Techniques and strategies for data integration in mineral resource assessment
Charles M. Trautwein, John L. Dwyer
1991, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
The Geologic and the National Mapping divisions of the U.S. Geological Survey have been involved formally in cooperative research and development of computer-based geographic information systems (GISs) applied to mineral-resource assessment objectives since 1982. Experience in the Conterminous United States Mineral Assessment Program (CUSMAP) projects including the Rolla, Missouri; Dillon,...
Bank accretion and the development of vegetated depositional surfaces along modified alluvial channels
C.R. Hupp, A. Simon
1991, Geomorphology (4) 111-124
This paper describes the recovery of stable bank form and development of vegetated depositional surfaces along the banks of channelized West Tennessee streams. Most perennial streams in West Tennessee were straightened and dredged since the turn of the century. Patterns of fluvial...
Fractal patterns of fractures in granites
B. Velde, J. Dubois, D. Moore, G. Touchard
1991, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (104) 25-35
Fractal measurements using the Cantor's dust method in a linear one-dimensional analysis mode were made on the fracture patterns revealed on two-dimensional, planar surfaces in four granites. This method allows one to conclude that:(1)|The fracture systems seen on two-dimensional surfaces in granites are consistent with the part of...
Determining the mean hydraulic gradient of ground water affected by tidal fluctuations
Michael E. Serfes
1991, Ground Water (29) 549-555
Tidal fluctuations in surface-water bodies produce progressive pressure waves in adjacent aquifers. As these pressure waves propagate inland, ground-water levels and hydraulic gradients continuously fluctuate, creating a situation where a single set of water-level measurements cannot be used to accurately characterize ground-water flow. For example,...
Possible tectonomagnetic effect observed from mid-1989, to mid-1990, in Long Valley Caldera, California
R.J. Mueller, M.J.S. Johnston, J. O. Langbein
1991, Geophysical Research Letters (18) 601-604
Precise measurements of local magnetic fields have been obtained with a differentially connected array of three proton magnetometers in the Long Valley caldera region since 1984. Two magnetometers are located inside the caldera with a third reference magnetometer located 26km southeast of the caldera. After correction...
One perspective on spatial variability in geologic mapping
H. W. Markewich, S.C. Cooper
1991, Conference Paper, SSSA Special Publication (Soil Science Society of America)
This paper discusses some of the differences between geologic mapping and soil mapping, and how the resultant maps are interpreted. The role of spatial variability in geologic mapping is addressed only indirectly because in geologic mapping there have been few attempts at quantification of spatial differences. This is largely because...
Tritium as an indicator of ground-water age in Central Wisconsin
Kenneth R. Bradbury
1991, Groundwater (29) 398-404
In regions where ground water is generally younger than about 30 years, developing the tritium input history of an area for comparison with the current tritium content of ground water allows quantitative estimates of minimum ground-water age. The tritium input history for central Wisconsin has been constructed using precipitation tritium...
Notes on sedimentation activities calendar year 1990
U.S. Interagency Advisory Committee on Water Data- Subcommittee on Sedimentation
1991, Report
This report is a digest of information furnished by Federal agencies conducting sedimentation investigations. The decision to publish the report was made in 1946, from a proposal by the Chairman of the Federal Interagency River Basin Committee, Subcommittee on Sedimentation. The subcommittee approved the proposal and agreed to issue this...
Revised values for the thermodynamic properties of boehmite, AlO(OH) , and related species and phases in the system Al-H-O
B. S. Hemingway, R. A. Robie, J. A. Apps
1991, American Mineralogist (76) 445-457
Heat capacity measurements are reported for a well-characterized boehmite that differ significantly from results reported earlier by Shomate and Cook (1946) for a monohydrate of alumina. It is suggested that the earlier measurements were made on a sample that was a mixture of phases and that use of that heat-capacity...
Infiltration of unconsumed irrigation water in Utah
William C. Brothers, Susan A. Thiros
1991, Conference Paper
The ground-water hydrology of Panguitch Valley and adjacent areas, south-central Utah, was studied during 1988-90. One objective of the study was to measure ground-water recharge from infiltration of unconsumed irrigation water. Water-level and soil-moisture data were used to estimate travel times for water moving down through the soil profile, and...
Carcinogens and cancers in freshwater fishes
John J. Black, Paul C. Baumann
1991, Environmental Health Perspectives (90) 27-33
Epizootics of neoplasms in freshwater fish species are considered in relation to circumstantial and experimental evidence that suggest that some epizootics of neoplasia of hepatocellular, cholangiocellular, epidermal, and oral epithelial origin may be causally related to contaminant exposure. Although there is concern for the safety of consuming fish affected...
Federal support for seismological research; past, present, and future.
D. R. Sarewitz
1991, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 115-116
Data from the past 20 years indicate a strong temporal correlation between major California earthquakes and icnreased federal funding for seismology. ...
Cretaceous-Eocene (Laramide) landscape development and Oligocene- Pliocene drainage reorganization of transition zone and Colorado Plateau, Arizona
D. P. Elston, R.A. Young
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research (96) 12389-12406
Landscape development of central and northern Arizona can no longer be ascribed mainly to events of Miocene and Pliocene age. New information on the age and distribution of older Cenozoic deposits has led to the recognition of a regional Cretaceous-Paleocene(?) surface of erosion that conforms...
