Flow and chloride transport in the tidal Hudson River, NY
Lawrence A. Weiss, Raymond W. Schaffranek, M. Peter de Vries
1994, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
A one-dimensional dynamic-flow model and a one-dimensional solute-transport model were used to evaluate the effects of hypothetical public-supply water withdrawals on saltwater intrusion in a 133-mile reach of the tidal Hudson River between Green Island dam, near Troy, N.Y., and Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y. Regression techniques were used in analyses of current...
Ionic strength and DOC determinations from various freshwater sources to the San Francisco Bay
Y.R. Hunter, J.S. Kuwabara
1994, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (52) 311-318
An exact estimation of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) within the salinity gradient of zinc and copper metals is significant in understanding the limit to which DOC could influence metal speciation. A low-temperature persulfate/oxygen/ultraviolet wet oxidation procedure was utilized for analyzing DOC samples adapted for ionic strength from major freshwater sources...
Real-time data collection of scour at bridges
David S. Mueller, Mark N. Landers
1994, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Symposium on Fundamentals and Advancements in Hydraulic Measurements and Experimentation
The record flood on the Mississippi River during the summer of 1993 provided a rare opportunity to collect data on scour of the streambed at bridges and to test data collection equipment under extreme hydraulic conditions. Detailed bathymetric and hydraulic information were collected at two bridges crossing the Mississippi River...
Developing standards for a national spatial data infrastructure
Kathryn C. Wortman
1994, Cartography and Geographic Information Systems (21) 132-135
The concept of a framework for data and information linkages among producers and users, known as a National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI), is built upon four corners: data, technology, institutions, and standards. Standards are paramount to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of the NSDI. Historically, data standards and specifications have...
Sediment resuspension and bed armoring during high bottom stress events on the northern California inner continental shelf: Measurements and predictions
P.L. Wiberg, D.E. Drake, D.A. Cacchione
1994, Continental Shelf Research (14) 1191-1219
Geoprobe bottom tripods were deployed during the winter of 1990–1991 on the northern California inner continental shelf as part of the STRESS field experiment. Transmissometer measurements of light beam attenuation were made at two levels and current velocity was measured at...
Paleocene floral diversities and turnover events in eastern North America and their relation to diversity models
N. O. Frederiksen
1994, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (82) 225-238
This paper uses angiosperm pollen taxon turnover (first and last appearance) and diversity events as metrics to describe the Paleocene floral history of the eastern Gulf Coast; data are from 64 samples and 67 angiosperm pollen taxa. Angiosperm pollen diversity was very low at the beginning of the Paleocene, rose...
The geochemical cycling of trace elements in a biogenic meromictic lake
Laurie S. Balistrieri, J.W. Murray, B. Paul
1994, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (58) 3993-4008
The geochemical processes affecting the behavior and speciation of As, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Mo, Ni, Pb, V, and Zn in Hall Lake, Washington, USA, are assessed by examining dissolved and acid soluble particulate profiles of the elements and utilizing results from thermodynamic calculations. The water column of this...
Modeling the effects of climate change on water resources - a review
G.H. Leavesley
1994, Climatic Change (28) 159-177
Hydrologic models provide a framework in which to conceptualize and investigate the relationships between climate and water resources. A review of current studies that assess the impacts of climate change using hydrologic models indicates a number of problem areas common to the variety of models applied. These problem areas include...
Geometry of an outcrop-scale duplex in Devonian flysch, Maine
D. C. Bradley, L.M. Bradley
1994, Journal of Structural Geology (16) 371-380
We describe an outcrop-scale duplex consisting of 211 exposed repetitions of a single bed. The duplex marks an early Acadian (Middle Devonian) oblique thrust zone in the Lower Devonian flysch of northern Maine. Detailed mapping at a scale of 1:8 has...
Magnetic and gravity constraints on forearc upper crustal structure and composition, offshore northeast Japan
Carol A. Finn
1994, Journal of Geomagnetism & Geoelectricity (46) 423-441
Marine magnetic and gravity data from the northeast Japan forearc offer insight to the subsurface structure, density and magnetization from which geologic interpretations and tectonic reconstructions can be made. Positive marine magnetic anomalies, on-land geology, drill hole data, and 2-1/2-dimensional models reveal that Kitakami plutons and possibly their associated volcanic...
Precursory swarms of long-period events at Redoubt Volcano (1989-1990), Alaska: Their origin and use as a forecasting tool
B. A. Chouet, R.A. Page, C.D. Stephens, J.C. Lahr, J.A. Power
1994, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (62) 95-135
During the eruption of Redoubt Volcano from December 1989 through April 1990, the Alaska Volcano Observatory issued advance warnings of several tephra eruptions based on changes in seismic activity related to the occurrence of precursory swarms of long-period (LP) seismic events (dominant period of about 0.5 s). The initial eruption...
Multicomponent-flow analyses by multimode method of characteristics
Chintu Lai
1994, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (120) 378-395
For unsteady open-channel flows having N interacting unknown variables, a system of N mutually independent, partial differential equations can be used to describe the flow-field. The system generally belongs to marching-type problems and permits transformation into characteristic equations that are associated with N distinct characteristics directions. Because characteristics can be...
Mechanisms of crustal uplift and subsidence at the Yellowstone caldera, Wyoming
D. Dzurisin, K.M. Yamashita, J.W. Kleinman
1994, Bulletin of Volcanology (56) 261-270
Leveling surveys in 1923, 1976, and each year from 1983 to 1993 have shown that the east-central part of the Yellowstone caldera, near the base of the Sour Creek resurgent dome, rose at an average rate of 14??1 mm/year from 1923 to 1976 and 22??1 mm/year from 1976 to 1984....
