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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Precious metals associated with Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary igneous rocks of southwestern Alaska
Thomas K. Bundtzen, Marti L. Miller
Richard J. Goldfarb, Lance D. Miller, editor(s)
1997, Book chapter, Mineral Deposits of Alaska (Economic Geology Monographs, volume 9)
Placer gold and precious metal-bearing lode deposits of southwestern Alaska lie within a region 550 by 350 km, herein referred to as the Kuskokwim mineral belt. This mineral belt has yielded 100,240 kg (3.22 Moz) of gold, 12, 813 kg (412,000 oz) of silver, 1,377,412 kg (39,960 flasks) of mercury,...
Hazard evaluation of inorganics, singly and in mixtures, to Flannelmouth Sucker Catostomus latipinnis in the San Juan River, New Mexico
S. J. Hamilton, K.J. Buhl
1997, Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (38) 296-308
Larval flannelmouth sucker (Catostomus latipinnis) were exposed to arsenate, boron, copper, molybdenum, selenate, selenite, uranium, vanadium, and zinc singly, and to five mixtures of five to nine inorganics. The exposures were conducted in reconstituted water representative of the San Juan River near Shiprock, New Mexico. The mixtures simulated environmental ratios...
Habitat use by nesting and brood rearing northern pintails on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
J. Barry Grand, Paul L. Flint, Patricia J. Heglund
1997, Journal of Wildlife Management (61) 1199-1207
We studied habitat use by nesting and brood-rearing northern pintails (Anas acuta) on the coastal Yukon-Kuskokwim (Y-K) Delta, 1991-93. We used a digital habitat map constructed from color infrared aerial photos to assign habitat types to nest and brood locations and estimate habitat availability. Sixty-nine percent of females nested on...
Toxicity to Daphnia pulex and QSAR predictions for polycyclic hydrocarbons representative of Great Lakes contaminants
D.R. Passino-Reader, J.P. Hickey, L.M. Ogilvie
1997, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (59) 834-840
The objectives of this study were (1) to determine the toxicity of several types of polycyclic hydrocarbons characteristic of Great Lakes samples to Daphnia pulex, a Great Lakes zooplankter, (2) to investigate the influence of different structural characteristics on toxicity, and (3) to determine the linear solvation energy relationship (LSER)...
Late Paleozoic crustal history of central coastal Queensland interpreted from geochemistry of Mesozoic plutons: The effects of continental rifting
C. M. Allen, J. L. Wooden, B. W. Chappell
1997, LITHOS (42) 67-88
The eastern margin of Australia is understood to be the result of continental rifting during the Cretaceous and Tertiary. Consistent with this model, Cretaceous igneous rocks (granites to basalts) in a continental marginal setting near Bowen, Queensland are isotonically retarded, having isotopic ratios similar to those of most island arcs...
Late Mesozoic and Cenozoic thermotectonic evolution of the central Brooks Range and adjacent North Slope foreland basin, Alaska: Including fission track results from the Trans-Alaska Crustal Transect (TACT)
P. B. O’Sullivan, J.M. Murphy, A.E. Blythe
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 20821-20845
Apatite fission track data are used to evaluate the thermal and tectonic history of the central Brooks Range and the North Slope foreland basin in northern Alaska along the northern leg of the Trans-Alaska Crustal Transect (TACT). Fission track analyses of the detrital apatite grains in most sedimentary units resolve...
Crustal deformation at long Valley Caldera, eastern California, 1992-1996 inferred from satellite radar interferometry
W. Thatcher, D. Massonnet
1997, Geophysical Research Letters (24) 2519-2522
Satellite radar interferometric images of Long Valley caldera show a pattern of surface deformation that resembles that expected from analysis of an extensive suite of ground-based geodetic data. Images from 2 and 4 year intervals respectively, are consistent with uniform movement rates determined from leveling surveys....
