Evidence from the Lamarck granodiorite for rapid late Cretaceous crust formation in California
D.S. Coleman, A. F. Glazner, T. P. Frost
1992, Science (258) 1924-1926
Strontium and neodymium isotopic data for rocks from the voluminous 90-million-year-old Lamarck intrusive suite in the Sierra Nevada batholith, California, show little variation across a compositional range from gabbro to granite. Data for three different gabbro intrusions within the suite are identical within analytical error and are consistent with derivation...
Interseismic deformation at the Nankai Trough, Japan, subduction zone
James C. Savage, Wayne R. Thatcher
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (97) 11117-11135
Uplift along the coast of southwestern Japan following the 1944 Tonankai (Ms = 8.0) and 1946 Nankaido (Ms = 8.2) earthquakes has been inferred from the 1950–1985 tide gage records. Although uplift rates vary with geographic position, the temporal dependence at each site can be described as the superposition of an exponentially...
The influence of pressure on petroleum generation and maturation as suggested by aqueous pyrolysis
L.C. Price, L.M. Wenger
1992, Organic Geochemistry (19) 141-159
Because fluid pressures are transient in sedimentary basins over geologic time, the effect of increasing fluid pressure on organic-matter metamorphism is difficult to determine, and conflicting opinions exist concerning its influence. Properly-performed aqueous-pyrolysis experiments can closely simulate hydrocarbon generation and maturation in nature, and thus offer an excellent way to...
Deposition of aerially applied BT in an oak forest and its prediction with the FSCBG model
Dean E. Anderson, David R. Miller, Yansen Wang, William G. Yendol, Karl Mierzejewski, Michael L. McManus
1992, Journal of Applied Meteorology (31) 1457-1466
Data are provided from 17 single-swath aerial spray trials that were conducted over a fully leafed, 16-m tall, mixed oak forest. The distribution of cross-swath spray deposits was sampled at the top of the canopy and below the canopy. Micrometeorological conditions were measured above and within the canopy during the...
Change in failure stress on the southern San Andreas fault system caused by the 1992 magnitude = 7.4 Landers earthquake
R.S. Stein, G.C.P. King, J. Lin
1992, Science (258) 1328-1332
The 28 June Landers earthquake brought the San Andreas fault significantly closer to failure near San Bernardino, a site that has not sustained a large shock since 1812. Stress also increased on the San Jacinto fault near San Bernardino and on the San Andreas fault southeast of Palm Springs. Unless...
Changes in static stress on southern California faults after the 1992 Landers earthquake
R.A. Harris, R.W. Simpson
1992, Nature (360) 251-254
The magnitude 7.5 Landers earthquake of 28 June 1992 was the largest earthquake to strike California in 40 years. The slip that occurs in such an earthquake would be expected to induce large changes in the static stress on neighbouring faults; these changes in stress should in turn affect the...
Resilience of a heavily logged grove of giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) in Kings Canyon National Park, California
Thomas J. Stohlgren
1992, Forest Ecology and Management (54) 115-140
The Big Stump Grove of giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum (Lindl.) Buchholz) was heavily logged between 1883 and 1889 and the stand naturally regenerated from seed following logging. In 1968, as part of a 100% sequoia tree inventory, all living sequoias (n = 3587) and dead trees and stumps (n=588) were...
Evaluating fishery rehabilitation under uncertainty: A bioeconomic analysis of quota management for the Green Bay yellow perch fishery
Barry L. Johnson, S.R. Milliman, R.C. Bishop, J.F. Kitchell
1992, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (12) 703-720
The fishery for yellow perch Perca flavescens in Green Bay, Lake Michigan, is currently operating under a rehabilitation plan based on a commercial harvest quota. We developed a bioeconomic computer model that included links between population density and growth, recruitment, and fishing effort for this fishery. Random variability was included in the...
Modeling tidal exchange and dispersion in Boston Harbor
Richard P. Signell, Bradford Butman
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (97) 15591-15606
Tidal dispersion and the horizontal exchange of water between Boston Harbor and the surrounding ocean are examined with a high-resolution (200 m) depth-averaged numerical model. The strongly varying bathymetry and coastline geometry of the harbor generate complex spatial patterns in the modeled tidal currents which are verified by shipboard acoustic...