Backwater effects in the Amazon River basin of Brazil
R.H. Meade, J.M. Rayol, S.C. Da Conceicao, J.R.G. Natividade
1991, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (18) 105-114
The Amazon River mainstem of Brazil is so regulated by differences in the timing of tributary inputs and by seasonal storage of water on floodplains that maximum discharges exceed minimum discharges by a factor of only 3. Large tributaries that drain the southern Amazon River basin reach their peak discharges...
Automated urban change detection using scanned cartographic and satellite image data
Jeffrey D. Spooner
1991, Conference Paper, GIS/LIS 1991 ACSM-ASPRS Fall Convention
The objective of this study was to develop a digital procedure to measure the amount of urban change that has occurred in an area since the publication of its corresponding 1:24,000-scale topographic map. Traditional change detection techniques are dependent upon the visual comparison of high-altitude aerial photographs or, more recently,...
Implications for organic maturation studies of evidence of a geologically rapid increase and stabilization of vitrinite reflectance at peak temperature: Cerro Prieto geothermal system, Mexico
C.E. Barker
1991, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (75) 1852-1863
A short-term rapid heating and cooling of the rock in well M-94 below 1300 m was caused by a pulse of hot water passing through the edge of the Cerro Prieto, Mexico, geothermal system. Below 1300 m, the peak paleotemperatures were about 225-250 degrees C, but equilibrium well log temperatures...
Late Cretaceous paleomagnetism of the Tucson Mountains: Implications for vertical axis rotations in south central Arizona
J.T. Hagstrum, P. W. Lipman
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research (96) 16069-16081
The Tucson Mountains of southern Arizona are the site of an Upper Cretaceous caldera from which the rhyolitic Cat Mountain Tuff was erupted at about 72 Ma. Two magnetic units within the Cat Mountain Tuff are distinguished by paleomagnetic data in both the northern and...
Origin of xenoliths in the trachyte at Puu Waawaa, Hualalai Volcano, Hawaii
David A. Clague, Wendy A. Bohrson
1991, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (108) 439-452
Rare dunite and 2-pyroxene gabbro xenoliths occur in banded trachyte at Puu Waawaa on Hualalai Volcano, Hawaii. Mineral compositions suggest that these xenoliths formed as cumulates of tholeiitic basalt at shallow depth in a subcaldera magma reservoir. Subsequently, the minerals in the xenoliths underwent subsolidus reequilibration that particularly affected chromite...
Geochemistry of dissolved inorganic carbon in a Coastal Plain aquifer. 1. Sulfate from confining beds as an oxidant in microbial CO2 production
F. H. Chapelle, P.B. McMahon
1991, Journal of Hydrology (127) 85-108
A primary source of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the Black Creek aquifer of South Carolina is carbon dioxide produced by microbially mediated oxidation of sedimentary organic matter. Groundwater chemistry data indicate, however, that the available mass of inorganic electron acceptors (oxygen, Fe(III),...
High-energy carbonate-sand accumulation, the Quicksands, southwest Florida Keys
Eugene A. Shinn, Barbara H. Lidz, Charles W. Holmes
1991, Journal of Sedimentary Research (61) 861-862
High-resolution seismic-reflection profiles of the Quicksands, located along a broad ridge on the platform shelf west of Key West, Florida, indicate a significant deposit of non-oolitic carbonate sand occurs in a belt 47 km long by 28 km wide. The surface of the...
Surface features of central North America: a synoptic view from computer graphics
R.J. Pike
1991, GSA Today (1) 1-251
A digital shaded-relief image of the 48 contiguous United States shows the details of large- and small-scale landforms, including several linear trends. The features faithfully reflect tectonism, continental glaciation, fluvial activity, volcanism, and other surface-shaping events and processes. The new map not only depicts topography accurately and in its true...
Proposed method of hydrogeochemical exploration for salt deposits using ClBr ratios, Eastern Province, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
C. L. Smith
1991, Applied Geochemistry (6) 249-255
Despite the value of the salt (NaCl) and brine used by the chemical industry, geochemical prospecting techniques are not customarily employed in the search for these raw materials. In this study, Br geochemistry is used as the basis for a proposed hydrogeochemical prospecting technique that was designed to search for...
Modelling the petrogenesis of high Rb/Sr silicic magmas
A. N. Halliday, J.P. Davidson, W. Hildreth, P. Holden
1991, Chemical Geology (92) 107-114
Rhyolites can be highly evolved with Sr contents as low as 0.1 ppm and Rb Sr > 2,000. In contrast, granite batholiths are commonly comprised of rocks with Rb Sr 100. Mass-balance modelling of source compositions, differentiation and contamination using the trace-element geochemistry of...
Field-scale investigation of infiltration into a compacted soil liner
Samuel V. Panno, Beverly L. Herzog, Keros Cartwright, Kenneth R. Rehfeldt, Ivan G. Krapac, Bruce R. Hensel
1991, Groundwater (29) 914-921
Little field-scale research has been done to evaluate the effectiveness of compacted soil barriers in retarding the movement of water and leachates. In response to this need, the Illinois State Geological Survey constructed and instrumented an experimental compacted soil liner. Infiltration of water into...
The interaction between biology and the management of aquatic macrophytes
S. A. Nichols
1991, Aquatic Botany (41) 225-252
‘Management’ refers to controlling nuisance aquatic species and to restoring or restructing aquatic plant communities. Producing stable, diverse, aquatic plant communities containing a high percentage of desirable species is a primary management goal.There are a variety of techniques including harvesting, herbicides, water-level fluctuation, sediment alteration, nutrient limitation, light alteration, and...