revised 1963). U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 1964. vi + 37 pp. + 1 fold. map. Examination of port and harbor conditions and facilities, with map.
4059 The Ports of Savannah and Brunswick, Georgia. Port Series No. 14 (Revised 1972). U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 1973. vi+ 71 pp. + 2 fold. maps. Examination of port and harbor conditions and facilities at Savannah and Brunswick. Includes map of port facilities at each.
4060 Ports on the South Atlantic Coast of the United States. Part 2. Port Series, No. 16 (Revised 1964). U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 1966. vi + 147 pp. + 7 fold. maps. Examination of port and harbor conditions and facilities at Brunswick, pp. 35-53; map follows p. 53.
4061 Plans for Reduction of Shoaling In Brunswick Harbor and Jekyll Creek, Georgia; Hydraulic Model Investigation. F. A. Herrmann and I. C. Tallant. Technical Report No. H-72-5. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station. Vicksburg, Miss. September 1972. 214 pp. NTIS number: AD 751 749.
4062 United States Coast Pilot 4, Atlantic Coast, Cape Henry to Key West, 11th ed. U.S. Department of Commerce, National Ocean Survey. Washington, D.C. July 1973. v + 225 + 23 + 11 pp.
4063 Development Potentials of Camden County and Kings Bay Terminal. Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission. Brunswick, Georgia. September 1972. [iv] + 52+14pp.
INLAND
4064 Georgia's Navigable Waterways and Industrialization. James B. Kenyon. Monograph No. 15. University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development and Department of Geography. Athens. 1964. 28 pp.
4065 The Development of Barge Traffic on Georgia's Inland Waterways, 1958-1968, and Some Development Potentials. Robert E. Van Geuns. Project E-400-500. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Division. Atlanta. 1970.
4066 Study ol the Potential Traffic for the Proposed Chattahoochee River Navigation Channel to Atlanta. Chattahoochee River Basin Development Commission. Atlanta. 1967. 122 pp. +appendices.
4067 Economic Development Possibilities In the Chattahoochee River Basin. Part 1. Georgia. Chattahoochee River Basin Development Commission. Atlanta. August 1967. 143 pp. NTIS number: PB-185 768.
4068 Walter F. George Lock and Dam, Chattahoochee River, Alabama and Georgia; Hydraulic Model Investigation. Technical Report No. 2-519. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station. Vicksburg, Miss. August 1959. NTIS number: AD 760 935.
4069 Navigation Conditions, Columbia Lock and Dam, Chattahoochee River, Georgia and Alabama; Hydraulic Model Investigation. Technical Report No. 2-571. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station. Vicksburg, Miss. July 1961. NTIS number: AD-761 724.
4070 '"Atlanta to the Atlantic Via the Altamaha". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine October 25, 1970. Pp. 10-12, 15-16. Damming and dredging of the Altamaha River could give Atlanta a navigable waterway to the Atlantic. The system could also connect with the Tennessee River basin.
4071 Bridges Over Navigable Waters of the United States. Part 1. Atlantic Coast. U. S. Department of Transportation, Coast Guard. Washington, D.C. [1973]. [iii]+ 150 pp.
110
wattter
WEATHER
GENERAL LOCAL STUDIES HURRICANES TORNADOES MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL
4072 Climates of the States, Georgia. H. S. Carter. Climatography of the U.S., No. 60-9. U.S. Department of Commerce, Weather Bureau. 1959. 16 pp. Revised 1969, 21 pp.
4073 Climatological Data- Georgia. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Data Service. Monthly, with annual summary. Summary information on temperature extremes, precipitation, evaporation, wind. relative humidity, sunshine, and soil moisture data.
4074 Local Climatological Data. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Data Service. Asheville, N.C. Monthly, with annual summary. Issued separately for approximately 300 first-order weather stations. Contains daily and monthly temperature data including cooling and heating degree days, dew point, precipitation including snowfall. pressure, wind, sunshine and sky cover, and, where availble, solar radiation data. Stations in Georgia: Athens, Atlanta, Augusta, Columbus, Dawsonville, Macon, Rome, Savannah, and Thomasville.
4075 Georgia Temperatures. Horace S. Carter. Research Report 69. University of Georgia. College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. March 1970. 53 pp.
4076 Spring and Fall Freezing Temperatures in Georgia. Horace S. Carter. Research Report 162. University of Georgia College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. June 1973. 34 pp.
4077 Relative Humidity In Georgia. Horace S. Carter. Technical Memorandum No. 26. U. S. Department of Commerce, Environmental Science Services Administration, Weather Bureau, Southern Region. 1966.
4078 Precipitation in Georgia. Horace S. Carter. Bulletin N.S. 102. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. April 1963. 26 pp.
4079 Hourly Precipitation Data - Georgia. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Data Service. Asheville, N.C. Monthly, with annual summary.
4080 The Variability of Monthly Precipitation in Georgia. Hway Hwa Kuo. Masters thesis, 1962, University of Georgia. 81 pp.
4081 Precipitation In Tennessee River Basin. Tennessee Valley Authority, Division of Water Control Planning, Hydraulic Data Branch. Knoxville, Tenn. Monthly, with annual summary. Includes detailed records for 25 stations in Georgia.
4082 Agricultural Drought in Georgia. C. H. M. Van Savel and John R. Carreker. Technical Bulletin N.S. 15. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Stations. Athens. 1957.41 pp.
4083 Meteorological Drought in South Georgia. Michael W. Smith. Masters thesis, 1968, University of Georgia. 84 pp.
4084 The Meteorological Conditions and Related Causes of Extreme Departures from Mean Monthly Precipitation within the Southeastern United States. Roy Jackson Fletcher. Doctoral dissertation, 1968, Clark University. 289 pp.
4085 "'The Relation of Rainfall to Elevation in the Southern Appalachian Reg1on"'. David E. Donley and Richard L. Mitchell. Transactions of the American Geophysical Union 20:711-721. 1939.
LOCAL STUDIES
4086 The Golden Isle~ of Georgia. Horace S. Carter. Climatography of the United States No. 21-9-2, Climatic Summaries of Resort Areas. U. S. Department of Commerce, EnVIronmental Science Services Administration. Washington, D.C. 1967. 4 pp.
4087 Georgia Mountain Area. Horace S. Carter. Climatography of the United States No. 21-9-3, Climatic Summaries of Resort Areas. U. S. Department of Commerce, Environmental Science Services Administration, Environmental Data Service. Silver Spring, Md. January 1970.
4088 Warm Springs, Georgia. Horace S. Carter. Climatography of the United States No. 21-9-1, Climatic Summaries of Resort Areas. U.S. Department of Commerce. Environmental Science Services Administration. Washington, D.C.
4089 Weather Data Analyses of the University of Georgia College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. F. L. Crosby eta/. Research Report 66. University of Georgia, College of
Agriculture Experiment Stations. February 1970. 129 pp. A compilation of weather information for the three major stations and four branch stations. These are (1) College Station at Athens, Clarke County; (2) Georgia Station at Experiment, Spalding County; (3) Coastal Plain Station at Tifton, Tift County; (4) Mountain Station at Blairsville, Union County; (5) Northwest Branch Station at Calhoun, Gordon County; (6) Southeast Branch Station at Midville, Burke County; and (7) Southwest Branch Station at Plains, Sumter County.
HURRICANES
4090 Georgia Tropical Cyclones and Their Effect on the State. Horace S. Carter. Technical Memorandum EDSTM-14. U. S. Department of Commerce. Environmental Science Services Administration, Environmental Data Service. Washington, D.C. January 1970. 39 pp. NTIS number: PB-190 768.
4091 Some Climatological Characteristics of Hurricanes and Tropical Storms, Gull and East Coasts of the United States. Francis P. Ho, Richard W. Schwerdt, and Hugo V. Goodyear. NOAA Technical Report NWS 15. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Weather Service. Washington, D.C. May 1975. viii + 87 pp.
4092 Storm Damages In South Atlantic States, August 5-17, 1940. U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, South Atlantic Division. Atlanta. No date. 4 vols.
4093 Bibliography on Hurricanes and Severe Storms of the Coastal Plains Region. Publication No. 70-2. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. 1970. 84 pp. NTIS number: COM-71-00063.
4094 Bibliography on Hurricanes and Severe Storms of the Coastal Plains Region: Supplement No.1. Publication No. 72-1. Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Services. Wilmington, N.C. January 1972. 17 pp.
4095 Early American Hurricanae: 1492-1870. David M. Ludlum. The History of American Weather. American Meteorological Society. Boston 1963. xii + 198 pp.
4096 Storm Tide Frequency Analysis lor the Coast of Georgia. Francis P. Ho. Technical Memorandum NW HYDR0-19. National Weather Service, Office of Hydrology. Silver Spring, Md. September 1974. 33 pp. NTIS number: COM-74-11746.
TORNADOES
4097 Georgia Tornadoes 1953-1969. Horace S. Carter. Technical Memorandum EDSTM16. U.S. Department of Commerce, Environmental Data Service. Silver Spring, Md. July 1970. 17 pp. NTIS number: PB-194 209. Includes (1) number of tornadoes reported 1953-1969; (2) frequency of occurrence by county, month, and hour; (3) number of deaths and injuries by month and year; and (4) property damage. Several tornadoes are described in detail. ESSA's tornado warning service and recommended tornado safety rules are discussed.
4098 "Tornado Time in Georgia". Virgil E. Adams. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine February 23, 1969. Pp. 10-13. On tornadoes m Georgia, most of which strike in March and April.
4099 "'New Techniques Outwit Tornadoes". Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine May 19, 1974. Pp. 8-9, 23-24. Georgia Tech researchers say they have the latest method for tracking the tornadoes that plague the state.
4100 "Forecasting Tornadoes in Georgia" Harry Armstrong. Monthly Weather Review 81 (9) 290-298. September 1953.
4101 Early American Tornadoes: 1586-1870. David M. Ludlum. The History of American Weather. American Meteorological Society. Boston. 1970. [viii) + 219 pp.
MISCELLANEOUS
4102 Climatic Data Report; Southeastern Snowstorm, February B-11, 1973. William T. Hodge. NOAA Technical Memorandum EDS NCC-2. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Environmental Data Service, National Climatic Center. Asheville, N.C. May 1973. iv + 50 pp. Description of a freak snowstorm that crossed the Southeast from February 8 to February 11 in 1973. Many new "greatest snow" records were set. Includes summary and table of outstanding Southeastern snow storms of the past.
4103 lnterdiurnal Characteristics of the Winter Season In Southeastern United States. Nallamma S. Senathirajah. Doctoral dissertation, 1958, Ohio State University. 225 pp.
4104 Fifteen Cold Years In South Carolina and Neighboring States, 1958-1972. National Weather Service. Clemson, S.C. April1973. 18 pp. NTIS number: COM-73-11148. The fifteen years 1958-1972 were colder than normal for the Carolinas and Georgia. Temperatures records for various areas m each state are examined. The areal patterns of negative departure from normal temperature are mapped.
4105 Effects of Elevation and Slope Exposure on Air and Soil Temperatures lor the Typical Georgia Piedmont Farm. Francis E. Johnstone, Jr., Carlisle Cobb, Jr., and Horace S. Carter. Research Bulletin 31. University of Georgia, College of Agriculture Experiment Stations. Athens. March 1968. 26 pp.
111
Miscellaneous
411!6 Comparison of Climatic Elements In a Forested and a Non-Forested Area on the Georgia Piedmont. Nathaniel J. Goode. Masters thesis, 1962, University of Georgia. 92 pp.
4107 Early American Winters: 1604-1820. David M. Ludlum. The History of American Weather. American Meteorological Society. Boston. 1966. xii 285 pp.
4108 Early American Winters II: 1821-1870. David M. Ludlum. The History of American Weather. Amencan Meteorological Society. Boston. 1968. x 257 pp.
MISCELLANEOUS
GENERAL WORKS
4109 The Natural Resources of Georgia. Roland M. Harper. Study No. 2. University of Georgia, School of Commerce, Bureau of Business Research. Issued as Number 3 of Volume 30 of Bulletin of the University of Georgia, February, 1930. xii 105 pp. General survey of physiography, geology, water resources, climate, vegetation, and animal life.
4110 Natural Resources of Georgia. Prepared by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources in cooperation with the Georgia Department of Education for the Georgia Program for the Improvement of Instruction. Atlanta. July 1938. 222 pp. State parks. wildlife, forests and mineral resources are described.
4111 Natural Resources. Citizens Fact Finding Movement of Georgia. Series 3, Number 1. Atlanta. October 1939. 30 pp.
4112 Georgia Facts In Figures - A Source Book. Citizens Fact-Finding Movement of Georg1a. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1946. xviii + 178 pp.
4113 Natural Resources of Middle Georgia. Middle Georgia Area Planning Commission. Macon. Georgia. December 1973. 169 pp.
4114 Northwest Georgia - Summary of Resources. Tennessee Valley Authority, Office of Tnbutary Area Development. Knoxville, Tenn. June 1967. Various pagings. Summary of natural and human resources in Catoosa, Dade, and Walker Counties, Georgia.
4115 Guide to Georgia State Museum of Science and Industry. Charles E. Fleming. State of Georgia. Secretary of State, Georgia State Museum of Science and Industry. Atlanta. August 1974. 71 pp. Illustrated guide to the exhibits. The museum has numerous displays of Georgia flora, fauna. minerals, and histoncal artifacts.
4116 Georgia Progress. Georgia Department of Community Development. Atlanta. Quarterly. Tourism, recreation, and community development in Georgia are examined in brief ar ticles.
OTHER WORKS
4125 Fern bank Makes a Pitch for the Future. Phil Garner. Atlanta Joumal and Constitution Magazine July 27. 1975. Pp. 12-13, 15-17. On the future expansion plans of Fernoank Science Center in DeKalb County. The center 1s an educat1onal facility featunng a 65-acre forest, a museum of natural history, a planetarium. and numerous other exhibits and activities.
4126 Economic Development Profile [Series]. Georgia Department of Community Development. Atlanta. Economic development profiles of cities. towns, and counties in Georgia are available from the Department of Community Development. These are revised frequently to give up-to-date Information.
4127 An Atlas of Multi-County Organizational Units In Georgia. 2nd rev. ed. Howard A. Schreiter and James A. Barnes. University of Georg1a. Institute of Community and Area Development. Athens. June 1974. 85 pp.
4128 State of Georgia - Emergency and Disaster Operations Plan. Georgia Department of Defense. Civil Defense Division. Atlanta. [1974]. Various pagings.
4129 The Seasons in South Georgia. Sapelo Treanor. Georgia Review 3(2) : 204-213. Summer 1949. On the cycle of natural beauties m a country of substance and tranquility".
4130 Turpentine Trees and Wiregrass. The Many Faces of South Georgia. David R. Goodsell. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine April 7. 1974. Pp. 14-16, 18. Valdosta State College and 12 south Georgia libraries have created an environmental protection education program for South Georgians. The beauty and the fragile character of the reg1ons landscape are described by means of a slide-tape presentation.
4131 Public Hearings on Noise Abatement and Control. Volume 1. Construction Noise, Meeting Held In Atlanta, Georgia on July 8-9, 1971. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency. Office of Noise Abatement and Control. Washington, D.C. 1971. 192 pp. NTIS number: PB-230 064. [See also PB-230 065].
4132 The Trouble Is It Wont Shut Up. Keith Coulbourn. Atlanta Journal and Constitution Magazine June 3. 1973. Pp. 34-36, 40, 49. Noise polluters in Cobb County (sewer pumps). in College Park (jetliners), and in Decatur (air-conditioning cooling towers) are examined.
4133 The Land Utilization Program, 1934 to 1964. Agricultural Economic Report No. 85. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service. Washington. D.C. August t965. 85 pp. A study of the Land Utilization Program which resulted from the Great Depression. Land acquisition and relocation of families by the federal government were followed by establishment of national forests. national wildlife areas. and multiple-use projects. An example used IS that of the Piedmont ProJects m Georgia- in Jasper. Jones. and Putnam Counties.
4134 critics Force Sewer Line Redesign. Engineering News-Record 187(3) . 24. July 15. 1971. Report of redes1gn of an interceptor sewer line at the Palisades area of the Chattahoochee River m Cobb County.
4117 State Planning Data Summary. Georgia Off1ce of Planning and Budget, State Data Center. Atlanta. October 1972. 86 pp. Summary of social, economic, and physical statistics for the state, 1ts economic regions, 1ts 18 Area Plann1ng and Development Commissions. and its 159 counties.
4118 Modern Georgia. 4th ed. John C. Meadows. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1954. vi+ 352 pp. College-level textbook on physical and human conditions of the state. Examines geography. history, culture. population, education. health, public welfare, agriculture. industry. government, and revenues.
4119 Readings to Accompany a Course on Contemporary Georgia. Malcolm H. Bryan and J. Thomas Askew, comps. University of Georgia, Division of Publications. Athens. 1935. [v111] + 520 pp.
4120 Georgia Today, Facts and Trends. John C. Belcher and K. Imogene Dean. eds. University of Georgia Press. Athens. 1960. viii+ 345 pp.
4121 Marching Through Georg1a Sixty Years After: Multifold Industries and Diversified Agnculture are Restonng the Prosperity of Americas Largest State East of the MissisSIPPI. Ralph A. Graves. National Geographic 50(3) 259-311. September 1926. A general tour of m1d-20s Georgia.
4122 The Greener Fields of Georgia. Howell Walker. National Geographic Magazine 105(3) 287-330. March 1954. "Dixie's Empire State turns cotton land to pasture, makes news with pine, and multiplies its industries".
4123 Geography of Georgia. Edward Scott Sell. Harlow Publishing Corporation. Oklahoma City. [1950). vi+ 126 pp.
4124 Georgia Statistical Abstract. University of Georgia, College of Business Administration. Div1sion of Research. Athens. Bienn1al.
