Ground water in carbonate rocks and regolith in the Fairview area, Tennessee
C.R. Burchett, Ann Zurawski, A.K. Sparkes, E. F. Hollyday
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4134
Fourteen test wells drilled in the Fairview area, Tennessee, produce from 3 to 100 gallons per minute and have an average yield of 32 gallons per minute, measured while blowing water from the wells with compressed air. In comparison, the average yield of supply wells reported by drillers is 13...
Ground-water hydrology before, during, and after coal strip mining of a small watershed in Coshocton County, Ohio
A. C. Razem
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4155
Ground-water conditions before, during, and after surface mining of a small watershed are described as part of a study to determine the effects of mining on hydrologic systems. The watershed was underlain by stratified sedimentary rocks containing three aquifers. The top and middle aquifers were perched above clay beds that...
Hydrogeologic and water-quality characteristics of the St. Peter aquifer, Southeast Minnesota
J. F. Ruhl, R. J. Wolf
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4200
Quality of water in the St. Peter aquifer is generally acceptable for most uses. Sulfate concentrations increase toward the southwestern part of the aquifer because of highly mineralized leakage from overlying Cretaceous deposits. Concentrations of sodium, magnesium, and sulfate generally increase to the west, and those of calcium, bicarbonate, and...
Groundwater resources of the Dallas-Monmouth area, Polk, Benton, and Marion Counties, Oregon
Joseph B. Gonthier
1983, Open-File Report 80-678
The Dallas-Monmouth area is in the west-central Willamette Valley of western Oregon. It comprises a total of about 400 square miles in Polk, Benton, and Marion Counties. Tertiary consolidated rocks underlie the entire area. These rocks include marine sandstone, siltstone, shale, tuff, basalt, and gabbro. In the lowlands, the consolidated...
Injection of treated wastewater for ground-water recharge in the Palo Alto Baylands, California, hydraulic and chemical interactions — Preliminary report
S. N. Hamlin
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 82-4121
An injection-extraction well network in the Palo Alto Baylands along the San Francisco Bay, California, was designed to flush the shallow aquifer system of saline water and prevent further inland saline contamination. Clogging processes and solution migration in the vicinity of one injection well were studied. Cyclic evaporative concentration of...
Geohydrology and effects of water use in the Black Mesa area, Navajo and Hopi Indian Reservations, Arizona
James H. Eychaner
1983, Water Supply Paper 2201
The N aquifer is the main source of water in the 5,400-square-mile Black Mesa area in the Navajo and Hopi Indian Reservations in northeastern Arizona. The N aquifer consists of the Navajo Sandstone and parts of the underlying Kayenta Formation and Wingate Sandstone of Jurassic and Triassic age. Maximum saturated...
Biogeochemical sampling in the Mahd Adh Dhahab District, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Richard J. Ebens, Hansford T. Shacklette, Ronald G. Worl
1983, Open-File Report 83-330
A biogeochemical reconnaissance of the Mahd adh Dhahab district, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, confirms the ability of deep-rooted Acacia trees to reflect bedrock concentrations of some trace elements. The analytical values for lead, zinc, selenium, and cadmium in ash of tree branches are significantly higher in samples from areas of...
Quality of ground water in southern Buchanan County, Virginia
Stanley M. Rogers, John D. Powell
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 82-4022
In seven small contiguous stream basins in the coal area of southwest Virginia, ground water is predominantly bicarbonate in anion composition, with calcium as the major cation in the ridges and sodium the major cation in the lower altitudes. Sulfate is the major anion in water associated with coal seams...
Geophysical and geologic studies in southern Mecklenburg County and vicinity, North Carolina and South Carolina
Frederick A. Wilson
1983, Open-File Report 83-93
Geophysical methods consisting of gravity, aeromagnetics and aeroradioactivity have been applied to part of the Charlotte and Carolina slate belts in southern Mecklenburg County and vicinity to help interpret geology, lithology and structure. High aeroradioactivity is associated with potassium-rich granitic plutons, muscovite-rich gneisses, schists, and metavolcanic rocks; positive gravity and...
Data for ground-water test hole near Butte City, Central Valley aquifer project, California
James J. French, R. W. Page, G.L. Bertoldi
1983, Open-File Report 83-697
This report provides preliminary data for the third of seven test holes drilled as part of the Central Valley Aquifer Project which is part of the National Regional Aquifer Systems Analysis Program. The test hole was drilled in the SW 1/4 NE 1/4 sec. 32, T. 19 N., R. 1...
Late Proterozoic island-arc complexes and tectonic belts in the southern part of the Arabian Shield, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
William R. Greenwood, D. B. Stoeser, R.J. Fleck, J. S. Stacey
1983, Open-File Report 83-296
Two main subdivisions of layered rocks are recognized in the southern Arabian Shield south of lat 22? N. These are an older ensimatic-arc complex, which formed 1100-800 m.y. ago, and a younger marginal-arc complex, which formed 800-690 m.y. ago. The older ensimatic-arc complex, located in the southwestern part of the...
Stratigraphic framework and distribution of lignite on Crowleys Ridge, Arkansas
Charles R. Meissner
1983, Open-File Report 83-609
The purpose of this report is to establish a stratigraphic framework of lignite beds and associated strata of Crowleys Ridge, Arkansas. Drill hole data provided by the Arkansas Geological Commission is used in the synthesis and interpretation. Areas containing lignite of potential resource value are also delineated. To illustrate the...
