Fission-track evidence for Quaternary uplift of the Nanga Parbat region, Pakistan
P.K. Zeitler, N.M. Johnson, C. W. Naeser, R.A.K. Tahirkheli
1982, Nature (298) 255-257
The north-striking Nanga Parbat-Haramosh Massif protrudes into the northwestern Himalaya along the axis of a great syntaxis1,2 (Fig. 1), where the Hindu Kush, Karakorum, and Himalayan ranges converge. As the Indus Suture Zone3 enters this region from the east it bifurcates into two branches, encircling what may be a docked...
Sources, sinks and storage of river sediments in the Atlantic drainage of the United States
R.H. Meade
1982, Journal of Geology (90) 235-252
The history of sediment and its movement in the Atlantic drainage demonstrate some of the difficulties of modeling sediment on a river-basin scale. Soil erosion was accelerated by a factor of at least 10 when European settlers cleared forests and planted crops. Although increasing soil-conservation practice and decreasing crop farming...
Three FORTRAN programs for finite-difference solutions to binary diffusion in one and two phases with composition-and time-dependent diffusion coefficients
R.F. Sanford
1982, Computers & Geosciences (8) 235-263
Geological examples of binary diffusion are numerous. They are potential indicators of the duration and rates of geological processes. Analytical solutions to the diffusion equations generally do not allow for variable diffusion coefficients, changing boundary conditions, and impingement of diffusion fields. The three programs presented here are based on Crank-Nicholson...
Stratigraphic reference section for Georges Bank Basin - Depositional model for New England passive margin.
C. Wylie Poag
1982, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (66) 1021-1041
A multichannel seismic reflection profile (U.S. Geological Survey line 19), calibrated with the COST G-1, COST G-2, and Shell Mohican I-100 wells, and seismic-sequence analysis shows that the chronostratigraphic and lithostratigraphic units and depositional history of the Georges Bank basin are similar to those of the Scotian basin. Carbonate rocks...
Mineral composition of small-grain cultivars from a uniform test plot in South Dakota
J. A. Erdman, R.C. Moul
1982, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (30) 169-174
Seventy-five cultivated varieties (cultivars) of hard red spring wheat (HRS), hard red winter wheat (HRW), durum wheat, oats, and barley were harvested in 1974 from a small-grain trial plot in Harding County, SD, just north of Buffalo. Analysis of the grains reported here includes crude protein for only the wheat...
A relation between landsat digital numbers, surface reflectance, and the cosine of the solar zenith angle
William S. Kowalik, Stuart E. Marsh, Ronald J. P. Lyon
1982, Remote Sensing of Environment (12) 39-55
A method for estimating the reflectance of ground sites from satellite radiance data is proposed and tested. The method uses the known ground reflectance from several sites and satellite data gathered over a wide range of solar zenith angles. The method was tested on each of 10 different Landsat images...
Stability of βMnOOH and manganese oxide deposition from springwater
J.D. Hem, C. E. Roberson, Reba B. Fournier
1982, Water Resources Research (18) 563-570
Beta MnOOH is precipitated preferentially (with respect to Mn3O4) at temperatures near O°C when Mn2+ is oxidized in aerated aqueous solutions. Upon aging in solutions open to the atmosphere a slurry of βMnOOH tends to disproportionate to form MnO2 and Mn2+. In such aged solutions, Mn2+ and H+ activities can be constant, and both...
Map reading tools for map libraries.
G.L. Greenberg
1982, Information Bulletin, Western Association of Map Libraries (13) 290-300
Engineers, navigators and military strategists employ a broad array of mechanical devices to facilitate map use. A larger number of map users such as educators, students, tourists, journalists, historians, politicians, economists and librarians are unaware of the available variety of tools which can be used with maps to increase the...
An automatic optimum kernel-size selection technique for edge enhancement
Pat S. Chavez Jr., Brian P. Bauer
1982, Remote Sensing of Environment (12) 23-38
Edge enhancement is a technique that can be considered, to a first order, a correction for the modulation transfer function of an imaging system. Digital imaging systems sample a continuous function at discrete intervals so that high-frequency information cannot be recorded at the same precision as lower frequency data. Because...
Water-soluble material on aerosols collected within volcanic eruption clouds
D. B. Smith, R. A. Zielinski, W.I. Rose Jr., B.J. Huebert
1982, Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans (87) 4963-4972
In February and March of 1978, filter samplers mounted on an aircraft were used to collect the aerosol fraction of the eruption clouds from three active Guatemalan volcanoes (Fuego, Pacaya, and Santiaguito). The samples were collected on Teflon (Fluoropore) filters with a nominal pore diameter of 0.5μm. The mass of...
Biological effects of dietary T-2 toxin on rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri
H. A. Poston, J. L. Coffine, G. F. Combs Jr.
1982, Aquatic Toxicology (2) 79-88
A 16-wk feeding study was conducted to evaluate the chronic toxicity of graded levels (0, 1.0, 2.5.5, 10 and 15 mg/kg of chemically pure dietary T-2 toxin (4,15-diacetoxy-8-(3-methylbutyryloxy)-12,13-epoxy-Δ9-tricothecen-3-ol) in 1-g rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri, held in 9°C single-passage well water. Levels of T-2 toxin > 2.5 mg/kg depressed growth, efficiency of...
Biostratigraphy and structural setting of the Permian Coyote Butte Formation of central Oregon
B. R. Wardlaw, M.K. Nestell, J.T. Dutro Jr.
1982, Geology (10) 13-16
Larger isolated outcrops of the limestones of the Coyote Butte Formation consistently contain younger over older faunas that range through most of the Leonardian Series of the Early Permian. The outcrops of the Coyote Butte Formation are interpreted as right-side up blocks probably...