AIDS TO FURTHER RESEARCH
4135 Area Planning and Development Commission Reports and Local Planning Agency Reports. Georgias eighteen Area Planning and Development Commissions (APDC's) and the numerous local planning agencies in the state issue hundreds of publications each year. These concern such areas as housing. transportation. land use. community facilities and services. publiC improvements. economic base. recreation. and environmental protection. Because of the large number of these publications. no attempt has been made here to 1nventory and I1st them. Selected ones are. however. mcluded. Several of the APDC"s and some of the local planning agenc1es have compiled lists of their publ1cat10ns. In addition. some have cooperated with the National Technical Information Serv1ce of the U. S. Department of Commerce to enter many of their reports into that extens1ve Information system. NTIS sells cop1es of reports in its collection and issues its Government Reports Announcements & Index to s1mplily access to this informatiOn. NTIS cop1es are normally available 1n either paper or microfilm form. A 11sting of Area Planning and Development Commissions with their addresses may be found 1n the Appendix.
4136 Georgia Library Resources - Newspapers, Indexes, Bibliographies. [Georgia Library Association). GLA Reference Section. 1973. 56 pp. A un1on 11st of newspapers. mdexing projects. and unpublished bibliographies in Geor9'a l1branes. The newspaper listing indicates. for each of 282 newspapers (184 Georgia newspapers and 98 non-Georgia newspapers). those libraries having copies. the extent of the~r holdings. the form (paper or m1croflim) of their holdings. and information concernmg lending policies and photocopy charges.
112
4137 The Atlanta Constitution: A Georgia Index. Mary Edith Redus and Lyn Thaxton. eds. Georgia State University. Pullen Library, Reference Department. (Microfilming Corporation of America. Glen Rock, N.J.]. Annual, began 1971.
4138 A Guide to Printed Sources of Information about Georgia. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station, Industrial Development Division. Atlanta. November 1967. 43 pp.
Aids to Further Research
4139 Checklist of Official PubHcatlons of the State of Georgia. Georgia State Library. Atlanta. Quarterly.
4140 Handbook of Georgia State Agencies. Edwin L. Jackson. University of Georgia, Institute of Government. Athens. 1975. 416 pp. looseleaf.
113
AUTHORS
A
Abbot, John 2239 Abbott, William Wright 2087 Abercrombie, Thomas Franklin 2419 Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 0672 Adams, John G. 0651, 0659-60, 0662 Adams, Patrick C. 0591, 3386 Adams, Virgil 0013, 3817, 4098 Adamson, Carrie M. 2689 Adkins, Howard G. 0194 Adler, Leopold 2573, 2576 Agnew, J. L. 2542 Agnew, Tom 3055 Aguar, Charles 2989 Ahrenholz, H. W. 1190 Aiken, Charles S. 1970 Aikman, Leo 3721,2718 Aimes, Hubert H. S. 0287 Akers, Thomas H. 2700 Albert, Frank A. 3804 Albertson, Ralph 3137 Alden, John Richard 2073 Alexander, Bruce 1904 Alexander, E. D. 3549 Allen, Arthur Thomas, Jr. 1279, 1575, 1594, 1642, 1685 Allen, Elsa G. 2236 Alleri, George W. 0943 Allen, Ivan 2196 Allen, Ralph H., Jr. 0195 Allen, Richard Sanders 2094 Allison, Homer D. 3972 Allison, John R. 0010 Almand, Charles William 1866 Almand, David 0928 Almy, Patty Carpenter 0426, 3168 American Fisheries Society 1018 American Forests [Anon.] 3543 American Institute of Architects 2852 American Museum of Natural History 3433 American Water Works Association 3880 Anderson, C. C. 1232 Anderson, C. S. 1109 Anderson, David A. 0800 Anderson, J. Randolph 2068, 3156 Anderson, Kirby-Smith, Mrs. 2093, 2359 Anderson, Mary Savage 1949 Anderson, Mary Talley 2527 Anderson, R.F. 3337 Anderson, Richard R. 3763 Anderson, Russell H. 2328 Anderson, Walter C. 0855 Anderson, William W. 0162, 0580, 0658 Andrew, Bunyan Hadley 2227 Andrews, Daniel Marshall 2375 Andrews, Earnest M. 3748 Andrews, James W. 0015, 0018 Anonymous 0296, 0379, 0421, 0463, 0483, 0824, 1080,
1067, 1073, 1078, 1364, 2192, 2562, 2577, 2579, 2618, 2621, 2723, 2934, 3010, 3106, 3148, 3207, 3543, 3705, 3845, 4134 Anthony, Madeline 2879 Antiques [Anon.] 2562 Antoine, J. W. 1463 APDC 4135 Appalachian Journal [Anon.] 2192 Appalachian Trail Conference 3670 Appleman, Roy Edgar 0306 Applin, Esther R. 1301, 1327, 1345, 1408 Applin, PaulL. 1301, 1327, 1345, 1408 Archeological Survey of Cobb-Fulton Counties 0388 Area Planning and Development Commissions 4135 Arlington Centennial Corporation 2509 Armistead, Margaret Beauchamp 2507, 2619, 2895 Armstrong, Harry 4100 Arnold, Peter E. 2889 Arrendondo, Antonio de 2067 Arthur, T. S. 1939 Ascher, Robert 0337 Ashe, W. W. 0807 Asher, William E. 2691 Ashemore, Otis 3313 Askew, J. Thomas 4119 Asmussen, Loris E. 1251, 1347, 1412,3972,3974
Atchison, Jere 0846 Athens, City of 2682 Athens Historical Society 2672 Atkinson, Ann 0617 Atkinson, Hugh T. 2724 Atkinson, Larry P. 0581 Atlanta Area, Community Council of the 3744 Atlanta Centennial Year Book 2836 Atlanta Chamber of Commerce 2911 Atlanta Chapter, National Railway Historical Society
2894 Atlanta Economic Review 0824, 1080 Atlanta, Metropolitan, Water Resources Study Group
see Metropolitan Atlanta... Atlanta Region Metropolitan Planning Commission
3745,3791 Atlanta Regional Commission 3629, 4017, 4035 Augusta Bicentennial Commission 3176 Austin, Roger Seth 1361 Auton, Marcie 0945 Averitt, Jack N. 2414 Avery, I. W. 1938 Aw1rey, Hugh R. 0393 Ayres, H. B. 0807
B
Bacon, Mary Ellen 2778-9 Bacote, Clarence A. 2883 Bagby, George T. 1690, 3826 Bahr, Leonard Marion, Jr. 0565 Bailey, Arthur C., Jr. 1878-9 Bailey, Virginia G. 2163 Bailey, W. B. F. 0435 Bake, William A., Jr., 3359, 3517 Baker, John William 3017 Baker, Pearl 3068, 3070, 3074 Baker, Robert A. 3381 Baker, W. B. 3503, 3515, 3557, 3846 Baker, Whiteford L. 0876 Bakken, Terry 2701 Baldwin, Nell 2504 Balfour, Robert C., Jr. 0939 Ball, Lamar Q. 2413 Bandy, B. J., Mrs. 3120 Bangs, Outram 0035 Bannister, Turpin C. 2569 Barber, Ann 3523 Barfield, Louise Calhoun 3013 Barker, Eddie 2963 Barker, James C. 0017 Barnes, Harry H., Jr. 0745, 1657 Barnes, James A. 4127 Barnes, Steven S. 0562 Barnett, A. P. 3813 Barnhart, John H. 2245 Barr, David J. 1934-35 Barrett, L. I. 0812 Barrett, Lonice 0719, 3695 Barrington, Eva J. 2626 Barrow, David C. 2669 Barrow, Elfrida DeRenne 1949, 2547 Barrows, H. H. 3833 Bartram, John 2242 Bartram, William 2240-3 Bash, Evelyn C. 2901 Bassett, Anna Stowell 2238 Bates, James E.. Mrs. 3001 Bates, Thomas F. 1124 Batson, Wade T. 3401 Battey, George Magruder, Jr. 2808 Baum, James 1999 Baum, Robert B. 1154 Bay, Harry X. 1090
Bayley, w. s. 1843 Beale, 0. w. 3813
Bearss, Edwin C. 3088 Beasley, Lee 0606 Beasley, William Dana 0410 Beck, Kevin C. 0587, 0599, 1225, 1478, 1504 Beck, Lewis H. 2165, 3049, 3219
Beck, w. A. 1823
Bederman, Sanford H. 3332, 3344 Beeson, Leola Selman 2442-3, 2446 Belcher, John C. 4120 Bell, Laura Palmer 2547, 2568, 2661 Bell, Malcolm, Jr. 2229
114
Benke, Arthur C. 0772 Bennett, Frank A. 0827, 0835 Bennett, Mary Louise 3288 Bentley, Robert D. 1610 Bergeaux, P. J. 3765, 3769 Berisford, C. Wayne 0516 Beshear, Ramona J. 0192 Bicentennial Commission, City of Augusta 3176 Bigham, Gary N. 1496 Billman, Calvin J. 3209 Birdsong, Irene B. 3267 Bishop, G. Norman 3534, 3545 Bishop, S.c. 0123, 0139 Black, Crow and Eidsness, Inc. 4034 Black, Robert C. 2303-4 Blackburn, Ben B. 3825 Blackburn, Wayne W. 3750 Blair, Ruth 2851 Blaisdell, RobertS. 3450 Blake, Janice Gayle 2209 Blake, William P. 1818 Blanchard, Harry E., Jr. 1629, 1730 Blankenship, Samuel M. 3663 Blauch, D. S. 3404 Blihovde, Helene 1071 Blomquist, Hugo L. 3559 Boatright, Sherry L. 2508, 3067 Boddiford, Grace P. 0084 Boddiford, Laura R. 0084 Bogle, James G. 2034, 2090, 2302, 2307 Bogle, Walter S. 3297 Bohan, Joseph P. 3971 Bohland, James R. 3343, 3349 Boland, Frank Kells 2421 Bole, G. A. 1091 Bolster, Paul D. 3138 Bolton, Herbert E. 2065, 2067 Bond, T. A. 1331 Bonner, James C. 1953,1959,1961,1964,1974,1985-6,
2000, 2294, 2521' 2525, 2528, 3008, 3018 Boogher, Elbert W. G. 2101 Borman, F. H. 3430 Born, James 2917 Bornside, George H. 0520 Boschung, Herbert T., Jr. 0152 Bostick, P. E. 3510, 3794 Bottoms, Roy E. 2668, 2824 Bowden, Haygood S. 2645, 2659 Bowen, Boone Moss 1723, 1729 Bowen, Eliza A. 3301 Bowling, Robert E. 1922 Boyce, Stephen G. 0833, 3823 Boyd, Mark F. 2744 Boyd, William K. 2436 Boyer, Dorothy G. 3217 Boykin, S. 2318 Boylston, Elise Reid 2839 Boynton, H. V. 2534-5 Bozeman, John Russell 0516, 3445-7 Bradley, G. H. 0190 Bragg, Lillian C. 2549, 2565, 2624 Bramlett, Gene A. 0861 Brandon, Josephine Hart 2089 Brannon, Peter A. 0214, 0349 Brantley, R. L. 2791 Brantly, J. E. 3833, 1382 Braswell, Joel Henry 3345 Braun, E. Lucy 0667 Brawley, Benjamin 2887 Braynard, Frank 0. 2651 Bredehoelt, John D. 1780 Breen, Ruth S. 3466 Brender, Ernst V. 0826, 3274, 3325, 3350 Brice, William Malcolm 3002 BRIDGES - Cobb County, Inc. 2710 Bridges, Edwin C. 3193 Bridges, S. R. 1269 Bright, John W. 0498 Brightwell, C. Nelson 0882 Brinkley, Hal E. 2253 Britt, Albert S., Jr. 2638 Brittain, Marion Luther 2881 Brittain, Nell E. 3574 Brobst, Donald A. 1075, 1084 Brock, Para Lee 3563 Brooks, Maurice 1909 Brooks, Robert Preston 1945, 1958, 1966, 2429, 2436, 2611, 2683 Broome, Dean 3157
Brossard, Chandler 2559 Brower, Kenneth 0445 Brown, Aaron 2105, 2781 Brown, Alexander Crosby 2652 Brown, Alfred 2931 Brown, Andrew 2537 Brown, Andrew H. 3676 Brown, D. 0348 Brown, E. Evan 0016, 0792, 0813, 0857-60, 0863-4,
1034, 3593, 3739 Brown, Eugene 1405 Brown, John P. 2181 Brown, Marel 2707 Brown, Nathan Atkinson, Mrs. 2938 Browning, Clyde E. 1932 Brown's Guide to Georgia [Anon.] 2934, 3106, 3148 Broyles, Bettye 0356 Brunswick-Glynn County Chamber of Commerce 2049 Brunswick Junior College 3966 Brunswig, Norman L. 0969 Bryan, Malcolm H. 4119 Bryan, Mary Givens 2515, 2900, 2967, 3045 Bryan, T. Conn 2044, 2422 Bryant, Pat 2213 Bryson, Reid A. 0596 Buckingham, Clyde E. 2796 Buie, B. F. 1080, 1123, 1367 Bullen, Ripley P. 0365, 0373 Bullock, Henry Morton 2751 Bunch, C. M. 0742, 0757 Bunn, David W. 0008 Burbanck, George Palmer 1507 Burbanck, Madeline P. 3511 Burbanck, W. D. 0199, 0538 Burch, Loren W. 2999 Burgess, Rebekah 0434 Burkholder, Paul R. 0519-20 Burleigh, Thomas D. 0055, 0111, 3537 Burmeister, Walter F. 3661 Burnett, Thomas Lawrence 1659 Burns, Russell M. 0848 Burrison, John A. 2109, 2116 Burrows, W. H. 0843 Burt, Jesse 2177 Burton, G. 3483 eush-Brown, Harold 1991-2, 2855 Business Week [Anon.] 0463 Butler, Howard Putnam 1171 Butler, J. Robert 1547 Butler, John C. 2470, 2485 Butner, H. B. 0933 Butts, Charles 1569 Byers, Douglas S. 0297 Byers, Tracy 2816 Byrne, Mary Margaret 3133
c
Cain, Andrew W. 3061
Cairns, John 0668
Calder, Dale R. 0654
Caldwell, David K. 0051
Caldwell, Joseph R. 0231, 0237, 0243, 0329-31, 0344-5,
0378, 0383, 0397, 0399, 0438
.
