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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Assessment of habitat of wildlife communities on the Snake River, Jackson, Wyoming
Richard L. Schroeder, Arthur W. Allen
1992, Report, Fish and Wildlife Service Resource Publication 190
The composition of the wildlife community in western riparian habitats is influenced by the horizontal and vertical distribution of vegetation, the physical complexity of the channel, and barriers to movement along the corridor. Based on information from the literature and a workshop, a model was developed to evaluate the wildlife...
Partially melted granodiorite and related rocks ejected from Crater Lake caldera, Oregon
Charles R. Bacon
1992, Book chapter, The second Hutton symposium on the origin of granites and related rocks
Blocks of medium-grained granodiorite to 4 m, and minor diabase, quartz diorite, granite, aplite and granophyre, are common in ejecta of the ∼6,900 yr BP caldera-forming eruption of Mount Mazama. The blocks show degrees of melting from 0–50 vol%. Because very few have adhering juvenile magma, it is thought that...
Source region of a granite batholith: evidence from lower crustal xenoliths and inherited accessory minerals
Calvin F. Miller, John M. Hanchar, Joseph L. Wooden, Victoria C. Bennett, T. Mark Harrison, David A. Wark, David A. Foster
P.E. Brown, B. W. Chappell, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, The Second Hutton Symposium on the Origin of Granites and Related Rocks
Like many granites, the Late Cretaceous intrusives of the eastern Mojave Desert, California, have heretofore provided useful but poorly focused images of their source regions. New studies of lower crustal xenoliths and inherited accessory minerals are sharpening these images.Xenoliths in Tertiary dykes in this region are the residues of an...
Colloid formation during waste form reaction: Implications for nuclear waste disposal
J. K. Bates, J. Bradley, A. Teetsov, C. R. Bradley, Marilyn R. Buchholtz ten Brink
1992, Science (256) 649-651
Insoluble plutonium- and americium-bearing colloidal particles formed during simulated weathering of a high-level nuclear waste glass. Nearly 100 percent of the total plutonium and americium in test ground water was concentrated in these submicrometer particles. These results indicate that models of actinide mobility and repository integrity, which assume complete solubility...
Partially melted granodiorite and related rocks ejected from Crater Lake caldera, Oregon
Charles R. Bacon
1992, Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh (83) 27-47
Blocks of medium-grained granodiorite to 4 m, and minor diabase, quartz diorite, granite, aplite and granophyre, are common in ejecta of the ∼6,900 yrBP calderaforming eruption of Mount Mazama. The blocks show degrees of melting from 0–50 vol%. Because very few have adhering juvenile magma, it is thought that the...
Variations in the reflectivity of the moho transition zone beneath the Midcontinent Rift System of North America: results from true amplitude analysis of GLIMPCE data
Deborah R. Hutchinson, Myung W. Lee, John C. Behrendt, William F. Cannon, Adrian G. Mann
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (97) 4721-4737
True amplitude processing of The Great Lakes International Multidisciplinary Program on Crustal Evolution seismic reflection data from the Midcontinent Rift System of North America shows large differences in the reflectivity of the Moho transition zone beneath the axial rift, beneath the rift flanks, and outside of the rift. The Moho...
Source region of a granite batholith: Evidence from lower crustal xenoliths and inherited accessory minerals
Calvin F. Miller, John M. Hanchar, Joseph L. Wooden, Victoria C. Bennett, T. Mark Harrison, David A. Wark, David A. Foster
1992, Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh (83) 49-62
Like many granites, the Late Cretaceous intrusives of the eastern Mojave Desert, California, have heretofore provided useful but poorly focused images of their source regions. New studies of lower crustal xenoliths and inherited accessory minerals are sharpening these images.Xenoliths in Tertiary dykes in this region are the residues of an...
Petrogenesis of the Pd-rich intrusion at Salt Chuck, Prince of Wales island: an early Paleozoic Alaskan-type ultramafic body
R. A. Loney, G. R. Himmelberg
1992, Canadian Mineralogist (30) 1005-1022
The early Paleozoic Salt Chuck intrusion has petrographic and chemical characteristics that are similar to those of Cretaceous Alaskan-type ultramafic-mafic bodies. The intrusion is markedly discordant to the structure of the early Paleozoic Descon Formation, in which it has produced a rather indistinct contact aureole a few meters wide. Mineral...
Change-in-ratio methods for estimating population size
Mark S. Udevitz, Kenneth H. Pollock
Dale R. McCullough, Reginald H. Barrett, editor(s)
1992, Book chapter, Wildlife 2001: Populations
Change-in-ratio (CIR) methods can provide an effective, low cost approach for estimating the size of wildlife populations. They rely on being able to observe changes in proportions of population subclasses that result from the removal of a known number of individuals from the population. These methods were first introduced in...
Progress report on the Worldwide Earthquake Risk Management (WWERM) Program
S. T. Algermissen, Walter W. Hays, Paul R. Krumpe
1992, Conference Paper, NIST Special Publication
Considerable progress has been made in the Worldwide Earthquake Risk Management (WWERM) Program since its initiation in late 1989 as a cooperative program of the Agency for International Development (AID), Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA), and the U.S. Geological Survey. Probabilistic peak acceleration and peak Modified Mercalli intensity...
