The M2 tide on the Amazon Shelf
R.C. Beardsley, J.L. Candela, R. Limeburner, W. Rockwell Geyer, Steven J. Lentz, Belmiro M. Castro, D.A. Cacchione, Nelson Carneiro
1995, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (100) 2283-2319
As part of A Multidisciplinary Amazon Shelf Sediment Study (AMASSEDS), moored and shipboard current measurements made over the Amazon shelf during 1990–1991 have been analyzed to determine the dominant semidiurnal tidal constituent, the M2. These results have been combined with coastal sea level data from within the Amazon and Para...
Large-scale atmospheric forcing of recent trends toward early snowmelt runoff in California
Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel R. Cayan
1995, Journal of Climate (8) 606-623
Since the late 1940s, snowmelt and runoff have come increasingly early in the water year in many basins in northern and central California. This subtle trend is most pronounced in moderate-altitude basins, which are sensitive to changes in mean winter temperatures. Such basins have broad areas in which winter temperatures...
The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observing campaign on comet Shoemaker-Levy 9
H. A. Weaver, M. F. A’Hearn, C. Arpigny, D. C. Boice, P. D. Feldman, S. M. Larson, P. Lamy, D. H. Levy, B. G. Marsden, K. J. Meech, K. S. Noll, J. V. Scotti, Z. Sekanina, Carolyn S. Shoemaker, Eugene Merle Shoemaker, T. E. Smith, S. A. Stern, A. D. Storrs, J. T. Trauger, D. K. Yeomans, B. Zellner
1995, Science (267) 1282-1288
The Hubble Space Telescope made systematic observations of the split comet P/Shoemaker-Levy 9 (SL9) (P designates a periodic comet) starting in July 1993 and continuing through mid-July 1994 when the fragments plunged into Jupiter's atmosphere. Deconvolutions of Wide Field Planetary Camera images indicate that the diameters of some...
1995 National assessment of United States oil and gas resources; results, methodology, and supporting data
Donald L. Gautier, G.L. Dolton, K. I. Takahashi, K. L. Varnes
1995, Data Series 30
This report summarizes the results of a 3-year study of the oil and gas resources of the onshore and state waters of the United States by the U.S. Geological Survey. A parallel study of the Federal offshore is being conducted by the Minerals Management Service. Estimates are made of technically...
The stream-gaging program of the U.S. Geological Survey
Kenneth L. Wahl, Wilbert O. Thomas, Robert M. Hirsch
1995, Circular 1123
The U.S. Geological Survey stream-gaging program provides streamflow data for a variety of purposes. The uses of streamflow data are described, and the growth of the stream-gaging program is related to legislation and the need to manage the Nation's water resources more effectively. A brief description is provided of the...
Effects of agricultural land-management practices on water quality in northeastern Guilford County, North Carolina, 1985-90
Douglas A. Harned
1995, Water Supply Paper 2435
The effects of selected agricultural land-management practices on water quality were assessed in a comparative study of four small basins in the Piedmont province of North Carolina. Agricultural practices, such as tillage and applications of fertilizer and pesticides, are major sources of sediment, nutrients, and pesticides in surface water, and...
Quality of water in the alluvial aquifer and tributary alluvium of the Fountain Creek valley, southwestern El Paso County, Colorado, 1991-92
M.E. Lewis
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4118
The alluvial aquifer in Fountain Creek Valley between Colorado Springs and Widefield is the source for several public water-supply systems. Since 1981, concentrations of dissolved nitrite plus nitrate as nitrogen (nitrate) have exceeded the drinking-water standard of 10 milligrams per liter in several areas of the aquifer. Water-quality data collected...
Origin and diagenesis of K/T impact spherules - from Haiti to Wyoming and beyond
B.F. Bohor, B.P. Glass
1995, Meteoritics (30) 182-198
Impact spherules in Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary clays and claystones consist of two types; each type is confined to its own separate layer of the boundary couplet in the Western Hemisphere. The form and composition of each of the spherule types result from its own unique mode of origin during the...
