Genetic implications of regional and temporal trends in ore fluid geochemistry of Mississippi Valley-type deposits in the Ozark region
J.G. Viets, D. L. Leach
1990, Economic Geology (85) 842-861
Fluids extracted from aqueous fluid inclusions in epigenetic gangue and ore minerals record the migration of huge volumes of highly saline fluids throughout the stratigraphic section of the Ozark region. The extracted fluids share many similarities regionally, but there are significant temporal differences which define two geochemically distinct end-member ore-forming...
Discontinuities in the shallow Martian crust at Lunae, Syria, and Sinai Plana
P. A. Davis, M.P. Golombek
1990, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (95) 14231-14248
Detailed photoclinometric profiles across 125 erosional features and 141 grabens in the western equatorial region of Mars indicate the presence of three discontinuities within the shallow crust. Pits, troughs, and wall valleys (tributary canyons) within Noctis Labyrinthus and Valles Marineris and escarpments within the fretted terrain of Sacra Fossae and...
Instantaneous and daily values of the surface energy balance over agricultural fields using remote sensing and a reference field in an arid environment
William P. Kustas, M. S. Moran, R. D. Jackson, L. W. Gay, L.F.W. Duell, K. E. Kunkel, A.D. Matthias
1990, Remote Sensing of Environment (32) 125-141
Remotely sensed surface temperature and reflectance in the visible and near infrared wavebands along with ancilliary meteorological data provide the capability of computing three of the four surface energy balance components (i.e., net radiation, soil heat flux, and sensible heat flux) at different spatial and temporal scales. As a result,...
Monitoring land subsidence in Sacramento Valley, California, using GPS
J. C. Blodgett, M. E. Ikehara, Gary E. Williams
1990, Journal of Surveying Engineering (116) 112-130
Land subsidence measurement is usually based on a comparison of bench-mark elevations surveyed at different times. These bench marks, established for mapping or the national vertical control network, are not necessarily suitable for measuring land subsidence. Also, many bench marks have been destroyed or are unstable. Conventional releveling of the...
Measurement and interpretation of low levels of dissolved oxygen in ground water
A. F. White, M. L. Peterson, R.D. Solbau
1990, Groundwater (28) 584-590
A Rhodazine-D colorimetric technique was adapted to measure low-level dissolved oxygen concentrations in ground water. Prepared samples containing between 0 and 8.0 μmoles · 1-1 dissolved oxygen in equilibrium with known gas mixtures produced linear spectrophotometric absorbance with a lower detection limit of 0.2 μmoles ·...
Postglacial response of a stream in central Iowa to changes in climate and Drainage basin factors
J. Van Nest, E. Arthur Bettis III
1990, Quaternary Research (33) 73-85
Postglacial geomorphic development of the Buchanan Drainage, a small tributary to the South Skunk River, is reconstructed by documenting relationships among four allostratigraphic units and 17 radiocarbon dates. Formation and headward expansion of the valley was both episodic and time-transgressive. Response to downstream conditions in the South Skunk River largely...
Unexpected hydrologic perturbation in an abandoned underground coal mine: Response to surface reclamation?
D. Harper, G.A. Olyphant, E.J. Hartke
1990, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (15) 179-187
A reclamation project at the abandoned Blackhawk Mine site near Terre Haute, Indiana, lasted about four months and involved the burial of coarse mine refuse in shallow (less than 9 m) pits excavated into loess and till in an area of about 16 ha. An abandoned flooded underground coal mine...
Geotechnical characteristics and slope stability on the Ebro margin, western Mediterranean
J. Baraza, H.J. Lee, R. E. Kayen, M. A. Hampton
1990, Marine Geology (95) 379-393
Sedimentological and geotechnical analyses of core samples from the Ebro continental slope define two distinct areas on the basis of sediment type, physical properties and geotechnical behavior. The first area is the upper slope area (water depths of 200–500 m), which...
Distribution and dispersal of suspended particulate matter on the Ebro continental shelf, northwestern Mediterranean Sea
A. Palanques, D.E. Drake
1990, Marine Geology (95) 193-206
Hydrographic data, water and bottom-sediment samples, and a GEOPROBE tripod experiment were used to examine the distribution and dynamics of suspended particulate matter on the Ebro shelf in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea.In the absence of strong winds and storms, primary...
Trace elements in Corbicula fluminea from the San Joaquin River, California
H.V. Leland, B. C. Scudder
1990, Conference Paper, Science of the Total Environment
(i) Trace element concentrations in soft tissue of the benthic bivalve, Corbicula fluminea, from the San Joaquin River and its major tributaries were examined during the primary irrigation season in relation to the spatial variation in concentrations of major, minor and trace constituents in riverwater and sediments. (ii) Selenium concentrations...
Controls on porphyrin concentrations of Pennsylvanian organic-rich shales, Western U.S.A.
J.L. Clayton, G.E. Michael
1990, Energy & Fuels (4) 644-646
Organic-rich black shales of Middle Pennsylvanian (Desmoinesian) age occur over much of the central U.S. and as far west as the northern Denver and southeastern Powder River basins. Total organic carbon contents (Corg) are commonly greater than 10 wt %. Porphyrin concentrations (vanadyl + nickel) are as high as 40000...
Ground-water control of evaporite deposition
W.W. Wood, W. E. Sanford
1990, Economic Geology (85) 1226-1235
Topographically closed basins may be hydrologically open as a result of seepage losses to underlying or surrounding ground-water systems. In such cases, these losses can have a substantial control over the suite and the thicknesses of evaporite minerals formed in the basin. The ratio of ground-water outflow to inflow (flux...
