Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

40904 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 1334, results 33326 - 33350

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
An earthquake instability model based on faults containing high fluid-pressure compartments
D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee
1995, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (145) 717-745
It has been proposed that large strike-slip faults such as the San Andreas contain water in seal-bounded compartments. Arguments based on heat flow and stress orientation suggest that in most of the compartments, the water pressure is so high that the average shear strength of the fault is less than...
Fluxes of water and solute in a coastal wetland sediment. 2. Effect of macropores on solute exchange with surface water
J. W. Harvey, W.K. Nuttle
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 109-125
Chloride was highly concentrated relative to seawater in matrix porewater but was comparatively dilute in macropores. Concentration differences in pore-size classes declined with depth until indistinguishable below 10 cm. The segregated chloride distribution can be explained if recharge to the sediment occurred by downward infiltration in macropores and discharge occurred...
Effects of climate on chemical weathering in watersheds
A. F. White, A.E. Blum
1995, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (59) 1729-1747
Climatic effects on chemical weathering are evaluated by correlating variations On solute concentrations and fluxes with temperature, precipitation, runoff, and evapotranspiration (ET) for a worldwide distribution of sixty-eight watersheds underlain by granitoid rock types. Stream solute concentrations are strongly correlated with proportional ET loss, and evaporative concentration makes stream solute concentrations an...
Constraints on formation processes of two coarse-grained calcium- aluminum-rich inclusions: A study of mantles, islands and cores
G.P. Meeker
1995, Meteoritics (30) 71-84
Many coarse-grained calcium- aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs) contain features that are inconsistent with equilibrium liquid crystallization models of origin. Spinel-free islands (SFIs) in spinel-rich cores of Type B CAIs are examples of such features. One model previously proposed for the origin of Allende 5241, a Type B1 CAI containing SFIs, involves...
Seafloor environments within the Boston Harbor-Massachusetts Bay sedimentary system: a regional synthesis
H.J. Knebel, R.C. Circe
1995, Journal of Coastal Research (11) 230-251
Modern seafloor sedimentary environments within the glaciated, topographically complex Boston Harbor and Massachusetts Bay area have been interpreted and mapped from an extensive collection of sidescan sonar records and supplemental marine geologic data. Three categories of environments are present that reflect the dominant long-term processes of erosion or nondeposition, deposition,...
Diatom evidence for earthquake-induced subsidence and tsunami 300 yr ago in southern coastal Washington
E. Hemphill-Haley
1995, Geological Society of America Bulletin (107) 367-378
Fossil diatoms from four stratigraphic sections along the tidal Niawiakum River, southwestern Washington, provide an independent paleoecological test of a relative sea-level rise that has been attributed to subsidence during an inferred earthquake in the Cascadia subduction zone about 300 yr ago. Diatom assemblages in a buried soil and overlying...
Using GIS for verification of bathymetric data from Long Island sound
Muriel S. Grim, Barbara A. Seekins, Thomas E. Chase
1995, Conference Paper, Coastal Zone: Proceedings of the Symposium on Coastal and Ocean Management
Accurate depiction of the topography of the seafloor in coastal areas is needed for modeling of ecosystems and processes, and also as a framework for analyzing and displaying information used in management decisions. Often, errors must be corrected before acquired digital data bases can be used. To create an acceptable...
Variations of weekly atmospheric deposition for multiple collectors at a site on the shore of Lake Okeechobee, Florida
N.E. Peters, R.S. Reese
1995, Atmospheric Environment (29) 179-187
Eight wet/dry precipitation collectors were modified to house four additional dryfall collectors and one bulk precipitation collector to sample atmospheric deposition for 12 weeks in a small area on the southwestern shore of Lake Okeechobee; sample contamination, primarily by insects, reduced the comparison to the last nine weeks. The deposition...
Superposed local and regional paleostresses: fault-slip analysis of Neogene extensional faulting near coeval caldera complexes, Yucca Flat, Nevada
S.A. Minor
1995, Journal of Geophysical Research (100) 10507-10528
Numerous reduced stress tensors are computed by multiple inversions of 906 temporally and spatially partitioned fault-slip data from the Yucca Flat region in the southwest Nevada volcanic field to constrain the Neogene paleostress and faulting history and to investigate how the regional tectonic stress field...
Rainfall thresholds for the initiation of debris flows at La Honda, California
R. C. Wilson, G. F. Wieczorek
1995, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (1) 11-27
In order to study the relation between heavy rainfall, shallow pore pressures, and slope stability in hillslopes susceptible to debris flows, we have been observing debris flows and measuring rainfall and hillslope pore pressures in a 10-km2 study area in the central Santa Cruz Mountains near La Honda, California. A simple...
Glacial removal of late Cenozoic subglacially emplaced volcanic edifices by the West Antarctic ice sheet
John C. Behrendt, D. D. Blankenship, D. Damaske, A. K. Cooper
1995, Geology (23) 1111-1114
Local maxima of the horizontal gradient of pseudogravity from closely spaced aeromagnetic surveys over the Ross Sea, northwestern Ross Ice Shelf, and the West Antarctic ice sheet, reveal a linear magnetic rift fabric and numerous subcircular, high-amplitude anomalies. Geophysical data indicate two or three youthful volcanic edifices at widely separated...
