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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Publications of the U.S. Geological Survey, 1990
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1990, Report
This catalog is a list of (1) books and maps 1 that were published during 1990, and (2) articles by Geological Survey personnel in non-Geological Survey journals and books that came to our attention in 1990; it supplements the permanent catalogs "Publications of the Geological Survey, 1879-1961", "Publications of the...
Notes on sedimentation activities calendar year 1989
U.S. Interagency Advisory Committee on Water Data- Subcommittee on Sedimentation
1990, 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 Ground Water. The subcommittee approved the proposal and agreed to issue...
Activators of photoluminescence in calcite: evidence from high-resolution, laser-excited luminescence spectroscopy
V.A. Pedone, K.R. Cercone, R.C. Burruss
1990, Chemical Geology (88) 183-190
Laser-excited luminescence spectroscopy of a red-algal, biogenic calcite and a synthetic Mn-calcite can make the distinction between organic and trace-element activators of photoluminescence. Organic-activated photoluminescence in biogenic calcite is characterized by significant peak shifts and increasing intensity with shorter-wavelength excitation and by significant decreases in intensity after heating to ???...
Removal of benzocaine from water by filtration with activated carbon
G.E. Howe, T.D. Bills, L. L. Marking
1990, Progressive Fish-Culturist (52) 32-35
Benzocaine is a promising candidate for registration with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use as an anesthetic in fish culture, management, and research. A method for the removal of benzocaine from hatchery effluents could speed registration of this drug by eliminating requirements for data on its residues, tolerances,...
Influence of climate and eolian dust on the major-element chemistry and clay mineralogy of soils in the northern Bighorn basin, U.S.A.
Marith C. Reheis
1990, Catena (17) 219-248
Soil chronosequences in the northern Bighorn basin permit the study of chronologic changes in the major-element chemistry and clay mineralogy of soils formed in different climates. Two chronosequences along Rock Creek in south-central Montana formed on granitic alluvium in humid and semiarid climates over the past two million years. A...
New geologic map of the Island of Hawaii
Edward Wolfe, Jean Morris
1990, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Recent geologic mapping on the Island of Hawaii is compiled in a detailed new 1:100,000-scale geologic map. The lava flows and pyroclastic deposits of each volcano are assigned to major lithostratigraphic units based on lithology and stratigraphic relations. However, the emphasis of the map is strongly chronostratigraphic. Lavas of latest...
Analysis of eight argonne premium coal samples by X-ray fluorescence spectrometry
J.R. Evans, G.A. Sellers, R. G. Johnson, D.V. Vivit, J. Kent
1990, Energy & Fuels (4) 440-442
X-ray fluorescence spectrometric methods were used in the analysis of eight Argonne Premium Coal Samples. Trace elements (Cr, Ni, Cu, Zn, Rb, Sr, Y, Zr, Nb, Ba, La, and Ce) in coal ash were determined by energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometry; major elements (Na, Mg, Al, Si, P, S, K, Ca,...
On graphically representing the confidence region for an unknown rotation in three dimensions
M.S. Hanna, T. Chang
1990, Computers & Geosciences (16) 163-194
In assessing the errors involved in reconstructing tectonic plate rotations, it is desirable to have confidence regions for the unknown rotation. This paper presents a method for graphing such confidence regions, which exhibits the dependence of the range of possible angles of rotation on the axis considered. Namely, the minimum...
Traveltime inversion using transmitted waves of offset VSP data
Myung W. Lee
1990, Geophysics (55) 1089-1097
Estimation of layer parameters such as interval velocity, reflector depth, and dip can be formulated as a generalized linear inverse problem using observed arrival times. Based on a 2-D earth model, a computationally efficient and accurate formula is derived for traveltime inversion. This inversion method is applied to offset vertical...
National contaminant biomonitoring program: Residues of organochlorine chemicals in U.S. Freshwater Fish, 1976–1984
Christopher J. Schmitt, Jim L. Zajicek, Paul H. Peterman
1990, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (19) 748-781
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service periodically determines concentrations of organochlorine chemicals in freshwater fish collected from a nationwide network of stations as part of the National Contaminant Biomonitoring Program (NCBP, formerly a part of the National Pesticide Monitoring Program). From late 1984 to...
Results of seismological monitoring in the Cascade Range 1962-1989: earthquakes, eruptions, avalanches and other curiosities
C.S. Weaver, R.D. Norris, C. Jonientz-Trisler
1990, Geoscience Canada (17) 158-162
Modern monitoring of seismic activity at Cascade Range volcanoes began at Longmire on Mount Rainier in 1958. Since then, there has been an expansion of the regional seismic networks in Washington, northern Oregon and northern California. Now, the Cascade Range from Lassen Peak to Mount Shasta in the south and...
