Use of machine-processable field notes in a wilderness mapping project (Granite Fiords area), southeastern Alaska
Henry C. Berg, James G. Smith
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 579-585
For reconnaissance geologic mapping and mineral resource evaluation of the Granite Fiords wilderness study area, we developed and used a system of machine-processable field notes. Preprinted field forms standardize notes and serve as checklists that insure collection of all available data. The use of this system cut in half the time required to record data...
Disseminated pyrite in a latite porphyry at Texan Mountain, Hudspeth County, Texas
Thomas E. Mullens
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 519-521
A pyrite-bearing latite porphyry that contains fragments of syenite and a quartz porphyry intruded into the Cretaceous Cox Sandstone are well exposed in a roadcut at Texan Mountain, Hudspeth County, Tex. The pyrite, which occurs along tiny fractures as well as disseminated, and the multiple episodes of intrusion, coupled with copper minerals in veins in...
Soda Creek springs - metamorphic waters in the eastern Alaska Range
D.H. Richter, D.E. Donaldson, R.A. Lamarre
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 523-528
The Soda Creek springs are a group of small, cold mineral springs on the southern flank of the eastern Alaska Range. The spring waters contain anomalous concentrations of carbon dioxide, sodium, chlorine, sulfate, boron, and ammonia and are actively precipitating deposits of calcite and aragonite. Sparingly present in these deposits are mixed-layer illite-montmorillonite clays and...
The Dun Mountain ultramafic belt Permian oceanic crust and upper mantle in New Zealand
M.C. Blake Jr., C. A. Landis
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 529-534
Geologic evidence suggests that the Dun Mountain ultramafic belt in New Zealand is the basal part of a Lower Permian ophiolite suite. By analogy with other ophiolite suites, and as a result of marine geophysical studies of the present ocean basins, the ophiolite is believed to represent oceanic crust and upper mantle upon which...
A calorimetric determination of the standard enthalpies of formation of huntite, CaMg3 (CO3)4 , and artinite, Mg2(OH)2 CO3 * 3H2O, and their standard Gibbs free energies of formation
Bruce S. Hemingway, Richard A. Robie
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 535-541
The enthalpies of formation, ΔH°f, of huntite, CaMg3(CO3)4 , and artinite, Mg2(OH)2CO3 * 3H2O, have been determined by HCl solution calorimetry using a constant-volume isoperibol reaction calorimeter. For the reaction CaO(c) + 3MgO(c) + 4CO2 (g) = CaMg3(CO3)4 (c), the enthalpy change at 298.15 K, ΔH°298 , is -123,203±145 cal mol-1. For the reaction 2MgO(c) +...
Spectrochemical computer analysis - argon-oxygen d-c arc method for silicate rocks
A. F. Dorrzapf Jr.
1973, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (1) 559-562
Use of an argon-oxygen atmosphere eliminates the interference of cyanogen bands with many sensitive analytical lines. The jet-controlled atmosphere also improves the stability of the arc. These procedural changes, coupled with computerized analysis of the spectra, result in increased detectability, precision, and speed as compared to the former visual semiquantitative technique....
Gold abundance in igneous rocks; bearing on gold mineralization
Robert I. Tilling, David Gottfried, Jack J. Rowe
1973, Economic Geology (68) 168-186
Review of quantitative data, restricted range in gold content (rarely more than 10 ppb, generally below 5 ppb), mafic rocks have more, so do early crystallizing minerals, no use in exploration, factors other than concentration determine mineralization; examples...
Boulder Batholith, Montana: A product of two contemporaneous but chemically distinct magma series
Robert I. Tilling
1973, GSA Bulletin (84) 3879-3900
Rocks of the Late Cretaceous composite Boulder batholith, though successively emplaced in a relatively small segment of the Earth's crust within a very brief time span (78 to 68 m.y.), can be grouped chemically into two magma series: (1) the main series, defined principally by plutons in the central and northern...
Analysis of radiotracking data using digitized habitat maps
D.S. Gilmer, S.E. Miller, L.M. Cowardin
1973, Journal of Wildlife Management (37) 404-409
A method is described that provides a rapid and accurate analysis of habitat used by radio-equipped animals. The digitizer (basically an X-Y plotter in reverse) converts maps into digital form by describing each habitat unit as a polygon that closely approximates the actual shape of the unit. The coordinates of...
Mercury residues in pintails breeding in North Dakota
Gary L. Krapu, G.A. Swanson, H.K. Nelson
1973, Journal of Wildlife Management (37) 395-399
Livers of 42 pintail hens (Anas acuta) breeding in eastern North Dakota during the spring and early summer of 1969 and 1970 were analyzed for total mercury by the neutron activation technique. Mercury content on a...
Hydraulics of sheetlike solution cavities
Gerald K. Moore
1973, Groundwater (11) 4-11
The sheetlike solution cavities that supply water to most wells in central Tennessee are 100 to 2,500 feet wide and less than 0.2 inch high. These dimensions have a scale similar to those in Hele-Shaw models. Both logical and mathematical evidence indicate laminar ground-water flow, except close to pumping wells....
Thermochemical approximations for sulfosalts
James R. Craig, Paul B. Barton Jr.
1973, Economic Geology (68) 493-506
Most sulfosalts may be regarded as intermediate phases on joins between simple sulfide components (e.g., all lead sulfbismuthinides lie on the PbS-Bi 2 S 3 join). Many of the structures are characterized by subunits whose individual structures are similar to those of the component simple sulfides (e.g., galena-like and stibnite-like layers in the lead...
