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Page 4259, results 106451 - 106475

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Composition of massive sulfide deposits from the sediment-covered floor of Escanaba Trough, Gorda Ridge: implications for depositional processes
Randolph A. Koski, Wayne C. Shanks III, Wendy A. Bohrson, Robert L. Oscarson
1988, Canadian Mineralogist (26 pt 3) 655-673
Massive sulfide deposits with two distinct compositions are spatially related to volcanic edifices that penetrate up to 500 m of turbiditic sediment in Escanaba Trough (ET), southern Gorda Ridge. The mineralogy, metal content, sulfur isotope composition, and hydrocarbon content of massive sulfides from ET reflect the extensive interaction between underlying...
Concentration of gold in natural waters
J. B. McHugh
1988, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (30) 85-94
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the amount of gold present in natural waters. One hundred and thirty-two natural water samples were collected from various sources and analyzed for gold by the latest techniques. Background values for gold in...
The chemical evolution of a travertine-depositing stream: Geochemical processes and mass transfer reactions
Michelle M. Lorah, Janet S. Herman
1988, Water Resources Research (24) 1541-1552
This field study focuses on quantitatively defining the chemical changes occurring in Falling Spring Creek, a travertine-depositing stream located in Alleghany County, Virginia. The processes of CO2outgassing and calcite precipitation or dissolution control the chemical evolution of the stream. The observed chemical composition of the water was used with the...
Stochastic system identification in structural dynamics
Erdal Safak
1988, Conference Paper
Recently, new identification methods have been developed by using the concept of optimal-recursive filtering and stochastic approximation. These methods, known as stochastic identification, are based on the statistical properties of the signal and noise, and do not require the assumptions of current methods. The criterion for stochastic system identification is...
Principal component analysis of geodetically measured deformation in Long Valley caldera, eastern California, 1983-1987
J.C. Savage
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 13297-13305
Typical geodetic measurements of deformation consist of repeated surveys of a particular geodetic network. Such deformation data can be interpreted as a consequence of one or more self-coherent sources by means of principal component analysis. A self-coherent source is defined as any source that produces deformation that is time and...
Subsidence of Puna, Hawaii inferred from sulfur content of drilled lava flows
J.G. Moore, D. M. Thomas
1988, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (35) 165-171
Sulfur was analyzed in more than 200 lava samples from five drill holes located on the east rift zone of Kilauea volcano on the island of Hawaii. The sulfur content is a gage of whether lava was erupted subaerially (low sulfur) or erupted subaqueously (high sulfur). Despite considerable variation, sulfur...
Garnet compositions and their use as indicators of peraluminous granitoid petrogenesis - southeastern Arabian Shield
du Bray
1988, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (100) 205-212
Garnet, an uncommon accessory mineral in igneous rocks, occurs in seven small peraluminous granitoid plutons in the southeastern Arabian Shield; textural equilibrium between garnet and other host granitoid minerals indicates that the garnets crystallized from their host magmas. Compositions of the garnets form three groups that reflect host-granitoid compositions, which...
The design and use of a hydraulic potentiomanometer for direct measurement of differences in hydraulic head between groundwater and surface water
T. C. Winter, J. W. LaBaugh, P.O. Rosenberry
1988, Limnology and Oceanography (33) 1209-1214
The hydraulic potentiomanometer described herein consists of a potentiometer connected to a manometer by a flexible tube. The device is used to directly measure the direction of seepage as well as the hydraulic-head difference between groundwater and surface water. The device works most effectively in sandy materials. For accurate measurements...
An oxygen isotope and geochemical study of meteoric-hydrothermal systems at Pilot Mountain and selected other localities, Carolina slate belt
T. L. Klein, R.E. Criss
1988, Economic Geology (83) 801-821
Several epigenetic mineral deposits in the Ca1rolina slate belt are intimately related to meteoric-hydrothermal systems of late Precambrian and early Paleozoic age. At Pilot Mountain, low 18 O rocks correlate well with zones of strong silicic alteration and alkali leaching accompanied by high alumina minerals (sericite, pyrophyllite, andalusite + or - topaz)...
Volumetric strain in relation to particle displacements for body and surface waves in a general viscoelastic half-space
R. D. Borcherdt
1988, Geophysical Journal (93) 215-228
Dilatational earth strain, associated with the radiation fields for several hundred local, regional, and teleseismic earthquakes, has been recorded over an extended bandwidth and dynamic range at four borehole sites near the San Andreas fault, CA. The general theory of linear viscoelasticity is applied to account for anelasticity of the...
Determining transit losses for water deliveries by use of stream-aquifer models
Russell K. Livingston
1988, Conference Paper
Hydrologic modeling of stream-aquifer interaction commonly has been used to quantify transit losses associated with water deliveries, such as those from reservoir storage. This technique requires estimation of model parameters that include stage-discharge relations, channel-storage coefficient, aquifer transmissivity, and aquifer-storage coefficient. Because data to reliably estimate or calibrate these parameters...
Inversion for slip distribution using teleseismic P waveforms: North Palm Springs, Borah Peak, and Michoacan earthquakes
C. Mendoza, S.H. Hartzell
1988, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (78) 1092-1111
We have inverted the teleseismic P waveforms recorded by stations of the Global Digital Seismograph Network for the 8 July 1986 North Palm Springs, California, the 28 October 1983 Borah Peak, Idaho, and the 19 September 1985 Michoacan, Mexico, earthquakes to recover the distribution of slip on each of the...