Lithofacies and palynostratigraphy of some Cretaceous and Paleocene rocks, Surghar and Salt Range coal fields, northern Pakistan
Peter D. Warwick, Shahid Javed, S. Tahir A. Mashhadi, Tariq Shakoor, Asrar M. Khan, A. Latif Khan
1995, Bulletin 2096
The stratigraphic relation between the Cretaceous generally non-coal-bearing Lumshiwal Formation (64 to 150 m thick) and the Paleocene coal-bearing Hangu Formation (5 to 50 m thick) in the Surghar Range of north-central Pakistan is complex. Both formations contain remarkably similar lithofacies: one or two types of sandstone lithofacies; a combined...
Geochemistry of water in aquifers and confining units of the Northern Great Plains in parts of Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming
J.F. Busby, B. A. Kimball, J. S. Downey, K. D. Peter
1995, Professional Paper 1402-F
The geochemistry of water in five aquifers and two confining units in the Williston Basin of the Northern Great Plains is similar and is controlled by halite dissolution. In areas outside the Williston Basin ground-water is fresh and controlled by the solution chemistry of carbonate and sulfate minerals....
Shorter contributions to the stratigraphy and geochronology of Upper Cretaceous rocks in the Western Interior of the United States
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1995, Bulletin 2113
No abstract available....
Chlorofluorocarbons as tracers of groundwater transport processes in a shallow, silty sand aquifer
P.G. Cook, D. K. Solomon, Niel Plummer, E. Busenberg, S.L. Schiff
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 425-434
Detailed depth profiles of Chlorofluorocarbons CFC-11(CFCl3(, CFC-12 (CF2Cl2) and CFC-113 (C2F3Cl3) have been obtained from a well-characterized field site in central Ontario. Aquifer materials comprise predominantly silty sands, with a mean organic carbon content of 0.03%. Nearly one-dimensional flow exists at this site, and the vertical migration of a well-defined 3H...
Groundwater transport of crater-lake brine at Poa´s Volcano, Costa Rica
Ward E. Sanford, Leonard F. Konikow, Gary L. Rowe Jr., Susan L. Brantley
1995, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (64) 269-293
Poa´s Volcano is an active stratovolcano in Costa Rica that has a lake in its active crater. The crater lake has high temperatures (50–90 °C), high acidity (pH ≈ 0.0), and a high dissolved-solids content (100 g/kg). The volcano has numerous freshwater springs on its flanks, but a few on...
Screening tests for assessing the anaerobic biodegradation of pollutant chemicals in subsurface environments
Joseph M. Suflita, Frank Concannon
1995, Journal of Microbiological Methods (21) 267-281
Screening methods were developed to assess the susceptibility of ground water contaminants to anaerobic biodegradation. One method was an extrapolation of a procedure previously used to measure biodegradation activity in dilute sewage sludge. Aquifer solids and ground water with no additional nutritive media were incubated anaerobically in 160-ml serum bottles...
Using borehole flow logging to optimize hydraulic-test procedures in heterogeneous fractured aquifers
F.L. Paillet
1995, Hydrogeology Journal (3) 4-20
Hydraulic properties of heterogeneous fractured aquifers are difficult to characterize, and such characterization usually requires equipment-intensive and time-consuming applications of hydraulic testing in situ. Conventional coring and geophysical logging techniques provide useful and reliable information on the distribution of bedding planes, fractures and solution openings along boreholes, but it is...
Stratigraphic significance of siliceous microfossils collected during NAUTIPERC dives (off Peru, 5 °-6°S)
P. De Wever, J. Bourgois, J.-P. Caulet, E. Fourtanier, J. Barron, P. Dumitrica
1995, Marine Micropaleontology (24) 287-305
The geological evolution of the northern Peru convergent margin can be traced using samples collected during deep-sea dives of the submersible Nautile. In the Paita area (5°–6°S), the sedimentary sequence was intensively sampled along the main scarp of the middle slope area. It consists of Upper Miocene (7–9 Ma) to Pleistocene...
Modeling the effects of variable groundwater chemistry on adsorption of molybdate
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 347-357
Laboratory experiments were used to identify and quantify processes having a significant effect on molybdate (MoO42−) adsorption in a shallow alluvial aquifer on Cape Cod, assachusetts. Aqueous chemistry in the aquifer changes as a result of treated sewage effluent mixing with groundwater. Molybdate adsorption decreased as pH, ionic strength, and the...
