GIRAS TO MOSS INTERFACE.
Thomas P. DiNardo, R. Alan Jackson
1984, Conference Paper
An analysis of land use change for an area in Boulder County, Colorado, was conducted using digital cartographic data. The authors selected data in the Geographic Information Retrieval and Analysis System (GIRAS) format which is digitized from the 1:250,000-scale land use and land cover map series. The Map Overlay and...
Synchrotron radiation determination of elemental concentrations in coal
J.R. Chen, N. Martys, E. C. T. Chao, J.A. Minkin, C.L. Thompson, A.L. Hanson, H.W. Kraner, K.W. Jones, B.M. Gordon, R.E. Mills
1984, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms (3) 241-245
The variations with depth of the elemental concentrations in vitrinites in a series of vitrites have been determined using radiation from the Cornell high energy synchrotron source. All of the vitrites were selected from a single drill core sample of coal from the Emery coalfield, Utah. The results are compared...
Mineral resources of the Tracy Arm-Fords Terror Wilderness Study Area and vicinity, Alaska
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1984, Bulletin 1525
No abstract available....
Reaction rate kinetics for in situ combustion retorting of Michigan Antrim oil shale
M. Rostam-Abadi, R.W. Mickelson
1984, Conference Paper, Preprints
The intrinsic reaction rate kinetics for the pyrolysis of Michigan Antrim oil shale and the oxidation of the carbonaceous residue of this shale have been determined using a thermogravimetric analysis method. The kinetics of the pyrolysis reaction were evaluated from both isothermal and nonisothermal rate data. The reaction was found...
The Jeanie Point complex revisited
Julie A. Dumoulin, Marti L. Miller
1984, Circular 868
The so-called Jeanie Point complex is a distinctive package of rocks within the Orca Group, a Tertiary turbidite sequence. The rocks crop out on the southeast coast of Montague Island, Prince William Sound, approximately 3 km northeast of Jeanie Point (loc. 7, fig. 44). These rocks consist dominantly of fine-grained...
Peralkaline ash flow tuffs and calderas of the McDermitt Volcanic Field, southeast Oregon and north central Nevada
J. J. Rytuba, E.H. McKee
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (89) 8616-8628
The McDermitt volcanic field covers an area of 20,000 km2 in southeastern Oregon and northwestern Nevada and consists of seven large-volume ash flow sheets that vented from 16.1 to 15 Ma ago. The volcanic field is characterized by peralkaline, high-silica rhyolite, and all but one of the sheets are comendites. The...
Reconnaissance geochemical assessment of metallic mineral resource potential, Riordan's Well Wilderness Study Area (NV 040-166), Nye County, Nevada
A. H. Hofstra, E. L. Rowan, G.W. Day
1984, Open-File Report 84-781
No abstract available....
Lead poisoning of sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis)
R. M. Windingstad, S.M. Kerr, L. N. Locke, J. J. Hurt
1984, Prairie Naturalist (16) 21-24
Two wild and two captive sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) were diagnosed by National Wildlife Health Laboratory personnel as having died from lead toxicity. Ingestion of lead fishing weights by the wild cranes and of unspent .22 caliber shell cartridges by the captive cranes were responsible for these deaths. One crane...
The isotope systematics of a juvenile intraplate volcano: Pb, Nd, and Sr isotope ratios of basalts from Loihi Seamount, Hawaii
H. Staudigel, A. Zindler, S.R. Hart, T. Leslie, C.-Y. Chen, D. Clague
1984, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (69) 13-29
Sr, Nd, and Pb isotope ratios for a representative suite of 15 basanites, alkali basalts, transitional basalts and tholeiites from Loihi Seamount, Hawaii, display unusually large variations for a single volcano, but lie within known ranges for Hawaiian basalts. Nd isotope...
Renal coccidiosis in interior Canada geese, Branta canadensis interior Todd, of the Mississippi Valley population
Benjamin N. Tuggle, John L. Crites
1984, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (20) 272-278
Kidneys from 309 Interior Canada geese from three locations in the Mississippi Flyway were examined for renal coccidia. Oocysts and/or young zygotes of Eimeria sp. were found in 6.8% of goose kidneys sampled. Only one type of renal coccidian oocyst was observed. Significantly more immature...
Reconnaissance geochemical assessment of the Clover Mountains Bureau of Land Management Wilderness Study Area (NV-050-139), Lincoln County, Nevada
J. D. Hoffman, G.W. Day
1984, Open-File Report 84-654
No abstract available....
Observations on burrowing rates and comments on host specificity in the endangered mussel Lampsilis higginsi
J.R. Sylvester, L. E. Holland, T.K. Kamer
1984, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (2) 555-559
In preliminary laboratory studies, the endangered mussel Lampsitis higginsi was unable to burrow into rocky substrates, but did burrow into substrates comprised of silt, clay, sand, and/or pebble-gravel. Burrowing times were shortest in silt and longest in pebble-gravel. As judged by longevity of glochidial infection, walleye (Stizostedion vitreum) and largemouth...
Archaeological sedimentology of overbank silt deposits on the floodplain of the Ohio River near Louisville, Kentucky
H.H. Gray
1984, Journal of Archaeological Science (11) 421-432
The surface of the floodplain of the Ohio River about 20km southwest of Louisville, Kentucky, is a series of linear ridges and swales that are subparallel to the channel of the river, which here is relatively straight and flows southward. Numerous prehistoric occupational sites are located on these ridges. The...
Relationship between quantity and quality of storm runoff and various watershed characteristics in Minnesota, USA
Rob G. Brown
1984, Conference Paper
Watersheds are rural areas undergoing urbanization with current urban land use comprising 4 to 58 percent of the watershed area. The quantity and quality of storm runoff in the watersheds was tested for correlations (significance level of 0. 05) with various land-surface features and landuse characteristics. Quantity of storm runoff...
