CONTRIBUTION OF LAND USE DATA TO THE INVESTIGATION OF TRENDS IN FLOODING IN THE TUG FORK BASIN OF KENTUCKY, VIRGINIA, AND WEST VIRGINIA.
Sarah E. Bowers, Arthur G. Scott
1983, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
The U. S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U. S. Bureau of Mines and the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, is investigating effects of mining on flood frequency and magnitude within the basin. Changing land use, particularly the acceleration of surface mining, may cause or contribute to...
Surveyors, cartographers, photogrammetrists; identification friends or foes
Frederick J. Doyle
1983, Cartography (13) 88-95
Largely because of historical developments, the disciplines of geodesy, surveying, photogrammetry, cartography and remote sensing which make up the profession of cartographic science are organised into numerous societies at both the national and international levels. Partly as a consequence of this separatism, an effective education system for the profession is...
Paleohydrological methods and some examples from Swedish fluvial environments I. Cobble and boulder deposits
G. P. Williams
1983, Geografiska Annaler, Series A (65 A) 227-243
This article establishes approximate empirical relations for determining the minimum unit stream power, bed shear stress and mean flow velocity capable of moving cobbles and boulders on streambeds. The derived equations then are used to estimate the minimum paleoflows that could have transported the boulders of two ancient...
U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY LAND REMOTE SENSING ACTIVITIES.
Doyle G. Frederick
1983, Conference Paper
USGS uses all types of remotely sensed data, in combination with other sources of data, to support geologic analyses, hydrologic assessments, land cover mapping, image mapping, and applications research. Survey scientists use all types of remotely sensed data with ground verifications and digital topographic and cartographic data. A considerable amount...
Geochemistry of diverse basalt types from Loihi Seamount, Hawaii: Petrogenetic implications
F.A. Frey, D.A. Clague
1983, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (66) 337-355
The wide variety of basalt types, tholeiitic to basanite, dredged from Loihi Seamount have minor and trace element abundances that are characteristic of subaerial Hawaiian basalts, thereby confirming that Loihi Seamount is a manifestation of the Hawaiian “hot spot”. Within the Loihi sample suite there are well-defined positive correlations among...
Two examples of earthquake- hazard reduction in southern California.
W. J. Kockelman, C.C. Campbell
1983, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (15) 216-225
Because California is seismically active, planners and decisionmakers must try to anticipate earthquake hazards there and, where possible, to reduce the hazards. Geologic and seismologic information provides the basis for the necessary plans and actions. Two examples of how such information is used are presented. The first involves assessing the...
Ground water: a review.
J.D. Bredehoeft
1983, Reviews of Geophysics and Space Physics (21) 760-765
There is growing documentation that a significant portion of the Nation's fresh ground water in the densely populated areas of the USA is contaminated. Because of the slow rates of ground-water movement, ground water once contaminated will remain so for decades, often longer. Cleanup of contaminated ground water is almost...
Nonlinear strain buildup and the earthquake cycle on the San Andreas fault
W. Thatcher
1983, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (88) 5893-5902
Two contrasting models of the earthquake deformation cycle on strike slip faults predict significant temporal declines in shear strain rate near the fault, accompanied by a progressive broadening of the zone of deformation adjacent to it. In the thin lithosphere model, transient deformation results from flow in the asthenosphere due...
Terpenoid marker compounds derived from biogenic precursors in volcanic ash from Mount St. Helens, Washington
W. E. Pereira, Colleen E. Rostad
1983, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (47) 2287-2291
A volcanic-ash sample obtained after the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington, was analyzed for cyclic terpenoid organic compounds and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons using capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-computer techniques. Various tricyclic diterpenoid acids and hydrocarbons were identified including dehydroabietic acid, dehydroabietin, dehydroabietane, simonellite, and retene. Preliminary evidence indicates that...
ROLES OF REMOTE SENSING AND CARTOGRAPHY IN THE USGS NATIONAL MAPPING DIVISION.
Rupert B. Southard, John W. Salisbury
1983, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
The inseparable roles of remote sensing and photogrammetry have been recognized to be consistent with the aims and interests of the American Society of Photogrammetry. In particular, spatial data storage, data merging and manipulation methods and other techniques originally developed for remote sensing applications also have applications for digital cartography....
Comparison of rapid methods for chemical analysis of milligram samples of ultrafine clays
S.L. Rettig, J.W. Marinenko, Hani N. Khoury, B.F. Jones
1983, Clays and Clay Minerals (31) 440-446
Two rapid methods for the decomposition and chemical analysis of clays were adapted for use with 20–40-mg size samples, typical amounts of ultrafine products (≤0.5-µm diameter) obtained by modern separation methods for clay minerals. The results of these methods were compared with those of “classical” rock analyses. The two methods...
Use of reflectance spectra of native plant species for interpreting airborne multispectral scanner data in the East Tintic Mountains, Utah
N.M. Milton
1983, Economic Geology (78) 761-769
Representative spectra from three plant species were used to interpret the color components on a color ratio composite image. Most of the vegetation unit coincided with an altered rock unit, but many altered areas were not within the vegetation unit....
Correlation of metal occurrence and terrane attributes in the northwestern conterminous United States
E. W. Tooker
1983, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (20) 1030-1039
The regional distribution patterns for 20 critical metals derived by an areal-pattern recognition technique leads me to conclude that metals are regularly distributed preferentially in the accreted and cratonic terranes studied in and surrounding the state of Oregon in the northwestern United States. The distribution patterns along distinctively different zones...