The graphic cell method: a new look at digitizing geologic maps
J.T. Hanley
1982, Computers & Geosciences (8) 149-161
The graphic cell method is an alternative method of digitizing areal geologic information. It involves a discrete-point sampling scheme in which the computer establishes a matrix of cells over the map. Each cell and the whole cell is assigned the identity or value of the geologic information that is recognized...
Incorporation of prior information on parameters into nonlinear regression groundwater flow models: 1. Theory
Richard L. Cooley
1982, Water Resources Research (18) 965-976
Prior information on the parameters of a groundwater flow model can be used to improve parameter estimates obtained from nonlinear regression solution of a modeling problem. Two scales of prior information can be available: (1) prior information having known reliability (that is, bias and random error structure) and (2) prior...
Differential compaction mechanism for earth fissures near Casa Grande, Arizona
R.C. Jachens, T.L. Holzer
1982, Geological Society of America Bulletin (93) 998-1012
Precise gravity measurements indicate that earth fissures or tension cracks caused by ground-water withdrawal within a 10-km2 area southeast of Casa Grande, Arizona, are associated with relief on the buried interface between the alluvial aquifer and underlying bedrock. All of the fissure zones; which...
An analysis of input errors in precipitation-runoff models using regression with errors in the independent variables
Brent M. Troutman
1982, Water Resources Research (18) 947-964
Errors in runoff prediction caused by input data errors are analyzed by treating precipitation-runoff models as regression (conditional expectation) models. Independent variables of the regression consist of precipitation and other input measurements; the dependent variable is runoff. In models using erroneous input data, prediction errors are inflated and estimates of...
Stratigraphy, structure, absolute age, and paleontology of the upper Pleistocene deposits at Sankaty Head, Nantucket Island, Massachusetts
Robert N. Oldale, Page C. Valentine, T. M. Cronin, E.C. Spiker, B. W. Blackwelder, D. F. Belknap, J.F. Wehmiller, Barney J. Szabo
1982, Geology (10) 246-252
The Sankaty Head cliff exposes drift of at least two glaciations and interglacial marine deposits. Radiocarbon, amino-acid- racemization, and uranium-thorium analyses were used to determine the absolute ages of the beds. The results indicate that 1) the Sankaty Sand correlates with oxygen-isotope stage 5 (Sangamonian), 2) the underlying drift is...
The mobility of uranium and other elements during alteration of rhyolite ash to montmorillonite: A case study in the Troublesome Formation, Colorado, U.S.A.
R. A. Zielinski
1982, Chemical Geology (35) 185-204
An unusual occurrence of juxtaposed glassy and clay-altered ash was sampled to estimate the degree and type of element mobility during alteration of glass to montmorillonite. The results are particularly interesting in that major mobilization of uranium is indicated. Closely spaced samples of glassy and montmorillonitic ash were collected from...
A quantitative index of soil development from field descriptions: Examples from a chronosequence in central California
J.W. Harden
1982, Geoderma (28) 1-28
A soil development index has been developed in order to quantitatively measure the degree of soil profile development. This index, which combines eight soil field properties with soil thickness, is designed from field descriptions of the Merced River chronosequence in central California. These eight properties are: clay films, texture plus...
The UThPb age of equilibrated L chondrites and a solution to the excess radiogenic Pb problem in chondrites
D.M. Unruh
1982, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (58) 75-94
U, Th, and Pb analyses of whole-rock and troilite separates from seven L chondrites suggest that the excess radiogenic Pb relative to U and the large variations in PbPb model ages commonly observed in chondritic meteorites are largely due to terrestrial Pb contamination induced prior to...
Geomagnetic local and regional harmonic analyses
L.R. Alldredge
1982, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (87) 1921-1926
Procedures are developed for using rectangular and cylindrical harmonic analyses in local and regional areas. Both the linear least squares analysis, applicable when component data are available, and the nonlinear least squares analysis, applicable when only total field data are available, are treated. When component data are available, it is...
Hydrologic inferences from ring widths of flood-damaged trees, Potomac River, Maryland
T.M. Yanosky
1982, Environmental Geology (4) 43-52
Year-to-year variability in the ring widths of trees on flood plains along two reaches of the Potomac River near Washington, D.C., seems in large part to be related to differences in flood-flow regimes. Trees directly exposed to high flood velocities are damaged more often than sheltered trees and thus exhibit...
Low-temperature formation of hydrocarbon gases in San Francisco Bay sediment (California, U.S.A.)
T.M. Vogel, R.S. Oremland, K.A. Kvenvolden
1982, Chemical Geology (37) 289-298
To understand the processes responsible for the presence of low-molecular-weight hydrocarbons (C1-C4) in anoxic environments, we studied sediments collected from an anaerobic estuarine mudflat. In these sediments methane (C1) was several orders of magnitude more abundant than all other C2-C4 hydrocarbons; the C1 (C2 + C3) ratio was ??? 13,000....
Sediment deposition in a flood retention structure after two record floods in southwestern Wisconsin.
P.A. Kammerer Jr., W. G. Batten
1982, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (37) 302-304
Sediment deposited in a flood-control structure was measured after record floods in SW Wisconsin on June 17 and June 30-July 1, 1978. The structure is in the Driftless Area, where high relief, erodible soils, and land use contribute to high soil losses. The two floods deposited 4.1 acre-ft of sediment...
Estimation of earthquake source parameters by the inversion of waveform data: synthetic waveforms
S.A. Sipkin
1982, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (30) 242-259
Two methods are presented for the recovery of a time-dependent moment-tensor source from waveform data. One procedure utilizes multichannel signal-enhancement theory; in the other a multichannel vector-deconvolution approach, developed by Oldenburg (1982) and based on Backus-Gilbert inverse theory, is used. These methods have the advantage of being extremely flexible; both...