Caldwell, Sheila K. 0397,0401, 0403-4
Calhoun, John Henry 2908
Callahan, Helen 3208
Callahan, James E. 1680, 2396
Callahan, Joseph T 1191, 1240-2, 1397, 1402, 1406,
1604, 1627, 1629, 1724, 1731, 1784, 1777
Calmes, Alan Royse 0263
Calver, James L. 1736, 1836
Camden County Historical Commission 2511
Campbell, Elmer Grant 3502
Campbell, Jesse H. 2317
Campbell, Marius R. 1549
Campbell, Steve B. 2895-6
Candler, Allen D. 2037, 2088, 2140, 2341
Candler, Mark Allen 3073
Cannon, Margaret 1995
Capitol Commission of Georgia 2878
Carley, D. H. 0620-1,0623,0627,0652,3814-5
Carneal, Raymond B. 2307
Carnes, Lon Melson, Jr. 4051
Carnes, Sara S. 3004
Carpenter, E. J. 0557
Carpenter, R. H. 1352, 1661, 1805-6, 1898
Carpenter, W. H. 1939 Carr, Archie 3452 Carreker, John R. 0009, 4082 Carrillo, Richard F. 0335 Carroll, Gladys 3471 Carstarphen, Carol 2383-4, 3172, 3198 Carswell, Katherine Jones 3269 Carter, Carolyn 3102 Carter, E. R. 2906 Carter, Horace S. 4072, 4075-8, 4086-8, 4090, 4097,
4105 Carter, R. F. 1198, 1205-6, 1210, 1218, 1731, 1794 Carter, R. W. 0743, 1625, 1848 Carter, Robert L. 3766-7 Carter, Samuel 2025 Carter, Verlon E. 0818 Carter, Virginia 3763 Cartersville Centennial Committee 2450 Cartledge, Groves Harrison 3094 Caruso, John Anthony 2074 Carver, Robert E. 1238, 1319, 1336-7, 1400, 1491,
1850 Case, Gerard R. 1284 Cashin, Edward J., Jr. 3179 Cassell, Robert B. 3954 Cate, Margaret Davis 2052, 2059, 2940, 2955, 2959 Catesby, Mark 2246 Cathy, Esther 2821 Catton, Bruce 2768 Caulfield, Patricia 3839 Cave, H. S. 1152, 1277 Cawthon, William Lamar, Jr. 3037 Cazeau, Chiules J. 1228 Celecia, Juan F. 3792-3 Central of Georgia Railway 1062, 2308 Cerruti, James 0443 Chabreck, Robert H. 0492 Chaffin, Robert L. 0846 Chai, J. C. 0792 Chalker, Fussell 2312, 2416, 2466 Chamberlain, E. Burnham 0063, 0684 Chambliss, Amy 2166 Champlin, James R. 3619 Chancey, C. N. 1880 Chapman, A. W. 3399 Chapman, J. Roy 1253 Chapman, Paul W. 1977, 1984 Chapman, Russell L. 3457-8 Chappell, Absalom H. 2132 Charlton County Historical Commission 2539 Chase, David W. 0238, 0253, 0356, 0413-4 Chatham County - Savannah Metropolitan Planning
Commission 2581, 4054-5 Chattahoochee River Basin Development Commission
4066-7 Chattahoochee Valley Historic Society 3258 Cheatham, Berrien 3205 Cheek, Joseph E. 0021 Chen, Chih Shan 1579 Cherry, Rodney N. 1222 Chesness, Jerry L. 0017 Chestney, M. Jemison 2480 Chiang, Tze I. 0843 Chaudhary, Madhav C. 3573 Chowns, T. M. 1576 Chrisler, Isabel 2999 Christensen, David E. 3328 Christensen, Linda L. 3622 Christian, Schuyler Medlock 2232-3 Church, Mary L. 2997 "Citizen, A" 3075 Citizens Fact Finding Movement of Georgia 4111-2 Claflin, William H., Jr. 0361 Clark, Agnew Hilsman 3224 Clark, Lorin D. 1363, 1859 Clark, Marean Moncrief 3224 Clark, Thomas D. 2386-8, 2390-1 Clark, Walter A. 3188 Clark, William Henry Harrison 2529 Clark, William Z. 3756 Clarke, Caroline McKinney 2748 Clarke, James Wood 1882 Clary, George Esmond, Jr. 3196 Clauss, Errol MacGregor 2024 Clebsh, Alfred 3468 Clement, Charles D. 0500-1, 3726 Clement, William Gilbert 1717 Clements, James Bagley 3024 Clench, William J. 0175
115
Authors
Clifton, David S. 4052 Clizbee, Azalea 2431 Cloister, Sea Island 2049 Close, Anna Belle 3841 Clutter, J. L. 3783 Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission
2051, 2063, 4063 Coastal Georgia Historical Society 2051, 2944 Coastal Plains Center for Marine Development Ser-
vices 0582-3, 0614, 0619, 0926-7, 1379, 4093-4 Coastal Plains Regional Commission 3730, 3742, 4050 Cobb, Addie Davis [Mrs. W. P.] 2770 Cobb, Carlisle, Jr. 0009, 4105 Cobb-Fulton Counties, Archeological Survey of 0388 Cobb, Joe 2522 Cobb, Norman J. 2971 Cochran - Bleckley Centennial 2493 Coe, Joffre L. 0248 Cofer, Harland Elbert, Jr. 1749, 1769, 1816 Coggins, Allen R. 2826,3117,3367,3701 Cohen, Alvin Jerome 1186 Cohen, Arthur D. 3875-7 Coile, T. S. 0912, 0914 Coker, William Chambers 3539 Colburn, William B. 0431 Coleman, Kenneth 2085, 2338, 2674, 2676 Coleman, Leodel 2503 Collings, Henrietta 2120 Collins, Amy 4009 Colquhoun, D. J. 1298 Community Council of the Atlanta Area 3744 Conkin, Paul K. 3016 Connell, James F. L. 1302-3, 1335, 1342 Constantine, Denny G. 0049 Conway, Alan 2313 Conway Research, Inc. 3731 Coogle, Lois 2916 Cook, Anna Maria Green 2440 Cook, Jacquelyn 2774, 3234, 3700 Cook, Lula Keen 3299 Cook, Robert Bigham, Jr. 1665, 1896 Cooke, C. Wylhe 1182, 1284, 1300, 1422, 1436 Cooke, R. Jervis 2501 Cooney, Loraine M. 2164 Cooper, Cornelia E. 2869 Cooper, Fred D. 3266 Cooper, H. H., Jr. 1391, 1395-6 Cooper, Robert Cecil 2161 Cooper, Sherwin H. 2399-2400 Cooper, Walter G. 1951,2828 Coosa Valley Area Planning and Development Com-
mission 0762-3, 3604 Cope, Channing 0012 Copeland, B. J. 0517 Coram, Robert 1030 Cordell, Harold K. 3625 Corkran, David H. 2075 Corley, Florence Fleming 3180 Corley, W. L. 3499 Corry, John P. 2005, 2076 Cosner, Oliver J. 0219 Cost, Noel D. 3823 Cothran, James R. 0604 Cotter, David J. 1645, 3513 Cotterill, R. S. 2174 Coulbourn, Keith 0046, 0091, 0105, 0118, 0156, 0699,
1256, 2108, 2235, 2861, 3200, 3226, 3228, 3389, 3655, 3828, 3931, 4001, 4010, 4070, 4099, 4132 Coulter, E. Merton 1952, 1954, 1963, 2060, 2226, 2356, 2389, 2609, 2650, 2679, 2684-5, 2687, 2692, 2697, 2803, 2987, 3043, 3065, 3092, 3369-70, 3747, 3854-4. Council of State Governments 0731 Council on Environmental Quality 0739 Counts, Charles 2117 Counts, Harlan B. 1239, 1320, 1399, 1692-5, 1697 Covey, L. H. 0016 Covington, Sara J. 3843 Covington, William Alonzo 2728 Cowles, Calvin D. 2039 Cox, Jacob D. 2021, 2027 Coyle, Mattie Oglesby 2727 Crabtree, D. Glen 3395 Craft, T. F. 0562 Cramer, Howard Ross 1279-80, 1348, 1663, 2228 Crane, 'Edward A. 2563 Crane, Verner W. 2071 Crane, W. R. 1135 Crawford, Gerald 3717 Crawford, Robert L. 0089
Authors
Crawford, Thomas J. 1296, 1319, 1353, 1601, 1617-9, 1795, 1846-7
Cressler, Charles W. 1684, 1700, 1763, 1789-90, 1883 Cribb, Robert Eugene 1834 Crickmay, Geoffrey W. 1173, 1181, 1254, 1260, 1614,
1644, 1827 Crimmins, Timothy J. 2439 Crisler, Robert Malcolm 1583 Croft, Inez Watson 2786 Croft, M.G. 1398, 1668, 1715-6 Cronquist, Arthur 3564 Crook, Lewis E., Jr. 1999 Crosby, F. L. 4089 Crow, A. B. 0880 Crowe, Carol3212 Crowe, Ron 3584, 3566-7 Cruickshank, Helen Gere 2242 Crusoe, Donald L. 0275 Cubberly, Frederick 2219 Culbertson, William C. 1581 Cullens, Joe 0968, 1031, 1072,3712 Culler, John 0978, 1010, 1012 Cullimore, Don G. 3363 Culpepper, Virginia M. 3231 Culver, David W. 0857, 0859-60, 0864 Cumming, Inez Parker 1975, 3109, 3167 Cumming, Mary G. 2310, 3177 Cumming, William P. 2208 Cummins, Robert, Jr. 0633 Cunyas, Lucy Josephine 2449 Cushwa, C. T. 0820 Cutler, Bill 2383, 2479, 2818, 3627, 3630-40 Cypert, Eugene 0099, 3870, 3872-3 Czuhai, Eugene 0820
D
Dabney, Joseph Earl 2121 DaCosta, Beverley 2011 Dade County Times 2740 Dahlberg, Michael D. 0142-3, 0156-61, 0188-9, 0171,
0201, 3913 Dahlonega Gold Rush Museum 3063 Dalrymple, Tate 0748 Daneker, Jerome G. 1144 Daniels, D. L. 1413 Danielson, V. A. 1190 Danzwith, Charles 1044 Darby, David G. 0541 Darling, Robert William 1884 Daughters of the American Revolution, Fort Early Chapter 2738 Daughters of the American Revolution, General James
Jackson Chapter 3059 Daughters of the American Revolution, Governor
Treutlen Chapter 3152 Daughters of the American Revolution, Hawkinsville
Chapter 3165 Daughters of the American Revolution, Thronateeska
Chapter 2777 Davidson, Victor 3316 Davidson, William H. 3097, 3258, 3280-3 Davis, David E. 0038 Davis, Dick 0962-6, 1050, 1069, 1266, 3135, 3612,
3678, 3680, 3683, 3690 Davis, E. G. 1189 Davis, G. H. 1697 Davis, George B. 2039 Davis, Harold Earl 2406 Davis, Jingle 0638 Davis, Richard Beale 2248 Davis, Robert S., Jr. 3311 Davis, Sharon 0977 Davis, Sydney K. 3171 Davis, William Columbus 2681 Dawson, Edward 2297 Dawson, Kerry 3647 Day1on, Samuel Fleming, Jr. 1902 Dean, Blanche Evans 3492, 3558 Dean, K. Imogene 4120 Dean, Lillian F. 0485 Deane, Barbara 3673 Deaton, Thomas Mashburn 2844 Deatrick, Juanita Frances 3237 de Baillou, Clemens 0356, 0387, 0395-6, 0432, 0437,
3119,3121,3203 Debo, Angie 2203 Debo, Thomas N. 0773
DeBrahm, John Gerar William 2211 DeBrahm, William Gerard 2210 DeFoor, Harry E. 2426 de Ia Cruz, Armando A. 0536, 0544, 0552 de Laubenfels, D. J. 2029 Dellquest, Augustus Wilfrid 3185 Delta Kappa Gamma, Tau Chapter 3862 Dempsey, Rachael Mays 2928 Dempsey, William A. B. 3687 Denman, H. Edward, Jr. 1262 Denmark, Ernest Ray 1997 Dennis, Howard Willis 1662 Dennis, John V. 0686 Dennison, John M. 1589 Denson, N. M. 1766 Dent, Borden D. 3594 Denton, J. Fred 0058, 0064, 0067, 0077 Derden, John 2805 Derry, Joseph T. 2138-9 DeSelm, H. R. 3416 Designers' Collaborative, Inc. 3373, 3714 Detroit Cyclorama Company 2893 DeVane, Ernest E. 2919 DeVorsey, Louis, Jr. 2210, 2216-7 Dewberry, Oscar 0973 Dickens, Roy S., Jr. 0273, 0374-5, 2439 Dickey, Tom 2719 Dickinson, J. C. 0669 Dicus, Joseph Martin 1885 Digby, Jessie Bartlett 2526 Diseker, Ellis G. 3810-1 Dixie Council of Authors and Journalists 2437 Dixon, Jefferson M. 2309 Dixon, Sarah Robertson 3223-4 Dodd, Rebecca Foltz 2929 Dodson, Winfred G. 3g54, 4009 Doering, John A. 1340 Doerjes, Jurgen 1474, 1505 Dogwood City Grotto 1255 Doherty, Jim 3945 Dombrowski, James 3139 Donley, David E. 4085 Donnelly, Ralph W. 2462 Donsky, Ellis 1692-3 Dooly County Sesquicentennial Corp. 2771 Dopson, C. William, Jr. 0081 Dorjes, Jurgen 1474, 1505 Dorman, LeRoy M. 1269-70 Dorsey, James 2805 Douglass, James E. 0895-6 Dover, H. Jackson 3323 Dowell, Spright 2482 Downey, Fairfax 2536 Downs, Charles 2339 Dozier, D. Jack 0089 Drake, James C. 0642 Drennen, Charles William 1297 Drewry, Jones M. 2693 Drewry, Kathleen Merry 3428 Dryden, Lincoln 1384 Duane, D. B. 1495 Dubach, Harold W. 0613 DuBose, Beverly M. 2043, 2714 DuBose, Louise Jones 3124 Duever, Michael James 1796 Dulle, Barbara Sayer 3298 Duggan, J. R. 1247 Duggan, M. L. 2102 DuMond, David M. 3407 Duncan, A. 0. 0933 Duncan, Marion Bennett 3426 Duncan, Wilbur H. 0691, 3425, 3427, 3476, 3518-9, 3533, 3548, 3550, 3554, 3572, 3574-9 Dunlap, Samuel C. 2141 Dunning, Peter H. 3675 Dunstan, William 0577-8, 0598 Dupuis, Roy Harbin 1881 Durant, Charles J. 3383-6 Du rett, Dan 2850 Dutcher, Salem 3178 Dyar, T. R. 0595 Dyer, C. Dorsey 0829, 0882
E
Eargle, D. Hoye 1325, 1328 Early County Historical Society 2787
116
Eaton, Allen H. 2114 Eaton, Gordon P. 1376 Ebel, Bernard H. 0875 Ebert, Charles H. V. 3798 Ecke, Melvin W. 2897 Eckel, Edwin C. 1675, 1821 Edens, Larry R. 4052 Edge, Sarah Simms 2873 Edgerton, D. Priscilla 2169 Edgerton, J. H. 1729 Edwards, Earl 3258 Edwards, Kate F. 3091 Edwards, Malcolm 0048 Eisterhold, John A. 2642 Elberton Granite Association 1756 Eldredge, I. F. 0786, 0790 Eldridge, Leila Venable Mason 2759 Eldridge, Peter J. 0653-4 Elliott, Charles New1on 0799, 0849, 0963, 0970, 0993,
0996, 3535, 3693, 3847 Elliott, Stephen 2249 Ellwood, B. B. 1258 Elmore, George Roy, Jr. 4048 Elrod, Frary 3025 Elston, L. W. 1672 Emmons, W. H. 1560 Engel, Beth 2949 Engineering News-Record [Anon.] 4134 England, C. B. 3775, 3788 English, Thomas H. 2750 Engram, lrby Dell 3173 Environmental Quality Committee, Federal Executive
Board 0716 Eric Hill Assoc. 3189 Ersoz, Abdullah 3979 Eschmeyer, Paul H. 1040 Esogbue, Augustine 0. 0735 Espenshade, Gilbert H. 1129 Estill, J. H. 2616 Evans, Clement A. 2041, 2140 Evans, Lawton B. 3204 Evenden, Leonard Jesse 1654 Ewan, Joseph 2243, 2247 Eyles, Don Edgar 3434, 3454, 3460 Eyre, F. H. 3355
F
Fagin, N. Bryllion 2244 Fairbanks, Charles H. 0218, 0224, 0230, 0232, 0235,
0248, 0266, 0310-12, 0320, 0326, 0337, 0363, 0398, 2954, 2960 Faircloth, Wayne R. 0693, 3435, 3479 Fairley, William M. 1616, 1844 Fallows, James M. 3925 Fancher, Betsy 0450, 2048 Fanning, Marsha E. 0561 Fanning, Ralph 1996 Farnham, K. G. 2877 Fatora, Joseph R. 1004 Faulk, J. Lanette O'Neal 3270 Faust, N. L. 3754-5 Faxon, Walter 2237 Fears, Wayne 3660 Federal Executive Board, Environmental Quality Committee 0716 Federal Insurance Administration 0750 Federal Power Commission 3987 Federal Water Pollution Control Administration 3885, 3888-9, 3897. 3910 Federal Writers' Project (WPA) 2053-4, 2145, 2473, 2558, 2589-2608, 2847, 3184 Fehrenbach, Joseph 2357 Feiss, Carl 3251 Fendig, Gladys 3432 Fenega, Franklin 2978 Ferguson, Leland Greer 0274 Ferguson, Robert B. 2177 Fernald, Merritt Lyndon 3528 Feu rt, Seldon D. 3522 Few, Etta S. 3113 Fewkes, Vladimir J. 0341-2 Filler, Louis 2190 First National Bank of Atlanta 2837 Fischback, Alexander A., Jr. 0753 Fish, John 0. 3136 Fish, Tallu 2965
Fisher, George W. 1541 Fishe~. James Samuel 3342 Fisher, John J. 1438 Fiskell, John G. A. 3777 Fitzgerald, Charles H. 0853 Fitzgerald, Muriel T. 0604 Flanders, Bertram Holland 2882 Flanders, Ralph B. 2407, 3022 Flanigan, James C. 2990-2 Fleming, Berry 3175, 3181, 3194 Fleming, Charles E. 4115 Fleming, William P. 2739 Fletcher, Roy Jackson 4084 Flint, Mortimer A. 2460 Flint, Richard Foster 1423 Flock, William Merle 1870 Floyd, Charles F. 0454 Floyd, D. B. 2958 Floyd, Dolores Boisfeuillet 0346 Floyd, M. H. 2958 Fluker, W. H. 1824 Fodor, Beth 0039 Fogarty, Paul 2876 Folsom, H. B. 3048 Fontane, Darrell G. 3971 Foote, Leonard 0193, 0851, 0936, 0975, 1267, 3527,
3554 Ford, Austin McNeill 2747 Ford, Elizabeth Austin 2747, 2758, 2984 Ford, James A. 0262 Ford, Thomas A. 1908 Fordham, Herbert W. 3961-2 Foreman, Grant 2175 Foreman, Mary D. Fundaburk 0242 Forman, Henry Chandlee 1998 Forrest, Joseph T. 1563 Fortson, Charles W., Jr. 1150, 1383, 1681, 1786, 1797 Foss, Abby 2765 Foster, A. A. 3485 Fountain, Richard C. 1602, 1802 Fouts, James Allen 1895, 1897 Fowler, Henry W. 0144 Francis, Allen Philip 2996 Francisco, Wayne 0461 Frankenberg, Dirk 0197, 0533, 0538, 0601, 1486 Franklin D. Roosevelt Warm Springs Memorial Com-
mis~ion 3101 Fraser, Charles E. 0498 Freeman, H. W. 0151 Freeman, Janice Ford 2725 French, A. A. 1634 Frey, John E. 3886, 3908 Frey, Robert W. 1448, 1452, 1468, 1473, 1501, 1509 Friddell, MichaelS. 1332 Fries, Adelaide L. 2330 Friggens, Paul 0823 Frisbie, C. M. 0621, 0623, 0652, 0656 Fuchs, Dan M. 0604 Fuller, Myron L. 1709 Fuller. Samuel L. H. 0176, 0179 Fulton County Commissioners of Roads and Revenues
2830 Fundaburk, Emma Lila 0242 Funkhouser, W. D. 0123 Furcron, A. S. 0700, 1041, 1054-6, 1087, 1094, 1097-
1100, 1105-6, 1130-1, 1139, 1145, 1148, 1164-5, 1167, 1174, 1177, 1179-80, 1278, 1383, 1540, 1573, 1613, 1708, 1713, 1746, 1765, 1770, 1809, 1836, 1855, 1865, 1868, 1880, 1891' 1899, 2126, 2994, 3118, 3155, 3379 Furlow, James W. 1688 Furnival, George M. 0867 Futch, Ovid L. 3085