Subsidence of ash-flow calderas: Relation to caldera size and magma-chamber geometry
P. W. Lipman
1997, Bulletin of Volcanology (59) 198-218
Diverse subsidence geometries and collapse processes for ash-flow calderas are inferred to reflect varying sizes, roof geometries, and depths of the source magma chambers, in combination with prior volcanic and regional tectonic influences. Based largely on a review of features at eroded pre-Quaternary calderas, a continuum of geometries and subsidence...
Surfactant-enhanced remediation of a trichloroethene-contaminated aquifer. 1. Transport of triton X-100
J. A. Smith, D. Sahoo, H.M. Mclellan, T.E. Imbrigiotta
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 3565-3572
Transport of a nonionic surfactant (Triton X-100) at aqueous concentrations less than 400 mg/L through a trichloroethene-contaminated sand-and-gravel aquifer at Picatinny Arsenal, NJ, has been studied through a series of laboratory and field experiments. In the laboratory, batch and column experiments were conducted to quantify the rate and amount of...
Supercritical fluid carbon dioxide extraction and liquid chromatographic separation with electrochemical detection of methylmercury from biological samples
N.S. Simon
1997, International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry (68) 313-330
Using the coupled methods presented in this paper, methylmercury can be accurately and rapidly extracted from biological samples by modified supercritical fluid carbon dioxide and quantitated using liquid chromatography with reductive electrochemical detection. Supercritical fluid carbon dioxide modified with methanol effectively extracts underivatized methylmercury from certified reference materials Dorm-1 (dogfish...
Controls on accretion of flysch and melange belts at convergent margins: Evidence from the Chugach Bay thrust and Iceworm melange, Chugach accretionary wedge, Alaska
Timothy M. Kusky, Dwight Bradley, Peter J. Haeussler, Susan M. Karl
1997, Tectonics (16) 855-878
Controls on accretion of flysch and mélange terranes at convergent margins are poorly understood. Southern Alaska's Chugach terrane forms the outboard accretionary margin of the Wrangellia composite terrane, and consists of two major lithotectonic units, including Triassic-Cretaceous mélange of the McHugh Complex and Late Cretaceous flysch of the Valdez Group....
A physically-based method for predicting peak discharge of floods caused by failure of natural and constructed earthen dams
J. S. Walder, J. E. O’Connor, J. E. Costa
Leavesley G.H., editor(s)
1997, Destructive water: water-caused natural disasters, their abatement and control. Proc. international conference, California, 1996 217-224
We analyse a simple, physically-based model of breach formation in natural and constructed earthen dams to elucidate the principal factors controlling the flood hydrograph at the breach. Formation of the breach, which is assumed trapezoidal in cross-section, is parameterized by the mean rate of downcutting, k, the value of which...
Multispectral thermal infrared mapping of sulfur dioxide plumes: A case study from the East Rift Zone of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
V.J. Realmuto, A. J. Sutton, T. Elias
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 15057-15072
The synoptic perspective and rapid mode of data acquisition provided by remote sensing are well suited for the study of volcanic SO2 plumes. In this paper we describe a plume-mapping procedure that is based on image data acquired with NASA's airborne thermal infrared multispectral scanner (TIMS) and apply the procedure to...
Constant-concentration boundary condition: Lessons from the HYDROCOIN variable-density groundwater benchmark problem
Leonard F. Konikow, W. E. Sanford, P.J. Campbell
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 2253-2261
In a solute-transport model, if a constant-concentration boundary condition is applied at a node in an active flow field, a solute flux can occur by both advective and dispersive processes. The potential for advective release is demonstrated by reexamining the Hydrologic Code Intercomparison (HYDROCOIN) project case 5 problem, which represents...
Roadblocks on the kill curve: Testing the Raup hypothesis
C. W. Poag
1997, Palaios (12) 582-590
The documented presence of two large (~100-km diameter), possibly coeval impact craters of late Eocene age, requires modification of the impact-kill curve proposed by David M. Raup. Though the estimated meteorite size for each crater alone is large enough to have produced considerable global environmental stress, no horizons of mass...
