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No. 1005. PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION OF COMMERCIALLY CAUGHT FISH AND SHELL

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Source: Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service; annual report, Fisheries of the United States.

No. 1006. CANNED FISHERY PRODUCTS-PRODUCTION AND VALUE, BY SPECIES: 1950 TO 1966

[Production in thousands of pounds; value in thousands of dollars. Prior to 1955, excludes Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and American Samoa. See also Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series L 176-195]

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Source: Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service; annual report, Fishery Statistics of the United States. No. 1007. CANNED AND INDUSTRIAL FISHERY PRODUCTS-PRODUCTION AND Value:

1950 TO 1966

[Excludes Hawaii except that, beginning 1955, canned fishery products and meal include Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and American Samoa. See also Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series L 177 and L 196-201]

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Source: Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service; annual report, Fishery Statistics of the United States.

No. 1008. FRESH AND FROZEN FISH AND FROZEN FISHERY PRODUCTS: 1940 TO 1966 [Excludes Alaska and Hawaii, except as noted. See Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series L 160, for frozen fishery products]

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No. 1009. PROCESSED FISHERY PRODUCTS-SUMMARY: 1960, 1965, AND 1966 [Production in thousands of pounds, except as indicated. Includes Puerto Rico and American Samoa]

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NA Not available.

X Not applicable.

1 Includes whale meat for animal feeding.

2 Includes lutefisk from dried cod." 3 Includes other species, principally tuna.

Source of tables 1008 and 1009: Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service; annual report, Fishery Statistics of the United States.

No. 1010. FISHERY PRODUcts—Imports and Exports: 1940 to 1966 [Quantity in thousands of pounds; value in thousands of dollars. Includes Puerto Rico; beginning 1955, imports also include landings of tuna by foreign vessels in American Samoa. See Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series L 162, for edible imports]

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Source: Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service; annual reports, Fishery Statistics of the United States, and Fisheries of the United States. Compiled from data furnished by Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census.

No. 1011. SELECTED FISHERY PRODUCTS-IMPORTS AND EXPORTS: 1955 TO 1966 [Quantity in thousands of pounds; value in thousands of dollars. Includes Puerto Rico. See Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series L 164-171, for selected imports]

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Source: Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service; annual report. Fishery Statistics of the United States Compiled from data furnished by Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census.

247079 06744

Total..

No. 1012. SUPPLY OF FISHERY PRODUCTS: 1955 TO 1966
[Round weight, in millions of pounds, except as indicated]

ITEM

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1 Univalve and bivalve mollusks (conchs, clams, oysters, scallops, etc.) are reported in the weights of meats, excluding the shell.

2 Excludes imports of cured cod into Puerto Rico; includes landings of foreign caught tuna in American Samoa. Source: Dept. of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service; annual report, Fisheries of the United States.

No. 1013. POLLUTION-CAUSED FISH KILL, BY SOURCE OF POLLUTION AND TYPE OF WATER: 1963 TO 1966

[Fish in thousands. Estimates based on reports from State agencies responsible for fisheries management]

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Source: Dept. of the Interior, Federal Water Pollution Control Administration; annual reports, PollutionCaused Fish Kills.

No. 1014. POLLUTION-CAUSED FISH KILL, BY SOURCE OF POLLUTION: 1966 [Based on reports from State agencies responsible for fisheries management]

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1 Averages derived after exclusion of 21 reports of 100,000 or more.

* All fish killed as reported plus average for each source applied to reports which gave no number.

Source: Dept. of the Interior, Federal Water Pollution Control Administration; annual report, Pollution-Caused Fish Kills, 1966.

Section 27

Mining and Mineral Products

This section presents statistics relating to the mineral industries and mineral products. The data are arranged in four broad groupings: General summary statistics, fuels, nonmetals other than fuels, and metals. Summary measures of production and employment are presented for mining and its products. More detailed data on value and quantity of production, prices, imports and exports, consumption, and distribution are shown for specific mineral industries and products.

The principal source of these data is the Minerals Yearbook, published by the Bureau of Mines of the Department of the Interior, in four volumes, as follows: Metals and Minerals (Except Fuels), Fuels, Area Reports, and International Review. Other government sources are the Census of Mineral Industries, conducted every 5 years by the Bureau of the Census; Statistics of Oil Pipe Line Companies, issued annually by the Interstate Commerce Commission as Part 6 of Transport Statistics; and the Bureau of the Mint's Annual Report of the Director, which presents data on gold and silver. Nongovernment sources include the Engineering and Mining Journal, issued monthly by the McGraw-Hill Publishing Co., New York, and The Iron Age, issued weekly by the Chilton Co., Philadelphia.

Mineral statistics, with principal emphasis on commodity detail, have been collected by the United States Geological Survey or by the Bureau of Mines since 1880. Current data available from Bureau of Mines publications include quantities and values of minerals produced, sold or used by producers, or shipped; quantities of minerals stocked; crude materials treated and prepared minerals recovered; and consumption of mineral raw materials. The Bureau of Mines also collects and publishes data on man-hours, active days, length of shift, and accidents. The International Review presents mineral statistics for major countries and areas.

Decennial censuses of mineral industries were conducted by the Bureau of the Census from 1840 to 1940. Censuses were taken again for the years 1954, 1958, and 1963. They provide, for the various types of mineral establishments, information on operating costs, capital expenditures, and labor, equipment, and energy requirements in relation to their value of shipments and other receipts. Commodity statistics on many of the manufactured mineral products are also collected by the Bureau at monthly, quarterly, or annual intervals and issued in its Current Industrial Reports series.

Data on mining and mineral products may also be found in other sections of this Abstract. For example, data on iron and steel, aluminum and magnesium, copper products, clay products, and other manufactured mineral products appear in section 29, Manufactures; and summary data for outlying areas of the U.S. appear in section 32.

In general, figures shown in the individual commodity tables include data for outlying areas, and may therefore not agree with summary table 1019. Except for crude petroleum, the export and import figures include foreign trade passing through the customs districts of Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, but exclude shipments between conterminous U.S. and outlying areas.

Historical statistics.-Tabular headnotes provide cross-references, where applicable, to Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1957. See preface.

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