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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Geology and resources of thorium and associated elements in the Wet Mountains area, Fremont and Custer counties, Colorado
T.J. Armbrustmacher
1988, Professional Paper 1049-F
Thorium in potentially economic amounts occurs in three types of deposits in the Wet Mountains area of Colorado: (1) quartz-baritethorite veins and fracture zones, (2) carbonatite dikes, and (3) red syenite dikes. The quartz-barite-thorite veins and fracture zones contain the largest resources of thorium; they cut all Precambrian and Paleozoic...
Potential flood and debris hazards at Katherine Landing and Telephone Cove, Lake Mead National Recreation Area, Mohave County, Arizona
Otto Moosburner
1988, Water-Resources Investigations Report 87-4081
Katherine Landing is a recreation site on the east shore of Lake Mohave, an impoundment on the Colorado River southeast of Las Vegas, Nevada. With proper inspection and maintenance, the present (1979) channel and diking system at Katherine Landing is judged adequate to confine and restrain floods up to and...
Mines, prospects, and mineral sites, wilderness and RARE II areas, White Mountain National Forest, New Hampshire
G. C. Gazdik, Gazdik Harris, R. A. Welsh, V. P. Girol
1988, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 1594-E
The Wilderness Act (Public Law 88-577, September 3, 1964) and related acts require the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Mines to survey certain areas on Federal lands to determine their mineral value, if any, that may be present. Results must be made available to the public and...
Phytoplankton growth rates in a light-limited environment, San Francisco Bay
Andrea E. Alpine, James E. Cloern
1988, Marine Ecology Progress Series (44) 167-173
Phytoplankton cells reside in a turbulent medium partitioned into an upper photic zone that sustains photosynthesis, and a lower aphotic zone that does not. In estuaries, vertical mixing rates between these 2 zones can be rapid (< 1 generation time) because of tidal stirring and because the mixing depth is...
Conservation of North American rallids
William R. Eddleman, Fritz L. Knopf, Brooke Manley, Frederic A. Reid, Richard Zembal
1988, The Wilson Bulletin (100) 458-475
The Rallidae are a diverse group in their habitat selection, yet most North American species occur in or near wetlands As a consequence, most species are subject to habitat enhancement or perturbation from waterfowl management programs. The overall effects of these management programs relative to rallid conservation have...
A new Lower Carboniferous tetrapod locality in Iowa
J.R. Bolt, R.M. McKay, B.J. Witzke, M.P. McAdams
1988, Nature (333) 768-770
The earliest tetrapods known are from two or three Upper Devonian1–3 and some 20 Lower Carboniferous localities in Scotland4 and North America5–8. Most sites yield few and fragmentary specimens; well-preserved and even partially articulated material is exceedingly rare. This report discusses a middle Lower Carboniferous site rich in amphibian and fish...
Uranium-series dating of the Mousterian occupation at Abric Romani, Spain
J. L. Bischoff, R. Julia, R. Mora
1988, Nature (332) 68-70
The precise evolutionary position of the Neanderthal people continues to be a major uncertainty in human evolution. Their origin and their relationship to anatomically modern people are unclear and are clouded by poor chronology. Lithic artefacts of the Mousterian type, found throughout Europe and the Mediterranean Basin, are believed to...
Granulite fades Nd-isotopic homogenization in the Lewisian complex of northwest Scotland
M.J. Whitehouse
1988, Nature (331) 705-707
A published Sm–Nd whole-rock isochron of 2,920 ± 50 Myr, obtained from a wide range of lithologies in the Lewisian complex of north-west Scotland, was interpreted1 as the time of protolith formation. This date is ∼260 Myr older than estimates for the timing of high-grade metamorphism in the complex at ∼ 2,660...
Origin of ultramafic xenoliths containing exsolved pyroxenes from Hualalai Volcano, Hawaii
Wendy A. Bohrson, David Clague
1988, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (100) 139-155
Hualalai Volcano, Hawaii, is best known for the abundant and varied xenoliths included in the historic 1800 Kaupulehu alkalic basalt flow. Xenoliths, which range in composition from dunite to anorthosite, are concentrated at 915-m elevation in the flow. Rare cumulate ultramafic xenoliths, which include websterite, olivine...
Three decades of geochronologic studies in the New England Appalachians
R. E. Zartman
1988, Geological Society of America Bulletin (100) 1168-1180
Over the past 30 years, both isotope geochronology and plate tectonics grew from infancy into authoritative disciplines in the geological sciences. Previously, mountain systems like the Appalachians had been viewed almost entirely in the context of the classical geosyncline, implying a gradualism in stratigraphic and structural change throughout the orogen....