A dynamic balance between magma supply and eruption rate at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
R.P. Denlinger
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 18091-18100
The dynamic balance between magma supply and vent output at Kilauea volcano is used to estimate both the volume of magma stored within Kilauea volcano and its magma supply rate. Throughout most of 1991 a linear decline in volume flux from the Kupaianaha vent on Kilauea's east rift zone was...
Climatic controls of western U.S. glaciers at the last glacial maximum
S. W. Hostetler, P.U. Clark
1997, Quaternary Science Reviews (16) 505-511
We use a nested atmospheric modeling strategy to simulate precipitation and temperature of the western United States 18,000 years ago (18 ka). The high resolution of the nested model allows us to isolate the regional structure of summer temperature and winter precipitation that is crucial to determination of the net...
Accelerated relative sea-level rise and rapid coastal erosion: Testing a causal relationship for the Louisiana barrier islands
J. H. List, A. H. Sallenger Jr., M. E. Hansen, B. E. Jaffe
1997, Marine Geology (140) 347-365
The role of relative sea-level rise as a cause for the rapid erosion of Louisiana's barrier island coast is investigated through a numerical implementation of a modified Bruun rule that accounts for the low percentage of sand-sized sediment in the eroding Louisiana shoreface. Shore-normal profiles from 150 km of coastline...
Simulating reservoir leakage in ground-water models
J.P. Fenske, S. A. Leake, David E. Prudic
1997, Groundwater (35) 895-897
Leakage to ground water resulting from the expansion and contraction of reservoirs cannot be easily simulated by most ground-water flow models. An algorithm, entitled the Reservoir Package, was developed for the United States Geological Survey (USGS) three-dimensional finite-difference modular ground-water flow model MODFLOW. The Reservoir...
Watershed responses to climate change at Glacier National Park
D.B. Fagre, P.L. Comanor, J.D. White, F. Richard Hauer, S. W. Running
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 755-765
We have developed an approach which examines ecosystem function and the potential effects of climatic shifts. The Lake McDonald watershed of Glacier National Park was the focus for two linked research activities: acquisition of baseline data on hydrologic, chemical and aquatic organism attributes that characterize this pristine northern rocky mountain...
Foreland crustal structure of the New York recess, northeastern United States
G.C. Herman, D.H. Monteverde, R.W. Schlische, D.M. Pitcher
1997, Geological Society of America Bulletin (109) 955-977
A new structural model for the northeast part of the Central Appalachian foreland and fold-and-thrust belt is based on detailed field mapping, geophysical data, and balanced cross-section analysis. The model demonstrates that the region contains a multiply deformed, parautochthonous fold-and-thrust system of Paleozoic age. Our interpretations differ from previous ones...
Using δ87Sr values to identify sources of salinity to a freshwater aquifer, Greater Aneth Oil Field, Utah, USA
D. L. Naftz, Z. E. Peterman, L.E. Spangler
1997, Chemical Geology (141) 195-209
Salinity increases in water from the freshwater Navajo aquifer in the Aneth area have been documented in recent years. Previous studies during the 1980s in the Aneth area suggested that brines associated with oil production and their subsequent re-injection were the probable source of salinity in the Navajo aquifer. Differences...
222Rn transport in a fractured crystalline rock aquifer: Results from numerical simulations
P. F. Folger, E. Poeter, R. B. Wanty, W. Day, D. Frishman
1997, Journal of Hydrology (195) 45-77
Dissolved 222Rn concentrations in ground water from a small wellfield underlain by fractured Middle Proterozoic Pikes Peak Granite southwest of Denver, Colorado range from 124 to 840 kBq m-3 (3360-22700 pCi L-1). Numerical simulations of flow and transport between two wells show that differences in equivalent hydraulic aperture of transmissive...