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Page 6018, results 150426 - 150450

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Transformation of montmorillonite to kaolinite during weathering
Z. S. Altschuler, E.J. Dwornik, H. Kramer
1963, Science (141) 148-152
Extensive deposits of kaolinite in Florida are formed by transformation of montmorillonite during low-temperature supergene weathering. The transformation occurs by intracrystalline leaching of interlayer cations and tetrahedral silica layers. Interposition of stripped layers within montmorillonite creates a regular 1:1 mixed-layered montmorillonite-kaolinite, a new clay structure. Kaolin-like layers are nourished by...
Reef Creek Detachment Fault, Northwestern Wyoming
William G. Pierce
1963, GSA Bulletin (74) 1225-1236
he Reef Creek fault is in northwestern Wyoming, a few miles east of the northeast border of Yellowstone National Park. It lies within the area covered by the more extensive Heart Mountain fault. Like that fault, it is a décollement or detachment fault in which strata became detached along a basal shearing...
Hydrologic bench marks to distinguish the effects of climate vs. man
H.D. Wilson Jr.
1963, Groundwater (1) 13-14
There is a vital need for hydrologic data representing various environments that are free from the effects of man's activities. Without such data hydrologists will be stymied in distinguishing hydrologic changes caused by man from those caused by climate. To provide this background information, the U. S. Geological Survey is planning a nationwide hydrologic <span...
Saline ground water — A little used and unmapped resource
J. L. Poole
1963, Groundwater (1) 18-20
Vast quantities of saline ground water await new commercial uses and economical demineralization processes for recognition as a valuable resource. Saline ground water is more widely distributed than any other natural resource, occurring throughout the United States and in geologic formations ranging from the oldest to the youngest. The Coastal Plain has the...
Gibson peak pluton: A discordant composite intrusion in the southeastern Trinity Alps, northern California
Peter W. Lipman
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1259-1280
Gibson Peak pluton is the most discordant of several dominantly granitic intrusions in the Trinity Alps of northern California. It formed during Nevadan (Late Jurassic) deformation by emplacement of at least five discrete rock units that define a successively more silicic series, ranging from hypersthene gabbro to trondhjemitic tonalite. Contact features suggest that several...
Composite dike of andesite and rhyolite at Klondyke, Arizona
Frank S. Simons
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 1049-1056
A composite dike of probable Tertiary age intrudes Precambrian granodiorite 6 miles north of Klondyke, Arizona. The dike is exposed discontinuously for about 1500 feet along the strike and has a core of porphyritic rhyolite 15-20 feet thick flanked by coarsely porphyritic andesite 1-2 feet thick. Field evidence indicates that the rhyolite is later than...
The abundance of scandium in volcanic rocks, a preliminary estimate
Verne Charles Fryklund Jr., Michael Fleischer
1963, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (27) 643-664
Using Rittman's classification to determine the clan, we suggest the following abundance figures: basalts (99), 38 p.p.m. Sc; andesites (72), 34 p.p.m. Sc; dacites (68), 21 p.p.m. Sc; rhyodacites (32), 14 p.p.m. Sc; quartz latites (14), 11 p.p.m; rhyolites (24), 5 p.p.m. The scandium was determined spectrographically on samples for...
Studies of fluid inclusions iii: Extraction and uantitative analysis of inclusions in the milligram range
E. Roedder, B. Ingram, W. E. Hall
1963, Economic Geology (58) 353-374
A method has been developed for the extraction and chemical microanalysis of individual fluid inclusions, or groups of inclusions, in the milligram range. Usable quantitative analyses for Na, K, Ca, Mg, CI, B, and SO* have been obtained of mineral samples containing several milligrams of inclusion fluid, and with increased experimental errors,...
Epigenetic, diplogenetic, syngenetic, and lithogene deposits
T. S. Lovering
1963, Economic Geology (58) 315-331
Much of the disagreement over "epigenetic" And "Syngenetic" Deposits Is Semantic; Some Ores And altered rocks are in part syngenetic and in part epigenetic and for them the term "diplogenetic" is proposed. All these terms are primarily time terms related to the contemporaneity of the deposit and the enclosing rock, but...
Neutron activation analysis of fluid inclusions for copper, manganese, and zinc
G.K. Czamanske, E. Roedder, F.C. Burns
1963, Science (140) 401-403
Microgram quantities of copper, manganese, and zinc, corresponding to concentrations greater than 100 parts per million, were found in milligram quantities of primary inclusion fluid extracted from samples of quartz and fluorite from two types of ore deposits. The results indicate that neutron activation is a useful analytical method for...
