Government Depository Publications
Permanent URI for this communityhdl:10365/26369
Documents in this area are products of local, regional, and national government entities. In partial fulfillment of NDSU's role as Depository Library. Materials in this area conform to the NDSU Libraries Government Information Collection Management Policy.
Browse
Browsing Government Depository Publications by Title
Now showing 1 - 20 of 222
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Item 2022 Regional Government Information Librarians (REGIL) Meeting(REGIL, 2022-04-20) Breedveld, JanelleMinutes of the April 20th, 2022 meeting of the Regional Libraries.Item 2022 Regional Government Information Librarians (REGIL) Meeting(REGIL, 2022-10-18) REGILThe Regional Libraries Meeting covers topics of relevance to regional FDLP libraries and is led by regional coordinators from across the country. The main discussion topics are: i) NCSA quarterly meeting, ii) Regional-L listserv, iii) Regional Discard Policy, and iv) all-digital FDLP.Item Agency Coordination Meeting: Water and Related Land Planning, Omaha, November 6, 1973: Combined Report(1973) Missouri River Basin CommissionCombined Report, Agency Coordination Meeting, Water and Related Land Planning (Omaha, November 6, 1973)Item Alcohol and the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe(1961) Whittaker, James O.This study is one of the first formal attempts to systemically investigate the use of alcohol-related problems among members of a major Indian Tribe. The study is regarded as a pilot or preliminary study since neither finances nor personnel were sufficient to attack the problem in all its details.Item Altered Hydrology of the Missouri River and its Effects on Floodplain Forest Ecosystems(1982) Johnson, W. Carter; Reily, Peggy W.; Andrews, L. Scott; McLellan, James F.; Brophy, John A.; Geological Survey (U.S.); Virginia Water Resources Research CenterIt is generally expected that construction and operation of a floodplain protection project will alter a river system's hydrologic regimen, but this altered regimen also has been suspected of having major, long-term effects on the natural dynamics of riparian ecosystems that remain in gaps between large reservoirs. This study confirms that hypothesis by documenting some of those impacts in an area between Garrison Dam and Oahe Reservoir on the Missouri River in south-central North Dakota. Specifically, it examines post-dam changes in river meandering rate, floodplain forest composition, tree population structure, and tree growth rate.Item ANG Coal Gasification Company (ANGCGC) North Dakota project: Pick-Sloan Missouri Basin Program: Final Environmental Statement(1978) United States. Bureau of Reclamation. Upper Missouri Regional Office; United States. Department of the InteriorDescription of Action: The Bureau of Reclamation proposes to make available to ANG Coal Gasification Company (ANGCGC) 17,000 acre-feet of water annually for coal gasification needs from Garrlson Reservoir through a 40-year water service contract. The gasification complex, to be located in southwestern (Mercer County) North Dakota, would produce 250 million cubic feet per day of synt hetic natural gas for use in the Michigan and Wisconsin market areas. The water intake, coal and ash handling, and plant access systems would be shared with an adjacent 880 MW coalfired powerpl ant proposed by Basin Electric Power Cooperative.Item Ashley, construct an addition to the county courthouse, includes plans(U.S. National Archives and Records Administration., 1938) United States. Works Projects Administration.Administrative documents relating to Works Projects Administration project to construct an addition to the county courthouse,. includes plans.Item Assessment of Alternatives: Visitor/Administrative Facility Sites, Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site, North Dakota(1980) United States. National Park Service. Denver Service CenterIn 1974 Knife River Indian Villages National Historic Site was authorized by Congress to preserve certain historic and archeologic resources of Plains Indian cultures. All lands have been acquired by the National Park Service. The historic site now has temporary administrative offices and interpretive facilities 3.5 miles north of Stanton (see Existing Conditions Map). Until permanent facilities are available closer to Stanton, guided tours and minimal interpretive and orientation displays will be centered at this location. Providing visitor and interpretive facilities and programs is particularly critical, because the cultural resources and their significance are not apparent to the average visitor. Interpretive facilities and programs are necessary for the national historic site to be appropriately used, appreciated, and valued by the public. Permanent administrative facilities are also needed for optimum protection of the irreplacable archeological resources, coordination and management of interpretive programs, and maintenance of the above programs and facilities. The alternatives presented in this assessment to solve the previously mentioned problems all conform with the proposals made in the Knife River Indian Villages Master Plan.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 1(1975) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 2(1975) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 3(1975) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 4(1976) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 5(1976) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 6(1976) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 7(1976) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 4, No. 1(1976) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 4, No. 2(1976) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 4, No. 3(1977) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.Item Basin Bulletin, Vol. 4, No. 4(1977) Missouri River Basin CommissionMRBC Basin Bulletin is published bimonthly by the Missouri River Basin Commission, charged with coordination, planning and communication in the area of water and related land resources in accordance with PL 89-80.