INDUCED SEISMICITY MECHANISM AT THE GEYSERS, CALIFORNIA.
David Oppenheimer
1985, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Induced microearthquake activity at The Geysers geothermal reservoir is observed in the vicinity of eight geothermal steam power units. The earthquakes do not align with mapped faults but occur adjacent to steam wells. The sense of motion as deduced from focal mechanisms is strike-slip to reverse in the upper 1...
U. S. G. S. MODULAR GROUND-WATER FLOW MODEL: DESIGNED TO BE UNDERSTOOD AND ADAPTED.
Michael G. McDonald, Arlen W. Harbaugh
1985, Conference Paper
The paper discusses a carefully designed model program and its complementary complete description of all of the physical and mathematical concepts used in the model. The model program consists of a series of independent subroutines called modules. Modules are grouped by hydrologic function into 'packages. ' A report describing the...
Impulsive radon emanation on a creeping segment of the San Andreas fault, California
C.-Y. King
1985, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (122) 340-352
Radon emanation was continuously monitored for several months at two locations along a creeping segment of the San Andreas fault in central California. The recorded emanations showed several impulsive increases that lasted as much as five hours with amplitudes considerably larger than meteorologically induced diurnal variations. Some of the radon...
TEMPERATURE VARIATION WITH TIME IN A PERENNIALLY BOILING WELL IN THE LONG VALLEY CALDERA, MONO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA; OBSERVATIONS IN CHANCE NO. 1 (1976-1983).
W.H. Diment, T. C. Urban, Manuel Nathenson
1985, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Chance No. 1 was drilled to a depth of 245. 4 m and cased to a depth of 72. 2 m in 1961. Temperature logs were obtained in 1976, 1982, and 1983, with the casing open to the atmosphere. Water was boiling at the surface of the fluid column on...
APPLICATION OF THE AERIAL PROFILING OF TERRAIN SYSTEM.
Edward J. Cyran
1985, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
The U. S. Geological Survey has completed the performance evaluation flight tests of the Aerial Profiling of Terrain System (APTS) and is now performing a series of application tests to determine its effectiveness and efficiency as an earth-science data collection tool. These tests are designed to evaluate the APTS at...
Mineral, chemical and textural relationships in rhythmic-bedded, hydrocarbon-productive chalk of the Niobrara Formation, Denver Basin, Colorado ( USA).
R. M. Pollastro, C.J. Martinez
1985, Mountain Geologist (22) 55-63
The types of hydrocarbons produced from these chalks are determined by the level of thermal maturity associated with present-day burial or paleoburial conditions. Detailed analyses of deeply-buried chalk from core of the Smoky Hill Chalk Member of the Niobrara Formation in the Champlin Petroleum 2 Boxelder Farms well combined with...
Hydrologic changes associated with the October 28, 1983, Idaho earthquake
R.L. Whitehead, R.W. Harper, H.G. Sisco
1985, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (122) 280-293
Significant hydrologic changes were observed after the magnitude 7.3 earthquake that occurred on October 28, 1983, in central Idaho. Groundwater levels rose by as much as 3 meters near the epicenter. Discharge in many streams and springs increased, in some instances by more than 100%. One warm spring ceased flowing...
Natural hazards activities of the National Geophysical Data Center
P. A. Lockridge
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 60-69
The National Geophysical Data Center (NGDC), a part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, has been given the task of collecting, managing, and disseminating the great mass of inofmation produced by scientific observations of the geophysical environment. This article describes NGDC data bases that speifically relate to natural hazards. ...
Reducing losses from earthquakes through personal preparedness
W. J. Kockelman
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 50-59
Actions to reduce earthquake hazards can be divided into five phases:two occur before the event, one during the event, and two after the event. The phases are: (1) Mitigation techniques taken anywhere from 1 to 20 years before the event, (2) preparedness measures taken 1 to 20 weeks before the...
Geochemical processes in the Gascoyne Lignite Mining Area, Bowman County, North Dakota
D. W. Fisher, D. C. Thorstenson, M. G. Croft, R. L. Houghton
1985, Water-Resources Investigations Report 84-4192
NoticeThe publication has been withdrawn because it contained errors or contained information that could not be verified for accuracy....
Depositional Relations of Umpqua and Tyee Formations (Eocene), Southwestern Oregon
C. M. Molenaar
1985, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (69) 1217-1229
Studies of the depositional relations of the Umpqua and Tyee Formations (Eocene) in southwestern Oregon indicate a need for reassessing the correlations and currently used terminology. The Umpqua Formation (as herein restricted) consists of as much as 10,000 ft (3,000 m) of mudstone, sandstone, and conglomerate of nonmarine to deep...
Precambrian tholeiitic-dacitic rock-suites and Cambrian ultramafic rocks in the Pennine nappe system of the Alps: Evidence from Sm-Nd isotopes and rare earth elements
P. Stille, M. Tatsumoto
1985, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (89) 184-192
Major element, trace element and Sm-Nd isotope analyses were made of polymetamorphic hornblendefelses, plagioclase amphibolites and banded amphibolites from the Berisal complex in the Simplon area (Italy, Switzerland) to determine their age, origin and genetic relationships. In light of major and rare earth element data, the hornblendefelses are inferred to...