Glauconite from the Precambrian belt series, Montana
R. A. Gulbrandsen, S. S. Goldich, H.H. Thomas
1963, Science (140) 390-391
Glauconite from the upper part of the Missoula Group of the Belt Series, Flathead County, Montana, has been dated at 1070 million years by potassium-argon and rubidium-strontium analyses. This is the first glauconite of Precambrian age reported in North America....
Surface material of the moon
C.R. Warren
1963, Science (140) 188-190
A skeletal fuzz that consists mostly of open space probably covers the moon to a depth of several millimeters or centimeters. The solid part of the fuzz probably consists of randomly oriented linear units, with or without enlarged nodes, which either anastomose in a mesh or are branching....
Band loss by nestling mourning doves
C.F. Kaczynski, W.H. Kiel
1963, Journal of Wildlife Management (27) 271-279
Nestling mourning doves (Zenaidura macroura) were banded and checked for band loss prior to fledging at Parchman, Mississippi, during the months of June-August, 1960. Three hundred seventy-seven nestlings 4-6 days of age were banded, 117 with size 3 bands, 120 with size 3A bands, and 140 with size 3A bands...
Annual production by a cottontail population
C.N. Conaway, H. M. Wight, K.C. Sadler
1963, Journal of Wildlife Management (27) 171-175
Adult females in a cottontail (Sylvilagus floridanus) population produced seven or eight litters during the 1961 breeding season. A synchrony of the conception dates was maintained throughout the breeding season. Data about ovulation rate, prenatal mortality, and litter size for each litter are presented. The first litter was smallest, averaging...
Overlapping of late mesozoic orogens in western Idaho
Warren Hamilton
1963, Geological Society of America Bulletin (74) 779-787
Early formed rocks of the border zone of the Idaho batholith are thrust westward over the low-grade metavolcanic rocks of the Seven Devils Mountains. Late intrusions of the border zone cut out upper plate rocks and contact-metamorphose lower plate rocks. Granitic intrusions in the Seven Devils complex are metamorphosed near the border zone...
Studies of fluid inclusions; [Part] 2, Freezing data and their interpretation
E. Roedder
1963, Economic Geology (58) 167-211
Aqueous and non-aqueous inclusions in 84 samples of various minerals from a wide range of geologic environments were studied with the freezing stage in order to gain an insight into the range of concentrations and compositions of fluid inclusions. Inclusions in most Mississippi Valley-type ore minerals contain highly concentrated saline solutions, showing freezing temperatures...
Geothermal brine well: Mile-deep drill hole may tap ore-bearing magmatic water and rocks undergoing metamorphism
D. E. White, E.T. Anderson, D.K. Grubbs
1963, Science (139) 919-922
A deep geothermal well in California has tapped a very saline brine extraordinarily high in heavy metals and other rare elements; copper and silver are precipitated during brine production. Preliminary evidence suggests that the brine may be pure magmatic water and an active ore-forming solution. Metamorphism of relatively young rocks...
Recent advances in space science
E.H. Vestine, S.-I. Akasofu, S. I. Rasool, J.R. Spreiter, E.M. Shoemaker, C.W. Snyder, D. Tilles
1963, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (44) 137-143
The present rapid advance in space sciences, clearly apparent at previous semiyearly national meetings of the American Geophysical Union, was again in evidence at the Stanford meeting, December 27–29, 1962. A total of over 60 papers was presented by the Planetary Sciences Section, usually in sessions held jointly with other Sections, including Geomagnetism...
Isotopic fractionation of uranium in sandstone
J.N. Rosholt, W. R. Shields, E. L. Garner
1963, Science (139) 224-226
Relatively unoxidized black uranium ores from sandstone deposits in the western United States show deviations in the uranium-235 to uranium-234 ratio throughout a range from 40 percent excess uranium-234 to 40 percent deficient uranium-234 with respect to a reference uranium-235 to uranium-234 ratio. The deficient uranium-234 is leached preferentially to...
Public water supplies in Gloucester County, New Jersey
William F. Hardt
1963, New Jersey Division of Water Policy and Supply Water Resources Circular 9
Gloucester County is in the southwestern part of New Jersey, below Camden, and is a part of the Lower Delaware River Valley. This area is attracting new industry and has shown a population increase of about 47 percent from 1950 to 1960, mostly urban. With the economic growth of the...
Some aspects of sampling salty ground water in coastal aquifers
F. A. Kohout, N.D. Hoy
1963, Groundwater (1) 28-43
Investigations of the fluctuations of chloride content in wells that tap the zone of diffusion between fresh and salt water show that the salty well water behaves erratically when the well is pumped. Frequently, a static distribution of chloride content that ranges from less than 1,000 ppm at the top to more than 10,000...