Genesis of the tabular-type vanadium-uranium deposits of the Henry Basin, Utah
H. R. Northrop, M. B. Goldhaber, Gary P. Landis, J.W. Unruh, Richard J. Reynolds, John A. Campbell, Richard B. Wanty, Richard I. Grauch, Gene Whitney, Robert O. Rye
1990, Economic Geology (85) 215-269
Tabular-type vanadium-uranium deposits occur in fluvial sandstones of the Salt Wash Member of the Morrison Formation of Late Jurassic age The mineralized intervals and the weakly mineralized lateral extensions are bounded both above and below by zones rich in dolomite cement. Carbon isotope values of dolomite cements indicate that at...
40Ar/39Ar laser probe evidence concerning the age and associated hazards of the Lake Nyos Maar, Cameroon
G. B. Dalrymple, J. P. Lockwood
1990, Natural Hazards (3) 373-378
The waters of Lake Nyos are impounded by a fragile natural dam composed of pyroclastic rocks ejected during the formation of the lake crater (maar). Lateral erosion of this dam has reduced its width from over 500 m to only 45 m. Published whole-rock K-Ar ages of about 100 ka...
Molluscan evidence for early middle Miocene marine glaciation in southern Alaska
L. Marincovich Jr.
1990, Geological Society of America Bulletin (102) 1591-1599
Profound cooling of Miocene marine climates in southern Alaska culminated in early middle Miocene coastal marine glaciation in the northeastern Gulf of Alaska. This climatic change resulted from interaction of the Yakutat terrane with southern Alaska beginning in late Oligocene time. The ensuing...
Trace-metal concentrations, waters from selected sky lakes, streams and springs, northern Shawangunk Mountains, New York: geologic and ecologic implications
J. D. Friedman, P.C. Huth, D. Smiley
1990, Northeastern Geology (12) 114-131
Reconnaissance sampling and chemical analysis of water from selected lakes, streams and springs of the northern Shawangunk Mountains in 1987 to 1988 to determine the influence of lithology on trace-metal concentrations in surface water, and to establish a base level of concentration of 27 selected metals by ICP-AES and Hg...
Interaction of cold-water aquifers with exploited reservoirs of the Cerro Prieto geothermal system
Alfred Truesdell, Marcelo Lippmann
1990, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Cerro Prieto geothermal reservoirs tend to exhibit good hydraulic communication with adjacent cool groundwater aquifers. Under natural state conditions the hot fluids mix with the surrounding colder waters along the margins of the geothermal system, or discharge to shallow levels by flowing up fault L. In response to exploitation reservoir...
Faults of the central part of the Lewis and Clark line and fragmentation of the Late Cretaceous foreland basin in west-central Montana
C. A. Wallace, D. J. Lidke, R. G. Schmidt
1990, Geological Society of America Bulletin (102) 1021-1037
The Lewis and Clark line is a prominent zone of strike-slip, dip-slip, and oblique-slip faults that extends from near Wallace, Idaho, to east of Helena, Montana. Faults of this zone have been intermittently active from Middle Proterozoic to Holocene time, and because of numerous tectonic overprints, controversy continues about displacement...
Late Pleistocene and Holocene sedimentary facies on the Ebro continental shelf
J. Diaz, C.H. Nelson, J. H. Barber Jr., S. Giro
1990, Marine Geology (95) 333-352
Late Pleistocene—Holocene history of the Ebro continental shelf of northeastern Spain is recorded in two main sedimentary units: (1) a lower, transgressive unit that covers the shelf and is exposed on the outer shelf south of 40°40′N, and (2) an upper,...
Discharge rates of fluid and heat by thermal springs of the Cascade Range, Washington, Oregon, and northern California
Robert H. Mariner, T. S. Presser, William C. Evans, M.K.W. Pringle
1990, Journal of Geophysical Research (95) 19517-19531
Fluid and heat discharge rates of thermal springs of the Cascade Range have been determined using the chloride inventory method. Discharge rates of thermal spring groups range from 1 to 120 L s−1. Most of the fluid (50%) and heat (61%) are discharged from two hot spring groups in northern...
Geothermal systems within the Mammoth Corridor in Yellowstone National Park and the adjacent Corwin Springs KGRA
Michael Sorey, Elizabeth Colvard, N.C. Sturchio
1990, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
A study of potential impacts of geothermal development in the Corwin Springs KGRA north of Yellowstone Park on thermal springs within the Park is being conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey. Thermal waters in the KGRA and at Mammoth Hot Springs, located 13 km inside the Park boundary, are high...
Isotopic studies of the Eye-Dashwa Lakes pluton and the long-term integrity of whole-rock and mineral systems
Zell E. Peterman, D.C. Kamineni
1990, Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, AECL (Report)
This report presents results of isotopic studies of the Eye-Dashwa Lakes pluton, located near Atikokan, Ontario. Suites of pristine 'unaltered' and 'highly altered' core samples from deep boreholes were used to study Rb-Sr, U-Th-Pb and Sr-Nd systematics, whole-rock Pb isotopes and fission track dating of apatite. The results have been...
Inorganic geochemistry of surface sediments of the Ebro shelf and slope, northwestern Mediterranean
J.V. Gardner, W.E. Dean, B. Alonso
1990, Marine Geology (95) 225-245
Distributions of major, minor, and trace elements in surface sediment of the continental shelf and upper slope of the northeastern Spanish continental margin reflect the influences of discharge from the Ebro River and changes in eustatic sea levels. Multivariate factor analysis of sediment geochemistry was used to identify five...
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...