Magnetic models of crystalline terrane: Accounting for the effect of topography
R.J. Blakely, V. J. S. Grauch
1983, Geophysics (48) 1551-1557
Igneous rocks commonly have large magnetic susceptibilities so that high topographic relief in crystalline terrane can produce significant anomalies in aeromagnetic surveys. Topographic anomalies are particularly significant in relatively undeformed volcanic terrane because young volcanic rocks generally have large natural remanent magnetizations as well as large susceptibilities. These anomalies commonly...
Eastern Devonian shales: Organic geochemical studies, past and present
Irving A. Breger, Patrick G. Hatcher, L.A. Romankiw, F.P. Miknis
1983, Conference Paper, Preprints Symposia
The Eastern Devonian shales are represented by a sequence of sediments extending from New York state, south to the northern regions of Georgia and Alabama, and west into Ohio and to the Michigan and Ilinois Basins. Correlatives are known in Texas. The shale is regionally known by a number of...
Calculation of a velocity distribution from particle trajectory end-points.
Lowell A. Rasmussen
1983, Journal of Glaciology (29) 203-214
The longitudinal component of the velocity of a particle at or near a glacier surface is considered, its position as a function of time being termed its trajectory. Functional relationships are derived for obtaining the trajectory from the spatial distribution of velocity and for obtaining the velocity...
The Frontier Formation and mid- Cretaceous orogeny in the foreland of southwestern Wyoming
E. Allen Merewether
1983, Mountain Geologist (20) 121-138
Tectonism in SW Wyoming and adjoining areas, and fluctuations of sea level in the central USA during the mid-Cretaceous are represented by the regional stratigraphy of the Frontier Formation. The Frontier consists mainly of clastic rocks that were deposited in marine and nonmarine environments during latest Albian, Cenomanian, Turonian, and...
Main field and recent secular variation.
L.R. Alldredge
1983, Reviews of Geophysics and Space Physics (21) 599-603
As Cain (1979) indicated might happen in the last IUGG quadrennial report, added resources were made available during the past few years and a real impulse was added to the geomagnetic work in the US by the launching of the MAGSAT Satellite. This new effort paid off in terms of...
MASS STORAGE ESTIMATES FOR THE DIGITAL MAPPING AREA.
Donald L. Light
1983, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
Modern computer technology offers cartographers the potential for transition from conventional film-oriented methods to digital techniques as the way of mapping in the future. Traditional methods utilizing silver halide aerial and lithographic films for storage are time proven, and film is a very high density archival storage media. In view...
Isotopic evidence from the eastern Canadian shield for geochemical discontinuity in the proterozoic mantle
L.D. Ashwal, J. L. Wooden
1983, Nature (306) 679-680
Most workers agree that Proterozoic anorthosite massifs represent the crystallization products of mantle-derived magmas1,2, although the composition of the parental melts is a major unsolved petrological problem 3. As mantle-derived rocks, the massifs can be used as geochemical probes of their late Precambrian upper mantle sources. We report here Nd...
DETERMINATION OF MODE OF OCCURRENCE OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN THE UPPER FREEPORT COAL BED USING SIZE AND DENSITY SEPARATION PROCEDURES.
C.A. Palmer, R.H. Filby
1983, Conference Paper
A procedure has been developed using low temperature ashing, followed by size and sink-float separation of the ash, X-ray diffraction analysis, and instrumental neutron activation analysis to give both qualitative and quantitative information for major, minor and trace minerals and their associated trace elements in coal....
Bedform distribution and inferred sand transport on Georges Bank, United States Atlantic continental shelf.
D.C. Twichell
1983, Sedimentology (30) 695-710
Four bedform provinces have been identified using sidescan-sonar and echo-sounding techniques: large sand waves superimposed on sand ridges, small sand waves, megaripples, and featureless seafloor. Sand-wave asymmetry and surface-sediment texture have been used to infer bedload transport paths and although the asymmetry of megaripples could not be determined, the occurrence...
Sm-Nd age and isotopic systematics of the bimodal suite, ancient gneiss complex, Swaziland
R. W. Carlson, D.R. Hunter, F. Barker
1983, Nature (305) 701-704
Studies of the development and stabilization of the Archaean crust often focus on the relative temporal relationships between the metamorphosed basaltic to ultramafic volcanic units (greenstone belts) and the sialic gneiss terrains that make up the oldest sections of the terrestrial crust. At the heart of this interest are the...
STABLE ISOTOPE GEOCHEMISTRY OF THERMAL FLUIDS FROM LASSEN VOLCANIC NATIONAL PARK, CALIFORNIA.
Cathy J. Janik, Nancy L. Nehring, Alfred H. Truesdell
1983, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
In the Lassen vapor-dominated geothermal system, surface manifestations of thermal fluids at high elevations (1800-2500 m) include superheated and drowned fumaroles, steam-heated acid-sulfate hot springs, and low-chloride bicarbonate springs. Neutral high-chloride hot water discharges at lower elevations. Deuterium and oxygen-18 data establish genetic connections between these fluids and with local...
Landsat analysis of the Yangjiatan tungsten district, Hunan Province, People's Republic of China
W. D. Carter, T. H. Kiilsgaard
1983, Advances in Space Research (3) 113-123
The Yangjiatan tungsten district at latitude 27??28??? N. and longitude 111??54???E. is located about 140 km southwest of the city of Changsha and 35 km northeast of the town of Shaoyang, southeast Hunan Province, People's Republic of China. The deposits, consisting largely of scheelite in veins (Wang, 1975), are contained...