Midcontinent rift volcanism in the Lake Superior region: Sr, Nd, and Pb isotopic evidence for a mantle plume origin
S. W. Nicholson, S.B. Shirey
1990, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (95) 10851-10868
Between 1091 and 1098 Ma, most of a 15- to 20-km thickness of dominantly tholeiitic basalt erupted in the Midcontinent Rift System of the Lake Superior region, North America. The Portage Lake Volcanics in Michigan, which are the youngest MRS flood basalts, fall into distinctly high- and low-TiO2 types having different...
Synthetic calibration of a Rainfall-Runoff Model
David B. Thompson, Jerome A. Westphal
Chang Howard H.Hill Joseph C., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulic Engineering - Proceedings of the 1990 National Conference
A method for synthetically calibrating storm-mode parameters for the U.S. Geological Survey's Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System is described. Synthetic calibration is accomplished by adjusting storm-mode parameters to minimize deviations between the pseudo-probability disributions represented by regional regression equations and actual frequency distributions fitted to model-generated peak discharge and runoff volume. Results...
A multilayered sharp interface model of coupled freshwater and saltwater flow in coastal systems: Model development and application
Hedeff I. Essaid
1990, Water Resources Research (26) 1431-1454
A quasi three-dimensional, finite difference model, that simulates freshwater and saltwater flow separated by a sharp interface, has been developed to study layered coastal aquifer systems. The model allows for regional simulation of coastal groundwater conditions, including the effects of saltwater dynamics on the freshwater system. Vertically integrated freshwater and...
Effect of ten quaternary ammonium cations on tetrachloromethane sorption to clay from water
J. A. Smith
1990, Environmental Science & Technology (24) 1167-1172
The mineral surface of Wyoming bentonite (clay) was modified by replacing inorganic ions by each of 10 quaternary ammonium compounds, and tetrachloromethane sorption to the modified sorbents from water was studied. Tetrachloromethane sorption from solution to clay modified with tetramethyl-, tetraethyl-, benzyltrimethyl-, or benzyltriethylammonium cations generally is characterized by relatively...
On graphically representing the confidence region for an unknown rotation in three dimensions
M.S. Hanna, T. Chang
1990, Computers & Geosciences (16) 163-194
In assessing the errors involved in reconstructing tectonic plate rotations, it is desirable to have confidence regions for the unknown rotation. This paper presents a method for graphing such confidence regions, which exhibits the dependence of the range of possible angles of rotation on the axis considered. Namely, the minimum...
Hydrogeology of an ancient arid closed basin: Implications for tabular sandstone-hosted uranium deposits
R.F. Sanford
1990, Geology (18) 1099-1102
Hydrogeologic modeling shows that tabular-type uranium deposits in the Grants uranium region of the San Juan basin, New Mexico, formed in zones of ascending and discharging regional ground-water flow. The association of either lacustrine mudstone or actively subsiding structures and uranium deposits can...
Modern aerial gamma-ray spectrometry and regional potassium map of the conterminous United States
Joseph S. Duval
1990, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (39) 249-253
Aerial gamma-ray surveys of the natural environment measure the flux of gamma rays produced by the radioactive decay of 40K, 214Bi, and 208Tl in the upper 10–20 cm of surface materials. 40K is a radioactive potassium isotope which can be used to estimate the total amount of potassium in the soils and rocks. 214Bi is...
Double-diffusive convection in geothermal systems: the Salton Sea, California, geothermal system as a likely candidate
R.O. Fournier
1990, Geothermics (19) 481-496
Much has been published about double-diffusive convection as a mechanism for explaining variations in composition and temperature within all-liquid natural systems. However, relatively little is known about the applicability of this phenomenon within the heterogeneous rocks of currently active geothermal systems...
The 1989 earthquake swarm beneath Mammoth Mountain, California: An initial look at the 4 May through 30 September activity
D.P. Hill
1990, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (80) 325-339
Mammoth Mountain is a 50,000- to 200,000-year-old cumulovolcano standing on the southwestern rim of Long Valley in eastern California. On 4 May 1989, two M = 1 earthquakes beneath the south flank of the mountain marked the onset of a swarm that has continued for more than 6 months. In...
Geology of Medicine Lake Volcano, Northern California Cascade Range
Julie Donnelly-Nolan
1990, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Medicine Lake volcano (MLV) is located in an E-W extensional environment on the Modoc Plateau just east of the main arc of the Cascades. It consists mainly of mafic lavas, although drillhole data indicate that a larger volume of rhyolite is present than is indicated by surface mapping. The most...
Computational open-channel hydraulics for movable-bed problems
Chintu Lai
Chang Howard H.Hill Joseph C., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulic Engineering - Proceedings of the 1990 National Conference
As a major branch of computational hydraulics, notable advances have been made in numerical modeling of unsteady open-channel flow since the beginning of the computer age. According to the broader definition and scope of 'computational hydraulics,' the basic concepts and technology of modeling unsteady open-channel flow have been systematically studied...
Management implications of a model of predation by a resident fish on juvenile salmonids migrating through a Columbia River reservoir
Raymond C. Beamesderfer, Bruce E. Rieman, Lewis J. Bledsoe, Steven Vigg
1990, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (10) 290-304
We constructed a model ofpredation by northern squawfish Ptychocheilus oregonensis on juvenile salmonids migrating through John Day Reservoir. The model predicts salmonid survival as a function of number and distribution of northern squawfish, number and timing of juvenile salmonids entering the reservoir, salmonid residence time, water temperature, and flow. The...