G
Gadow, Sibylle 1469 Gaines, F. H. 2754 Gallagher, John L. 0560, 0563, 3761-2 Galphin, Bruce 2870 Galpin, S. L. 1146 Galtsoff, PaulS. 0641 Gamble, Charles A. 0744, 0746 Gamble, Thomas, Jr. 2628 Gambold, Anna A. Kleist, Mrs. 2250 Gannon,Arthur1988 Gannon, W. B. 1794
Garden Club of Georgia 3500 Gardner, Charles Harwood 1837 Gardner, Robert G. 2819 Garner, Phil 1021, 2749, 3213, 3375, 3654, 3658-9,
3715, 3720, 3722, 3991, 4037, 4125 Garren, Kenneth H. 3569 Garrett, Franklin M. 2019, 2757, 2832, 2841 Garrison, Webb S. 3143 Garrow, Patrick H. 0380 Garth, A. E. 3453 Gassman, McDill McCown 2810,2812 Gatewood, Willard P. 0810 Gay, Charles 1793 Gehringer, Jack W. 0580 Gelders, lsidor 2464-5, 2467 Gelders, Maud 2464-5, 2467 Geldert, Louis N. 2142 Georgia Appalachian Trail Club 3664 Georgia Bureau of Industry and Trade 0994, 1931 Georgia Center for Technology Forecasting and As-
sessment 0706 Georgia Conservancy 0740 Georgia Council for the Preservation of Natural Areas
3353 Georgia Crop Reporting Service 0002-3 Georgia Dept. of Agriculture 2143 Georgia Dept. of Archives and History 2036, 2128 Georgia Dept. of Commerce 3062 Georgia Department of Community Development
3727-8, 4116,4126 Georgia Dept. of Defense, Civil Defense Division 4128 Georgia Dept. of Education 0831, 2433 Georgia Dept. of Game and Fish 0958, 0992 Georgia Dept. of Human Resources 3879, 3965 Georgia Department of Industry and Trade 1933, 3731 Georgia Dept. of Mines, Mining, and Geology 1052,
1351, 1562, 1574 Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources (Old) 0803, 1161,
4110 Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources 0727, 1039, 1900,
3189, 3617-8, 4035 Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources, Earth and Water
Division 1042, 1282, 1409 Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources, Environmental
Protection Division 0024, 0026, 0509, 3878, 3943, 3947,3949, 3951,3955-6, 3958 Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources, Game and Fish Division 1035 Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Office of Planning and Research 0495, 0503, 0505, 0725 Georgia Dept. of Public Health 0023, 0027, 0711, 3881-2 Georgia Dept. of Transportation 1274, 1927 Georgia Entomological Society 0196 Georgia Forest Research Council 0842, 0865 Georgia Forestry Commission 0805, 0847, 0852, 0906, 3544 Georgia Forestry Service 0832 Georgia Game and Fish Commission 0920, 0922, 0930, 0959, 1014-7, 1025, 1037-8 Georgia Granite Corporation 1759 Georgia Historical Commission 2017, 2149 Georgia Historical Records Survey (WPA) 2319 Georgia Historical Society 1962, 2402, 2630 Georgia Institute of Technology 0600, 0707 Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering Experiment Station 1203, 4138 Georgia Institute of Technology, Graduate City Planning Program 2871 Georgia Library Association 4136 Georgia Magazine [Anon.] 0296, 0421, 1073, 2618, 2621' 2723, 3010 Georgia Marble Company 1143 Georgia Marine Science Center 0616, 3959 Georgia Mineral Newsletter 1078, 1364 Georgia Mineral Society Newsletter 1067, 1178 Georgia Mountains Planning and Development Commission 1903, 1906-7, 4018 Georgia Natural Areas Council 3352 Georgia Office of Planning and Budget 0486, 3588, 3591-2, 4117 Georgia Ports Authority 4049 Georgia Power Company 0707, 1930, 3373 Georgia School for the Deaf 2822 Georgia Science and Technology Commission 3753 Georgia, State of 1036 Georgia State Board of Game and Fish 0059 Georgia State College of Business Administration 4053 Georgia State Division of Wildlife 0921
117
Authors
Georgia State Highway Dept. 1047, 2092 Georgia State Library 4139 Georgia State Planning Board 3623 Georgia State Soil and Water Conservation Needs Committee 3807 Georgia Surface Mined Land Use Board 3610 Georgia Task Force on Environmental Health 0711 Georgia Water Quality Control Board 3887, 3891-5,
3898-3907, 3909, 3912, 3914-7, 3919, 3923, 3926, 3928, 3930, 3932-9, 3941-2 Georgia Water Use and Conservation Committee 1192 Georgia Wildlife Federation 0741 Georgia Writers' Project (WPA) 2119, 2589-2608, 3303 Gergel, Thomas J. 1651 Gersmehl, Philip Joel 3411 Geurin, J. W. 1191 Gholson, Julius 2469 Gibbons, J. Whitfield 0671 Gibbs, J. A. 3775, 3787 Gibson, Count D. 0462, 1424 Gibson, Dorothy A. 2962 Giddens, Joel E. 3485, 3766-7, 3961 Giese, Fred P. 1172 Gilbert, Price 2957, 3156 Gilbert, Ronald J. 0147 Gilbert, William Harten, Jr. 2186 Gildersleeve, Benjamin 1569 Giles, Robert T. 1452, 1457, 1518, 1857 Gillespie, David M. 0572 Gillmore, Q. A. 2588 Gilmer, George A. 2198 Gilmore, Jeannie Roe 3524 Giusti, Ennio V. 1840 Givens, Florence Montgomery 3512 Glascock County Centennial Corporation 2937 Glenn, Leonidas Chalmers 0808 Glenn, Steve 0626 Glover, Lynn 1598 Glynn County Beach and Dune Study Commission 0496 Godfrey, A. K. 3450 Godley, Margaret W. 2298, 2549, 2614 Godwin, Walter F. 0634-7, 0645, 0647, 0659 Goff, John H. 1987, 2187, 2254-82, 2285-93, 2349, 2362-5, 2367-71, 2378, 2541, 2664,2776, 3020, 32401' 3532, 3860 Gohdes, Clarence 0937-8 Gold Rush Museum of Dahlonega 3063 Golden, Harold G. 0745, 0747 Golden, Harry 2335 Goldstein, Steven A. 0653 Golley, Frank B. 0034, 0051 Goode, Nathaniel J. 4106 Goodell, H. Grant 1579 Goodrich, Calvin 0178, 0181-4 Goodrich, William Henry 3197 Goodsell, David A. 4130 Goodwin, Melvin H., Jr. 0674, 1393 Goodyear, Hugo V. 4091 Gordon, Asa H. 2408 Gordon, G. Arthur 3082 Gordon, Peter 2079 Gorsline, Donn S. 1484 Gosselink, James G. 0584, 1926 Govan, Gilbert E. 2531 Government Printing Office 0809 Governors Commission on Planned Growth 0720 Grady, James 2001 Graham, Robin Spear 1771 Granger, M. L. 2641 Granger, Mary 2589 Grant, B. F. 0785 Grant, Carol M. 0542 Grant, Hugh Fraser 2972 Grant, Willard H. 1663, 1741, 1798, 1807 Gras1y, Robert 1308 Graves, Ralph A. 4121 Graves, Richard A. 1922 Gray, Tom S., Jr. 2028 Greear, Philip F.-C. 0478, 0715, 3414 Green, Charlotte Hilton 3547 Green, E. A. A. 3031 Green, Fletcher M. 2423-4 Green, H. D. 2444 Greene, E. A. 2699 Greene, Earl A. 0056, 0074,0117 Greene, Frances 1020, 3009 Greene, H. Bruce 0365
Authors
Greene, Wilhelmina F. 3559 Gregg, Dean 0. 1390, 1775-6, 1781-2, 3918 Gregory, Clark 3614 Gregory, Jack 2184 Gremillion, L. R. 1080, 1367-8 Grice, Joseph T. 3239 Grice, Warren 1954 Griffies, H. F. 2662 Griffin, James David 2551 Griffin, Richard W. 2410 Griffin, Villard S. 1546, 1554 Griffin, William W. 0056, 0075 Griffith, Benjamin W. 2784-5 Griffitts, Wallace R. 1638-9 Grimm, William C. 0085 Grout, Abel Joel 3473 Groveland Lake Development Authority 4002 Groves, Robert Walker 2612 Grubbs, Lillie Martin 3317 Grubbs, Mary 3250 Grumbles, George Robert 1871 Gunn, Victoria Reeves 2973, 3039 Gunn, Willie David 3424-5 Guttmann, Allen 2190
H
Haag, William G. 0219 Hackney, Courtney T. 0588 Hahn, Marie 2792 Haight, F. J. 0592-3 Haile, Thomas H. 1026 Hails, John R. 1433, 1441, 1444-6, 1454, 1482 Haines, Evelyn Brown 0568, 0577 Hall, Arthur R. 3600 Hall, B. M. 1231-4 Hall, Benjamin M., Jr. 1649 Hall, J. 2966, 3699, 3874 Hall, M. R. 1231, 1233-4 Halls, Lowell K. 0899, 0901-2 Hally, David J. 0409 Hamilton, Anne 0066, 0063 Hamilton, R. E. 0066 Hamilton, W. J., Jr. 0140 Hammond, Edmund Jordan 2323 Hammond, Robert A. 0497 Hamrick, J. R. 2524 Hand, Bryce M. 1263 Hanie, Robert Edward 0445-6, 3364 Hankinson, Christine Park 2506 Hanlin, RichardT. 3486, 3488-90 Hannah, Evelyn 3275 Hanshaw, Bruce B. 1785 Hanson, Lee H., Jr. 0316, 0318 Hanson, R. L. 1230 Hanson, R. P. 0047 Hardee, Charles Seton Henry 2548 Harden, William 2546, 2639 Harding, James L. 0594, 1381 Hardman, Thomas Colquitt 3028 Hare, James R. 3674 Hargreaves, L. A., Jr. 3319-22 Hargrove, Clara Nell 2469 Harlow, Richard F. 0904-5 Harn, Julia E. 2497-8 Harper, Francis 0036, 0094, 0133, 0701, 2241, 2385,
3849,3861 Harper, Roland M. 0697, 0791, 3378, 3419, 3429, 3439-
44,3477,3538,3566-8,3850-1,4109 Harrar, Ellwood S. 3540 Harrar, J. George 3540 Harris, C. Duane 0657 Harris, Corra 0328 Harris, Frederick R., Inc. 3978, 4007 Harris, James Coffee 2820 Harris, Joe N. 1757 Harris, Joel Chandler 1943 Harris, Lucien, Jr. 0189 Harris, Van T. 1040 Harris, Virginia Speer 3164 Harris, Wallace, Mrs. 3164 Harris, Walter A. 0215, 2207, 2487
Harrison, w. H. 2878
Harriss, Robert C. 0546 Harrold, Charles C. 0217 Hart, Bertha Sheppard 2622, 3042 Hart, Carroll 2435
Hart, John Fraser 3327 Hartigan, John P., Jr. 3968 Hartley, Marvin Eugene 1565-6 Hartman, W. A. 3324 Haseltine, R. H. 1114 Hassemer, Russell Robert 1656 Hatcher, George 2342 Hatcher, Robert D., Jr. 1542, 1545, 1548, 1552, 1854 Haunton, Richard Herbert 2552 Hawes, Li IIa M. 2637 Hawie, Sally 3740 Hawkins, Benjamin 2205 Hawley, Arthur J. 0008, 3339 Hawlhorne, Joseph C. 3391 Hay, J. D. 3505 Hay, Marion 3364 Hayes, Charles Willard 1549, 1599, 1675 Haynes, William G., Jr. 3992 Hays, Louise Frederick 3084, 3301 Hazzard, William W. 2946 Heard, George Alexander 2948 Heard, Janie Lovelace 3258 Heard, R. W. 0169, 0171 Heath, Milton S. 2411 Hebard, Frederick V. 0095, 0098 HedluAd, Arnold 0868 Hein, Polly W. 3725 Heinrich, E. W. 1638, 1640 Hemperley, Marion R. 2213, 2254, 2263, 2371, 2379-
80, 2472, 2956 Henderson, Edward P. 1179-80, 1182-3 Henderson, J. T. 2135 Hendricks, E. L. 0674, 1252, 1393 Hendricks, Stephen Elliott 1905 Hendrickson, B. H. 3813 Hendrix, Jack H. 3691 Hendry, Charles W., Jr. 1864 Henry, Inez 2815 Henry, Vernon J., Jr. 1430-32, 1442, 1452, 1463, 1466,
1511' 1514-5 Hensey, Melville D. 1934-5 Hepting, George H. 0834 Herndon, Melvin 2643-4 Herr, Kincaid A. 2311 Herrick, Stephen M. 1243-4, 1304-5, 1320-1, 1344,
134!1, 1388, 1407, 1410, 1464, 1624-6 Herrmann, Leo Anthony 1739 Hertweck, Gunther 1472 Hesseltine, William B. 3086 Hester, Norman Curtis 1334 Hewett, D. F. 1827 Hewlett, John D. 0779-80, 0893-4, 0897 Heye, George G. 0439 Heyi,R James 3620 Heyward, Duncan Clinch 2056 Hicken, Victor 2459 Hicks, R. G. 1380 Hicky, Louise McHenry 2927, 2988, 3108, 3110-2 Higgins, Michael W. 1620-1, 1768 Hill, Carl Richard 0537 Hill, Carole E. 0408 Hill, Duane W. 0767 Hill, Ella Godwin 3098 Hill, Lynn 3704 Hill, Philip G. 0489-90 Hill, Robert J. 1924, 3087 Hillestad, Hilburn 0. 0516 Hillhouse, A. H. 2504 Hilliard, Sam B. 2215, 3334 Hill-Rowley, Richard 3596 Hillyer, Georgia 2225 Hinckley, David N. 1357 Hinds, Dudley S. 3805 Hines, Nelle Womack 2441 Hinton, E. H. 2481, 2658, 3210 Historic American Buildings Survey 2156-8 Historic Savannah Foundation, Inc. 2561, 2572 Hitch, Robert M. 2560 Hitz, Alex M. 2875, 3305 Ho, Francis P. 4091, 4096 Hoadley, Alfred W. 3944 Hodge, Frederick W. 0439 Hodge, William T. 4102 Hodges, Lucille 2806 Hodgins, Maibelle Dickey 0116 Hoehling, A. A. 2894 Heese, H. Dickson 0163 Hoffman, Phillip 2899 Holbrook, Herman L. 0935
118
Holbrook, John A. 1022 Holder, Daniel R. 0155 Holder, Frank 3130 Holder, Gerald Leon 2401 Holder, Preston 0220, 0389 Holemo, Fred J. 1034, 3739 Holland, F. Ross, Jr. 2486 Holland, J. Truman 2352 Holland, James W. 2623, 3051 Holland, Willis 1748 Hollenbeck, Ronald P. 1889 Holley, Kenneth R. 4027 Hollifield, Nell Roach 2746 Hollingsworth, C. D. 3033 Hollingsworth, Clyde 3215 Holman, Edwin 3116 Holmes, Michael Stephan 2412 Holsinger, John R. 0202 Holtzclaw, Mary M. 2491 Hooper, Ralph M. 0891 Hopkins, John M. 3856 Hopkins, Mary Suzanne 1742 Hopkins, Milton, Jr. 0058, 0079, 0081, 0088, 0113,
0960 Hopkins, Oliver B. 1079 Hopson, C. A. 1744 Hornady, John R. 2638 Hornsby, George C. 3957 Horton, George R. 1877 Horvath, Joseph C. 0923-4 Hosking, William 0814 Hoskins, Robert N. 0801 Hotchkiss, Neil 3461-3 House, Albert Virgil 2972 Housing Authority of Savannah 2562 Howard, Annie Hornady 2009-10 Howard, J. Hatten 1630 Howard, James D. 1431, 1452, 1468, 1471, 1473, 1475,
1501-2, 1505, 1509-10, 1526 Howard, Roger D. 0737 Howard, W. C. 0843 Howell, Clark 1947 Howell, Evan P. 2878 Howell, James 0. 0192 Howells, John Mead 2564 Howell, Catherine M. 2064 Hoyl, John H. 1428-35, 1437, 1439-42, 1444-6, 1450,
1454, 1466-7, 1482, 1498, 1513-5, 1519-20 Hubbell, T. H. 0669 Hubricht, Leslie 0187 Huddlestun, Paul F. 1619 Hudson, Charles J. 3498 Hudson, Charles M. 2172 Hudson, Donald Ray 0729 Hudson, W. C. 1132 Huffman, Frank Jackson, Jr. 2677 Hughes, Nathaniel C., Jr. 2741 Hughes, Thomas C. 1805 Huie, Mildred 2947 Hull, Augustus Longstreet 2673 Hull, J.P.D. 1083, 1135, 1159 Hulsey, Agnes 2874 Hume, H. Harold 3497 Humphries, Robert L. 0090 Hunn, Max 3089 Hunt, Caroline C. 2986 Hunt, Jesse L., Jr. 1458, 1511 Hunter, Charles E. 1128 Hurd, John C. 0180 Hursh, C. R. 0812 Hurst, Robert Latimer 3286 Hurst, Vernon J. 0241, 0293, 1155, 1175, 1296, 1307-
1317, 1353, 1553, 1559, 1572, 1601, 1615, 1636, 1706-7, 1760, 1791, 1795, 1813, 1877 Huscher, Harold 0357-9, 0377, 0417, 0419, 0429-30 Husted, John E. 1063, 1480 Huston, Willis E. 0011 Huxford, Folks 2495, 2705-6 Hyatt, S. E. 1140 Hynds, Ernest C. 2670 Hyypio, Peter A. 0103
Ike, A. F., Jr. 0451, 3783 lnglesby, Charlotte 2588 Ingalls, Robert S. 3883
Ingram, Frank Thompson 1718 Inman, Ernest J. 1195 Ireland, H. Andrew 1667 Ivers, Larry E. 2083
J
Jack McCormick and Associates 3433 Jackson, Charles T. 1818 Jackson, Edwin L. 4140 Jackson, Harvey H. 2340 Jackson, James Houstoun 2306 Jackson, L. W. R. 0872, 0913 Jacobs, Don L. 3467 Jacobs, Thornwell 2752 Jahns, Richard H. 1638, 1640 James, Edwin 1981, 3549 James, L. Douglas 0726, 0767-72, 0775 Jamison, Alma Hill 2891, 2898 Janes, Thomas P. 2133 Jarrell, Charles C. 3141 Jeane, Donald Gregory 2147 Jefferies, Richard W. 0370 Jekyll Island State Park Authority 0455 Jemison, George M. 0834 Jenkins, Charles F. 0702 Jenkins, J. H. 0942, 0944 Jenkins, James S. 0097 Jenkins, Leerie T., Jr. 0461 Jenkins, William Thomas 2471 Jenkinson, Michael 3361 Jennings, Jesse D. 0304 Jewett, Mary Gregory 2151, 2732, 2790, 2950 Jinks, D. D. 3789 Johnson, A. M. F. 1210 Johnson, A. Stephen 3358 Johnson, A. Sydney 0515-6, 0969 Johnson, Amanda 1950 Johnson, Don 1022 Johnson, Douglas Wilson 1417, 1567-8, 1605 Johnson, Gerald W. 2762 Johnson, Guion Griffis 2055 Johnson, Irene 1967-8 Johnson, J. G. 2069 Johnson, J. R. 0004 Johnson, Lucille Bryant 3257 Johnson, Martha Josephine 2230 Johnson, Paul Michael 2490 Johnson, Thomas Cary, Jr. 2234 Johnson, V. H. 1720 Johnston, David W. 0065,0076, 0106, 0112, 0115 Johnston, Gibson, Jr. 0110,0191, 3525 Johnston, John E. 1376 Johnslone, Francis E., Jr. 4105 Jolley, Clyde W. 2456 Jonas, Anna I. 1555 Jones, .Billie Walker 2296, 3270 Jones, Charles C., Jr. 0205, 0207-8, 0412, 0427, 1940,