An updated model of induced airflow in the unsaturated zone
Arthur L. Baehr, Craig J. Joss
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 417-421
Simulation of induced movement of air in the unsaturated zone provides a method to determine permeability and to design vapor extraction remediation systems. A previously published solution to the airflow equation for the case in which the unsaturated zone is separated from the atmosphere by a layer of lower permeability...
Deducing the distribution of terminal electron-accepting processes in hydrologically diverse groundwater systems
Francis H. Chapelle, Peter B. McMahon, Neil M. Dubrovsky, Roger F. Fujii, Edward T. Oaksford, Don A. Vroblesky
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 359-371
The distribution of microbially mediated terminal electron-accepting processes (TEAPs( was investigated in four hydrologically diverse groundwater systems by considering patterns of electron acceptor (nitrate, sulfate) consumption, intermediate product (hydrogen (H2)) concentrations, and final product (ferrous iron, sulfide, and methane) production. In each hydrologic system a determination of predominant TEAPs could...
Intraglacial volcanism in the Wells Gray–Clearwater volcanic field, east-central British Columbia, Canada
C.J. Hickson, James G. Moore, L. Calk, P. Metcalfe
1995, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (32) 838-851
Small-volume, subaerial, subaqueous and subglacial basaltic eruptions occurred in the Wells Gray–Clearwater area during Quaternary time. Part of this time, significant thicknesses of glacial ice were present. Dating of intraglacial volcanic features corroborates other evidence of an Early Pleistocene, Cordilleran-wide ice sheet. Of the intraglacial volcanoes investigated, three were studied...
Petrology of Submarine Lavas from Kilauea's Puna Ridge, Hawaii
D. A. Clague, James G. Moore, J.E. Dixon, W.B. Friesen
1995, Journal of Petrology (36) 299-349
We have studied 30 quenched tholeiitic lava flows recovered by 20 dredge hauls and one submersible dive along Puna Ridge, the submarine part of the East Rift Zone of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii Glass grains from numerous additional flows were recovered in turbidite sands cored in the Hawaiian Trough. These quenched...
Seismic stratigraphic evidence of ice-sheet advances on the Wilkes Land margin of Antarctica
S. L. Eittreim, Alan K. Cooper, J. Wannesson
1995, Sedimentary Geology (96) 131-156
The Wilkes Land continental shelf, similar to other Antarctic shelves, is underlain by thick sequences of steeply prograded glacial diamictons. On the outer shelf, banks that are shallower than 400 m are separated by broad outer-shelf troughs that deepen landward. The prograded sequences are found preferentially in these broad outer-shelf...
Mudflow generated by retrogressive slope failure, Santa Barbara Basin, California continental borderland
Brian D. Edwards, Homa J. Lee, Michael E. Field
1995, Journal of Sedimentary Research (A65) 57-68
The morphology and internal geometry of a mudflow deposit on the mainland slope of the Santa Barbara Basin are defined using high-resolution seismic-reflection data in combination with core samples. Sediment failure occurred on a 4 degrees slope in the uppermost part of late Quaternary well-bedded slope deposits. The failure zone...
Effects of diet on rate of body mass gain by wintering canvasbacks
Dennis G. Jorde, G. Michael Haramis, Christine M. Bunck, Grey W. Pendleton
1995, Journal of Wildlife Management (59) 31-39
Because habitat degradation has led to the loss of submerged vegetation in Chesapeake Bay, wintering canvasbacks (Aythya valisineria) have shifted from a plant diet of American wildcelery (Vallisneria americana) to an animal diet of Baltic clams (Macoma balthica). We conducted experiments with pen-reared canvasbacks (n = 32, 1990; n =...
A regional monitoring network to investigate the occurrence of agricultural chemicals in near-surface aquifers of the midcontinental USA
D.W. Kolpin, D. A. Goolsby
1995, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Conference on Groundwater Quality--Remediation and Protection
Previous state and national surveys conducted in the mid-continental USA have produced a wide range in results regarding the occurrence of agricultural chemicals in groundwater. At least some of these differences can be attributed to inconsistencies between the surveys, such as different analytical reporting limits. The US...