YELLOWSTONE MAGMATIC-HYDROTHERMAL SYSTEM, U. S. A.
R.O. Fournier, A.D. Pitt
Stone Claudia, editor(s)
1985, Conference Paper
At Yellowstone National Park, the deep permeability and fluid circulation are probably controlled and maintained by repeated brittle fracture of rocks in response to local and regional stress. Focal depths of earthquakes beneath the Yellowstone caldera suggest that the transition from brittle fracture to quasi-plastic flow takes place at about...
Why deposits of longitudinal dunes are rarely recognized in the geologic record
David M. Rubin, Ralph E. Hunter
1985, Sedimentology (32) 147-157
Dunes that are morphologically of linear type, many of which are probably of longitudinal type in a morphodynamic sense, are common in modern deserts, but their deposits are rarely identified in aeolian sandstones. One reason for non-recognition of such dunes is that they can migrate laterally when they are not...
Use of strontium isotopes to constrain the timing and mode of dolomitization of upper Cenozoic sediments in a core from San Salvador, Bahamas
Peter K. Swart, Joaquin Ruiz, Charles W. Holmes
1985, Geology (15) 262-265
The 87Sr/86Sr ratios and the activity ratios of 234U/238U and 230Th/238U have been measured in dolomites from a 168-m-deep core taken on the island of San Salvador, Bahamas. These data suggest two periods of dolomitization. The first episode dolomitized Miocene age sediments during the latest Miocene, and the second dolomitized the Pliocene portion...
Bottom current and sediment transport on San Pedro Shelf, California
David E. Drake, David A. Cacchione, Herman A. Karl
1985, Journal of Sedimentary Research (55) 15-28
GEOPROBE (Geological Processes Bottom Environmental) tripods were used to measure bottom currents, pressure, and light transmission and scattering and to obtain time-series photographs of the sea floor at depths of 23 m and 67 m on San Pedro shelf between 18 April and 6 June 1978. Winds were light (<...
Deep continental margin reflectors
J. Ewing, J. Heirtzler, M. Purdy, Kim D. Klitgord
1985, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (66) 448-448
In contrast to the rarity of such observations a decade ago, seismic reflecting and refracting horizons are now being observed to Moho depths under continental shelves in a number of places. These observations provide knowledge of the entire crustal thickness from the shoreline to the oceanic crust on passive margins...
Ferromanganese crusts from Necker Ridge, Horizon Guyot and S.P. Lee Guyot: Geological considerations
James R. Hein, Frank T. Manheim, William C. Schwab, Alice S. Davis
1985, Marine Geology (69) 25-54
Necker Ridge, Horizon Guyot and S.P. Lee Guyot in the Central Pacific were sampled, seismically surveyed, and photographed by bottom cameras in order to better understand the distribution, origin, and evolution of ferromanganese crusts. Necker Ridge is over 600 km long with a rugged crest, pods of sediment to 146...
New York Bight fault
Deborah R. Hutchinson, John A. Grow
1985, Geological Society of America Bulletin (96) 975-989
High-resolution, single-channel and multichannel seismic-reflection profiles in the New York Bight provide 7 crossings of a 50-km-long fault that trends north-northeast for 30 km from its southern end, then bends northeast, and may continue northward beneath Long Island. Displacement, which is consistently down to the west, decreases upsection and suggests...
Block Island fault: A Paleozoic crustal boundary on the Long Island platform
Deborah R. Hutchinson, Kim D. Klitgord, R. S. Detrick
1985, Geology (13) 875-879
A major fault cutting through most of the crust can be identified and mapped on the Long Island platform using multichannel seismic reflection profiles and magnetic data. The fault, here called the Block Island fault (BIF), strikes north-northeast, dips westward at low angle, and does not resemble the thin-skinned thrust...
A drowned Holocene barrier spit off Cape Ann, Massachusetts
Robert N. Oldale
1985, Geology (13) 375-377
Seismic profiles and bathymetric contours reveal a drowned barrier spit on Jeffreys Ledge off Cape Ann, Massachusetts. Seaward-dipping internal reflectors indicate that a regressive barrier formed during the early Holocene low sea-level stillstand. Preservation of the barrier spit may have been favored by its large size (as much as 20...
Rapid postglacial shoreline changes in the western Gulf of Maine and the Paleo-Indian environment
Robert N. Oldale
1985, American Antiquity (50) 145-150
Rapid shoreline regression and transgression along the western Gulf of Maine between 13,000 and 9000 years B.P. are inferred to have produced a nearshore marine environment low in biologic productivity. Paleo-Indians living near the coast of the Gulf were probably forced to rely on nonmarine resources landward of the late-glacial...