Map showing outcrops of pre-Quaternary ash-flow tuffs and volcaniclastic rocks, Basin and Range province, Arizona
J. E. Jenness, D. A. Lopez, J. R. LaFortune
1984, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4114-F
No abstract available....
Floods of April 18, 1983 on St. Thomas and St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands
R. E. Curtis Jr.
1984, Water-Resources Investigations Report 84-4184
The U.S. Virgin Islands of St. Thomas and St. John experienced the most intense rainfall event in recorded history on April 18, 1983. Rainfall intensities of 2.5 inches per hour, and more than 16 inches in 18 hours were recorded. Almost instantaneous runoff caused widespread flooding near the coastlines of...
LASER MICROPROBE **4**0Ar/**3**9Ar DATING OF MINERAL GRAINS IN SITU.
J. F. Sutter, Jack B. Hartung
1984, Scanning Electron Microscopy 1525-1529
A laser-microprobe attached to a mass spectrometer for **4**0Ar/**3**9Ar age determination of single mineral grains in geological materials has been made operational at the US Geological Survey, Reston, VA. This microanalytical technique involves focusing a pulsed laser beam onto a sample contained in an ultra-high vacuum chamber attached to a...
Analysis of trace metals in water by inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry using sodium dibenzyldithiocarbamate for preconcentration
C. L. Smith, Jerry M. Motooka, W. R. Willson
1984, Analytical Letters (17) 1715-1730
Since concentrations of trace elements in most natural waters seldom exceed the μg/L level, analysis of trace elements in natural waters by inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry (ICP) requires a preconcentration procedure. The elements Ag, Bi, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Mo, Ni, Pb, Sn, V, W, and Zn were separated...
CHARACTERIZATION OF SECONDARY ALTERATION IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER BASALT BY BACKSCATTERED ELECTRON IMAGING AND ENERGY-DISPERSIVE X-RAY SPECTROSCOPY.
P.P. Hearn, W.C. Steinkampf, Z. A. Brown
Romig Alton D.Jr.Goldstein Joseph I., editor(s)
1984, Conference Paper, Proceedings, Annual Conference - Microbeam Analysis Society
The thick sequences of flood basalts which underlie the Columbia River basin are important aquifiers, providing water for both agricultural and domestic use. Secondary alteration in these rocks occurs primarily as coatings or fillings in fractures and vesicles; alteration is generally believed to have occurred at low temperatures ( less...
New data for iimoriite.
E.E. Foord, M.H. Staatz, N. M. Conklin
1984, American Mineralogist (69) 196-199
In its first reported occurrence outside of Japan, iimoriite, Y2(SiO4)(CO3), has been found in a thorite- and uraninite-bearing quartz and albite vein from Bokan Mountain on Prince of Wales Island, Alaska. It occurs as buff-tan subhedral and anhedral grains, 0.01-0.5 mm in diameter, with vitreous lustre, white streak, and H....
On the treatment of evapotranspiration, soil moisture accounting, and aquifer recharge in monthly water balance models
William M. Alley
1984, Water Resources Research (20) 1137-1149
Several two- to six-parameter regional water balance models are examined by using 50-year records of monthly streamflow at 10 sites in New Jersey. These models include variants of the Thornthwaite-Mather model, the Palmer model, and the more recent Thomas abcd model. Prediction errors are relatively similar among the models. However, simulated values...
Stratiform tourmalinites in metamorphic terranes and their geologic significance
J. F. Slack, N. Herriman, R.G. Barnes, I.R. Plimer
1984, Geology (12) 713-716
Stratiform tourmalinites are significant minor rock types in many regional metamorphic terranes of the world. Tourmalinites are more widespread than previously recognized and are especially common in Proterozoic and early Paleozoic sequences dominated by clastic metasedimentary rocks. They consist of conformable layers made...
Long-term observations of bottom conditions and sediment movement on the Atlantic continental shelf; time-lapse photography from instrumented tripod
Bradford Butman, Cynthia G. Bryden, Stephanie L. Pfirman, William J. Strahle, Marlene A. Noble
1984, Conference Paper
An instrument system that measures bottom current, temperature, light transmission, and pressure, and that photographs the bottom at 2- to 6-hour intervals has been developed to study sediment transport on the Atlantic Continental Shelf. Instruments have been deployed extensively along the United States East Coast Continental Shelf for periods of...
Hydrothermal minerology of research drill hole Y-3, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
Keith E. Bargar, Melvin H. Beeson
1984, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
The approximate paragenetic sequence of hydrothermal minerals in the Y-3 U. S. Geological Survey research diamond-drill hole in Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, is: hydrothermal chalcedony, hematite, pyrite, quartz, clay minerals (smectite and mixed-layer illite-smectite), calcite, chlorite, fluorite, pyrite, quartz, zeolite minerals (analcime, dachiardite, laumontite, stilbite, and yugawaralite),...
Evidence for tectonic emplacement of ultramafic and associated rocks in the pre-Silurian eugeoclinal belt of western New England: Vestiges of an ancient accretionary wedge
Rolfe S. Stanley, D. L. Roy, Norman L. Hatch, Douglas A. Knapp
1984, American Journal of Science (284) 559-595
In northern Vermont, detailed 1:10,000 mapping of the Hazens Notch, Ottauquechee, Stowe, and Moretown formations in the 60 km 2 Jay area has shown that metasedimentary rocks and serpentinites are highly faulted to produce a tectonic stratigraphy in which serpentinites and talc-carbonate rocks occur as slivers along faults that separate contrasting lithic...