2030, 2095, 2376, 2502, 2544, 2653, 3178 Jones, Charles Edgeworth 2018, 2100 Jones, David M. 3580 Jones, Dewitt E. 1044 Jones, Donovan Deronda 1842 Jones, E. P. 0835 Jones, Edward A. 2886 Jones, FrankS. 2743 Jones, George Fenwick 2792 Jones, George Noble 2656 Jones, Harold C. 0071, 3417 Jones, James Henry 0968 Jones, James P. 3126 Jones, Mary Callaway 2474, 2477 Jones, Mary G. 2734 Jones, Richard C. 3756-7 Jones, Richard W. 0804, 3319-22 Jones, S. P. 1103, 1856 Jones, Samuel B., Jr. 3421 Jones, Thomas J. 3519 Jordan, Jones, and Goulding, Inc. 4034 Jordan, Robert H. 3238 Jordon, Larry Eugene 1862 Jorgenson, Sherrell C. 0166-7 Joseph, Edwin B. 0654 Jova, Henri V. 2898 Joyner, B. F. 1245 Julian, Allen Phelps 2019, 2500 Junior League of Augusta 3183
Junior League of Savannah 2557 Justice, Robert Sherman 3520 Justus, Lucy 0487, 0607, 0676, 0733, 0817, 0850, 0877-
8, 0884, 0908, 0910, 1032, 1061, 1141, 1157, 1184, 1401, 1421, 1523, 1538-9, 1679, 1858, 1914, 1916, 1918, 2451, 2858, 2892, 2979, 2993, 3366, 3376, 3394, 3561' 3607, 3609, 3629, 3679, 3689, 3703, 3716, 3751, 3827, 3835, 3964, 3976, 3993-4, 4020, 4025, 4030
K
Kale, Herbert W. 0103, 0107, 0539-40, 0551 Kane, Edward P. 4027 Kane, Harnett T. 2815 Kanwisher, John 0530, 0554 Kaplan, David Mark 1492 Karstad, Lars 0047 Kates, Robert Clark 4043 Kaucher, Dorothy 2346 Keeling, William B. 1980, 3087, 3736 Keever, Catherine 3449 Keiser, Edwin C. 1535 Kellar, James H. 0354-5, 0418 Kelley, David B. 2724 Kelley, Ira C. 3948 Kellum, J. M., Mrs. 3276 Kelly, Arthur L. [sic] 0428 Kelly, Arthur R. 0222. 0225, 0227, 0236, 0241, 0252,
0289, 0291, 0301, 0303, 0305, 0309, 0326, 0354, 0356, 0371-2, 0385, 0408, [0428], 0437 Kelly, William A. 1758 Kelnhofer. Guy J. Jr. 4016 Kelso, William M. 0402, 2584, 2610 Kemble, Frances (Fanny) 2058 Kendall, H. F. 1761 Kennedy, Benjamin 2848 Kennedy, Vance C. 1227 Kent, Benjamin W. 0425 Kenyon, James B. 4064 Kerksis, Sydney C. 2720 Kerns. Waldon R. 0728, 0732 Kerr, Ed 0886 Kerr, Paul F. 1082 Kesler, Thomas L. 1117-9,1669-71, 1678 Key, William 0. 2026 Kidd and Assoc. 2920 Kiefer, John D. 1589-90 Killion, Ronald G. 2107, 2336 Kilpatrick, Anna Grills 2197 Kilpatrick, F. A. 1657 Kilpatrick, Jack Frederick 2197 Kindsvater, Carl E. 3986 King, Edward 2394 King, Elbert A., Jr. 1185, 1187 King, F. Wayne 0129 King, Francis P. 1096 King, Frank P. 1969 King, Larry D. 3967 King, George H. 1983 King, James A. 1750 King, Philip B. 1276, 1551 King, Sara Singleton 3287, 3857 King, Spencer B., Jr. 1956, 2857, 3079 King, W. V. 0190 Kinsey, Alfred Charles 3528 Kirkpatrick, Samuel Roger 1867 Kjerfve. Bjorn 0457, 0585 Klawitter, R. A. 0887 Klein, Rosemary L. 2580 Klepper, M. R. 1640 Klett, William Young 1801 Kline, M. H. 1823 Klinefelter, T. A. 1116 Knighl, Herbert A. 0783, 0866, 3346 Knight, Lee 0629 Knight, Lucian Lamar 1946, 1948, 2160, 2829 Knowlton, Clifford J. 0184 Koch, Peter 0836 Kollock, John 2998, 3221, 3292-3 Komarek, E. V. 0038, 0885 Koos, Philip D., Jr. 3341, 4009 Kraeuter, John N. 0174, 0204 Krakow, Kenneth K. 2252 Krause, R. E. 1390, 1812 Kreiger, Alex D. 0221 Kroeck, F. William 4015
119
Authors
Kuenzler, Edward J. 0524, 0529, 0531 Kunze, John H. 0883 Kuo, David Kuang-Hung 3795 Kuo, Hway-Hwa 4080 Kuroda, R. 0579 Kurtz, Annie Pye 2842 Kurtz, Wilbur G. 0386, 2019, 2033, 2035, 2842, 2848-9.
2890 Kushner, Adele 0844, 0846 Kyle, Clason 3131
L
Ladd, George E. 1088 Laessle, A. M. 0669 LaForge, Laurence 1045, 1135 Lagoudakis, Charilaos 2295 Lamar, William L. 1219, 1223-4, 1699 Lamb, George Marion 1592 Lamb, R. C. 0032 Lambdin, Augusta 3041 Lammers. William T. 3506 LaMoreaux. Philip E. 1292-3, 1322 Lampton, Robert K. 3465 Land, Lynton S. 1498, 1517 Lane, Harry F. 3336 Lane, Mary 3162 Lane, Mills 2393, 2554 Laney, F. B. 1560 Lang, Walter B. 1362 Langley, AI, Jr. 3195 Lanier, Alton 2893 Lanman, Charles 3371 Lanning, John Tate 2061, 2066 LaPlante, M. G. 0016, 0792, 0863 Larson, Lewis H., Jr. 0239, 0245, 0271, 0290-94, 0299-
0300, 0339, 0405-6 Larson, Robert W. 0784 Lattimore, Ralston 2585 Laurent, Eugene A. 0767 Lavonia Times 2825 Law, Laron Sidney 0971 Lawrence. Alexander A. 2550, 2847, 2849 Lawrence, R. M., Jr. 3810 Lawson. Skippy 3166 Lawton, Alexander R. 2635 Lawton, David E. 1283, 1832 League of Women Voters. Roswell Unit 2921 Leavell, Carroll 0610 LeCiar, Gerald 0728, 0732 Ledford, Rob 2091 Lee, Beatrice Joy 3393 Lee, Clermont H. 2570 Lee, Dallas 3236 Lee, F. D. 2542 Leeds, Arthur Newlin 0701 LeGrand, H. E. 1287, 1289, 1294-5, 1387, 1410, 1419,
1624, 1628, 1631 Lehrbas, M. M. 0790 Leisure Systems, Inc. 3730, 3742 Lemly, James H. 3330 Lester, James G. 1068, 1070, 1279, 1575, 1594, 1842.
1740 Lesure, Frank G. 1799, 1820 Levy, John S. 1499 Levy, Marion Abrahams 2625 Leweicki, Walter T. 1674, 1677, 1701 Lewicke, Carol Knapp 3950 Lewis, Ann E. 2445, 2478, 2763. 2866, 2897 Lewis, Bessie 2947, 3077-8, 3080 Lewis, Clifford E. 0005 Lewis, David 2905 Lewis, Eugene W. 2961 Lewis, Eulalia M. 2351, 3295-6 Lewis, George, Jr. 3248 Lewis, Jerry L. 1757 Leydet, Francois 3838 Libby, Stephen Charles 1852 Library of Congress 2404 Liesendahl, James A. 2427 Life [Anon.] 0483, 2577 Lightle, Burnette [Vanstory] see Burnette Vanstory Lindberg, Gene 3615 Lindgren, Waldemar 1817 Lindner, C. P. 3977 Lindsay, Mark C. 2932 Linduska, Joseph P. 0972
Authors
Linley, John 1993 Linnartz, Norwin E. 0666 Linthurst, A. A. 3760-1,3764 Linton, Thomas L. 0170, 0639-40 Lipps, Emma Lewis 3415-6 Lipscomb, Robert G. 2214 Lipson, Elliott L. 3692 Little, Elbert L., Jr. 0688 Livingood, James W. 2531 Livingstone, Robert, Jr. 0615 Living Wilderness [Anon.] 3845 Lockerman, Doris 3015 Lockwood, C. C. 0705 Logan, Thomas Francis 1788 Long, C. L. 1732 Long, F. Leslie 3776 Long, Leland Timothy 1269 Long, Sumner 1635-6 Lonsdale, Richard E. 1932 Lotti, Thomas 0887 Lounsberry, Alice 3556 Love, E. K. 2632 Lovell, Caroline Couper 2046 Lovett, Patrick Jeremiah, Mrs. 2354 Lowe, Charles E. 0044 Lowe, James N. 3732 Lowman, George Edgar 0682 Lowry, W. D. 1544 Luce, A. H. 0641 Ludlum, David M. 4095,4101,4107-8 Lumb, Alan M. 0771,0774-5, 1197 Lumpkin, Wilson 2191 Lund, Anne Casteen 3420 Lund, Ernest H. 1228 Lund, H. 0. 0872 Lutrick, Bill 2148 Lybarger, Ronald D. 0575-6 Lyell, Charles, Sir 2395 Lyon, Elizabeth Anne 2853-4, 2859-60
M
McAlister, James Douglas 4019 McAtee, W. L. 0060 McBay, L. G. 0647 McCain, James Ross 2084, 2753 McCall, Hugh 1936 McCall, John Clark, Jr. 2865 McCallie, Samuel Washington 1057, 1093, 1111, 1115,
1138, 1158, 1168-70, 1211, 1238-7, 1248, 1250, 1848,3832 McCann, Catherine 0345 McCary, Ben C. 2206 McClain, Donald S. 1666 McClanahan, Mark A. 3944 McClellan, G. H. 1369 McClure, Joe P. 0763, 0633, 0903 McClurkin, D. C. 3809 McCollum, Jerry Lawson 0148, 0574, 0675 McCollum, Morris J. 1464, 1695-6, 1784, 1861 McCommons, W. C., Mrs. 3069 McCook, C. B. 2492 McCormick, J. Frank 1645 McCormick, Jack, and Associates 3433 McCreery, A. A. 3810 McCullar, Bernice 1955 McDaniel, Mary Jane 2204 McDaniel, Susie Blaylock 2530 McDonald, Frederick H. 1051 MacDonell, Alexander A. 3081 McDonough, James Vernon 2003 McDowell, G. W. 0691 McGee, Charles E. 0891-2 McGimsey, Charles A. 0281 McGinness, John 3763 MacGregor, John 0138 McGregor, John A. 1204, 1214 McGuire, Peter S. 2301, 2695-6 McHatton, T. H. 1978 Mcilvaine, Paul 3053-4 Mcintire, Greg L. 0578 Mcintosh, John H. 2797 Macintyre, I. G. Macintyre, W. Irwin 3245 MacKallor, Jules A. 1733 McKay, Blythe 2476, 2488 McKay, John J., Jr. 2475
McKeever, Sturgis 0037 MacKichan, Kenneth A. 1213 McKinley, William 0407 McKinnon, John L. 3283 McKinstry, Mary Thomas 1973 McKniff, Joseph Michael 1556 McKnight, J. S. 0867 Mclean, Robbie 3844 Mclemore, William H. 1572, 1582, 1710 Mclendon, lrmgard 2783 Mclendon, S. G. 2212 Macleod, David 0605 McMahan, C. A. 3602 McMahan, E. A. 0517 McMahon, Doreen 2902 McMaster, Lucille 3265 McMichael, Edward V. 0246-7, 0354, 0418 McMurry, Richard M. 2020, 2023, 2717, 2745 McMurtrie, Douglas C. 2432 McNamara, Edward J., Mrs. 0510 McNeel, T. E. 0190 MacNeil, F. Stearns 1290, 1318, 1329, 1425 Mc0ueen,A.S.2538,3852 McRay, Sybil Wood 3000 McRee, Jannelle Jones 2798, 2801-2 Mcyaugh, Rogers 3475, 35o8 McWaters, Don 2971 McWilliams, Melinda 0461 Maddock, Stephen J. 3625 Maddux, H. 2457 Madeley, Hulon Matthews 1343 Mahan, Joseph B. 2452, 3122, 3225 Mahood, Robert K. 0624, 0632, 0663 Major, James C. 0106 Mallard, Daisy 0. 3231 Malone, Henry T. 0394, 2193-4, 2326, 2980 Mandeville, Leon P. 2523 Maney, David S. 0468 Mangat, B. S. 3388 Manley, Frank 0268, 0353, 0382 Mann, Floris Perkins 3242 Mann, William A. 1453 Manogaran, Chelvadurai 0898, 0915-6 Manucy, Albert C. 2062, 2953 Marcus, Ernst 0177 Marcus, Eveline 0177 Mark, Alan Francis 3412-3 Markin, G. P. 3392 Marland, Frederick C. 0480, 0488, 0579 Marlin, C. B. 0873 Marlin, Lloyd G. 2665 Marples, T. G. 0546 Marsalis, William E. 1151, 1332, 1619 Marsh, Blanche 2680 Marsh, Kenneth Frederick 2680 Marsh, Kermit B. 2852 Marshall, David L. 0630 Marshall, Harold G. 0556 Marshall, Rebecca N. 2499, 3046, 3201, 3222, 3707 Martens, James H. C. 1512 Martin, Anna C. 1053 Martin, Clarece 2919, 2922, 2925 Martin, Constance B. 3829 Martin, Dwight David 0149 Martin, Jean 2892 Martin, John H. 3125 Martin, Josephine Bacon 3044 Martin, A. 0. A. 1230 Martin. Roger 1380 Martin, T. Craig 0042, 0724, 1027, 3672, 3681 Martin, Thomas H. 2834 Martof, BernardS. 0120, 0124 Mason, Amy 3558 Mason, Carol Ann Irwin 0314, 0317 Massey, Katharine B. 2299 Masters, H. B. 0498 Matschat, Cecile Hulse 2347 Matthai, James Paul 1971 Matthews, Antoinette Johnson 2767 Matthews, Earl 2704 Matthews, James D., Mrs. 0019 Matthews, Mary Jeanne 3509 Matthews, Vincent 1803 Mattison, Ray H. 2540 Mattoon, W. A. 3537 Mattson, C. Dudley 4048 Maungkaew, Chuang 0708 Maxwell, Phillip A. A. 3830 May, Jack T. 0866
120
May, Mallory s. 0559, 0603
Mayes, Roberta Lyndon 3264 Maynard, T. Poole 1133 Mayo, Lawrence Shaw 2222 Mayou, Taylor V. 1448, 1525 Mays, Dennis 3719 Mays, Lois Barefoot 3858 Me- see MacMeade, Robert H. 1500 Meaders, Margaret Inman 3066 Meadows, John C. 4118 Mealor, William T. 3340 Meanly, Brooke 3819 Mebane, John 3202 Medlin, Jack H. 1617-9, 1791-2 Meier, August 2905 Meldrim, Peter W., Mrs. 2168 Mellen, James 1762 Mellinger, Abram Clair 3507 Mellinger, Marie B. 3405-6 Melton, Maurice 3190 Melton, Quimby, Jr. 3218 Menzies, Robert J. 0197 Merrick, Elliott 3274 Martie, John B., Jr. 1147, 1176 Methvin, Eugene H. 1919 Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Study Group
4024, 4026, 4028-9, 4033-6, 4038 Metz, L. J. 0887 Meyer, Eric C. 3427 Meyers, Carl Weston 1851 Michaelis, Virginia 0020, 0022 Michaux, Andre 2247 Middle Georgia Area Planning Commission 3611, 4041,
4113 Midgette, Gordon M. 3056 Miesch, A. T. 1272-3 Milanich, Jerald T. 0338 Milfort, Le Clerc 2206 Milici, Robert C. 1597 Miller, Bill A. 3323, 3979 Miller, Carl F. 0226, 0368-9, 0436 Miller, David 0586, 0589, 0594, 0629 Miller, Grant L. 0166-7 Miller, Howard A. 0902 Miller, J. H. 3481-3, 3485, 3487 Miller, James F. 3552 Miller, A. W. 0203 Miller, W. D. 0870 Millians, Robert Wilson 1655 Milliman, J.D. 1456, 1493-4 Milton, Charles 1307-8 Milton, John P. 0445 Mitchell, Ella 3289 Mitchell, Eugene M. 2891, 2903 Mitchell, Frances Letcher 1941 Mitchell, Jeffrey Leonard 1506 Mitchell, Lane 1120, 1260, 1358 Mitchell, Larry 3064 Mitchell, Lizzie A. 3159 Mitchell, Richard L. 4085 Mitchell, Stephens 2831 Mitchell, William Louis 1888 Mitchell, William A., Jr. 2150 Mizell, Hamp 3852 Mobley, H. E. 0879, 0886 Mobley, M. D. 0799, 0801 Mochon, Marion Johnson 0278 Mock, John E. 3603 Mohr, Clarence Lee 3147 Mohr, David Wilfred 1743 Moncrief, J. B., Jr. 3504 Monk, Carl D. 3422 Monroe, Watson, H. 1326 Montgomery, Albert A. 0845 Moody, Raymond D. 3624 Mooney, James 2123, 2127 Moore, Clarence B. 021Q-13 Moore, F. C., Jr. 1415 Moore, Gene 0469, 2383, 3365 Moore, Jerrold A. 0765 Moore, John Byron 1894 Moore, Joseph H. 2703 Moore, Virginia H. 3005-6 Moore, W. Robert 0444, 2050 Moore, William Halsell, Jr. 1584 Moorehead, Warren King 0288 Morehead, Bill 0951, 1007,3711,3752 Morgan, David T. 2334
Morgan, Thomas H. 2856 Morgan, William F., Jr. 0854 Morris, H. D. 3792, 3967 Morris, Janie 2863 Morris, William Sylvanus 2678 Morrison, Betty Ruth 2793 Morrison, Carlton A. 2348 Morrison, Jim 0458, 0941, 0949, 0954, 0995, 0998,
1008, 1013, 1028-9, 3377 Morrow, James E. 0919 Morse, Dan 0391 Morse, Phyllis 0391 Moseley, J. Edward 2325 Moses, Elsie Crutchfield 2876 Mosteller, James Donovan 2731 Moultrie Observer 2729 Moxham, R. M. 1687 Moye, Falma 1265 Muir, John 2251 Muldawer, Paul 2575 Mullis, Anthony Wayne 0173 Mulvihill, Frank J. 0416 Mundy, J. Ellis 2702 Munyan, Arthur C. 1090, 1300, 1355, 1374, 1893 Murdoch, Richard K. 2220 Murless, Dick 0468, 3648-9 Murphey, Eugene Edmund 0082 Murphy, Gregg 2836 Murphy, Robert Edward 1595 Murray, Grover E. 1286 Murray, Haydn H. 1121 Murray, Joseph B. 1767 Murray, Malcolm A. 3601 Music, James L., Jr. 0664 Mussey, Orville D. 1215 Myer, William E. 2366 Myers, Robert Manson 2045
N
Nader, Ralph, Study Group 3925 Nader, Ralph, Study Group 3925 Nadler, Freda 2489 National Air Pollution Control Administration 0028-9,
0031 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
Environmental Data Service 4073-4, 4079 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
National Marine Fisheries Service 0622 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
National Weather Service 0749, 4104 National Park Service see U. S. Dept. of Interior National Railway Historical Society 2894 National Weather Service 0749, 4104 Navarre, Alfred T., Jr. 1712 Neal, W. J. 1504 Neal, Willard 2755-6, 2761 Needhan:>, Robert E. 1835 Neelands, A. W. 3542 Nei heisel, James 1477, 1481 , 1497 Neill, Wilfred T. 0121-2, 0141, 0362, 0366 Nelson, Daniel J. 3431 Nelson, Steven N. 3973 Nelson, Thomas C. 0806, 3530 Nesbitt, A. T. 2136 Neville, Bert 2350, 2353 Newcomb, L. E. 1191, 1627, 1811 Newnan Times-Herald 2735 Newsom, John D. 0491 Newsweek [Anon.] 2579 Newton, Hester 2794, 3216 Nicholls, Robert P. 0604 Nichols, Frederick Doveton 1989-90 Nichols, Paul A. 0648 Nicholson, Stuart A. 3422-3 Nightingale, B. N. 2520 Nix, Harold L. 0626 Nixon, John W. 3589 Nonas, Richard 0356 Nonemaker, James A. 2764 Norris, J. D. 2773 Norris, Robert A. 0079-80, 0087, 0109 Norsworthy, Juanita 3480 North Georgia Area Planning and Development Com-
mission 3784, 4011 North Georgia Mountains Authority 3714 3373 North, Ronald M. 0858, 3831, 3984, 4042
North West Georgia Historical and Genealogical Society
W5
.
