Idealized debris flow in flume with bed driven by a conveyor belt
Chi-Hai Ling, Cheng-lung Chen
1989, Conference Paper
The generalized viscoplastic fluid (GVF) model is used to derive the theoretical expressions of two-dimensional velocities and surface profile for debris flow established in a flume with bed driven by a conveyor belt. The rheological parameters of the GVF model are evaluated through the comparison of theoretical results with measured...
Dinoflagellate species and organic facies evidence of marine transgression and regression in the atlantic coastal plain
D. Habib, J. A. Miller
1989, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (74) 23-47
Palynological evidence is used to date and interpret depositional environments of sediments of Campanian, Maestrichtian and early Danian ages cored in three wells from South Carolina and Georgia. The evidence is usefil for distinguishing environments which lithofacies evidence indicates a range from nonmarine to coastal to inner neritic shallow shelf....
Estimating urban flood-frequency characteristics
M.E. Jennings, J.B. Atkins, E. J. Inman
1989, Conference Paper
Methods in use by the U.S. Geological Survey to estimate flood-frequency characteristics for urban watersheds are compared with estimates based on the Soil Conservation Service TR-55 model. Data from four small urban watersheds in Georgia are used in the flood-peak and hydrograph comparisons....
Effect of chlorine in clay-mineral specimens prepared on silver metal-membrane mounts for X-ray powder diffraction analysis
L.J. Poppe, J.A. Commeau, G.M. Pense
1989, Clays and Clay Minerals (37) 381-384
Silver metal-membrane filters are commonly used as substrates in the preparation of oriented clay-mineral specimens for X-ray powder diffraction (XRD). They are relatively unaffected by organic solvent treatments and specimens can be prepared rapidly. The filter mounts are adaptable to automatic sample changers, have few discrete reflections at higher 20...
Fluid inclusions in the Stripa granite and their possible influence on the groundwater chemistry
D. Kirk Nordstrom, S. Lindblom, R.J. Donahoe, C.C. Barton
1989, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (53) 1741-1755
Fluid inclusions in quartz and calcite of the Proterozoic Stripa granite, central Sweden, demonstrate that the rock and its fracture fillings have a complex evolutionary history. The majority of inclusions indicate formation during a hydrothermal stage following emplacement of the Stripa pluton. Total salinities of quartz inclusions range from 0–18...
Uranium in Holocene valley-fill sediments, and uranium, radon, and helium in waters, Lake Tahoe-Carson Range area, Nevada and California, U.S.A.
J. K. Otton, R. A. Zielinski, J.M. Been
1989, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (13) 15-28
Uraniferous Holocene sediments occur in the Carson Range of Nevada and California, U.S.A., between Lake Tahoe and Carson Valley. The hosts for the uranium include peat and interbedded organic-rich sand, silt, and mud that underly valley floors, fens, and marshes along stream valleys between the crest of the range and...
Late cretaceous pelagic sediments, volcanic ASH and biotas from near the Louisville hotspot, Pacific Plate, paleolatitude ∼42°S
Peter F. Ballance, John A. Barron, Charles D. Blome, David Bukry, Peter A. Cawood, George Chaproniere, Robyn Frisch, Richard H. Herzer, Campbell S. Nelson, Paula Quinterno, Holly F. Ryan, David W. Scholl, Andrew J. Stevenson, David G. Tappin, Tracy L. Vallier
1989, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (71) 281-299
Dredging on the deep inner slope of the Tonga Trench, immediately north of the intersection between the Louisville Ridge hotspot chain and the trench, recovered some Late Cretaceous (Maestrichtian) slightly tuffaceous pelagic sediments. They are inferred to have been scraped off a recently subducted Late Cretaceous guyot of the Louisville...
Basin-scale relations via conditioning
B.M. Troutman, M.R. Karlinger, D.P. Guertin
1989, Stochastic Hydrology and Hydraulics (3) 111-133
A rainfall-runoff model is used in conjunction with a probabilistic description of the input to this model to obtain simple regression-like relations for basin runoff in terms of basin and storm characteristics. These relations, similar to those sought in regionalization studies, are computed by evaluating the conditional distribution of model...