Estimation of wildlife population ratios incorporating survey design and visibility bias
Michael D. Samuel, R. Kirk Steinhorst, Edward O. Garton, James W. Unsworth
1992, Journal of Wildlife Management (56) 718-725
Age and sex ratio statistics are often a key component of the evaluation and management of wildlife populations. These statistics are determined from counts of animals that are commonly plagued by errors associated with either survey design or visibility bias. We present age and sex ratio estimators that incorporate both...
Pliocene paleoclimatic interpretation of DSDP Site 580 (NW Pacific) using diatoms
John A. Barron
1992, Marine Micropaleontology (20) 23-44
High-resolution quantitative diatom data are tabulated for the early part of the late Pliocene (3.25 to 2.08 Ma) at DSDP Site 580 in the northwestern Pacific. Sample spacing averages 11 k.y. between 3.1 and 2.8 Ma, but increases to 14 to 19 k.y. prior to 3.1 Ma and after 2.8...
A geochemical transport model for redox-controlled movement of mineral fronts in groundwater flow systems: A case of nitrate removal by oxidation of pyrite
Peter Engesgaard, Kenneth L. Kipp
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2829-2843
A one-dimensional prototype geochemical transport model was developed in order to handle simultaneous precipitation-dissolution and oxidation-reduction reactions governed by chemical equilibria. Total aqueous component concentrations are the primary dependent variables, and a sequential iterative approach is used for the calculation. The model was verified by analytical and numerical comparisons and...
Modeling biotic uptake by periphyton and transient hyporrheic storage of nitrate in a natural stream
Brian K.A. Kim, Alan P. Jackman, Frank J. Triska
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2743-2752
To a convection-dispersion hydrologic transport model we coupled a transient storage submodel (Bencala, 1984) and a biotic uptake submodel based on Michaelis-Menten kinetics (Kim et al., 1990). Our purpose was threefold: (1) to simulate nitrate retention in response to change in load in a third-order stream, (2) to differentiate biotic...
Wildlife species richness in shelterbelts: test of a habitat model
Richard L. Schroeder, Ted T. Cable, Sandra L. Haire
1992, Wildlife Society Bulletin (20) 264-273
Shelterbelts are human-made habitats consisting of rows of shrubs and trees planted either in fields or on the windward side of farmstead dwellings. Shelterbelts provide wooded habitat for a large variety of birds and other wildlife. A model to predict wildlife species richness in shelterbelts (Schroeder 1986) was published as...
Use of chlorofluorocarbons (CCl3F and CCl2F2) as hydrologic tracers and age‐dating tools: The alluvium and terrace system of central Oklahoma
Eurybiades Busenberg, Niel Plummer
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2257-2283
The use of Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) as an age‐dating tool and tracer in shallow groundwaters has been investigated. New methodology for field sampling and preserving groundwaters containing parts per trillion concentrations of the CFCs, F‐1l and F‐12, is presented. Samples are analyzed by purge‐and‐trap gas chromatography with an electron...
The geology and distribution of impact craters on Venus: What are they telling us?
G. G. Schaber, R.G. Strom, H. J. Moore, Laurence A. Soderblom, Randolph L. Kirk, D.J. Chadwick, D.D. Dawson, Lisa R. Gaddis, J. M. Boyce, Joel F. Russell
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (97) 13257-13301
Magellan has revealed an ensemble of impact craters on Venus that is unique in many important ways. We have compiled a data base describing the 842 craters on 89% of Venus' surface mapped through orbit 2578. (The craters range in diameter from 1.5 to 280 km.) We have studied the...
Alternate reproductive strategies in the California gull
Bruce H. Pugesek, P. Wood
1992, Evolutionary Ecology (6) 279-295
We analysed 6 years of reproduction data for 176 California gulls (Larus californicus) surviving from 1980 to 1988. Using a statistical model adapted from Rao's (1958) and Tucker's (1966) generalized growth curve analysis, we reconstructed the reproductive patterns of gulls aged from 0 to 26 years. Individuals were...
