Rocky Mountain Tertiary coal-basin models and their applicability to some world basins
R. M. Flores
1989, International Journal of Coal Geology (12) 767-798
Tertiary intermontane basins in the Rocky Mountain region of the United States contain large amounts of coal resources. The first major type of Tertiary coal basin is closed and lake-dominated, either mud-rich (e.g., North Park Basin, Colorado) or mud plus carbonate...
Diapiric transfer of melt in Kilauea Iki lava lake, Hawaii: A quick, efficient process of igneous differentiation
Rosalind Tuthill Helz, H. Kirschenbaum, J.W. Marinenko
1989, Geological Society of America Bulletin (101) 578-594
Kilauea Iki lava lake, formed in 1959, is a large pond of picritic basalt (average MgO content = 15.34% by weight), which has cooled and crystallized as a small, self-roofed magma chamber. Repeated drilling of the upper crust of the lake, down to its molten core, and more recent (1981)...
Evidence of uplift near Charleston, South Carolina
S. Rhea
1989, Geology (17) 311-315
In spite of extensive research, the causal structure of the 1886 magnitude 7 earthquake near Charleston, South Carolina, has not been identified. In this study I analyzed digital surface topography and river morphology in light of earlier studies using seismic reflection, seismic refraction,...
Effect of site conditions on ground motion and damage
R. Borcherdt, G. Glassmoyer, M. Andrews, E. Cranswick
1989, Earthquake Spectra (5) 23-42
Results of seismologic studies conducted by the U.S. reconnaissance team in conjunction with Soviet colleagues following the tragic earthquakes of December 7, 1988, suggest that site conditions may have been a major factor in contributing to increased damage levels in Leninakan. As the potential severity of these effects in Leninakan...
Chloritization and associated alteration at the Jabiluka unconformity-type uranium deposit, Northern Territory, Australia
Constance J. Nutt
1989, Canadian Mineralogist (27 pt 1) 41-58
Jabiluka is the largest of four known uncomformity-type uranium deposits that are hosted by brecciated and altered metasedimentary rocks in the Pine Creek geosyncline, Northern Territory, Australia. The alteration zone at Jabiluka is dominated by chlorite, but also contains white mica, tourmaline and apatite; hematite is present, but only in...
Depositional environments and tectonic controls on the coal-bearing Lower to Middle Jurassic Yan'an Formation, southern Ordos Basin, China
E. A. Johnson, Liu Shu, Zhang Yonglin
1989, Geology (17) 1123-1126
The Ordos Basin of north-central China is well known for vast energy resources. This nonmarine interior basin developed on the North China-Korean platform following the Late Triassic Indochina orogeny and, for a time, contained a large freshwater lake prior to being uplifted into...
Thrust faults and related structures in the crater floor of Mount St. Helens volcano, Washington
W.W. Chadwick Jr., D. A. Swanson
1989, Geological Society of America Bulletin (101) 1507-1519
A lava dome was built in the crater of Mount St. Helens by intermittent intrusion and extrusion of dacite lava between 1980 and 1986. Spectacular ground deformation was associated with the dome building events and included the development of a system of radial...
Constraints from fluid inclusions on sulfide precipitation mechanisms and ore fluid migration in the Viburnum Trend lead district, Missouri
E. L. Rowan, D. L. Leach
1989, Economic Geology (84) 1948-1965
Measurements on fluid inclusions in hydrothermal dolomite cements place constraints on sulfide precipitation mechanisms and on the thermal-hydrologic processes which formed the Viburnum Trend Mississippi Valley-type lead district. Homogenization temperatures and freezing point depressions were determined for fluid inclusions in Bonneterre Dolomite-hosted dolomite cements in mine samples, as well as...
Debris is not a cheese: litter in coastal Louisiana
Dianne M. Lindstedt, Joseph C. Holmes Jr.
1989, Conference Paper, Coastal Zone: Proceedings of the Symposium on Coastal and Ocean Management
An 18-month study of six Louisiana beaches determined the extent, composition, and possible sources of beach litter. Data showed that from 2590 to 23,154 items may be encountered along any one-mile stretch of Louisiana beach, depending upon location and season, and that densities of litter ranged from 5 to 28...
Processing and attenuation of noise in deep seismic-reflection data from the Gulf of Maine
D. R. Hutchinson, Myung W. Lee
1989, Marine Geophysical Research (11) 51-67
The U.S. Geological Survey deep crustal studies reflection profile across the Gulf of Maine off southeastern New England was affected by three sources of noise: side-scattered noise, multiples, and 20-Hz whale sounds. The special processing most effective in minimizing this noise consisted of a combination of frequency-wavenumber (F-K) filtering, predictive...