Earthquakes, January-February 1990
W. J. Person
1990, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 179-182
There were no major earthquakes during the first 2 months of the year and there were no earthquake-related deaths reported during this same time period. In the United States a moderate earthquake on February 28 in southern California caused some minor injuries and considerable damage. ...
A study of model bivalve siphonal currents
Stephen G. Monismith, Jeffrey R. Koseff, Janet K. Thompson, Catherine A. O’Riordan, Heidi M. Nepf
1990, Limnology and Oceanography (35) 680-696
We carried out experiments studying the hydrodynamics of bivalve siphonal currents in a laboratory flume. Rather than use living animals, we devised a simple, model siphon pair connected to a pump. Fluorescence-based flow visualization was used to characterize siphon-jet flows for several geometric configurations and flow speeds. These measurements show...
A survey of three-dimensional numerical estuarine models
R. T. Cheng, P. E. Smith
1990, Conference Paper
Volcano hazard mitigation program in Indonesia
A. Sudradjat
1990, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 227-229
Volcanological investigations in Indonesia were started in the 18th century, when Valentijn in 1726 prepared a chronological report of the eruption of Banda Api volcno, Maluku. Modern and intensive volcanological studies did not begin until the catastrophic eruption of Kelut volcano, East Java, in 1919. The eruption took 5,011 lives...
Geographic information system as country-level development and monitoring tool, Senegal example
Donald G. Moore, Stephen M. Howard
Anon, editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the International Symposium on Remote Sensing of Environment
Geographic information systems (GIS) allow an investigator the capability to merge and analyze numerous types of country-level resource data. Hypothetical resource analysis applications in Senegal were conducted to illustrate the utility of a GIS for development planning and resource monitoring. Map and attribute data for soils, vegetation, population, infrastructure, and...
Urban hydrology in the desert, Antelope Valley, California
James C. Blodgett, Iraj Nasseri, Ann L. Elliott
French Richard H., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulics/Hydrology of Arid Lands
A study of urban hydrology in Antelope Valley includes data collection, analysis of rainfall and runoff frequencies, and comparison of results from various rainfall-runoff models. This paper discusses only parts of the project that include data collection and frequency analyses....
Ross Sea
J. C. Behrendt
W.E. LeMasurier, J.W. Thomson, P.E. Baker, P.R. Kyle, P. D. Rowley, J.L. Smellie, W.J. Verwoerd, editor(s)
1990, Antarctic Research Series 48-A
Eight short-wavelength, seismically defined penetrative structures having associated 1- to 5-km-wide magnetic anomalies (Table A. 12.1) in the western Ross Sea (Figure A. 12.1) are interpreted as volcanic in origin. Modeled anomalies fitted to the observed data and constrained by 24-fold seismic reflection profiles support the interpretation of these submarine...
The next big earthquake in the Bay Area may come sooner than you think—Are you prepared?
U.S. Geological Survey
1990, Report
Many of us breathed a little easier after October 17, 1989. The Lorna Prieta earthquake, 7.1 on the Richter scale, meant that the big one, talked about for decades, had finally happened. And, bad as it was, we had survived.There are two things wrong with that. First, Lorna Prieta was not...
Conducting field studies for testing pesticide leaching models
Charles N. Smith, Rudolph S. Parrish, David S. Brown
1990, International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry (39) 3-21
A variety of predictive models are being applied to evaluate the transport and transformation of pesticides in the environment. These include well known models such as the Pesticide Root Zone Model (PRZM), the Risk of Unsaturated-Saturated Transport and Transformation Interactions for Chemical Concentrations Model (RUSTIC) and the Groundwater Loading Effects...
Rheological analysis of fine-grained natural debris-flow material
Jon J. Major, Thomas C. Pierson
French Richard H., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulics/Hydrology of Arid Lands
Experiments were conducted on large samples of fine-grained material (???2mm) from a natural debris flow using a wide-gap concentric-cylinder viscometer. The rheological behavior of this material is compatible with a Bingham model at shear rates in excess of 5 sec. At lesser shear rates, rheological behavior of the material deviates...
Horizontal density-gradient effects on simulation of flow and transport in the Potomac Estuary
Raymond W. Schaffranek, Robert A. Baltzer
Chang Howard H.Hill Joseph C., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulic Engineering - Proceedings of the 1990 National Conference
A two-dimensional, depth-integrated, hydrodynamic/transport model of the Potomac Estuary between Indian Head and Morgantown, Md., has been extended to include treatment of baroclinic forcing due to horizontal density gradients. The finite-difference model numerically integrates equations of mass and momentum conservation in conjunction with a transport equation for heat, salt, and...
Simulated effects of climatic change on runoff and drought in the Delaware River Basin
Mark A. Ayers, Gary D. Tasker, David M. Wolock, Gregory J. McCabe, Lauren E. Hay
Singh Udai P.Helweg Otto J., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Supplying Water and Saving the Environment for Six Billion People
Various projection of climatic change were applied to watershed models of the Delaware River basin. Simulations indicate that a warming could reduce annual runoff by as much as 25 percent if current precipitation patterns continue. Simulations indicate that the largest changes in basin drought are in response to relatively small...
Berriasian (Early Cretaceous) radiometric ages from the Grindstone Creek Section, Sacramento Valley, California
T.J. Bralower, K.R. Ludwig, J. D. Obradovich
1990, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (98) 62-73
The Grindstone Creek Section, Glenn County, Northern California is a sequence of hemipelagic mudstone, siltstone and sandstone interbedded with concretionary limestone and a few thin tuffs and bentonites. Two tuffs have been collected from a narrow interval of this sequence and...