Mineralization potential along the trend of the Keweenawan- age Central North American Rift System in Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas
P. Berendsen
1989, Mining Engineering (41) 845-848
The tectonic and sedimentary environment of the Central North American Rift System (CNARS) provides an excellent setting for major mineral deposits. Major north-northeast-trending high-angle normal or reverse faults and northwest-trending transcurrent fault systems may exercise control over ore forming processes. Gabbro and basalt are the dominant igneous rock types. Carbonatite...
A multiple testing approach for hazard evaluation of complex mixtures in the aquatic environment: the use of diesel oil as a model
B. Thomas Johnson
1989, Environmental Pollution (58) 221-235
Traditional single species toxicity tests and multiple component laboratory-scaled microcosm assays were combined to assess the toxicological hazard of diesel oil, a model complex mixture, to a model aquatic environment. The immediate impact of diesel oil dosed on a freshwater community was studied in a model pond microcosm over 14...
Fossil Scenedesmus (Chlorococcales) from the Raton Formation, Colorado and New Mexico, U.S.A.
Fleming R. Farley
1989, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (59) 1-6
Fossilized coenobia of the alga Scenedesmus (Chlorococcales) were recovered in palynomorph assemblages from a lower Paleocene mudstone in the Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene Raton Formation of Colorado and New Mexico. This is the first description of fossil Scenedesmus from Tertiary rocks. Two species, Scenedesmus tschudyi sp. nov. and Scenedesmus hanleyi...
Determination of sensible heat flux over sparse canopy using thermal infrared data
William P. Kustas, B. J. Choudhury, M. S. Moran, R. J. Reginato, R. D. Jackson, L. W. Gay, H. L. Weaver
1989, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology (44) 197-216
Surface temperatures, Ts, were estimated for a natural vegetative surface in Owens Valley, California, with infrared thermometric observations collected from an aircraft. The region is quite arid and is composed primarily of bushes (∼30%) and bare soil (∼70%). Application of the bulk transfer equation for the estimation of sensible heat, H, gave...
Petrologic constraints on rift-zone processes - Results from episode 1 of the Puu Oo eruption of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
M.O. Garcia, R.A. Ho, J.M. Rhodes, E.W. Wolfe
1989, Bulletin of Volcanology (52) 81-96
The Puu Oo eruption in the middle of Kilauea volcano's east rift zone provides an excellent opportunity to utilize petrologic constraints to interpret rift-zone processes. Emplacement of a dike began 24 hours before the start of the eruption on 3 January 1983. Seismic and geodetic evidence indicates that the dike...
Kinky vitrinite reflectance well profiles: Evidence of paleopore pressure in low-permeability, gas-bearing sequences in Rocky Mountain foreland basins
B. E. Law, V. F. Nuccio, C.E. Barker
1989, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (73) 999-1010
Vitrinite reflectance (Rm) profiles of wells drilled in abnormally pressured, low-permeability gas-bearing sequences in Rocky Mountain foreland basins are commonly nonlinear with two or more nonparallel segments. These kinky profiles are most likely due to perturbations of the thermal gradient caused by contrasting heat transfer processes associated with the development...
Hydrologic effects on water level changes associated with episodic fault creep near Parkfield, California
E.A. Roeloffs, S.S. Burford, F. S. Riley, A.W. Records
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 12387-12402
As part of the Parkfield, California, earthquake prediction experiment, water level is monitored in a well 460 m from the main trace of the San Andreas fault on Middle Mountain, in the preparation zone of the anticipated Parkfield earthquake. The well configuration allows water level to be monitored in two...
Vegetation of wetlands of the prairie pothole region
H.A. Kantrud, J.B. Millar, A.G. Van Der Valk
A. van der Valk, editor(s)
1989, Book chapter, Northern prairie wetlands
Five themes dominate the literature dealing with the vegetation of palustrine and lacustrine wetlands of the prairie pothole region: environmental conditions (water or moisture regime, salinity), agricultural disturbances (draining, grazing, burning, sedimentation, etc.), vegetation dynamics, zonation patterns, and classification of the wetlands.The flora of a prairie wetland is a function...