Spatial analysis of extension fracture systems: A process modeling approach
C.C. Ferguson
1985, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (17) 403-425
Little consensus exists on how best to analyze natural fracture spacings and their sequences. Field measurements and analyses published in geotechnical literature imply fracture processes radically different from those assumed by theoretical structural geologists. The approach adopted in this paper recognizes that disruption of rock layers by layer-parallel extension results...
Tidal variation of seismic travel times in a Massachusetts granite quarry
Hsi-Ping Liu, Eugene D. Sembera, Robert E. Westerlund, Jon B. Fletcher, Paul Reasenberg, Duncan C. Agnew
1985, Geophysical Research Letters (12) 243-246
Conflicting results on tidal variation of seismic travel times exist in the literature. With improved methods, we have conducted a seismic survey at a Massachusetts granite quarry. The survey was conducted in the intervals (230d 23h, 231d11h) and (231d22h, 233d10h), 1983 (U.T.) along a 148 m...
Maximum likelihood estimation for periodic autoregressive moving average models
A. V. Vecchia
1985, Technometrics (27) 375-384
A useful class of models for seasonal time series that cannot be filtered or standardized to achieve second-order stationarity is that of periodic autoregressive moving average (PARMA) models, which are extensions of ARMA models that allow periodic (seasonal) parameters. An approximation to the exact likelihood for Gaussian PARMA processes is...
A new look at deep-sea video
H. Chezar, J. Lee
1985, Deep Sea Research Part A, Oceanographic Research Papers (32) 1429-1436
A deep-towed photographic system with completely self-contained recording instrumentation and power can obtain color-video and still-photographic transects along rough terrane without need for a long electrically conducting cable. Both the video- and still-camera systems utilize relatively inexpensive and proven off-the-shelf hardware adapted for deep-water environments. The small instrument frame makes...
The near-source strong-motion accelerograms recorded by an experimental array in Tangshan, China
K. Peng, Lingtian Xie, S. Li, D.M. Boore, W.D. Iwan, T.L. Teng
1985, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (38) 92-109
A joint research project on strong-motion earthquake studies between the People's Republic of China and the United States is in progress. As a part of this project, an experimental strong-motion array, consisting of twelve Kinemetrics PDR-1 Digital Event Recorders, was deployed in the meizoseismal area of the Ms = 7.8...
Ages of tuff beds at East African early hominid sites and sediments in the Gulf of Aden
A.M. Sarna-Wojcicki, C.E. Meyer, P.H. Roth, F. H. Brown
1985, Nature (313) 306-308
The early hominids of East Africa were dated by determining the ages of tuff beds at the sites. Despite much research using palaeomagnetic and K/Ar-dating techniques, some of those ages are still controversial 1,2. To obtain independent age estimates for these tephra layers, we have examined cores from DSDP Sites...
Time scales of circulation and mixing processes of San Francisco Bay waters
R. A. Walters, R. T. Cheng, T. J. Conomos
1985, Hydrobiologia (129) 13-36
Conceptual models for tidal period and low-frequency variations in sea level, currents, and mixing processes in the northern and southern reaches of San Francisco Bay describe the contrasting characteristics and dissimilar processes and rates in these embayments: The northern reach is a partially mixed estuary whereas the southern reach...
Role of small oil and gas fields in the United States
Richard F. Meyer, Mary L. Fleming
1985, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (69) 1950-1962
With the maturation of oil and gas production operations in a province or country, fields found by new-field wildcats diminish in size. The actual economic size cutoff is a function of such factors as depth, water depth offshore, and accessibility to transportation infrastructure. Because of the constraint of resource availability,...
Separation of solute and particulate vectors of heavy metal uptake in controlled suspension-feeding experiments with Macoma balthica
Ronald W. Harvey, Samuel N. Luoma
1985, Hydrobiologia (121) 97-102
Radioisotope labelling experiments with the estuarine clam, Macoma balthica, are described, in which a filter chamber device was used to separate solute metal uptake from uptake, of metals associated with suspended bacteria. Solute uptake contributed a majority of the 14-day total body burdens of 65Zn and 109Cd, whereas 57Co uptake...
Reports from the U.S. Geological Survey’s Cascades Volcano Observatory at Vancouver, Washington
S. Brantley, J. Power, L. Topinka
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 20-32
General P, type-I S, and type-II S waves in anelastic solids; inhomogeneous wave fields in low-loss solids
Roger D. Borcherdt, Leif Wennerberg
1985, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (75) 1729-1763
The physical characteristics for general plane-wave radiation fields in an arbitrary linear viscoelastic solid are derived. Expressions for the characteristics of inhomogeneous wave fields, derived in terms of those for homogeneous fields, are utilized to specify the characteristics and a set of reference curves for general P and S wave fields in arbitrary viscoelastic...
Estimating neighborhood variability with a binary comparison matrix.
D.L. Murphy
1985, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (51) 667-674
A technique which utilizes a binary comparison matrix has been developed to implement a neighborhood function for a raster format data base. The technique assigns an index value to the center pixel of 3- by 3-pixel neighborhoods. The binary comparison matrix provides additional information not found in two other neighborhood...
Phase relations and adiabats in boiling seafloor geothermal systems
J. L. Bischoff, Kenneth S. Pitzer
1985, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (75) 327-338
Observations of large salinity variations and vent temperatures in the range of 380–400°C suggest that boiling or two-phase separation may be occurring in some seafloor geothermal systems. Consideration of flow rates and the relatively small differences in density between vapors and...