The formation and failure of natural dams
John E. Costa, Robert L. Schuster
1988, Geological Society of America Bulletin (100) 1054-1068
Of the numerous kinds of dams that form by natural processes, dams formed from landslides, glacial ice, and late-neoglacial moraines present the greatest threat to people and property. Landslide dams form in a wide range of physiographic settings. The most common types of mass movements that form landslide dams are...
Petrology of ultramafic xenoliths from Loihi Seamount, Hawaii
D.A. Clague
1988, Journal of Petrology (29) 1161-1186
Ultramafic xenoliths were recovered in four alkalic lava flows from Loihi Seamount at depths between 2200 and 1400m. No xenolith bearing flows were sampled near the summit despite a concentrated dredge program. The flows, three of alkalic basalt and one of basanite, contain common olivine megacrysts and small xenoliths...
Rare earth elements in the phosphatic-enriched sediment of the Peru shelf
D.Z. Piper, P. A. Baedecker, J.G. Crock, W. C. Burnett, B.J. Loebner
1988, Marine Geology (80) 269-285
Apatite-enriched materials from the Peru shelf have been analyzed for their major oxide and rare earth element (REE) concentrations. The samples consist of (1) the fine fraction of sediment, mostly clay material, (2) phosphatic pellets and fish debris, which are dispersed throughout the fine-grained sediment, (3) tabular-shaped phosphatic crusts, which...
Near-bottom currents over the continental slope in the Mid-Atlantic Bight
G.T. Csanady, J.H. Churchill, B. Butman
1988, Continental Shelf Research (8) 653-671
From a set of 28 current meter records we have found that near-bottom currents faster than 0.2 m s-1 occur frequently over the outer continental shelf of the Mid-Atlantic Bight (bottom depth <210 m) but very rarely (<1% of the time) between bottom depths of 500 m and 2 km...
Ferromanganese deposits from the Gulf of Alaska Seamount Province: Mineralogy, chemistry, and origin
R.A. Koski
1988, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (25) 116-133
Ferromanganese-oxide deposits dredged from four seamounts (Welker, Miller, Murray, and Patton) in the Gulf of Alaska Seamount Province include poorly crystallized microlaminated crusts on basalt substrate, well-crystallized Mn-oxide veins in epiclastic sedimentary rocks, and crystalline Mn-oxide layers and micronodules in phosphorite. The principal rock types dredged are alkali-basalt pillow fragments...
Fluid inclusions in vadose cement with consistent vapor to liquid ratios, Pleistocene Miami Limestone, southeastern Florida
C.E. Barker, R. B. Halley
1988, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (52) 1019-1025
Vadose cements in the Late Pleistocene Miami Limestone contain regions with two-phase aqueous fluid inclusions that have consistent vapor to liquid (V-L) ratios. When heated, these seemingly primary inclusions homogenize to a liquid phase in a range between 75°C and 130°C (mean = 100°C) and have final melting temperatures between...
Pedogenic replacement of aluminosilicate grains by CaCO3 in Ustollic Haplargids, south-central Montana, U.S.A.
Marith C. Reheis
1988, Geoderma (41) 243-261
A chronosequence of calcic soils formed on granitic glaciofluvial terrace deposits of Rock Creek and the Clarks Fork in south-central Montana shows progressive replacement of aluminosilicate parent-material grains by calcium-magnesium carbonate. The terraces range from late Pliocene to Holocene in age as dated by tephrochronology, correlation, and stream incision rates....
Age and petrology of alkalic postshield and rejuvenated-stage lava from Kauai, Hawaii
D.A. Clague, G. B. Dalrymple
1988, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (99) 202-218
At the top of the Waimea Canyon Basalt on the island of Kauai, rare flows of alkalic postshield-stage hawaiite and mugearite overlie tholeiitic flows of the shield stage. These postshield-stage flows are 3.92 Ma and provide a younger limit for the age of the tholeiitic shield stage. The younger Koloa...
Garnet compositions and their use as indicators of peraluminous granitoid petrogenesis - southeastern Arabian Shield
du Bray
1988, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (100) 205-212
Garnet, an uncommon accessory mineral in igneous rocks, occurs in seven small peraluminous granitoid plutons in the southeastern Arabian Shield; textural equilibrium between garnet and other host granitoid minerals indicates that the garnets crystallized from their host magmas. Compositions of the garnets form three groups that reflect host-granitoid compositions, which...
Testing of male sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) and steelhead trout (Salmo gairdneri) for infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus
D. Mulcahy, R.J. Pascho, W.N. Batts
1987, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (44) 1075-1078
Infectious hematopoietic necrosis (IHN) virus has been isolated only rarely from whole milt samples of male sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka). In 3 yr of testing, virus incidences in males ranged from 0 to 13% when milt was sampled but were 60–100% with spleen or kidney. When IHN virus was isolated from...