Norwood, C. W. 2134 Norwood, Martha F. 3199 Norwood, Thomas M. 3107 Nottingham, Carolyn Walker 3275 Nottingham, Zera Pendleton 2483 Nunan, Walter Edward 1588 Nunnally, Nelson A. 3333 Nutter, Wade L. 0894, 3347 Nye, Wilbur S. 2019
0
O'Connell, J. J. 2332 O'Connor, Bruce J. 1860 O'Connor, Mary 3740 Oden, Jack Porter 0839 O'Donnell, James H. 2176 Odum, Ellen Payne 2730 Odum, Eugene P. 0056,0090,0100,0111-2,0180,0445,
0475, 0527, 0532, 0536, 0552, 0561, 0564. 0665, 0960,3597 Odum, H. T. 0517 Odum, Jim 0974 Odum, 0. B. 1698 Odum, Ron 0130, 0678, 0980, 3970 Odum, William E. 3382 Oefinger, Simeon W., Jr. 0901 Oertel, George F. 0570, 0590, 1452, 1524, 1526-34, 1537 Oetgen, Jerome 2333 Oglesby, Ted 3003 Ogren, David E. 3837 O'Kelley, Cora Eliza 2698 Olbrechts, Frans M. 2127 Olive, Lindsay S. 3484 Oliver, Jane 0019 Olmstead, Charles H. 2587, 3313 Olson, Jerry C. 1639 Olson, Norman K. 1346, 1377 O'Neill, Charles Kendall 2031 O'Neill, J. F. 1190. 1676, 1853 Oney, John 0981$ Oosting, H. J. 0518 Operations Group [Metropolitan Atlanta Water Resources Management Study] 4035 Orr, Dorothy 2099 Osborn, C. B. 3319 Osborn, George C. 2022 Oulton, T. D. 1081 Overstreet, Elizabeth F. 1086 Overstreet, William C. 1641 Ovrevik, Marie Wikstrom 2807 Owen, Vaux, Jr. 1587, 1808, 1810, 1829-30, 1869, 1890
p
Palmer, Bobby A. 0631 Palmer, E. L. 0154
Pannell, Clifton w. 3598
Pardee, J. T. 1637 Parham, Joseph 2463 Parizek, Eldon J. 1271, 1275, 1378, 1652-3, 1660, 1703 Park, Charles F., Jr. 1104, 1107, 1110, 1637, 1819 Park, Orville A. 2329 Parker, Dorothy 3474 Parker, Thomas Valentine 2185 Parker, Wayne 0472, 3357, 3374 Parks, William Scott 1229 Parmalee, Paul W. 0295 Parrish, June Jackson 2733 Parrish, Lydia 2119 Pass, Aaron 0040, 0134, 0678, 0889-90, 0940, 0947,
0962, 0967, 0979, 0987, 0991, 0999-1000, 1002-3, 1915, 2977, 3682, 3698 Pate, John Ben 3268 Patrick, J. Max 2620 Patrick, Rembert W. 2221 Patrick, Ruth 0668 Patterson, A. E. 0785, 0829 Patterson, S. H. 1123, 1349, 1737 Patterson, Wayne, Mrs. 0415 Patton, J. L. 1153 Paul, James Thomas 0888
121
Authors
Paul, Joel H. 2724 Pearson, H. A. 0006 Peattie, Roderick 1910 Peck, Stewart B. 0202 Peeples, Dale Hardy 2305 Pelton, Michael A. 0043, 0952 Pendergrast, Donald C. 2826 Penfound, William T. 3821 Penley, H. Michael 1566 Pennington, John 0030, 0033, 0125, 0280, 0381, 0384,
0390, 0447-9, 0507, 0655, 0677, 0713-4, 0718, 0955, 1033, 1920, 1923, 1928, 2097, 2862, 3351, 3368, 3529, 3582, 3824, 2840-1, 3864, 3940,. 3990, 4000, 4003 Pennington, Marilyn 0279, 0380 Peplies, Robert W. 3331 Pepper, George W. 0439 Perdue, Edward M. 1225-6 Perdue, Robert E. 2654 Parkerson, Medora Field 2008 Perkins, H. F. 0828, 1046, 3766, 3768, 3775, 3777, 3787-9 Perkins, Richard J. 0168 Perlmutter, Daniel 0127 Permar, Elise J. 2951 Perry, Eugene C., Jr. 1713, 1809 Perry, Joel W. 2788 Perry, Stuart H. 1183 Perryman, Margaret 0228, 0249-51, 0254-5, 0257, 0264-5, 0298, 0376, 0392, 0424, 2461, 2716, 2736, 2930, 2933, 3034, 3229 Pessin, L. J. 3451 Petrafeso, F. A. 1415, 1732 Petsche, Jerome E. 0441 Petty, A. J. 1415 Pettys, Dick 2995 Pevear, D. R. 1479, 1488-9 Peyton, Alexander L. 1677, 1816 Peyton, Garland 1065-6, 1216, 1822, 2425 Pfadenhauer, Ruby Mabry McCrary 3192 Pfeiffer, W. J. 3761 Pfitzer, Donald W. 3866 Phalen, W. C. 1773 Phelps, David Sutton 0267, 0434 Philbin, P. W. 1732 Phillips, J. V. 3833 Phillips, Ulrich Bonnell 2360, 2405 Picciola, Larry J. 3816 Pickering, Sam M. 1059, 1072, 1324, 1619, 1800, 3752, 3757 Pickett, B. S. 1979 Pierce, Alfred M. 2320-1 Pierce, Martha G. 1283 Pierce, Phillip C. 3886 Pierce, W. G. 1136 Pike County Sesquicentennial Assoc. 3161 Pikl, I. James, Jr. 0781, 0840 Pilkey, Orrin H. 0546, 1455, 1457, 1483, 1486-90, 1494-5, 1516, 1518 Pindar, L. Otley 0069 Pinder, George F. 1780 Pinkston, Regina P. 3096 Pinson, William H., Jr. 1845 Pioneer Citizens' Society of Atlanta 2833 Pirkle, William A. 1449 Pirtle, Caleb, Ill 3717 Pittman, Wes 3746 Pitts, Lulie 2976 Platt, Robert B. 3430,3511, 3513-4 Plummer, Gayther L. 1646, 3504, 3531, 3758-9, 3797 Pollack, Joseph A. 0140 Pomeroy, Lawrence R. 0522, 0542:3, 0549, 0558 Pope, G. D., Jr. 0313 Pope, A. M. 0564 Porcher, Francis Peyre 3400 Porter, Michael Leroy 2907 Postag, A.M. 2455 Postell, Charles 3103 Postley, Olive C. 1373 Potter, Donald B. 1129 Pound, James Hannon 1747 Powell, David P. 1793 Powell, James C. 3786 Powell, Nettie 3095 Powell, Nora 2772 Powell, Watts 2772 Power, Virginia W. 2923 Power, W. Robert 1137, 1563 Prather, Preston 1661, 1831
Authors
Pratt, Dorothy 2012 Pratt, Richard 2012 Pratt, Walden P. 1075 President of the U. S. (T. Roosevelt) 0809 Preston, Howard L. 2439, 2910 Prettyman, T. M. 1152 Price, McGlone 0742, 1772 Price, Terry S. 0871 Price, Virginia Polhill 3030 Prince, Martha Fort 3562 Prindle, Louis M. 1126 Proffitt, Elizabeth B. 2918 Prouty, W. F. 1418 Prowell, David Cureton 1664 Pruitt, Robert Grady 1622 Prunty, Merle C. 1970, 3335, 3339 Psi State Delta Kappa Gamma, Tau Chapter 3862 Puckett, Martha Mizell 2494 Pullen, Thomas M., Jr. 0953 Purcell, Joseph C. 0007 Pursell, Ronald A. 3466 Putnam, John A. 0867 Pyron, Joseph H. 3475
Q
Quarterman, Elsie 3449 Quattlebaum, Julian K. 2657 Queen, William H. 0567
R
Rabon, James W. 1196 Radcliffe, Dennis 1879 Radford, Albert E. 3408-9 Rado, Bruce Q. 3402, 3773 Raffalovich, George 2096 Ragotzkie, Robert A. 0128, 0476, 0523, 0596 Ragsdale, B. D. 2316 Ragsdale, Harvey L. 0772 Rahn, Ruby A. 2345 Rainer, Vessie Thrasher 3021 Rains, George W. 3191 Rainwater, E. H. 1371-2 Rainwater, Hattie C. 2164 Raley, Robert L. 2004 Ramsey, Berkley Carlyle 2782 Ramsey, John Scott 0146 Ramspott, Lawrence D. 1296, 1643, 1647 Randall, Charles E. 2169 Range, Willard 1965, 2104 Rao, A. M. 3961 Rapar, Arthur F. 2983-4 Rathman, James 0461 Rauers, Betty 2555 Raulerson, Lynn 0203 Rawson, Mac V., Jr. 1024 Ray, Donald L. 1891 Read, Florence Matilda 2885 Read, William A. 2264 Reade, Ernest H. 1137, 1838 Ready, Milton LaVerne 2082 Redus, Mary Edith 4137 Redwine, Loyd 2453 Reed, Avery H., Jr. 1633 Reed, Wallace P. 2835 Rees, Robert Arthur 0172 Reese, Trevor Richard 2077-9, 2086, 2952 Reeve, Jewell B. 2975 Reeves, Ollie 1142 Reid, J. Jefferson 0433 Reiger, George 3948 Reighard, Kenneth Frederick 1612 Reimold, Robert J. 0555, 0560, 0563, 0567, 0591, 3383-
7, 3760, 3762, 3764 Reimold, Robert J. 0555, 0560, 0563, 0567, 0591, 3383-
7' 3760, 3762, 3764 Reineck, Hans-Erich 1468, 1471, 1475-6 Remsen, Charles C. 0557 Renshaw, Ernest Wilroy 1580 Reps, John W. 2014 Research Reporter [Anon.] 0379 Resser, Charles Elmer 1550 Reu, Albrecht, Mrs. 2938 Reuter, J. Helmut 1225-6
Reynolds, Hughes 2809 Reynolds, Lily 2734 Rhinehart, Julian 3842 Rice, Thaddeus Brockett 2982 Richard, L. M. 1825-6 Richards, Horace G. 0186, 1263, 1306, 1309, 1447 Richards, Thomas W. 0498 Richardson, B. H. 2615 Richardson, E. C. 3811 Richardson, James I. 0451,0501,0516,0571 Richmond County Historical Society 3182 Richmond County Historical 3207 Richter, Dennis M. 1516 Rickards, William L. 0170, 0553 Rickett, Harold William 3555 Ries, Paul Fred 1299, 3348 Rihani, Rushdi F. 1503 Ripley, Thomas H. 0903 Ritchie, Andrew Jackson 3170 Ritchie, Carole A. 3790 Ritchie, F. T., Jr. 1046, 1387, 3768, 3786 Ritchie, J. C. 1412 Ritchie, Jerry C. 1646 Rivers, Barbara 3012 Rivers, Joachim B. 0633 Rivers, Robert H. 3796 Robeck, Selwyn S. 0668 Robert, Herbert C. 0100 Roberts, Allan 0114 Roberts, Carlyle J. 1623 Roberts, Darrell 2458 Roberts, Harvey 2817 Roberts, Lucien E. 1959, 3072, 3151 Roberts, Reuviel Newman 3299 Roberts, William B. 1323 Robertson, A. F. 1702 Robertson, Eugene C. 1420 Robertson, Heard 3179 Robertson, J. Lynne, Jr. 3460 Robertson, Reuben B. 0802 Robinson, J. E. 3258 Robinson, V. L. 0645 Robison, R. C. 3886 Rock, Maxine A. 0466, 1921 Rodgers, Ava D. 3149-50 Rodgers, John 1543 Rodgers, Robert L. 2722 Rogers, Norma Kate 2663 Rogers, R. W. 3160 Rogers, William Warren 3247-9 Rollins, Reed C. 3528 Rose, Boyd B. 0857-8, 0860-1, 0864 Rosene, Walter, Jr. 0966, 3396 Rosenfeld, Sigmund J. 1426 Ross, D. A. 1494 Ross, Mary 2065, 2070, 2372 Rostlund, Erhard 0050 Roth, Elmer R. 0871 Rowan, Ellis, Mrs. 3556 Rowland, Arthur Ray 2428, 3186-7 Royce, Charles C. 218g Rulison, Michael 3829 Ruskin, Gertrude 3280 Russell, Franklin 3839 Russell, G. E. Gibbs 3572 Russell, James Michael 2643 Russell, Margaret Clay1on 2986 Russell, Paul Lay 3697 Russell, Richard J. 1268 Rutherford, Mildred Lewis 2760
s
Sackett, Stephen S. 0881 Saggus, Charles Danforth 3315 St. John, Wylly Folk 2715, 3284, 3710 Salisbury, John W. 1833 Salotti, Charles A. 1897 Sammons, Jack L. 0612 Sams, Anita B. 3281 Sams, J. E. 3946 Sams, Richard H. 1156 Sanders, Adolph 1980, 3725, 3736 Sandlin, Walter Lee, Jr. 1593 Sandy, John 1319, 1353 Sartain, James Alfred 3278 Salomi, Masako 0543
122
Satterfield, Frances Gibson 2634 Satterfield, James D. 0145 Satterfield, Virginia 2106 Saver, H. I. 1272-3 Savannah - Chatham County Historic Site and Monu-
ment Commission 2627 Savannah, Housing Authority of 2582 Savannah River Basin Development Commission
3995 Savannah Writers' Project 2589-2608 Saye, Albert B. 1960 Schaeffer, Claude E. 0343 Schelske, Claire L. 0532 Schemmel, Bill 0442 Schepis, Eugene Louis 1755 Schindler, J. E. 0203 Schinkel, Peter Evans 2694
Schlee, J. s. 1559
Schmidt, R. G. 1414 Schmitt, Karl 0308 Schneider, Robert 1779 Schneider, William J. 1208, 1840-1 Schnell, Frank T. 0272, 0356, 0422 Schnitker, Delmar 1468 Schnooberger, Irma 3469 Schornherst, Ruth Olive 3470, 3472 Schreiter, Howard A. 1191,4127 Schroeder, B. W. 0557 Schuberth, Christopher J. 1521 Schueler, Donald G. 0131 Schultz, Roger Stephen 1839 Schumacher, F. X. 0912 Schumacher, George J. 3455-6 Schuyler, Montgomery 2686 Schwartz, Maurice L. 1451 Schwarze, Edmund 2331 Schwerdt, Richard W. 4091 Seiple, George W. 0072, 0107 Scott, Donald C. 0142-3 Scott, John 1092 Scott, Ralph C., Jr. 3071 Screven, Elizabeth Mackay 1949 Scrudato, R. J. 1331, 1356 Scruggs, Carroll Proctor 0470, 2153, 2162, 2337, 2876 Seale, William 2924 Sears, Joan N. 2016 Sears, Joanna 2015 Sears, William H. 0233-4, 0244, 0256, 0321-5, 0350-42,
0364, 2178 Sebba, Gregor 1958 Seehorn, Monte E. 0904-5 Segrest, Robert T. 3402, 3773 Sell, E. S. 2688 Sell, Edward Scott 4123 Sell, W. H. 0004 Sellers, Jackie 3984 Senathirajah, Nallamma S. 4103 Setzler, F. M. 0336 Sever, Charles W. 1321, 1350, 1366, 1375, 1404, 1832,
1711, 1722, 1724, 1728, 1734-5, 1683, 1875-6 Sewell, Cliff 2556 Shackleton, Robert, Jr. 0411 Shacklette, Hansford T. 1272-3 Shadburn, Don L. 2823 Shannon, Margaret 0456, 0484, 0611, 0709, 0909,
1257, 1536, 1929, 2152, 2655, 2880, 2926, 3158, 3252, 3309, 3583, 3613, 3616, 3684, 3805, 3999 Sharitz, Rebecca R. 0671 Sharma, G. C. 3368 Sharma, Prakash C. 3593 Sharp, Homer F., Jr. 0550 Shartar, Martin 1901 Shavin, Norman 2042, 2890, 3800 Shaw, Douglas W. 3347 Shea, Kevin P. 3397 Shearer, H. K. 1159, 1163, 1365 Sheppard, Peggy 0269, 2098, 2775, 3227, 3232-3, 3235, 3244, 3250, 3254, 3277' 3718, 3737 Sheridan, Joseph M. 3811, 3972 Sherwood, Adiel 2129 Ships of the Sea Museum 2553 Shirley, A. Ray 0782, 0907 Shirley, L.E. 1172 Sholes, A. E. 2545 Shrader, Jay 2468 Shrauder, Paul A. 0904-5 Shriner, Charles H. 3115 Shrum, R. A. 1122 Shryoc~, Richard Harrison 2409
Shubinski, Robert P. 3973 Shugart, Herman Henry, Jr. 0073 Shuler, Edward Leander 3273 Sibley, Celestine 2002, 2845 Siefkin, Gordon 0841 Sieg, Gerald Chan 2571, 2631 Sikora, Jean Pantell 0673 Sikora, W. B. 0171 Simmons, John Benjamin 3291 Simms, James M. 2633 Simms, Tina 3090 Singh, lndra Bir 1476 Siple, George E. 1682 Sirmans, Clemon F. 0454 Skaggs, Marvin Lucian 2224 Skelton, Marion Angelo 3560 Skidaway Institute of Oceanography 0514 Slash Pine Area Planning and Development Commis-
