United States Geological Survey Yearbook, fiscal year 1983
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1984, Report
The fiscal year 1983 Yearbook summarizes the activities of the U.S. Geological Survey in response to its scientific and regulatory missions....
Ferrelo fan, California: Depositional system influenced by Eustatic sea level changes
D. G. Howell, J. G. Vedder
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 187-192
Remnants of an Eocene fan system are preserved onshore at San Diego and in the central part of the southern California borderland. Even though faults and erosion have truncated its margins, geophysical data and exploratory wells indicate that remaining parts of the fan extend beneath an offshore area nearly 400-km...
Submarine-fan facies associations of the Eocene Butano Sandstone, Santa Cruz mountains, California
T. H. Nilsen
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 167-171
The Eocene Butano Sandstone was deposited as a submarine fan in a relatively small, partly restricted basin in a borderland setting. It is possibly as thick as 3000 m and was derived from erosion of nearly Mesozoic granitic and older metamorphic rocks located to the south. Deposition was at lower...
Monterey Fan: Growth pattern control by basin morphology and changing sea levels
W. R. Normark, C. E. Gutmacher, T. E. Chase, P. Wilde
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 93-99
Monterey Fan is the largest modern fan off the California shore. Two main submarine canyon systems feed it via a complex pattern of fan valleys and channels. The northern Ascension Canyon system is relatively inactive during high sea-level periods. In contrast, Monterey Canyon and its tributaries to the south cut...
Submarine-fan facies associations of the Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene Gottero Sandstone, Ligurian Apennines, Italy
T. H. Nilsen, E. Abbate
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 193-197
The Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene Gottero Sandstone was deposited as a small deep-sea fan on ophiolitic crust in a trench-slope basin. It was thrust northeastward as an allochthonous sheet in Early and Middle Cenozoic time. The Gottero, as thick as 1500 m, was probably derived from erosion of Hercynian granites...
Trench-fill submarine-fan facies associations of the Upper Cretaceous Chugach terrane, southern Alaska
T. H. Nilsen
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 179-185
Turbidites of the Upper Cretaceous Chugach terrane of southern Alaska were deposited in a trench during northward-directed subduction. The fault-bounded outcrop belt of the Chugach terrane is about 2000-km long and 100-km wide and was accreted to Alaska during the Cenozoic. Turbidites are at least 5000 m thick, are extensively...
Miocene Blanca Fan, Northern Channel Islands, California: Small fans reflecting tectonism and volcanism
H. McLean, D. G. Howell
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 161-166
Blanca fan is a submarine fan composed of Miocene volcaniclastic strata. Parts of the fan system are exposed on Santa Cruz and Santa Rosa Islands, and possibly correlative strata crop out on San Miguel and Santa Catalina Islands. The Blanca fan and underlying breccia reflect regional transcurrent faulting in the...
Navy Fan, California Borderland: Growth pattern and depositional processes
W. R. Normark, D.J.W. Piper
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 101-108
Navy Fan is a Late Pleistocene sand-rich fan prograding into an irregularly shaped basin in the southern California Borderland. The middle fan, characterized by one active and two abandoned 'distributary' channels and associated lobe deposits, at present onlaps part of the basin slope directly opposite from the upper-fan valley, thus...
Fouling community of the Loxahatchee River estuary, Florida, 1980-81
B. F. McPherson, W. H. Sonntag, M. Sabanskas
1984, Estuaries (7) 149-157
Monthly growth of the fouling community at eight test panel sites in the Loxahatchee River Estuary was related to salinity and temperature. Growth was lowest in January 1981 (averaging 23 g per m2, dry weight), and increased during spring and early summer with increasing water temperature. Maximum growth occurred during...
Sedimentary, tectonic, and sea-level controls on submarine fan and slope-apron turbidite systems
D.A.V. Stow, D. G. Howell, C.H. Nelson
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 57-64
To help understand factors that influence submarine fan deposition, we outline some of the principal sedimentary, tectonic, and sea-level controls involved in deep-water sedimentation, give some data on the rates at which they operate, and evaluate their probable effects. Three depositional end-member systems, two submarine fan types (elongate and radial),...
Delgada Fan: Preliminary interpretation of channel development
W. R. Normark, C. E. Gutmacher
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 79-83
The Delgada Fan, an irregularly shaped turbidite deposit extending more than 350 km offshore from northern California, consists of two large leveed-valley units each fed by a separate complex of coalescing submarine canyons and slope gullies. Although the leveed-valley units head within 25 km of each other, both appear to...
Aftermath of comfan-Comments, not solutions
W. R. Normark, N.E. Barnes
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 223-224
Comparison of descriptions of fans in this volume demonstrates the major problems in developing general models that incorporate modern fans and ancient turbidite sequences. Attempts to develop a unifying fan model are presently premature. The most pressing need is refined definition of the primary common characteristics of submarine turbidite systems...
Defining geologic Hazards for natural resources management using tree-ring analysis
J.V. DeGraff, S.S. Agard
1984, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (6) 147-155
Landslides, avalanches, floods, and other geologic hazards impair natural resources management by jeopardizing public safety, damaging or restricting resource utilization, and necessitating expenditures for corrective measures The negative impact of geologic hazard events can be reduced by tailoring resources management to hazard potential of an area This requires assessment of...