Preliminary evaluations of regional ground-water quality in relation to land use
D. Cain, D.R. Helsel, S.E. Ragone
1989, Ground Water (27) 230-244
Preliminary results from New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Florida, Nebraska, and Colorado indicate that regional ground-water quality has been affected by human activities. The frequencies of detection of volatile organic compounds and some trace elements were larger in ground water underlying urban or industrial areas in comparison to undeveloped areas....
A new method for the automatic interpretation of Schlumberger and Wenner sounding curves
A.A.R. Zohdy
1989, Geophysics (54) 245-253
A fast iterative method for the automatic interpretation of Schlumberger and Wenner sounding curves is based on obtaining interpreted depths and resistivities from shifted electrode spacings and adjusted apparent resistivities, respectively. The method is fully automatic. It does not require an initial guess of the number of layers, their thicknesses,...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
The prediction of aquatic sediment-associated trace element concentration using selected geochemical factors
A. J. Horowitz, K. A. Elrick, R. P. Hooper
1989, Hydrological Processes (3) 347-364
Multiple linear regression models calculated from readily obtainable chemical and physical parameters can explain a high percentage (70 per cent or greater) of observed sediment-trace element variance for Cu, Zn, Pb, Cr, Ni, Co, As, Sb, Se, and Hg in a widely divergent suite of...
Artificial reef observations from a manned submersible off southeast Florida
E.A. Shinn, R.I. Wicklund
1989, Bulletin of Marine Science (44) 1041-1050
Examination of 16 artificial reef structures in depths ranging from 30-120m indicated that the highest numbers of fish are found around reefs in water shallower than 46m. Fewer fish, especially those with tropical coral reef affinities, <46m was probably caused by a thermocline. Algae and reef community encrusters, abundant on...
Sea-floor drainage features of Cascadia Basin and the adjacent continental slope, northeast Pacific Ocean
M. A. Hampton, Herman A. Karl, Neil H. Kenyon
1989, Marine Geology (87) 249-272
Sea-floor drainage features of Cascadia Basin and the adjacent continental slope include canyons, primary fan valleys, deep-sea valleys, and remnant valley segments. Long-range sidescan sonographs and associated seismic-reflection profiles indicate that the canyons may originate along a mid-slope escarpment and grow...
Structures associated with strike-slip faults that bound landslide elements
R. W. Fleming, A. M. Johnson
1989, Engineering Geology (27) 39-114
Large landslides are bounded on their flanks and on elements within the landslides by structures analogous to strike-slip faults. We observed the formation of thwse strike-slip faults and associated structures at two large landslides in central Utah during 1983-1985. The strike-slip faults in landslides are nearly vertical but locally may...
Non-energy resources, Connecticut and Rhode Island coastal waters
N.F. Neff, R. S. Lewis
1989, Marine Geology (90) 125-130
Cores collected from Long Island Sound, Connecticut, were used to establish control on the geologic framework of the area. Lithologic and stratigraphic analyses verified the presence of the following units: (1) Cretaceous coastal plain, (2) Pleistocene glacial till, (3) late Pleistocene...
Evaluating geographic information systems technology
Stephen C. Guptill
1989, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (55) 1583-1587
Computerized geographic information systems (GISs) are emerging as the spatial data handling tools of choice for solving complex geographical problems. However, few guidelines exist for assisting potential users in identifying suitable hardware and software. A process to be followed in evaluating the merits of GIS technology is presented. Related standards...
Regional Jurassic geologic framework of Alabama coastal waters area and adjacent Federal waters area
R.M. Mink, B.L. Bearden, E. A. Mancini
1989, Marine Geology (90) 39-50
To date, numerous Jurassic hydrocarbon fields and pools have been discovered in the Cotton Valley Group, Haynesville Formation, Smackover Formation and Norphlet Formation in the tri-state area of Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, and in Alabama State coastal waters and adjacent Federal...
Exploration computer applications to primary dispersion halos: Kougarok tin prospect, Seward Peninsula, Alaska, USA
Jeffrey C. Reid
1989, Conference Paper, Application of Computers and Operations Research in the Mineral Industry
Computer processing and high resolution graphics display of geochemical data were used to quickly, accurately, and efficiently obtain important decision-making information for tin (cassiterite) exploration, Seward Peninsula, Alaska (USA). Primary geochemical dispersion patterns were determined for tin-bearing intrusive granite phases of Late Cretaceous age with exploration bedrock lithogeochemistry at the...