The East African rift system in the light of KRISP 90
Gordon R. Keller, C. Prodehl, J. Mechie, K. Fuchs, M.A. Khan, Peter K.H. Maguire, Walter D. Mooney, U. Achauer, P.M. Davis, R.P. Meyer, L.W. Braile, I.O. Nyambok, G. A. Thompson
1994, Tectonophysics (236) 465-483
On the basis of a test experiment in 1985 (KRISP 85) an integrated seismic-refraction/teleseismic survey (KRISP 90) was undertaken to study the deep structure beneath the Kenya rift down to depths of 100–150 km. This paper summarizes the highlights of KRISP 90 as reported in this volume and discusses their...
Statistical forecasting of repetitious dome failures during the waning eruption of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska, February-April 1990
R.A. Page, J.C. Lahr, B. A. Chouet, J.A. Power, C.D. Stephens
1994, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (62) 183-196
The waning phase of the 1989-1990 eruption of Redoubt Volcano in the Cook Inlet region of south-central Alaska comprised a quasi-regular pattern of repetitious dome growth and destruction that lasted from February 15 to late April 1990. The dome failures produced ash plumes hazardous to airline traffic. In response to...
Simulation of gas phase transport of carbon-14 at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, USA
N. Lu, B. Ross
1994, Waste Management (14) 409-420
We have simulated gas phase transport of Carbon-14 at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Three models were established to calculate travel time of Carbon-14 from the potential repository to the mountain surface: a geochemical model for retardation factors, a coupled gas-flow and heat transfer model for temperature and gas flow fields, and...
Using PETRIMES to estimate mercury deposits in California
P.J. Lee, D.A. Singer
1994, Nonrenewable Resources (3) 190-199
In this article, we examine the use of an unconventional procedure, PETRIMES, to estimate mineral resources of mercury deposits in California. The study, which is based on the nonparametric discovery process model and Q-Q plots, suggests that a lognormal distribution is appropriate for the mercury deposits in California. The results...
Isotopic Approach to Soil Carbonate Dynamics and Implications for Paleoclimatic Interpretations
E. G. Pendall, J.W. Harden, S.E. Trumbore, O.A. Chadwick
1994, Quaternary Research (42) 60-71
The radiocarbon content and stable isotope composition of soil carbonate are best described by a dynamic system in which isotopic reequilibration occurs as a result of recurrent dissolution and reprecipitation. Depth of water penetration into the soil profile, as well as soil age, determines the degree of carbonate isotope reequilibration....
Use of long-term tritium records from the Colorado River to determine timescales for hydrologic processes associated with irrigation in the Imperial Valley, California
Robert L. Michel, R.A. Schoeder
1994, Applied Geochemistry (9) 387-401
Tritium records were used to study hydrologic processes associated with irrigation and drainage in the Imperial Valley, a 2000-km2 agricultural area in the southeastern California desert. Tritium was analyzed in surface water, ground water, soil-pore water and drain water, and the results were compared to the historical record of tritium in...
San Francisco Bay test case for 3-D model verification
Peter E. Smith
1994, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
This paper describes a field test case for 3-D hydrodynamic model verification using data from Carquinez Strait in San Francisco Bay, California. It will be disseminated by the ASCE Computational Hydraulics task committee on 3-D Free-Surface Hydrodynamic Model Verifications during late 1994....
An integrated data-directed numerical method for estimating the undiscovered mineral endowment in a region
R.B. McCammon, W.I. Finch, J.O. Kork, N.J. Bridges
1994, Nonrenewable Resources (3) 109-122
An integrated data-directed numerical method has been developed to estimate the undiscovered mineral endowment within a given area. The method has been used to estimate the undiscovered uranium endowment in the San Juan Basin, New Mexico, U.S.A. The favorability of uranium concentration was evaluated in each of 2,068 cells defined...
A quantitative model of ground-water flow during formation of tabular sandstone uranium deposits
R.F. Sanford
1994, Economic Geology (89) 341-360
Tabular sandstone uranium deposits constitute the largest uranium resource type in the United States. A major point of contention has been the nature and direction of the ground-water flow. This paper presents a quantitative simulation of regional ground-water flow during uranium deposition in the Westwater Canyon Member and Jackpile Sandstone...
Sedimentological indicators of paleoenvironments and siliciclastic stratigraphic sequences in some Miocene deposits of the Calvert Cliffs, southern Maryland
G. L. Shideler
1994, Southeastern Geology (34) 163-184
Middle Miocene siliciclastic deposits comprising the Calvert Cliffs section at the Baltimore Gas and Electric Company's (BG&E) nuclear power plant site in southern Maryland were analyzed in terms of lithostratigraphy, sedimentary structures, and granulometric parameters, to interprete paleo-environments within a sequence-stratigraphic framework. In terms of sequence-stratigraphic models, the BG&E section...
Rare earth element contents and multiple mantle sources of the transform-related Mount Edgecumbe basalts, southeastern Alaska
J.R. Riehle, J. R. Budahn, M. A. Lanphere, D. A. Brew
1994, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (31) 852-864
Pleistocene basalt of the Mount Edgecumbe volcanic field (MEF) is subdivided into a plagioclase type and an olivine type. Olivine basalt crops out farther inboard from the nearby Fairweather transform than plagioclase basalt. Th/La ratios of plagioclase basalt are similar to those of mid-ocean-ridge basalt (MORB), whereas those of olivine...
Modeling and analysis of the 1949 Narrows landslide, Tacoma, Washington
A.F. Chleborad
1994, Bulletin of the Association of Engineering Geologists (31) 305-327
A large landslide failed catastrophically along steep, 90-m (300-ft) high bluffs overlooking the waters of Puget Sound at Tacoma, Washington, in April of 1949, three days after the region was struck by a magnitude 7.1 earthquake. The area of failure was investigated to...