Foraminiferal, lithic, and isotopic changes across four major unconformities at Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 548, Goban Spur
C. Wylie Poag, Leslie A. Reynolds, James M. Mazzullo, Loyd D. Keigwin
1985, Book chapter, Initial reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project
Sediment samples taken at close intervals across four major unconformities (middle Miocene/upper Miocene, lower Oligocene/upper Oligocene, lower Eocene/upper Eocene, lower Paleocene/upper Paleocene) at DSDP-IPOD Site 548, Goban Spur, reveal that coeval biostratigraphic gaps, sediment discontinuities, and seismic unconformities coincide with postulated low stands of sea level. Foraminiferal, lithic, and isotopic analyses demonstrate that...
A note on the effect of bottom currents on an ocean bottom seismometer
Anne M. Trehu
1985, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (75) 1195-1204
Two three-component ocean bottom seismometers and a current meter were deployed a few hundred meters apart on the southern Blake Plateau off the United States eastern coast to study the effect of near-bottom currents on the background noise level of seismometers. Although analysis of the data is limited somewhat by...
Coupling of ocean bottom seismometers to sediment: Results of tests with the U.S. Geological Survey ocean bottom seismometer
Anne M. Trehu
1985, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (75) 271-289
The response of an ocean bottom seismometer (OBS) to a transient pull that excites the natural OBS-sediment coupling resonance can be modeled as a mass-spring-dashpot system in which the resonant frequency and damping are functions of instrument mass and bearing radius and of the physical properties of the sediment (primarily...
Digital to analog conversion and visual evaluation of Thematic Mapper data
James R. McCord, Douglas R. Binnie, Paul M. Seevers
1985, Journal of Imaging Technology (11) 125-130
As a part of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Landsat D Image Data Quality Analysis Program, the Earth Resources Observation Systems Data Center (EDC) developed procedures to optimize the visual information content of Thematic Mapper data and evaluate the resulting photographic products by visual interpretation. A digital-to-analog transfer function...
Total chemical management in photographic processing
Charles Luden, Ronald Schultz
1985, Journal of Imaging Technology (11) 74-82
The mission of the U. S. Geological Survey's Earth Resources Observation Systems (EROS) Data Center is to produce high-quality photographs of the earth taken from aircraft and Landsat satellite. In order to meet the criteria of producing research-quality photographs, while at the same time meeting strict environmental restrictions, a total...
A comparative study of stream water and stream sediment as geochemical exploration media in the Rio Tanama porphyry copper district, Puerto Rico
R. E. Learned, T. T. Chao, R. F. Sanzolone
1985, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (24) 175-195
To test the relative effectiveness of stream water and sediment as geochemical exploration media in the Rio Tanama porphyry copper district of Puerto Rico, we collected and subsequently analyzed samples of water and sediment from 29 sites in the rivers and tributaries of the district. Copper, Mo, Pb, Zn, SO42−,...
Abundance fluctuations among benthic invertebrates in two pacific estuaries
Frederic H. Nichols
1985, Estuaries (8) 136-144
Long-term studies were used to examine (1) contrasting time scales and mechanisms of structural variations within two benthic communities and (2) the usefulness of long data sets for evaluating human impact. A 10-year study of a San Francisco Bay mudflat, the details of which are reported elsewhere, has revealed large...
Persistence of an introduced mud flat community in south San Francisco Bay, California
Frederic H. Nichols, Janet K. Thompson
1985, Marine Ecology Progress Series (24) 83-97
The benthic invertebrate community inhabiting the extensive and sedimentologically homogeneous mudflats of South San Francisco Bay has demonstrated a high degree of constancy in both species composition and relative abundance among species throughout 10 yr of observation. The community, composed predominantly of introduced species with opportunistic lifestyles, is dominated numerically...
Great Mexican earthquake provides lessons for the United States
D. Finley
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 190-191
Earthquakes in the Balkans
E. M. Fournier d’Albe
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 107-109
Seismology for the user
E. M. Fournier d’Albe
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 4-19
The earthquake hazard mitigation program in Massachusetts
E. S. Fratto
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 165-172
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
Earthquake potential of the Calaveras Fault, California
W. Bakun
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 192-193
Processes on a glacier-dominated coast, Alaska
Bruce F. Molnia
1985, Zeitschrift fur Geomorphologie, Supplementband (57) 141-153
The 500 km long Gulf of Alaska coastline between Cape Suckling and Cape Spencer can be characterized by constant rapid change in an environment of glaciers, stormy climate, high relief, and extreme oceanographic parameters. During a more than 200-year history of observation, bays have completely filled with sediment, new bays...