Potassium-Argon ages for minerals from the Ross of Mull, Argyllshire, Scotland
R. D. Beckinsale, J. D. Obradovich
1973, Scottish Journal of Geology (9) 147-156
Sixteen K-Ar ages for samples of biotite and amphibole from the Ross of Mull and analytical data for the standards Bern 4M and W1 are presented. Ages determined for biotite and amphibole samples from the Caledonian pluton average 423 ± 4 m.y. and 416 ± 4 m.y. respectively. Field observations...
Geochemical and fluid zonation at Copper Canyon, Lander County, Nevada
Ted G. Theodore, J. Thomas Nash
1973, Economic Geology (68) 565-570
No abstract available....
The bearing of the new Late Cambrian monoplacophoran genus Knightoconus upon the origin of the Cephalopoda
1973, Lethaia (6) 275-309
Knightoconus, a new genus of the Hypseloconidae (Mollusca: Monoplacophora) from rocks of early Franconian age in Antarctica, is multiseptate. The multiple septa are a criticàl feature to be expected in a form ancestral to cephalopods. Fossil cephalopods, however, invariably have a siphuncle as well as septa; some gastropods, some hyolithids,...
The bearing of the new Late Cambrian monoplacophoran genus Knightoconus upon the origin of the Cephalopoda
Ellis L. Yochelson, Rousseau H. Flower, Gerald F. Webers
1973, Lethaia (6) 275-309
Knightoconus, a new genus of the Hypseloconidae (Mollusca: Monoplacophora) from rocks of early Franconian age in Antarctica, is multiseptate. The multiple septa are a criticàl feature to be expected in a form ancestral to cephalopods. Fossil cephalopods, however, invariably have a siphuncle as well as septa; some gastropods, some hyolithids,...
Ground water and geology of Baraga County, Michigan
C. J. Doonan, J.R. Byerlay
1973, Water Investigation 11
Most wells In Baraga County obtain water from beds of sand and gravel in morainal and lakebed deposits or from the Jacobsville Sandstone. Yields of wells range from a few to as much as 115 gallons per minute, but most wells probably yield less than 10 gpm. Large areas, where...
Interpretation of a high-grade Precambrian terrane in northern Idaho
Sandra H. B. Clark
1973, Geological Society of America Bulletin (84) 1999-2004
A terrane of high-grade metamorphic rocks in northern Idaho and northeastern Washington is almost completely surrounded by low-grade rocks of the Precambrian Belt Supergroup. The high-grade terrane includes both Belt and pre-Belt rocks. Four events of folding and metamorphism occurred in the high-grade terrane. The first three events may have...
Radiometric ages of intrusive rocks in the Little Belt Mountains, Montana
Richard F. Marvin, Irving J. Witkind, William R. Keefer, Harald H. Mehnert
1973, Geological Society of America Bulletin (84) 1977-1986
Radiometric ages indicate that most, if not all, of the major intrusions in the Little Belt Mountains, central Montana, were emplaced during the Eocene epoch, between 48 and 54 m.y. ago. In the Hughesville area, igneous activity continued, or was episodic until 42 m.y. ago. As a result of the...
Origin of andesitic and granitic magmas in the northern Sierra Nevada, California
Anna Hietanen
1973, Geological Society of America Bulletin (84) 2111-2118
The early magmas of the northern Sierra Nevada, calc-alkaline andesite of island-arc type and its derivatives, all low in potassium, were generated during the Devonian(?) period, possibly along an eastward-dipping sub-duction zone. These magmas could have been derived from mantle peridotite of the continental plate by introduction of water from...
Petrogenesis of the Superstition-Superior volcanic area as inferred from strontium- and oxygen-isotope studies
John S. Stuckless, James R. O’Neil
1973, Geological Society of America Bulletin (84) 1987-1997
Apparent initial Sr87/Sr86 ratios of five ash-flow tuffs (0.7063 to 0.7139) and several mafic to silicic lavas (0.7055 to 0.7131) indicate that the magmas were derived below the base of the Precambrian granitic crust (0.7231 to 1.0906). Liquidus compositions in the system Q-Or-Ab-H2O and oxygen-isotope geother-mometry suggest that the silicic magmas...
Organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls in black duck eggs from the United States and Canada--1971
J. R. Longcore, B.M. Mulhern
1973, Pesticides Monitoring Journal (7) 62-66
Black duck (Anas rubripes) eggs were collected in 1971 from the Northeastern United States and Canada. All 61 eggs analyzed contained DDE residues; the mean DDE residues for States and Provinces ranged from 0.09 to 5.94 ppm on a wet-weight basis, with.mean concentrations exceeding 1.0 ppm in eggs from Maine,...
Mapping of the 1973 Mississippi River floods from the Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS)
Morris Deutsch, F. H. Ruggles, Philip Guss, Edward Yost
1973, Conference Paper, Remote sensing and water resources management
On March 31, and May 4 and 5, 1973, the first Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS-1) obtained multispectral scanner imagery over the Mississippi River below St. Louis, Missouri. The river was in flood, and the ERTS data provided the first opportunity for regional synoptic mapping of the extent of flooding...
Referees and the publications crisis
Frank T. Manheim
1973, Eos, Earth and Space Science News (54) 532-537
Routine refereeing by peers of manuscripts submitted to scholarly journals is a logical and effective device that can obviate ‘crankiness, irrelevance and gross incompetence’ [Ziman, 1970a] on the one hand and minimize editorial arbitrariness on the other. As reviewed by Zuckerman and Merton [1971], the device has historical roots that extend back...
Fordilla troyensis Barrande: The oldest known pelecypod
J. Pojeta Jr., B. Runnegar, J. Kriz
1973, Science (180) 866-868
Specimens of the small bivalved animal Fordilla troyensis Barrande from New York State show that this fossil is the oldest known pelecypod mollusk and not a conchostracan arthropod. This finding extends the range of the class Pelecypoda backward in time from the Early Ordovician (about 495 million years ago)...