Ground-water recharge through active sand dunes in northwestern Nevada
D.L. Berger
1992, Water Resources Bulletin (28) 959-965
Most water-resource investigations in semiarid basins of the Great Basin in western North America conclude that ground-water recharge from direct precipitation on the valley floor is negligible. However, many of these basins contain large areas covered by unvegetated, active sand dunes that may act as conduits for ground-water recharge. The...
Geology and geothermal potential of the Tecuamburro Volcano area, Guatemala
W. A. Duffield, G.H. Heiken, K.H. Wohletz, L.W. Maassen, G. Dengo, E.H. McKee, O. Castaneda
1992, Geothermics (21) 425-446
Tecuamburro, an andesitic stratovolcano in southeastern Guatemala, is within the chain of active volcanoes of Central America. Though Tecuamburro has no record of historic eruptions, radiocarbon ages indicate that eruption of this and three other adjacent volcanoes occurred within the past 38,300 years. The youngest eruption produced a dacite dome....
Tide- and wind-driven flushing of Boston Harbor, Massachusetts
Richard Signell
1992, Conference Paper
The flushing of Boston Harbor, a shallow, tidally dominated embayment with little fresh water input, is investigated using a depth-averaged model. The modeled tidal currents exhibit strong spatial variability and ebb/flood asymmetry due to complex topography and coastline geometry and were verified by shipboard acoustic Doppler current profiler measurements. At...
The Galileo Solid-State Imaging experiment
M. J. S. Belton, K.P. Klaasen, M.C. Clary, J. L. Anderson, C.D. Anger, M. H. Carr, C. R. Chapman, M. E. Davies, R. Greeley, D. Anderson, L.K. Bolef, T.E. Townsend, R. Greenberg, J. W. Head III, G. Neukum, C.B. Pilcher, J. Veverka, P.J. Gierasch, F. P. Fanale, A.P. Ingersoll, H. Masursky, D. Morrison, James B. Pollack
1992, Space Science Reviews (60) 413-455
The Solid State Imaging (SSI) experiment on the Galileo Orbiter spacecraft utilizes a high-resolution (1500 mm focal length) television camera with an 800 ?? 800 pixel virtual-phase, charge-coupled detector. It is designed to return images of Jupiter and its satellites that are characterized by a combination of sensitivity levels, spatial...
Two-dimensional circulation modeling of the Pamlico River estuary, North Carolina
G. L. Giese, Jerad Bales
1992, Conference Paper
A two dimensional, vertically averaged, unsteady flow model was applied to a 50- kilometer reach of the Pamlico River estuary, North Carolina. The model computational grid, which consists of about 16,000 square cells, each 200 meters on a side, was developed from more than one million depth soundings. Information from...
Large lake basins of the southern High Plains: Ground-water control of their origin?
W.W. Wood, W. E. Sanford, C.C. Reeves Jr.
1992, Geology (20) 535-538
The origin of the ∼40-50 topographically large lake basins on the southern High Plains of Texas and New Mexico has been an enigma. Previous workers have considered deflation or evaporite dissolution at depth and subsequent collapse as the most probable mechanisms. However, the eolian hypotheses have been unable to provide...
Effects of climatic change and climatic variability on the Thornthwaite moisture index in the Delaware River basin
G. J. McCabe Jr., D.M. Wolock
1992, Climatic Change (20) 143-153
The Thornthwaite moisture index is useful as an indicator of the supply of water in an area relative to the demand under prevailing climatic conditions. This study examines the effects of long-term changes in climate (temperature and precipitation) on the Thornthwaite moisture index in the Delaware River basin. Temperature and...
Simultaneous parameter estimation and contaminant source characterization for coupled groundwater flow and contaminant transport modelling
B.J. Wagner
1992, Journal of Hydrology (135) 275-303
Parameter estimation and contaminant source characterization are key steps in the development of a coupled groundwater flow and contaminant transport simulation model. Here a methodologyfor simultaneous model parameter estimation and source characterization is presented. The parameter estimation/source characterization inverse model combines groundwater flow and contaminant transport simulation with non-linear maximum...
Semiempirical model of soil water hysteresis
J. R. Nimmo
1992, Soil Science Society of America Journal (56) 1723-1730
In order to represent hysteretic soil water retention curves accurately using as few measurements as possible, a new semiempirical model has been developed. It has two postulates related to physical characteristics of the medium, and two parameters, each with a definite physical interpretation, whose values are determined empirically for a...
Phase relations in the system NaCl-KCl-H2O: V. Thermodynamic-PTX analysis of solid-liquid equilibria at high temperatures and pressures
S.M. Sterner, I.-M. Chou, R.T. Downs, Kenneth S. Pitzer
1992, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (56) 2295-2309
The Gibbs energies of mixing for NaCl-KCl binary solids and liquids and solid-saturated NaCl-KCl-H2O ternary liquids were modeled using asymmetric Margules treatments. The coefficients of the expressions were calibrated using an extensive array of binary solvus and solidus data, and both binary and ternary liquidus data. Over the PTX range considered, the...
Energy budgets and resistances to energy transport in sparsely vegetated rangeland
William D. Nichols
1992, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology (60) 221-247
Partitioning available energy between plants and bare soil in sparsely vegetated rangelands will allow hydrologists and others to gain a greater understanding of water use by native vegetation, especially phreatophytes. Standard methods of conducting energy budget studies result in measurements of latent and sensible heat fluxes above the plant canopy...