sion 3863 Small, J. B. 1697 Small, John Kunkel 0698, 0704, 3398, 3478 Smalley, A. E. 0052, 0521, 0527-8 Smedley, Jack E. 1686 Smith, Charlotte Hale 3052 Smith, Clifford Lewis 3256 Smith, E. E. 0542 Smith, Elizabeth Wiley 3004 Smith, Florrie Carter 3144-5 Smith, Francis C., Mrs. 0340 Smith, Frederick G. 0201 Smith, George Gillman 1944, 2322, 3206 Smith, George V. R. 2381 Smith, Gerald 2737 Smith, Hale G. 0240 Smith, J. Owens 0612, 0630, 4022 Smith, J. Owens 0612, 0630, 4022 Smith, James Edward, Sir 2239 Smith, James W. 1597, 1608, 1611, 3997-8 Smith, Joseph W. 2941 Smith, Larry D. 0157 Smith, Margaret Perryman see Perryman, Margaret Smith, Martin A. 0730 Smith, Marvin T. 0380 Smith, Mattie Lou McCullough 3501 Smith, Michael W. 4083 Smith, Milton B. 2617 Smith, Nelle Edwards 0137 Smith, Philip E. 0276 Smith, R. 1478 Smith, R. G. 0643 Smith, Ralph E. 0017 Smith, Richard W. 1043, 1127, 1162, 1354 Smith, S. Roland 3306 Smith, Sandra Adams 3871 Smith, Spencer H. 0504 Smith, T. E. 3104 Smith, William LaRue 1606 Smith, William Robert Lee 2182 Smithsonian Institution 0680 Snipes, David Strange 1339 Snodgrass, Ernest L. 3142 Snow, Beverly C., Jr. 0493 Snyder, Frank G. 1074 Soderholtz, E. E. 2563 Soil Conservation Service see U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Soil Conservation Society of America, Georgia Chapter
0723 Solbrig, Charles V. 1188 Solheim, Robert L. 3688 Sonderegger, Richard Paul 2072 Sottile, William S. 0569 Southeast Basins Inter-Agency Committee 0738, 4040 Southeast Georgian 2513 Southeastern Conference on Management of Shoot-
ing Preserves and Game Birds 0956 Southerland, James William 3169 Southern Forest Resource Analysis Committee 0822 Southern Highland Handicraft Guild 2115 Southern Highlands Literary Fund 2113 Southern Historical Association 1942 Southern Regional Conference on Urbanization 3599 Sowers, George F. 3774 Spada, Benjamin 0784 Spalding, Billups Phinizy 2080, 2636 Spalding, Jack J. 2888 Spalvins, Karlis 1607 Spanel, Michael D. 0126 Spann, G. William 3754-5 Sparks, Andrew 0400, 0423, 0452, 0459, 0473-4, 0481,
0690, 0692, 2382, 2454, 2690, 2811, 2867-8, 2872, 2970, 3372, 3818, 3859, 3867, 3890 Spector, Albert H. 3804 Speer, Paul R. 0744, 0746 Spence, Frank 3743 Spencer, J. W. 1570 Spillers, A. R. 0786 Sproat, Ira E. 1125 Stacy, James 2324, 3047 Stafford, Dorothy Davenport 3628 Stafford, Lynda P. 1053, 1108, 1370
Staheli, Albert c. 3837
Stallings, Constance 0465 Standard, Diffee William 3127 Standard, Janet Harvill 3302, 3304, 3307, 3310, 3312 Stanley Consultants 4036 Stanley, Lawrence L. 2935 Starbuck, James C. 2912-5 Starkey, Marion L. 2180 Starr, Emmel2183-4 Stebbins, Geneva 2949 Steed, Hal 1957 Steele, Connie 3709 Stegeman, John F. 2519, 2675 Steiner, Robert 0367 Stephens, J. L., Mrs. 0021 Stephens, Pauline Tyson 1972, 1976, 2780 Stephens, Raymond Weathers, Jr. 1338 Stephenson, Lloyd William 1285, 1288, 1385 Stephenson, M. F. 0206, 0284 Stephenson, Richard A. 1217 Stern, Malcolm H. 2846 Sternitzke, Herbert S. 0689 Stevens, 0. B. 2137 Stevens, William Bacon 1937 Stevenson, Frederic R. 2567 Stevenson, Henry M. 0061-2, 0068 Stewart, B. A. 3975 Stewart, Esther 3432 Stewart, J. W. 1246, 1259, 1261, 1398-9, 1403, 1626,
1705, 1725-7, 1730-1, 1783 Stewart, James M. 0494 Stewart, William C. 3027 Stickney, Robert R. 0127, 0165, 0512-3, 0586, 0589,
0598, 0628-9 Stiemke, Robert E. 0711 Stirling, Matthew W. 0302, 2171 Stoddard, Herbert L. 0056, 0119, 0964-5 Stokes, Thomas L. 2344 Stoltman, James B. 0277 Stone, Bonnell H. 3694 Stone, Eugenia Wootton 3105 Storey, Bryan M. 4045 Stose, Anna J. 1557-8 Stose, George W. 1043, 1557-8 Stovall, Clara 3069 Strahan, Charles Morton 2671 Strange, J.D. 0845 Stransky, John J. 0899 Straw, Richard M. 0086 Street, Michael W. 0849-51,0661-2 Strickland, Rennard 2184 Stringfield, V. T. 1386-7, 1391, 1394-5 Strobel, P. A. 2795 Strong, Katharine H. 2613 Struhsaker, P. 0625 Stryker, Robert G. 0871 Strzemienski, Joseph P. 1022 Stuart, Alfred Wright 1609, 1634 Stuart, Gene S. 0270 Stuart, George E. 0270 Stubbs, William J. 3132 Stull, R. T. 1091 Styron, C. E. 0199-0200 Suarez, Annette McDonald 2377 Suddeth, Ruth Elgin 2124-5 Sullivan, G. V. 1189 Sullivan, James R. 2533 Sullivan, John Wentworth 1577 Surrency, Erwin C. 2629 Swank, W. T. 0896 Swanson, David E. 0573 Swanson, Ernst W. 0508 Swanton, John R. 2122, 2170, 2201-2, 2374 Swill, D. J. P. 1495 Sykes, James E. 0644 Sylvester, C. Doughty 3174 Synan, Harold Vinson 2827
123
Authors
T
Tabor, P. V. 3812 Tabor, Paul 1982, 3571 Tan, K. H. 3789 Tankersley, Allen P. 2447, 3050 Tanner, William F. 1330 Tapley, Lucy Hale 2884 Tarver, James D. 3589-90, 3593 Tasker, G. D. 0595 Task Force on Development of Sensitive Areas in
Northeast Georgia 1906 Tate, Lucius Eugene 3154 Tate, Sam 3156 Tau Chapter, Psi State Delta Kappa Gamma 3862 Taylor, A. J. 3075 Taylor, Paul S. 2081 Taylor, William J. 0332-3 Teague, Kelton H. 1131, 1145, 1836 Teal, John M. 0092-3, 0100-02, 0198, 0467, 0477, 0526,
0530, 0535, 0545, 0554 Teal, Mildred 0467, 0477 Teale, Edwin Way 3806 Teas, L. P. 1160 Telfair, Nancy [pseud.] 3124 Temple, Sarah Blackwell Gober 2085, 2708 Tennessee Valley Authority, 0758-61, 0793-8, 1574,
1912-3,2418,4081,4114 Terrell County Centennial Executive Committee 3243 Terrill, Helen Eliza 3223 Terry, Claude 3842, 3846, 3650-3, 3656-7, 3865 Teskey, Margaret 0185 Thaxton, Lyn 4137 Theus, Charlton M., Mrs. 2974 Thomas, Adrian W. 1251 Thomas, Cyrus 0209, 0286 Thomas, James Pestles 0547 Thomas, Joab L. 3558 Thomas, Kenneth H., Jr. 2438, 3076, 3308, 3311 Thomas, Ruby Felder Ray 2159 Thomas, Z. V., Mrs. 3029 Thomaston, Wayne 0997 Thomaston, Willard W. 1023 Thompson, C. Mildred 2314 Thompson, Charles E. 0397 Thompson, Donald E. 0560, 0583, 3762 Thompson, G. E. 0872, 3481 Thompson, John R. 3621 Thompson, Lawrence S. 2392 Thompson, M. T. 1207 Thompson, Major H., Jr. 4008 Thompson, Maxine 3023 Thompson, Richard L. 0685 Thomson, Eunice 2484 Thomson, M. T. 0778, 1194, 1205-7, 1209, 1212, 2146,
2343,4047 Thorne, Robert F. 3436-8, 3565 Thornton, Ella May 2430, 2899 Theusen, Gerald J. 3922 Thurston, William N. 2355 Tilden, Freeman 3706 Tinkler, Bill 0734 Tippins, H. H. 0192 Tischendorf, Wilhelm G. A. 1658 Toler, L. G. 1738 Tomkins, Ivan R. 0053-4, 0056-7, 0107-8, 2505 Torrenueva, Allen L. 0917 Totten, H. R. 3539 Toulmin, Lyman D., Jr. 1291, 1322,1411 Towle, Margaret E. (Ashley) 0420 Townsend, Billy 3035 Traub, Franklin 2555 Traylor, Henry Grady 1886 Treanor, Sapelo 3060, 3848, 4129 Trimble, Lee S. 3011 Trimble, Stanley W. 3801-3, 3836 Trill, Robert E. 3726 Trogdon, Kathryn Curtis 3220 Troxell, John R. 1719 Trudell, H. W. 0695-6 Truett, Randle Bond 2358 Trumbull, James 1376 Trussell, Mattie M. 2231 Truxes, Lee Sayles 1591 Tryon, J. 0. 3058 Tsikimagi Garden Club 3279 Tucker, Glenn 2532 Tucker, Margarel1265, 3844-5, 3650, 3665-9 Tucker, Richard K. 3395
Authors
Turner, Bill 3114 Turner, Joel 3134 Turner, Philip Ambrose 1333 Turner, Preston 3271 Turner, Robert Eugene 0566 Turner, Ruth D. 0175 Tye, Marvin 0041, 0946, 0948, 0950, 0990, 1005, 1009 Tyler, Jim 1001 Tyner, Carolyn E. 3329 Tyre, Gary L. 3741 Tyrrell, M. E. 1889
u
Uchupi, Elazar 1459-61, 1485 United Daughters of the Confederacy, Quitman Chap-
ter 2498 University of Georgia 0604, 0906, 3599 University of Georgia, College of Agriculture, Agricul-
ture, Agricultural Experiment Stations 0882 University of Georgia, College of Business Adminis-
tration, Division of Research 4124 University of Georgia, Cooperative Extension Service
1001, 0014, 0712, 0830, 0929, 0931-2, 0957, 0976, 3493, 3546, 3551 University of Georgia, Graduate School of Business Administration, Bureau of Business and Economic Research 0460, 3729, 3733-5, 3738 University of Georgia, Institute of Community and Area Development 0014, 0502, 3995 University of Georgia, Institute of Government 3318, 3595 University of Georgia, Institute of Law and Government 4044 University of Georgia Marine Institute 0525, 0618 University System of Georgia, Advisory Committee lor Mineral Leasing 1689 Urlsperger, Samuel 2792 U. S. Army Corps of Engineers 0514, 0608-9, 0751-2, 0754-6, 0764, 1522, 3464, 3898, 3980-3, 3988-9, 4004-6, 4012-6, 4023-4, 4026, 4031-2, 4034-6, 4038, 4056-61 ' 4088-9, 4092 U. S. Army Engineer District, Mobile 345g U. S. Army, Stall History Officer, Third Army 2904 U. S. Atomic Energy Commission 0672 U. S. Bureau of Census 1064, 3585 U. S. Bureau of Land Management 0602 U.S. Bureau of Mines 1076, 1561 U. S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife see U. S. Dept. of Interior, Bureau ... U. S. Coast Guard 3911, 4071 U. S. Council on Environmental Quality 0739 U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service 3553 U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service 0736 U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Bureau of Soils 3771 U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Economic Research Service 4133 U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Farm Security Administration 2985 U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service 3581' 3770, 3778-82, 3785, 3807-8 U. S. Dept. of Commerce, Area Redevelopment Administration 1892 U. S. Dept. of Commerce, Economic Development Administration 3998 U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Ocean Survey 4062 U. S. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare 3864 U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development, Federal Insurance Administration 0750 U. S. Dept. of Interior, Board on Geographic Names 2300 U. S. Dept. of Interior, Bureau of Land Management 1465 U. S. Dept. of Interior, Bureau of Outdoor Recreation 3360,3662 U. S. Dept. of Interior, Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife 0098, 0679, 0925 U. S. Dept. of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service 0499 U. S. Dept. of Interior, National Park Service 0307, 0480, 0462, 1925, 2154-8, 3354, 3623, 3723-4 U. S. Dept. of Transportation, Coast Guard 4071 U. S. DeSoto Expedition Commission 2373 U. S. Energy Research and Development Administration 0670
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency 0025, 0509, 3920-1' 3924, 3929, 3952, 3955, 3963, 3989, 4035, 4131
U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service 0681, 0819, 3822 U. S. Forest Service 0683, 0687, 0787-9, 0815-6, 0837,
0874, 0900, 0906, 0918, 0934, 3362, 3521, 3541, 3671,3772 U. S. Geological Survey 077&-7, 1048-9, 1193, 11991202, 1220-1, 1235, 1281, 1416, 1462,1561, 1873 U. S. Navy Department 2040 U. S. Public Health Service 3g53 U. S. Senate 0809 U. S. Study Commission, Southeast River Basins 3985 U. S. War Department 2038 U. S. Works Progress Administration 1787, 2319, 2660, 2713, 2942, 3163, 3211, 3623 U. S. Works Progress Administration (later Work Project Administration) see also Federal Writers' Project and Georgia Writers' Project Utley, Francis Lee 2254
v
Vallely, J. L. 1172 Van Bavel, C. H. M. 4082 Van Der Schalie, Henry 0295 van Dresser, Cleveland 0821 Van Geuns, Robert E. 4065 Van Orden, H. E. (Bud) 0480, 0717 Vanstory, Burnette 0471, 2047,2327,2512, 2518,2711,
2943, 2945 Van Zandt, Franklin K. 2218 Vaughn, Thomas L. 0646 Veatch, C. L. 3812 Veatch, J. Otto 1089, 1285, 1341, 1359-60, 1385 Vedder, 0. F. 2544 Venard, Haskell 0691, 3403 Vernon, Robert 0. 1571 Vest, Ernest Louis, Jr. 1598 Vickers, Edward Davin 2981 Vinson, Frank Bedingfield 0811 Virginia Institute of Marine Science 0602 Visher, GlennS. 1510 Vital Areas Council 0721-2 Vocelle, James Thomas 2510, 2514 Vogl, Richard J. 3570 Voigt, Gilbert P. 2789 Voigt, William Jr. 0453, 2517 Voorhies, M. R. 1452 Vorhis, Robert C. 1304
w
Wade, Allison 0464 Wade, Forest C. 3749 Wade, Kathryn 0464 Wagner, Tom 3584, 358&-7 Whalenberg, W. G. 0825 Wait, Robert L. 0595, 1388, 1392, 1406, 1443, 1683,
