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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Errors and parameter estimation in precipitation-runoff modeling: 1. Theory
Brent M. Troutman
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1195-1213
Errors in complex conceptual precipitation-runoff models may be analyzed by placing them into a statistical framework. This amounts to treating the errors as random variables and defining the probabilistic structure of the errors. By using such a framework, a large array of techniques, many of which have been presented in...
Justification for a reduction in the crest-stage gage program in Louisiana
Richard A. Herbert, Darrell D. Carlson, Gregg J. Wiche
1985, Water Resources Bulletin (21) 953-965
The crest-stage gage program in Louisiana was evaluated to determine if the data were adequate for use in developing regional flood-frequency equations and to determine if any crest-stage gage stations could be discontinued. An abundance of data at many crest-stage gage stations and a lack of data for urban areas...
Electrical Techniques for Engineering Applications
Robert J. Bisdorf
1985, Bulletin of the Association of Engineering Geologists (22) 421-433
Surface electrical geophysical methods have been used in such engineering applications as locating and delineating shallow gravel deposits, depth to bedrock, faults, clay zones, and other geological phenomena. Other engineering applications include determining water quality, tracing ground water contaminant plumes and locating dam seepages. Various methods and electrode arrays are...
Overview of hydrologic-data collection by the US Geological Survey in Oklahoma.
L.D. Hauth
1985, Oklahoma Geology Notes (45) 149-161
The US Geological Survey (USGS) collects hydrologic data from 1332 stream, lake, and ground-water sites in Oklahoma. Information on the quantity of water from a network of 123 streamflow stations, 30 lakes, 42 peak-flow stations, three low-flow stations, and on the quality of water from 40 stream locations is published...
Field determination of the three-dimensional hydraulic conductivity tensor of anisotropic media: 2. Methodology and application to fractured rocks
Paul A. Hsieh, Shlomo P. Neuman, Gary K. Stiles, Eugene S. Simpson
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1667-1676
The analytical solutions developed in the first paper can be used to interpret the results of cross-hole tests conducted in anisotropic porous or fractured media. In the particular case where the injection and monitoring intervals are short relative to the distance between them, the test results can be analyzed graphically....
An underwater instrument for determining bearing capacity of shallow marine sediments
Ronald C. Circe
1985, Geotechnical Testing Journal (8) 96-98
A small, portable, underwater instrument for measuring carbonate substrate bearing capacity in situ is described. The device was used in various shallow water (< 9 m) carbonate reef environments. Criteria for design and operation were based on ability to deliver controlled levels of stress to bearing plates of various sizes,...
A policy evaluation tool: Management of a multiaquifer system using controlled stream recharge
Wesley R. Danskin, Steven M. Gorelick
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1731-1747
A model for the optimal allocation of water resources was developed for a multiaquifer groundwater and surface water system near Livermore, California. The complex groundwater system was analyzed using a transient, quasi-three-dimensional model that considers the nonlinear behavior of the unconfined aquifer. The surface water system consists of a reservoir...
Evolution and present state of the hydrothermal system in Long Valley caldera
M.L. Sorey
1985, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (90) 11219-11228
Evidence for previous periods of hydrothermal activity in Long Valley caldera exists in the form of extensive deposits of hydrothermal alteration products at several locations within the caldera and saline deposits in Searles Lake which contain mineral assemblages contributed by hot spring discharge from Long Valley. Hydrothermal activity was more...
Middle Proterozoic uplift events in the Dunbar dome of northeastern Wisconsin, USA
Z. E. Peterman, P.K. Sims, R. E. Zartman, K. J. Schulz
1985, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (91) 138-150
Isotopic ages of granitic and metamorphic rocks exposed in the Dunbar structural dome of northeastern Wisconsin identify a protracted series of tectonic and "hydrothermal" events that culminated in major regional uplift during Middle Proterozoic (Keweenawan; ca 1,100 Ma) continental rifting and volcanism. The major rock-forming events and the structural development...
Comparison of methods for estimating ground-water pumpage for irrigation
Steven A. Frenzel
1985, Groundwater (23) 220-226
Ground-water pumpage for irrigation was measured at 32 sites on the eastern Snake River Plain in southern Idaho during 1983. Pumpage at these sites also was estimated by three commonly used methods, and pumpage estimates were compared to measured values to determine the accuracy...
A two-dimensional dam-break flood plain model
T. V. Hromadka II, C. E. Berenbrock, J. R. Freckleton, G. L. Guymon
1985, Advances in Water Resources (8) 7-14
A simple two-dimensional dam-break model is developed for flood plain study purposes. Both a finite difference grid and an irregular triangle element integrated finite difference formulation are presented. The governing flow equations are approximately solved as a diffusion model coupled to the equation of continuity. Application of the model to...
Remotely sensed limonite anomaly on Lordsburg Mesa, New Mexico: Possible implications for uranium deposits
G. L. Raines, J. A. Erdman, J. H. McCarthy, G.M. Reimer
1985, Economic Geology (80) 575-590
We have identified a large, anomalously limonitic area in Cenozoic gravels on Lordsburg Mesa near Lordsburg, New Mexico, using Landsat images. Our interpretation of the geophysical and geochemical data suggests the exploration hypothesis that the Lordsburg Mesa limonite anomaly is the surface expression of a chemical trap that may contain...