The Laurentian Fan: Sohm Abyssal Plain
D.J.W. Piper, D.A.V. Stow, W. R. Normark
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 141-146
The 0.5- to 2-km thick Quaternary Laurentian Fan is built over Tertiary and Mesozoic sediments that rest on oceanic crust. Two 400-km long fan valleys, with asymmetric levees up to 700-m high, lead to an equally long, sandy, lobate basin plain (northern Sohm Abyssal Plain). The muddy distal Sohm Abyssal...
Specific-lon electrode determinations of sulfide preconcentrated from San Francisco Bay waters
D.V. Vivit, J.W. Ball, E. A. Jenne
1984, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (6) 79-90
Measurements of low-level dissolved-sulfide concentrations in estuarine water from San Francisco Bay have been made using the sulfide-specific electrode after preservation, separation, and preconcentration of the sulfide species. The separation and preconcentration were acheived by coprecipitation of ZnS with Zn(OH)2 followed by collection and dissolution of the precipitate, giving concentration...
The Crati Submarine Fan, Ionian Sea
F.R. Lucchi, A. Colella, G. Gabbianelli, S. Rossi, W. R. Normark
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 71-77
The Crati Fan is located in the tectonically active submerged extension of the Apennines chain and foretrough. The small fan system is growing in a relatively shallow (200 to 450 m), elongate nearshore basin receiving abundant input from the Crati River. The fan is characterized by a short, steep, channelized...
Field and laboratory evaluation of the influence of copper-diquat on apple snails in southern Florida
P. V. Winger, M.J. Imlay, W.E. McMillan, T.W. Martin, Jean E. Takekawa, W.W. Johnson
1984, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (3) 409-424
The recent decline of apple snail (Pomacea paludosa) populations in canals surrounding Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge in southern Florida coincided with the use of copper-diquat for the control of the aquatic weed hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata). Field and laboratory studies were designed to assess the effects of copper-diquat on apple snails,...
Occurrence and timing of second clutches in common terns
D.A. Wiggins, R.D. Morris, I.C.T. Nisbet, T. W. Custer
1984, The Auk (101) 281-287
Eighteen pairs of Common Terns (Sterna hirundo) at three different colonies laid second clutches while still feeding young from their first broods. Seven clutches were laid before the chicks from the first brood fledged, and 11 were laid after the chicks from the first brood fledged. In...
Residues of organochlorine insecticides, polychlorinated biphenyls, and heavy metals in biota from Apalachicola River, Florida, 1978
P. V. Winger, C. Sieckman, T.W. May, W.W. Johnson
1984, Journal of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists (67) 325-333
Seventy-seven composite samples composed of largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), channel catfish (Ictaluras punctatus), threadfin shad (Dorosoma petenense), Asiatic clam (Corbicula fluminea), burrowing mayfly (Hexagenia sp.), water snake (Natrix spp.), and little green heron (Butorides virescens) were collected from upper and lower reaches of the Apalachicola River, Florida, in 1978 for residue analysis...
Comparison of methods of preserving tissues for pesticide analysis
W. H. Stickel, L.F. Stickel, R. A. Dyrland, D.L. Hughes
1984, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (4) 113-118
Formalin preservation, freezing, spoiling followed by freezing, and phenoxyethanol were compared in terms of concentrations of DDT, DDD, DDE, endrin, and heptachlor epoxide measured in brain, liver and carcass of birds fed dietary dosages of pesticides and in spiked egg homogenate. Phenoxyethanol proved to be an unsatisfactory preservative; the amount...
Sight record of band-rumped storm-petrel off the coast of Palm Beach County, Florida
P.W. Sykes Jr., H.P. Langridge, T. Trotsky
1984, Florida Field Naturalist (12) 17-18
No abstract available....
DDE in birds: Lethal residues and loss rates
William H. Stickel, Lucille F. Stickel, R. A. Dyrland, Donald L. Hughes
1984, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (13) 1-6
Lethal brain residues of DDE2 were determined experimentally in four species of wild birds given dietary dosage of 1,500 ppm DDE until one-half had died, then sacrificing the survivors, chemically analyzing the tissues, and comparing results in dead birds and survivors. In all species, residues of 300 to 400 ppm of...
Phenotypic variation of the Mexican duck (Anas platyrhynchos diazi) in Mexico
N.J. Scott Jr., R.P. Reynolds
1984, Condor (86) 266-274
A collection of 98 breeding Mexican Ducks (Anas platyrhynchos diazi) was made in Mexico from six areas between the United States border with Chihuahua and Lake Chapala, Jalisco, in order to study geographic variation. Plumage indices showed a relatively smooth clinal change from north to south; northern populations were most...
Comparative toxicity of acephate in laboratory mice, white-footed mice, and meadow voles
Barnett A. Rattner, David J. Hoffman
1984, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (13) 483-491
The LD50 (95% confidence limits) of the organophosphorus insecticide acephate was estimated to be 351, 380, and 321 mg/kg (295–416, 280–516, and 266–388 mg/kg) for CD-1 laboratory mice (Mus musculus), white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus noveboracensis), and meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus), respectively. In a second study, these species were provided mash...
Avian endocrine responses to environmental pollutants
Barnett A. Rattner, V.P. Eroschenko, G.A. Fox, D.M. Fry, J. Gorsline
1984, Journal of Experimental Zoology (232) 683-689
Many environmental contaminants are hazardous to populations of wild birds. Chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides and industrial pollutants are thought to be responsible for population declines of several species of predatory birds through eggshell thinning. Studies have demonstrated that these contaminants have estrogenic potency and may affect the functioning of the gonadal...