1691, 1704, 1714, 1751-4, 1774-5, 1778, 1784, 1874 Walburg, Charles H. 0648 Walker, Howell 4122 Walker, Laura Singleton 3285, 3857 Walker, Laurence C. 0828, 0869, 3356 Walker, Robert Sparks 2195, 2742, 3677 Walker, Turnley 3100 Wall, William J. 3799 Wallace, James B. 0188 Wallace, James R. 0766, 0771 Waller, Charles T. 2107, 2336 Walton Tribune 3282 Wanless, Harold R. 1721 Ward, D. E. 0032 Ward, George Gordon 2936 Ward, Warren P. 2726 Ward, William C., Jr. 1077 Ware, Glenn 0. 0911 Ware, James E. 4042 Waring, Antonio J., Jr. 0220, 0258-9, 0327, 0347, 0406 Waring, Joseph Frederick 2640 Waring, Martha Gallaudet 1949 Warren, M.A. 1389, 1391, 1398 Warriner, Lendall P. 1804 Waters, John C. 0604
124
Waters, John Caldwell 0710 Waters, Mary L. 3083 Watkins, Amanda 3257 Watkins, C. Malcolm 0401 Watkins, Charles Hubert 2666 Watkins, Floyd C. 2666 Watson, Thomas L. 1085, 1112-3, 1134, 1149, 1249,
1815
Watts, w. A. 3418
Wauchope, Robert 0223, 0229, 0261 Weaver, Charles E. 1481 Weaver, David Charles 2361 Weaver, Howard E. 0800 Webb, James E. 1849 Weddell, D. J. 0829 Weed, Walter Harvey 1095 Weigel, W. M. 1673 Weimer, Robert J. 1428-30, 1442 Weir, Paul 3957 Weiss, George G. 3195 Weiss, William 0605 Weldon, Frank 2544 Wells, B. W. 3410,3448 Wells, Charles F. 3040 Wells, J. Robert 1059 Wells, Tom Henderson 2989 Weslager, Clinton Allred 2007 Wesley, Cacil Cobb 2766, 3272 West, Adele H. 0070 West, Clifford B. 0488 Westerfield, Charles W., Jr. 0601 Westerfield, Earl F. 2988 Wharton, Charles 0045, 0135-6, 3380, 3820, 3834,
3837 Wheeler, Garland Edgar 1586 Wheeler, John T. 2103 Wherry, Edgar T. 0694, 0703 Whitaker, L. B. 0006 White County Centennial Committee 3290 White, D. H. 1634 White, Dana F. 2850, 2909 White, David B. 0127, 0628-9 White, E. Lamar 3606 White, Gayle 2167, 2769, 2898, 3038, 3314 White, George 213Q-1 White, WalterS. 1600, 1766, 1828 White, William A. 1564, 1745 Whitehead, W., Mrs. 3093 Whitfield, Archie 2578 Whitfield County History Commission 3294 Whitlatch, George I. 1058, 3883 Whitlow, Jesse W. 1603 Whitney, Nathaniel R. 0078 Whitted, James 0626 Whittle, C. A. 0933, 3694 Whittlesey, Charles 0282-3, 0285 Wiedemann, Harmut U. 1508 Wieser, Wolfgang 0545 Wigginton, Brooks E. 3491 Wigginton, Eliot 211o-2 Wiggs, Deems N. 3514 Wightman, Orrin Sage 2052 Wilcox, Herbert 2799-2800, 2804 Wiley, Bell I. 2019 Wilkins, Mabel 3698, 3708 Wilkins, Thurman 2188 Wilkinson, Stannye 3019 Willeke, Gene E. 4015, 4021, 4039 Willey, Gordon R. 0216, 0260, 0326, 0334, 0350 Williams, Carolyn White 2982, 3036 Williams, Doris Gann 3014 Williams, H. J., Mrs. 3214 Williams, Ida Bell 3255 Williams, James D. 0153 Williams, Lloyd 3702 Williams, Richard B. 0534 Williams, Richard MacKenzie 3713 Williams, Stephen 0220, 0258-9, 0347, 0406, 0440 Williams, Thomas G. 3494-6 Williams, Vinnie 3007, 3032, 3074, 3516, 3608 Williford, William Bailey 2846, 3140, 3230 Willingham, Robert Marion, Jr. 3300 Williston, Hamlin J. 0856 Wilms, Douglas C. 2057, 2199-2200 Wilson, Adelaide 2543 Wilson, Bob 0479, 3643, 3927 Wilson, Cynthia 1917 Wilson, Everett B. 2013 Wilson, Gustavus James Nash 3026
Wilson, John Stainback 2840 Wilson, Rex L. 0315 Wilson, Robert Cumming 2420 Wilson, Robart Lake 1578 Wilson, Roy A. 1101, 1819 Wilson, Thelma 3153 Winberry, John J. 3580 Wind, Bob 3253 Windham, Steve R. 1585 Windom, Herbert L. 0511, 0562, 0584, 0597, 0599,
0843, 1478, 1504, 3960 Winn, Bill2173 Winn, William W. 2516 Winter, Rogers 2144 Winters, S. S. 1411 Wise, James 0. 0813, 3323 Wise, Lena Smith 3146 Witt, Ken 2876 Wofford, Pat, Jr. 0326 Wohlgemuth, Dean 0883, 0961, 0989, 1006, 1011,
1019, 3685 Wolff, Anthony 2574, 3390 Wood, John E. 0038 Wood, Marie Stevens Walker 2448 Wood, R. D. 3573 Wood, Virginia Steele 2946 Woodall, W. C. 3128-9
Woodhead, Henry 2884, 3526 Woodruff, James F. 0779, 1275, 1650, 1653, 1680 Woodward, Barbara 0104 Woodward, Emily 2403 Woodward, G. D. Jr: 0843 Woodward, Grace Steele 2179 Woollard, George P. 1166 Woolley, Edwin C. 2315 Woolsey, James R. 1381, 1452, 1511 Wooten, H. H. 3324 Wooten, Jean 3450 Worden, Roger 2148 Works Progress AdministratiQn see U. S. Works Pro-
gress Administration Worrell, Albert C. 3326 Worsley, Etta Blanchard 3099, 3123 Worthington, Joanne Sheldon 0506, 0571 Wright, A. A. 3868 Wright, Albart Hazen 0094, 0123, 0132, 0139, 0154,
3855, 3868-9 Wright, David Craig 1887 Wright, Harry R. 2223 Wright, R. F. 2137-9 Wright, Russell 3251 Wright, Stephen E. 0150 Wright, Wade H. 2417 Wright, Wilson H. 3536
Authors
Wunderlich, Friedrich 1470 Wylly, Charles Spalding 2939 Wymbarley-Jones, George 2211 Wyndham, C. E. 1676
XYZ
Yarbrough, Bird 3057 Yarbrough, Paul 3057 Yates, Bowling C. 2032, 2667,2709, 2712,2721,2724
Yeates, w. S. 1102
Yenawine, Wayne Stewart 2434 Yon, J. William, Jr. 1884 Young, Dorothy Neal 3258-9 Young, Ida 2489 Young, James Harvey 2813-4 Young, Rogers W. 2583, 2586 Zapp, Alfred D. 1383, 1872 Zeigler, John M. 1427 Zelinsky, Wilbur 1994, 2006, 2397-8 Ziegler, Robert E. 1270 Zillgitt, Walter M. 0806 Zimmerman, Everett A. 1776 Zisa, Arnold C. 3756 Zodac, Peter 1814
125
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PARKS AND
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AREA PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT COMMISSIONS IN GEORGIA
1. Altamaha Georgia Southern APDC P. 0. Box 328 Baxley, Georgia 31513 (912) 367-3648
2. Atlanta Regional Commission Suite 910 100 Peachtree St., N.W. Atlanta, Georgia 30305 (404) 522-7577
3. Central Savannah River APDC 2123 Wrightsboro Road Augusta, Georgia 30904 (404) 738-5337
4. Chattahoochee-Flint APDC P. 0. Box 1363 LaGrange, Georgia 30240 (404) 882-2956
5. Coastal APDC P. 0. Box 1316 Brunswick, Georgia 31520 (912) 264-6960
6. Coastal Plain APDC P. 0. Box 1223 Valdosta, Georgia 31601 (912) 244-2048
7. Coosa Valley APDC P. 0. Box 1467 Rome, Georgia 30161 (404) 234-8507
8. Georgia Mountains APDC P. 0. Box 1720 Gainesville, Georgia 30501 (404) 536-3431
9. Heart of Georgia APDC 501 Oak Street Eastman, Georgia 31023 (912) 374-4771
10. Lower Chattahoochee APDC P. 0. Box 1908 Columbus, Georgia 31901 (404) 324-4221
11. Mcintosh Trail APDC P. 0. Box 241 (107 Childers Bldg.) Griffin, Georgia 30223 (404) 227-3096
12. Middle Flint APDC P. 0. Box 6 Ellaville, Georgia 31806 (912) 937-2561
13. Middle Georgia APDC 711 Grand Building Macon, Georgia 31201 (921) 744-6160
14. North Georgia APDC 212 Pentz Street Dalton, Georgia 30720 (404) 226-1672
15. Northeast Georgia APDC 305 Research Dr. Athens, Georgia 30601 (404) 548-3141
16. Oconee APDC P. 0. Box 707 104 Hancock Street Milledgeville, Georgia 31061 (912) 452-0581
17. Southeast Georgia APDC (formerly Slash Pine APDC) P. 0. Box 1276 902 Grove Avenue Waycross, Georgia 31501 (912) 283-3831
18. Southwest Georgia APDC P. 0. Box 346 Camilla, Georgia 31730 (912) 336-5616
131
COUNTY SOIL SURVEYS STATUS: 1976
Published Surveys of U. S. Soil Conservation Service:
Appling and Jeff Davis (1975) Banks and Stephens (1971) Ben Hill and Irwin (1969) Berrien and Lanier (1973) Bryan and Chatham (1974) Bulloch (1968) Carroll and Haralson (1971) Chatham [see Bryan] Cherokee, Gilmer,
and Pickens (1973) Clarke and Oconee (1968) Cobb (1973) Colquitt and Cook (1975) Cook [see above] Dawson, Lumpkin,
and White (1972) Dougherty (1968) Douglas (1961) Forsyth (1960) Fulton (1958) Gilmer [see Cherokee] Gordon (1965) Gwinnett (1967) Habersham (1963) Haralson [see Carroll] Hart (1963) Houston [see Peach] Irwin [see Ben Hill] Jeff Davis [see Appling]
Jenkins (1968) Lamar, Pike,
and Upson (1972) Lanier [see Berrien] Lumpkin [see Dawson] Mcintosh (1961) Meriwether (1965) Montgomery, Toombs,
and Wheeler (1973) Morgan (1965) Oconee [see Clarke] Peach and Houston (1967) Pickens [see Cherokee] Pierce (1968) Pike [see Lamar] Schley and Sumter (1974) Spalding (1964) Stephens [see Banks] Sumter [see Schley] Tift (1959) Toombs [see Montgomery] Treutlen (1964) Twiggs (1963) Upson [see Lamar] Walton (1964) Wayne (1965) Wheeler [see Montgomery] White [see Dawson]
Completed; to be published:
Baldwin, Jones, and Putnam
Barrow, Hall, and Jackson
Bibb Brooks and Thomas Chattooga, Floyd,
and Polk Clayton, Fayette, and
Henry Elbert, Franklin, and
Madison Fayette [see Clayton] Floyd [see Chattooga]
Franklin [see El_bert] Hall [see Barrow] Henry [see Clayton] Jackson [see Barrow] Jones [see Baldwin] Lee and Terrell Lowndes Madison [see Elbert] Miller and Seminole Polk [see Chattooga] Putnam [see Baldwin] Seminole [see Miller] Terrell [see Lee] Thomas [see Brooks]
133
Appendix
Surveys of U. S. Bureau of Soil and Successor Agencies published 1901-1954:
Bartow (1930) Ben Hill (1913) Bibb (1926) Brantley1 Brooks (1918) Bulloch (1911) Burke (1919) Butts and Henry (1922) Calhoun (1928) Candler (1948) Carroll (1924) Catoosa (1941 ) Chatham (1912) Chattahoochee (1928) Chattooga (1913) Clarke (1930) Clay (1916) Cobb (1901 [series]) Colquitt (1915) Columbia (1912) Cook (1931) Coweta and Fayette (1922) Crisp (1917) Dade (1942) Decatur (1939)2 DeKalb (1915) Dodge (1905) Dooly (1926) Dougherty (1913) Early (1921) Elbert (1931) Evans3 Fannin (1926 and 1928) Fayette [see Coweta] Floyd (1921) Franklin (1910)
Glynn (1912) Gordon (1914) Grady (1909) Greene [see Oconee] Habersham (1914) Hall (1941) Hancock (1910) Hart (1933) Henry (see Butts] Houston4 Jackson (1915) Jasper (1918) Jeff Davis (1914) Jefferson (1935) denkins (1926) Jones (1914) Lamar (1928)
Lanier5 Laurens (1916) Lee (1930) Lowndes (1920) McDuffie (1937) Mcintosh (1932) Macon6 Madison (1921) Meriwether (1917) Miller (1914) Mitchell (1922) Monroe (1922) Morgan (see Oconee] Muscogee (1926) Newton7 Oconee, Morgan, Greene,
and Putnam (1922) Peach8 Pierce (1920)
Pike (1910) Polk (1916) Pulaski (1920) Putnam [see Oconee] Quitman (1929) Rabun (1924) Randolph (1928) Richmond (1917) Rockdale (1923) Screven (1924) Spalding (1905) Stewart (1915) Sumter (1911) Talbot (1914) Tattnall (1913) Terrell (1915) Thomas (1909) Tift (1910) Toombs (1939) Towns (1954) Troup (1913) Turner (1916) Union (1950) Walker (1911) Ware9 Washington (1916) Wayne (1929) Wilkes (1916) Worth (1933)
Bainbridge Area (1905) Covington Area (1901) Fort Valley Area (1904) Waycross Area (1907)
Notes:
1. See Pierce County Survey. Brantley County was created from Pierce, Charlton, and Wayne Counties by Act of August 14, 1920.
2. See also Bainbridge Area at end of list. 3. See Bulloch County and Tattnall County Surveys. Evans County was created from these by Act of August 11, 1914. 4. See also Fort Valley Area at end of list. 5. See Lowndes County Survey. Lanier County was created from Berrien, Clinch, and Lowndes Counties by Act of August
7, 1920. 6. See Fort Valley Area at end of list. 7. See also Covington Area at end of list. 8. See Fort Valley Area at end of list.
9: See Waycross Area at end of list.
134
COUNTIES WITHIN INTERSTATE REGIONAL
COMMISSIONS AND TVA
135
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Dr. Graham Roberts
Richard Leacy Lola Paille Frances Kaiser Barbara Walker Kenneth Thomas John Morgan
Gordon Midgette Russ Conger
Marcella Davis
Esther Stokes
Director, Price Gilbert Memorial Library, Georgia Institute of Technology
Price Gilbert Library Price Gilbert Library Price Gilbert Library Price Gilbert Library
Historic Preservation Section, Georgia DNR Historic Preservation Section, Georgia DNR
DeKalb County Historical Society
Geologic and Water Resources Division Georgia DNR
Geologic and Water Resources Division Georgia DNR
Library, U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region JV
Georgia State University Library
University of Georgia Libraries
Atlanta Public Library _
State Library of Georgia
Georgia Department of Education, Division of Public Library Services
Georgia Department of Archives and History
Georgia Surveyor General Department
Fernbank Science Center Library
Resource Planning Section and the Site Planning Section of the
Department of Natural Resources
United States Water Resources Council
U.S. ARMY ENGINEER DISTRICTS
COINCIDING WITH MAJOR RIVER BASINS