Petrography of some Ambrosia Lake, New Mexico prefault uranium ores, and implications for their genesis
James D. Webster
1983, Open-File Report 83-8
Petrographic and chemical study of prefault uranium ores from the Section 30, Section 30-west, and Section 23 mines in the Ambrosia Lake mining district, New Mexico has revealed that prefault ores commonly contain several authigenic phases including a new V-Ti mineral, which formed from destruction and remobilization of primary constituents...
Hydrogeologic data from the US Geological Survey test wells near Waycross, Ware County, Georgia
S.E. Matthews, R.E. Krause
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4204
Two wells were constructed near Waycross, Ware County, Georgia, from July 1980 to May 1981 to collect stratigraphic, structural, geophysical, hydrologic, hydraulic, and geochemical information for the U.S. Geological Survey Tertiary Limestone Regional Aquifer-System Analysis. Data collection included geologic sampling and coring, borehole geophysical logging, packer testing, water-level measuring, water-quality...
Statistical parameters for resource evaluation of geochemical data from the Ajo 1° x 2° quadrangle, Arizona
P. K. Theobald, Harlan N. Barton
1983, Open-File Report 83-734
Statistical data are presented from a regional geochemical study of the Ajo 1° x 2° quadrangle exclusive of the Papago Indian Reservation, but including the extension of Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument into the Lukeville 1° x 2° quadrangle. Frequency distribution data from the analysis of stream-sediment and heavy-mineral-concentrate samples...
Occurrence and use of ground water in the Venice-Englewood area, Sarasota and Charlotte counties, Florida
Horace Sutcliffe, Thomas H. Thompson
1983, Open-File Report 82-700
In a 75-square-mile area of coastal Sarasota and Charlotte Counties, demand for water is increasing. Groundwater, the principal source of supply, is distributed largely by public water systems. Principal water-bearing formations in descending order, include the surficial aquifer, artesian zone 1 in the Tamiami Formation, zone 2 in the upper...
Potential effects of surface coal mining on the hydrology of the Greenleaf-Miller area, Ashland coal field, southeastern Montana
G. W. Levings
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 82-4101
The Greenleaf-Miller area of the Ashland coal field contains reserves of Federal coal that have been identified for potential lease sale. A hydrologic study was conducted in the potential lease area in 1981 to describe the existing hydrologic system and to assess potential impacts of surface coal mining on local...
The nonopaque, detrital heavy mineralogy of the Morrison Formation near Crownpoint, San Juan Basin, New Mexico
Paula L. Hansley
1983, Open-File Report 83-191
Description and quantification of the nonopaque, detrital heavy mineralogy of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation in the southwestern part of the San Juan Basin have helped to identify stratigraphic trends, source-area lithologies, and zones of post-depositional alteration possibly related to uranium mineralization. A synthesis of stratigraphic variations in mineral species...
Preliminary results of spectral induced polarization measurements, Wadi Bidah District, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Bruce D. Smith, C. L. Tippens, V. J. Flanigan, Hamdy Sadek
1983, Open-File Report 83-612
Laboratory spectral induced polarization (SIP) measurements on 29 carbonaceous schist samples from the Wadi Bidah district show that most are associated with very long polarization decays or, equivalently, large time constants. In contrast, measurements on two massive sulfide samples indicate shorter polarization decays or smaller time constants. This difference in...
A hydrogeochemical survey in east-central Nevada
John B. McHugh, W. Roger Miller, Walter H. Ficklin
1983, Open-File Report 83-286
A hydrogeochemical survey utilizing waters from springs and wells was conducted in east-central Nevada. None of the trace elements commonly associated with mineralization were found to be highly anomalous in the study area. Slightly anomalous values for some elements were found in the southern valleys of the study area and...
Hydrogeologic and water-quality characteristics of the Mount Simon-Hinckley aquifer, southeast Minnesota
R. J. Wolf, J. F. Ruhl, D. G. Adolphson
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4031
The Mount Simon-Hinckley aquifer in southeast Minnesota consists of a thick sequence of sandstone that generally yields large quantities of good-quality water to wells. The aquifer is most important as a source of water supply in the Twin Cities area, where it supplies approximately 10 percent of the ground water...
Magnetic models of crystalline terrane; accounting for the effect of topography
Richard J. Blakely, V. J. 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...
Latest Oligocene through early middle Miocene diatom biostratigraphy of the eastern tropical Pacific
John A. Barron
1983, Marine Micropaleontology (7) 487-515
Study of DSDP Sites 71, 77, and 495 has allowed the development of a refined diatom biostratigraphy for the latest Oligocene through early middle Miocene of the eastern tropical Pacific which is well correlated to the low-latitude zonations for planktonic foraminifers, coccoliths, and radiolarians. Six zones and 7 subzones are...
Relation of concealed faults to water quality and the formation of solution features in the Floridan aquifer, northeastern Florida, U.S.A.
G.W. Leve
1983, Journal of Hydrology (61) 251-264
Geological and hydrological information on the Floridan aquifer in northeastern Florida indicates that isolated occurrences of water having relatively high chloride concentration in the upper part of the aquifer may be associated with buried faults. Water having chloride concentrations of more than 700 mg l−1 occurs in the deeper zone of...
Tectonics and metallogenic provinces
P. W. Guild
1983, Advances in Space Research (3) 9-16
Various theories have been advanced to explain the well-known uneven distribution of metals and ore-deposit types in space and time. Primordial differences in the mantle, preferential concentration of elements in the crust, the prevalence of ore-forming processes at certain times and (or) places, and combinations of one or several of...