Seismic constraints on the nature of lower crustal reflectors beneath the extending Southern Transition Zone of the Colorado Plateau, Arizona
Thomas E. Parsons, John M. Howie, George A. Thompson
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (97) 12391-12407
We determine the reflection polarity and exploit variations in P and S wave reflectivity and P wave amplitude versus offset (AVO) to constrain the origin of lower crustal reflectivity observed on new three-component seismic data recorded across the structural transition of the Colorado Plateau. The near vertical incidence reflection data...
Post-rifting stress relaxation at the divergent plate boundary in northeast Iceland
G.R. Foulger, C.-H. Jahn, G. Seeber, P. Einarsson, B.R. Julian, K. Heki
1992, Nature (358) 488-490
Interaction of the elastic lithosphere with the underlying anelastic asthenosphere causes strain to propagate along the Earth's surface in a diffusion-like manner following tectonism at plate boundaries. This process transfers stress between adjacent tectonic segments and influences the temporal tectonic pattern along a plate boundary. Observations of such strain transients...
Large-scale natural gradient tracer test in sand and gravel, Cape Cod, Massachusetts: 3. Hydraulic conductivity variability and calculated macrodispersivities
Kathryn M. Hess, Steven H. Wolf, Michael A. Celia
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2011-2027
Hydraulic conductivity (K) variability in a sand and gravel aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, was measured and subsequently used in stochastic transport theories to estimate macrodispersivities. Nearly 1500 K measurements were obtained by borehole flowmeter tests and permeameter analyses of cores. The geometric mean for the flowmeter tests (0.11 cm/s)...
Relation of nickel concentrations in tree rings to groundwater contamination
Thomas M. Yanosky, Don A. Vroblesky
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2077-2083
Increment cores were collected from trees growing at two sites where groundwater is contaminated by nickel. Proton-induced X ray emission spectroscopy was used to determine the nickel concentrations in selected individual rings and in parts of individual rings. Ring nickel concentrations were interpreted on the basis of recent concentrations of...
Precipitation estimation in mountainous terrain using multivariate geostatistics. Part I: structural analysis
Joseph A. Hevesi, Jonathan D. Istok, Alan L. Flint
1992, Journal of Applied Meteorology (31) 661-676
Values of average annual precipitation (AAP) are desired for hydrologic studies within a watershed containing Yucca Mountain, Nevada, a potential site for a high-level nuclear-waste repository. Reliable values of AAP are not yet available for most areas within this watershed because of a sparsity of precipitation measurements and the need...
Precipitation estimation in mountainous terrain using multivariate geostatistics. Part II: isohyetal maps
Joseph A. Hevesi, Alan L. Flint, Jonathan D. Istok
1992, Journal of Applied Meteorology (31) 677-688
Values of average annual precipitation (AAP) may be important for hydrologic characterization of a potential high-level nuclear-waste repository site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Reliable measurements of AAP are sparse in the vicinity of Yucca Mountain, and estimates of AAP were needed for an isohyetal mapping over a 2600-square-mile watershed containing...
Habitat characteristics at marten subnivean access sites
Janelle G. Corn, Martin G. Raphael
1992, Journal of Wildlife Management (56) 442-448
The occurrence of coarse woody debris (CWD) at sites of subnivean (under snow) access by martens (Martes americana) has not been quantified adequately, and must be better understood to provide suitable winter habitat management for the species. Consequently, we studied subnivean activity of martens in a subalpine forest in southern...
Structure of the Reelfoot rift as interpreted from 2-D magnetotelluric models
William D. Stanley, Brian D. Rodriguez
1992, Seismological Research Letters (63) 223-232
The results of magnetotelluric (MT) surveys reveal structures associated with the Reelfoot rift, including an axial high-resistivity structure that may be related to intrusions in the central part of the rift or to a previously unrecognized horst. The axis of this resistivity high generally follows the central part of the...