Applications of isotopes to tracing sources of solutes and water in shallow systems
Carol Kendall, David P. Krabbenhoft
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
New awareness of the potential danger to water supplies posed by the use of agricultural chemicals has focused attention on the nature of groundwater recharge and the mobility of various solutes, especially nitrate and pesticides, in shallow systems. A better understanding of hydrologic flowpaths and solute sources is required to...
The effect of fault-bend folding on seismic velocity in the marginal ridge of accretionary prisms
Y. Cai, Chun-Yong Wang, W.-t. Hwang, G.R. Cochrane
1995, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (145) 637-646
Fluid venting in accretionary prisms, which feeds chemosynthetic biological communities, occurs mostly on the marginal thrust ridge. New seismic data for the marginal ridge of the Cascadia prism show significantly lower velocity than that in the adjacent oceanic basin and place important constraints on the interpretations of why fluid venting...
Glacial morphology and depositional sequences of the Antarctic Continental Shelf
Uri S. ten Brink, Christopher Schneider
1995, Geology (23) 580-584
We propose a simple model for the unusual depositional sequences and morphology of the Antarctic continental shelf. Our model considers the regional stratal geometry and the reversed morphology of the Antarctic continental shelf to be principally the results of time-integrated effects of glacial...
Frictional slip of granite at hydrothermal conditions
M.L. Blanpied, D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee
1995, Journal of Geophysical Research (100) 13045-13064
Sliding on faults in much of the continental crust likely occurs at hydrothermal conditions, i.e., at elevated temperature and elevated pressure of aqueous pore fluids, yet there have been few relevant laboratory studies. To measure the strength, sliding behavior, and friction constitutive properties of faults...
Optimal pumping strategies for managing shallow, poorquality groundwater, western San Joaquin Valley, California
P. Barlow, B. Wagner, K. Belitz
1995, Models for assessing and monitoring groundwater quality. Proc. symposium, Boulder, 1995 (227) 141-148
Continued agricultural productivity in the western San Joaquin Valley, California, is threatened by the presence of shallow, poor-quality groundwater that can cause soil salinization. We evaluate the management alternative of using groundwater pumping to control the altitude of the water table and provide irrigation water requirements. A transient, three-dimensional, groundwater...
Extending and expanding the life of older current meters
W.J. Strahle, Marinna A. Martini
1995, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the IEEE Working Conference on Current Measurement
The EG&G Model 610 VACM and Model 630 VMCM are standards for ocean current measurements. It is simple to add peripheral sensors to the data stream of the VACM by use of add-on CMOS circuitry. The firmware control of the VMCM makes it virtually impossible to add sampling of additional...
Environmental probabilistic quantitative assessment methodologies
R. A. Crovelli
1995, Computers & Geosciences (21) 971-984
In this paper, four petroleum resource assessment methodologies are presented as possible pollution assessment methodologies, even though petroleum as a resource is desirable, whereas pollution is undesirable. A methodology is defined in this paper to consist of a probability model and a probabilistic method, where the method is used to...
A possible deficiency in estimates of wet deposition obtained from data generated by the NADP/NTN network
H.C. Claassen, D.R. Halm
1995, Atmospheric Environment (29) 437-448
A conventional precipitation scavenging model is used to evaluate the effect of the performance of a wet-deposition collector on the reported deposition amounts. Three National Atmospheric Deposition Program/National Trends Network sites in semi arid western Colorado were chosen to evaluate chloride and sulfate wet deposition. Observations of the performance of...
Simulation of interaction between ground water in an alluvial aquifer and surface water in a large braided river
S. A. Leake, M. R. Lilly
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
The Fairbanks, Alaska, area has many contaminated sites in a shallow alluvial aquifer. A ground-water flow model is being developed using the MODFLOW finite-difference ground-water flow model program with the River Package. The modeled area is discretized in the horizontal dimensions into 118 rows and 158 columns of approximately 150-meter...
Acidic deposition ("acid rain")
R. Kent Schreiber
Edward T. LaRoe, Gaye S. Farris, Catherine E. Puckett, Peter D. Doran, Michael J. Mac, editor(s)
1995, Book chapter, Our living resources: A report to the nation on the distribution, abundance, and health of U.S. plants, animals, and ecosystems
Acidic deposition, or "acid rain," describes any form of precipitation, including rain, snow, and fog, with a pH of 5.5 or below (Note: pH values below 7 are acidic; vinegar has a pH of 3). It often results when the acidity of normal precipitation is increased by sulfates and nitrates...
Strong-acid, carboxyl-group structures in fulvic acid from the Suwannee River, Georgia. 1. Minor structures
J.A. Leenheer, R.L. Wershaw, M.M. Reddy
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 393-398
An investigation of the strong-acid characteristics (pKa 3.0 or less) of fulvic acid from the Suwannee River, Georgia, was conducted. Quantitative determinations were made for amino acid and sulfur-containing acid structures, oxalate half-ester structures, malonic acid structures, keto acid structures, and aromatic carboxyl-group structures. These determinations were made by using...
Oxidation of dimethylselenide by δMnO2: oxidation product and factors affecting oxidation rate
Bronwen Wang, Richard G. Burau
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 1504-1510
Volatile dimethylselenide (DMSe) was transformed to a nonvolatile Se compound in a ??-MnO2 suspension. The nonvolatile product was a single compound identified as dimethylselenoxide based on its mass spectra pattern. After 24 h, 100% of the DMSe added to a ??-MnO2 suspension was converted to nonpurgable Se as opposed to...