Host-parasite relationships and geographic distribution of Salmincola corpulentus (Copepoda: Lernaeopodidae) on bloater (Coregonus hoyi) stocks in Lake Huron
Charles A. Bowen, Ralph M. Stedman
1990, Canadian Journal of Zoology (68) 1988-1994
Examination of the branchial cavities of 8347 adult bloaters (Coregonus hoyi) collected from seven locations in Lake Huron for parasitic copepods yielded only the lernaeopodid Salmincola corpulentus; its distribution was limited to bloaters collected in the southern two-thirds of the lake. The infections were highest off Au Sable Point and on...
Ground-water control of evaporite deposition
W.W. Wood, W. E. Sanford
1990, Economic Geology (85) 1226-1235
Topographically closed basins may be hydrologically open as a result of seepage losses to underlying or surrounding ground-water systems. In such cases, these losses can have a substantial control over the suite and the thicknesses of evaporite minerals formed in the basin. The ratio of ground-water outflow to inflow (flux...
Computational open-channel hydraulics for movable-bed problems
Chintu Lai
Chang Howard H.Hill Joseph C., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulic Engineering - Proceedings of the 1990 National Conference
As a major branch of computational hydraulics, notable advances have been made in numerical modeling of unsteady open-channel flow since the beginning of the computer age. According to the broader definition and scope of 'computational hydraulics,' the basic concepts and technology of modeling unsteady open-channel flow have been systematically studied...
Improved method for sectioning pectoral spines of catfish for age determination
Marc A. Blouin, Glenda R. Hall
1990, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (5) 489-490
A modified low-speed saw provided fast and precise sectioning of catfish pectoral spines for use in aging studies. In one hour, 10–15 spines can be sectioned, the sections mounted, and the annuli counted. Two methods commonly used to section ictalurid pectoral spines are (1) acid decalcification, followed by the...
Geological setting of chemosynthetic communities in the Monterey Fan Valley system
R.W. Embley, S.L. Eittreim, C.H. McHugh, W. R. Normark, G.H. Rau, Barbara Hecker, A.E. DeBevoise, H. Gary Greene, William B. F. Ryan, C. Harrold, C. Baxter
1990, Deep Sea Research Part A, Oceanographic Research Papers (37) 1651-1667
Alvin dives and camera tows within the "meander area" of the Monterey and Ascension Fan Valleys have located nine chemosynthetic communities over depths ranging from 3000 to 3600 m over a distance of 55 km. Most of the observed communities consist largely of Calyptogena phaseoliformis, but Solemya (species unknown) and...
Bowers Swell: Evidence for a zone of compressive deformation concentric with Bowers Ridge, Bering Sea
M. S. Marlow, A. K. Cooper, S. V. Dadisman, E.L. Geist, P.R. Carlson
1990, Marine and Petroleum Geology (7) 398-409
Bowers Swell is a newly discovered bathymetric feature which is up to 90 m high, between 12 and 20 km wide, and which extends arcuately about 400 km along the northern and eastern sides of Bowers Ridge. The swell was first revealed on GLORIA sonographs and subsequently mapped on seismic...
The Ebro margin study, northwestern Mediterranean Sea - an introduction
A. Maldonado, Nelson C. Hans
1990, Marine Geology (95) 157-163
The Ebro continental margin from the coast to the deep sea off northeastern Spain was selected for a multidisciplinary project because of the abundant Ebro River sediment supply, Pliocene and Quaternary progradation, and margin development in a restricted basin where a...
Volcanic hazards in the Pacific Northwest
C.D. Miller
1990, Geoscience Canada (17) 183-187
The Cascade Range stretches from southwestern British Columbia to northern California; the Range consists of major composite volcanic centres, most of which have been active during late Pleistocene and Holocene time. In addition, thousands of smaller basaltic or basaltic-andesite volcanoes have been active during the past few million years. Flowage...
A bioaccumulation bioassay for freshwater sediments
Michael J. Mac, George E. Noguchi, Robert J. Hesselberg, Carol C. Edsall, John A. Shoesmith, James D. Bowker
1990, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (9) 1405-1414
A laboratory bioassay is described for determining the bioavailability of contaminants from freshwater sediments. The bioassay consists of 10-d exposures to whole sediments under flow-through conditions. After testing five species, the fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) and the earthworm (Lubricus terrestris) were recommended for use in the test....
Trace elements in Corbicula fluminea from the San Joaquin River, California
H.V. Leland, B. C. Scudder
1990, Conference Paper, Science of the Total Environment
(i) Trace element concentrations in soft tissue of the benthic bivalve, Corbicula fluminea, from the San Joaquin River and its major tributaries were examined during the primary irrigation season in relation to the spatial variation in concentrations of major, minor and trace constituents in riverwater and sediments. (ii) Selenium concentrations...
Operation of U.S. Geological Survey unmanned digital magnetic observatories
L.R. Wilson
1990, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (59) 45-54
The precision and continuity of data recorded by unmanned digital magnetic observatories depend on the type of data acquisition equipment used and operating procedures employed. Three generations of observatory systems used by the U.S. Geological Survey are described. A table listing the frequency of component failures in the current observatory...