The long range plan of the American Fisheries Society
R.C. Hubley Jr.
1989, Fisheries (14) 16-22
No abstract available....
Effect of rearing density on poststocking survival of lake trout in Lake Ontario
Joseph H. Elrod, David E. Ostergaard, Clifford P. Schneider
1989, Progressive Fish-Culturist (51) 189-193
Six paired lots of yearling lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) reared at densities of 41,000 and 51,000 fish per raceway during their last 9 months in the hatchery were stocked in Lake Ontario. Poststocking survival of the high-density (HD) and low-density (LD) fish was not different for the 1982 year-class. However,...
Determination of arsenic and selenium in whole fish by continuous-flow hydride generation atomic absorption spectrophotometry
W. G. Brumbaugh, M.J. Walther
1989, Journal of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists (72) 484-486
A combined wet chemical and dry ash digestion and use of a continuous- flow hydride generator coupled with a flame-heated quartz cell enabled the simple, precise, and highly automated atomic absorption determination of arsenic and selenium in tissues of whole fish. Percent relative standard deviation averaged 4% for each element;...
Distribution of alewives in southeastern Lake Ontario in autumn and winter: a clue to winter mortalities
Roger A. Bergstedt, Robert O’Gorman
1989, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (118) 687-692
Alewives Alosa pseudoharengus in the Great Lakes are thought to avoid extreme cold in winter by moving to deep water where the temperature is usually highest because of inverse thermal stratification. Information collected in Lake Ontario during autumn and winter 1981–1984 with an echo sounder and bottom and midwater trawls indicated that...
Acute gastric dilatation and volvulus in a free-living polar bear
Steven C. Amstrup, Carol A. Nielsen
1989, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (25) 601-604
A large, adult male polar bear (Ursus maritimus) was found dead on a barrier island north of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska (USA), in June 1987. There were no external signs of trauma. A twisted distended stomach, distinctive parenchymal and fascial congestion, and significant difficulty in repositioning the...
Classification of lung cancer patients and controls by chromatography of modified nucleosides in serum
John E. McEntire, Kenneth C. Kuo, Mark E. Smith, David L. Stalling, Jack W. Richens Jr., Robert W. Zumwalt, Charles W. Gehrke, Ben W. Papermaster
1989, Cancer Research (49) 1057-1062
A wide spectrum of modified nucleosides has been quantified by high-performance liquid chromatography in serum of 49 male lung cancer patients, 35 patients with other cancers, and 48 patients hospitalized for nonneoplastic diseases. Data for 29 modified nucleoside peaks were normalized to an internal standard and analyzed by discriminant analysis...
Gopherus agassizii: Desert tortoise
Kristen H. Berry
Ian Richard Swingland, Michael W. Klemens, editor(s)
1989, Book chapter, The conservation biology of tortoises
The desert tortoise is one of four allopatric North American tortoises. It occurs in the Mojave and Sonoran deserts of the southwestern United States and Mexico.Auffenberg (1976) divided the genus Gopherus (consisting of four species, G. agassizi, G. berlandieri, G.flavomarginatus, and G. polyphemus) in two osteological groups. Bramble (1982), using...
Chemical hydrogeology in natural and contaminated environments
W. Back, M.J. Baedecker
1989, Journal of Hydrology (106) 1-28
Chemical hydrogeology, including organic and inorganic aspects, has contributed to an increased understanding of groundwater flow systems, geologic processes, and stressed environments. Most of the basic principles of inorganic-chemical hydrogeology were first established by investigations of organic-free, regional-scale systems for which simplifying assumptions could be made. The problems of groundwater...
Gas phase axial dispersion in a packed column oxygen absorber
Barnaby J. Watten, Claude E. Boyd
1989, Aquacultural Engineering (8) 421-434
Gas phase axial dispersion was characterized within an enclosed packed column receiving oxygen and water under counter-current flow conditions. Steady-state gas phase profiles (longitudinal) were measured during a series of 90 column runs in which, at each of three bed depths (0·362, 0·699, and 1·041 m), all combinations of the...