Curie temperature isotherm analysis and tectonic implications of aeromagnetic data from Nevada
R.J. Blakely
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 11817-11832
Estimates of the depth to the Curie temperature isotherm in Nevada are in accordance with other regional geologic and geophysical information and together can be explained in the context of present-day tectonism. A method to estimate the depth extent of magnetic sources from the statistical properties of magnetic anomalies was...
Simulation technique for modeling flow on floodplains and in coastal wetlands
Raymond W. Schaffranek, Robert A. Baltzer
1988, Conference Paper
The system design is premised on a proven, areal two-dimensional, finite-difference flow/transport model which is supported by an operational set of computer programs for input data management and model output interpretation. The purposes of the project are (1) to demonstrate the utility of the model for providing useful highway design...
The stress heat-flow paradox and thermal results from Cajon Pass
A.H. Lachenbruch, J.H. Sass
1988, Geophysical Research Letters (15) 981-984
Conventional friction models predict a substantial thermal anomaly associated with active traces of strike-slip faults, but no such anomaly is observed from over 100 heat-flow determinations along 1,000 km of the San Andreas fault. The Cajon Pass well is being drilled to bring deep heat-flow and...
Gravity model studies of Newberry Volcano, Oregon
M. E. Gettings, A. Griscom
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 10109-10118
Newberry Volcano, a large Quaternary volcano located about 60 km east of the axis of the High Cascades volcanoes in central Oregon, has a coincident positive residual gravity anomaly of about 12 mGals. Model calculations of the gravity anomaly field suggest that the volcano is underlain by an intrusive complex...
Dipolar-dephasing 13C NMR studies of decomposed wood and coalified xylem tissue: Evidence for chemical structural changes associated with defunctionalization of lignin structural units during coalification
Patrick G. Hatcher
1988, Energy & Fuels (2) 48-58
A series of decomposed and coalified gymnosperm woods was examined by conventional solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and by dipolar-dephasing NMR techniques. The results of these NMR studies for a histologically related series of samples provide clues as to the nature of codification reactions that lead to the defunctionalization...
Near-infrared reflectance spectra of mixtures of kaolin-group minerals: Use in clay mineral studies
James K. Crowley, Norma Vergo
1988, Clays and Clay Minerals (36) 310-316
Near-infrared (NIR) reflectance spectra for mixtures of ordered kaolinite and ordered dickite have been found to simulate the spectral response of disordered kaolinite. The amount of octahedral vacancy disorder in nine disordered kaolinite samples was estimated by comparing the sample spectra to the spectra of reference mixtures. The resulting estimates...
Evidence for a new geomagnetic reversal from lava flows in Idaho: Discussion of short polarity reversals in the Brunhes and late Matuyama polarity chrons
D.E. Champion, M. A. Lanphere, M. A. Kuntz
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 11667-11680
K-Ar ages and paleomagnetic data for basalt samples from a new core hole (site E) at the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL) indicate that the age of the reversed polarity event recorded in Snake River Plain lavas is older than 465±50 ka (1000 years before present) reported previously by Champion...
Ostwald ripening and interparticle-diffraction effects for illite crystals
D. D. Eberl, J. Srodon
1988, American Mineralogist (73) 1335-1345
The Warren-Averbach method, an X-ray diffraction (XRD) method used to measure mean particle thickness and particle-thickness distribution, is used to restudy sericite from the Silverton caldera. Apparent particle-thickness distributions indicate that the clays may have undergone Ostwald ripening and that this process has modified the K-Ar ages of the samples....
Rainfall intensity-duration equations
David C. Froehlich
1988, Conference Paper
A method for rapidly developing a rainfall intensity-duration equation for durations less than one hour and recurrence intervals between 2 and 100 years for any location in the conterminous United States is presented. Optimal parameters of a general rainfall-intensity duration equation are determined using precipitation depths for durations of 5,...
Three-dimensional gravity modeling of the geologic structure of Long Valley caldera
S. F. Carle
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 13237-13250
A 48-mGal gravity low coincides with Long Valley caldera and is mainly attributed to low-density caldera fill. Gravity measurements by Unocal Geothermal have been integrated with U.S. Geological Survey data, vastly improving gravity station coverage throughout the caldera. A strong regional gravity trend is mainly attributed to isostasy. A “best...
Depositional models for two Tertiary coal-bearing sequences in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming, USA
Peter D. Warwick, Ronald W. Stanton
1988, Journal of the Geological Society (145) 613-620
Depositional controls on peat-forming environments which produce thick (>10m) coal beds can be inferred from relationships between coal bed geometry, maceral composition and associated lithologies. Study of these relationships within sedimentary sequences associated with the Wyodak-Anderson (Palaeocene) and the Felix (Eocene) sub-bituminous coal beds in the Powder River Basin,...
National water-quality assessment: Future directions of the U.S. Geological Survey
Philip Cohen, William M. Alley, William G. Wilber
1988, Water Resources Bulletin (24) 1147-1151
Throughout U.S. history, the Nation has made major investments in assessing natural resources, such as soils, minerals, and hydrocarbons. The maintenance and the improvement of water quality has been one of the major areas of public investment and government regulation. One of the contributions the U.S. Geological Survey proposes to...