Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

46645 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 1614, results 40326 - 40350

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Euler-Lagrangian computation for estuarine hydrodynamics
Ralph T. Cheng
1983, Conference Paper, Numerical Methods in Laminar and Turbulent Flow, Proceedings of the International Conference
The transport of conservative and suspended matter in fluid flows is a phenomenon of Lagrangian nature because the process is usually convection dominant. Nearly all numerical investigations of such problems use an Eulerian formulation for the convenience that the computational grids are fixed in space and because the vast majority...
A quantitative comparison of Soil Development in four climatic regimes
J.W. Harden, E. M. Taylor
1983, Quaternary Research (20) 342-359
A new quantitative Soil Development Index based on field data has been applied to chronosequences formed under different climatic regimes. The four soil chronosequences, developed primarily on sandy deposits, have some numeric age control and are located in xeric-inland (Merced, Calif.), xeric-coastal (Ventura, Calif.), aridic (Las Cruces, N. Mex.), and...
Dual extraction of R-mode and Q-mode factor solutions
D. Zhou, T. Chang, J.C. Davis
1983, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (15) 581-606
It is mathematically possible to extract both R-mode and Q-mode factors simultaneously (RQ-mode factor analysis)by invoking the Eckhart-Young theorem. The resulting factors will be expressed in measures determined by the form of the scalings that have been applied to the original data matrix. Unless the measures for both solutions are...
U-Th-Pb systematics of zircon inclusions in rock-forming minerals: A study of armoring against isotopic loss using the Sherman Granite of Colorado-Wyoming, USA
J. N. Aleinikoff
1983, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (83) 259-269
Zircon inclusions were separated from the five major rock-forming minerals of the Sherman Granite of southern Wyoming, in order to evaluate the degree of discordance as a possible function of host minerals. U-Th-Pb isotopic ratios were determined for two size fractions of zircon inclusions from each mineral, plus five size...
COORDINATION OF DIGITAL CARTOGRAPHY IN THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
K. Eric Anderson, Peter F. Bermel
1983, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
The development and application of digital cartographic data bases are significant and important activities in the Federal Government. Increasingly, digital spatial data are being used for computer-based analyses in support of management decisions on land, forests, minerals, and energy....
Plutonic rocks of Jurassic age in the Alaska-Aleutian Range batholith: Ghemical variation and polarity
B.I. Reed, A.T. Miesch, M. A. Lanphere
1983, Geological Society of America Bulletin (94) 1232-1240
Plutonic rocks of Jurassic age exposed on the eastern, or Pacific, side of the Alaska–Aleutian Range batholith represent the roots of a magmatic arc generally considered to have been generated in response to northwest-directed subduction. These rocks form a compositionally continuous calc-alkaline suite...
CONTRIBUTION OF LAND USE DATA TO THE INVESTIGATION OF TRENDS IN FLOODING IN THE TUG FORK BASIN OF KENTUCKY, VIRGINIA, AND WEST VIRGINIA.
Sarah E. Bowers, Arthur G. Scott
1983, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
The U. S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U. S. Bureau of Mines and the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, is investigating effects of mining on flood frequency and magnitude within the basin. Changing land use, particularly the acceleration of surface mining, may cause or contribute to...
A strategy for mineral and energy resource independence
W. D. Carter
1983, Advances in Space Research (3) 223-236
Data acquired by Landsats 1, 2, and 3, are beginning to provide the information on which an improved mineral and energy resource exploration strategy can be based. Landsat 4 is expected to augment this capability with its higher resolution (30 m) and additional spectral bands in the Thematic Mapper (TM)...
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS ON THE ORIGIN OF MINERAL MATTER IN COAL.
C. B. Cecil, R.W. Stanton, F.T. Dulong, L.P. Ruppert
1983, Conference Paper
This study attempts to quantify some of the various origins of mineral matter. Data developed for the Upper Freeport coal bed indicates that mineral matter other than pyrite and calcite is primarily derived from the vegetal matter that ultimately became coal. Cathodoluminesence was used to verify that the quartz in...
Main field and recent secular variation.
L.R. Alldredge
1983, Reviews of Geophysics and Space Physics (21) 599-603
As Cain (1979) indicated might happen in the last IUGG quadrennial report, added resources were made available during the past few years and a real impulse was added to the geomagnetic work in the US by the launching of the MAGSAT Satellite. This new effort paid off in terms of...
Can the earth be dated from decay of its magnetic field?.
G. B. Dalrymple
1983, Journal of Geological Education (31) 124-133
Thomas G. Barnes, Emeritus Professor of Physics at the University of Texas, El Paso, and a creationist, argues that the geomagnetic field was created by unknown processes at the time of creation of the earth and has been decaying irreversibly and exponentially, with a half-life of about 1400 years,...