Installation of observation wells on hazardous waste sites in Kansas using a hollow-stem auger
C. A. Perry, R. J. Hart
1985, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (5) 70-73
Noncontaminating procedures were used during the hollow-stem auger installation of 12 observation wells on three hazardous waste sites in Kansas. Special precautions were taken to ensure that water samples were representative of the ground water in the aquifer and were not subjected to contamination from the land surface or cross...
Case for periodic, colossal jokulhlaups from Pleistocene glacial Lake Missoula
R. B. Waitt Jr.
1985, Geological Society of America Bulletin (96) 1271-1286
Two classes of field evidence firmly establish that late Wisconsin glacial Lake Missoula drained periodically as scores of colossal jökulhlaups (glacier-outburst floods). (1) More than 40 successive, flood-laid, sand-to-silt graded rhythmites accumulated in back-flooded valleys in southern Washington. Hiatuses are indicated between flood-laid...
Multisample conversion of water to hydrogen by zinc for stable isotope determination
C. Kendall, T.B. Coplen
1985, Analytical Chemistry (57) 1437-1440
Two techniques for the conversion of water to hydrogen for stable isotope ratio determination have been developed that are especially suited for automated multisample analysis. Both procedures involve reaction of zinc shot with a water sample at 450 ??C. in one method designed for water samples in bottles, the water...
Role of small oil and gas fields in the United States
Richard F. Meyer, Mary L. Fleming
1985, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (69) 1950-1962
With the maturation of oil and gas production operations in a province or country, fields found by new-field wildcats diminish in size. The actual economic size cutoff is a function of such factors as depth, water depth offshore, and accessibility to transportation infrastructure. Because of the constraint of resource availability,...
Uranium mineralization in the Smith Lake district of the Grants uranium region, New Mexico.
N.S. Fishman, R. L. Reynolds, J. F. Robertson
1985, Economic Geology (80) 1348-1364
The Mariano Lake and Ruby 1 uranium orebodies, which together comprise much of the uranium ore in the Smith Lake district of the Grants uranium region, New Mexico, occur in sandstones in the lower part of the Brushy Basin Member of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation. The orebodies, which are...
Seismic structure and stratigraphy of northern edge of Bahaman-Cuban collision zone
M. M. Ball, R. G. Martin, W. D. Bock, R. E. Sylwester, R. M. Bowles, D. Taylor, E. L. Coward, J. E. Dodd, L. Gilbert
1985, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (69) 1275-1294
Common-depth-point (CDP) seismic reflection data in the southwestern Bahamas reveal the northern edge of the tectonized zone that resulted from the late Mesozoic-early Cenozoic collision of Cuba and the Bahamas. Two seismic facies are present: a basin facies and a shallow-water carbonate-platform facies. In Santaren Channel, between Cay Sal and...
Time scales and mechanisms of estuarine variability, a synthesis from studies of San Francisco Bay
J. E. Cloern, F.H. Nichols
1985, Hydrobiologia (129) 229-237
This review of the preceding papers suggests that temporal variability in San Francisco Bay can be characterized by four time scales (hours, days-weeks, months, years) and associated with at least four mechanisms (variations in freshwater inflow, tides, wind, and exchange with coastal waters). The best understood component of temporal variability...
A new look at deep-sea video
H. Chezar, J. Lee
1985, Deep Sea Research Part A, Oceanographic Research Papers (32) 1429-1436
A deep-towed photographic system with completely self-contained recording instrumentation and power can obtain color-video and still-photographic transects along rough terrane without need for a long electrically conducting cable. Both the video- and still-camera systems utilize relatively inexpensive and proven off-the-shelf hardware adapted for deep-water environments. The small instrument frame makes...
Seismic and geochemical evidence for shallow gas in sediment on Navarin continental margin, Bering Sea
Paul R. Carlson, Margaret Golan-Bac, Herman A. Karl, Keith A. Kvenvolden
1985, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (69) 422-436
Marine seismic studies coupled with geochemical investigations demonstrate that hydrocarbon gases are ubiquitous in the near-surface (<= 250 m or 820 ft depth) sediment of the Navarin continental margin in the northern Bering Sea. Three types of acoustic anomalies appear to be related to the presence of gas in the...
Mineral-water reactions in metamorphism and volcanism
I. Barnes
1985, Chemical Geology (49) 21-29
Low-temperature (120??C and less) metamorphism of graywacke, granite and andesite yields zeolites and precursor gels by reaction with fresh water but low-greenschist facies by reaction with salt (sea)water. ?? 1985....
Genesis and evolution of water in a two-mica pluton: A hydrogen isotope study
R. H. Brigham, J. R. O’Neil
1985, Chemical Geology (49) 159-177
Measurements were made of the hydrogen isotope composition of 74 samples of muscovite, biotite, vein quartz and whole rocks from the Papoose Flat pluton, eastern California, U.S.A., and adjacent metamorphic and sedimentary rocks in order to elucidate the genesis and evolution of water and hydrous minerals in a two-mica granodiorite....
Stable-isotope evidence for a magmatic component in fumarole condensates from Augustine Volcano, Cook Inlet, Alaska, U.S.A.
J.A. Viglino, R.S. Harmon, J. Borthwick, N.L. Nehring, R.J. Motyka, L. D. White, D. A. Johnston
1985, Chemical Geology (49) 141-157
D/H and 18O 16O ratios have been determined for fumarole condensates from Augustine Volcano, an active calc-alkaline stratovolcano in Lower Cook Inlet, Alaska. The isotopic data for the condensates form a linear ?? D-?? 18O array from low-temperature fluids (< 100??C) which are essentially local meteoric water (?? D...