Maps for the nation: The current federal mapping establishment
Gary W. North
1983, Government Publications Review (10) 345-360
The U.S. Government annually produces an estimated 53,000 new maps and charts and distributes about 160 million copies. A large number of these maps are produced under the national mapping program, a decentralized Federal/State cooperative approach to mapping the country at standard scales. Circular A-16, issued by the Office of...
The role of digital cartographic data in the geosciences
S.C. Guptill
1983, Computers & Geosciences (9) 23-26
The increasing demand of the Nation's natural resource developers for the manipulation, analysis, and display of large quantities of earth-science data has necessitated the use of computers and the building of geoscience information systems. These systems require, in digital form, the spatial data on map products. The basic cartographic data...
Objective procedures for lineament enhancement and extraction
G. K. Moore, F. A. Waltz
1983, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (49) 641-647
A longterm research goal at EROS Data Center is to develop automated, objective procedures for lineament mapping. In support of this goal, a five-step digital convolution procedure has been used to produce directionally enhanced images, which contain few artifacts and little noise. The main limitation of this procedure is that...
Mapping of hydrothermally altered rocks using airborne multispectral scanner data, Marysvale, Utah, mining district
M. H. Podwysocki, D. B. Segal, O. D. Jones
1983, Advances in Space Research (3) 101-112
Multispectral data covering an area near Marysvale, Utah, collected with the airborne National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) 24-channel Bendix multispectral scanner, were analyzed to detect areas of hydrothermally altered, potentially mineralized rocks. Spectral bands were selected for analysis that approximate those of the Landsat 4 Thematic Mapper and which...
Synthesis of geophysical data with space-acquired imagery: a review
David A. Hastings
1983, Advances in Space Research (3) 157-168
Geophysical data obtained from ground and airborne platforms have been used in the development of regional geologic models for many years. Space-acquired data and imagery have a shorter but similar history of applications. All these data may be synthesized either manually or digitally. Manual synthesis methods consist of overlaying and...
Altitude of the top of the Matawan Group-Magothy Formation, Suffolk County, Long Island, New York
Richard K. Krulikas, E. J. Koszalka, Thomas P. Doriski
1983, Open-File Report 83-137
The Magothy aquifer, with its irregular surface and deeply eroded buried valleys, has become the major source of fresh water in most of Suffolk Country. With the availability of recent data from deep wells and test holes, refinement of the surface-altitude contours has been possible and resulted in substantial revision...
EFFICIENT TRANSFER OF DATA BETWEEN MAPS OF DIFFERENT PROJECTIONS.
John P. Snyder
1983, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
There are several ways to transfer data from an existing map to another map by computer. If the projection and parameters of both maps are known, analytic formulas may be used to convert rectangular coordinates of the first map to latitude and longitude and then to rectangular coordinates of the...
Simulation of solute transport in a mountain pool-and-riffle stream: A transient storage model
Kenneth E. Bencala, Roy A. Walters
1983, Water Resources Research (19) 718-724
The physical characteristics of mountain streams differ from the uniform and conceptually well- defined open channels for which the analysis of solute transport has been oriented in the past and is now well understood. These physical conditions significantly influence solute transport behavior, as demonstrated by a transient storage model simulation...
FINDINGS ON THE USE OF LANDSAT-3 RETURN BEAM VIDICON IMAGERY FOR DETECTING LAND USE AND LAND COVER CHANGES.
Valerie A. Milazzo
1983, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
The spatial resolution of imagery from the return beam vidicon (RBV) camera aboard the Landsat-3 satellite suggested that such data might prove useful in inspecting land use and land cover maps. In this study, a 1972 land use and land cover map derived from aerial photographs is compared with a...
Gas-film coefficients for streams
R. E. Rathbun, D. Y. Tai
1983, Journal of Environmental Engineering (109) 1111-1127
Equations for predicting the gas-film coefficient for the volatilization of organic solutes from streams are developed. The film coefficient is a function of windspeed and water temperature. The dependence of the coefficient on windspeed is determined from published information on the evaporation of water from a canal. The dependence of...
THEMATIC MAPPER: DETAILED RADIOMETRIC AND GEOMETRIC CHARACTERISTICS.
Hugh Kieffer
1983, Conference Paper
The paper is in abstract form. It discusses those radiometric characteristics of the Landsat 4 Thematic Mapper (TM) that can be established without absolute calibration or spectral data. Subscenes of radiometrically raw data (B-data) were examined on an individual detector basis; areas of uniform radiance were used to characterize subtle...
NEW HORIZONS FOR THE NATIONAL HIGH-ALTITUDE PHOTOGRAPHY PROGRAM.
Peter F. Bermel
1983, Conference Paper
The National High-Altitude Photography Program (NHAP) is a multi-Federal agency activity to acquire uniform imagery for the establishment of a national high-altitude photographic data base. Since the inception of NHAP in 1980, black-and-white and color infrared stereoscopic imagery has been acquired for about 50% of the 3,000,000 square miles in...