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Page 2258, results 56426 - 56450

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Regional and local networks of horizontal control, Cerro Prieto geothermal area
B.L. Massey
1979, Geothermics (8) 275-281
The Cerro Prieto geothermal area in the Mexicali Valley 30 km southeast of Mexicali, Baja California, is probably deforming due to (1) the extraction of large volumes of steam and hot water, and (2) active tectonism. Two networks of precise horizontal control were established in Mexicali Valley by the U.S....
U.S. Geological Survey core drilling on the Atlantic shelf
J.C. Hathaway, C. W. Poag, P. C. Valentine, R.E. Miller, D.M. Schultz, F.T. Manheim, F. A. Kohout, Michael H. Bothner, D.A. Sangrey
1979, Science (206) 515-527
The first broad program of scientific shallow drilling on the U.S. Atlantic continental shelf has delineated rocks of Pleistocene to Late Cretaceous age, including phosphoritic Miocene strata, widespread Eocene carbonate deposits that serve as reflective seismic markers, and several regional unconformities. Two sites, off Maryland and New Jersey, showed light...
Annotated list of the fishes of the Lake Ontario watershed
Edwin J. Crossman, Harry D. Van Meter
1979, Technical Report 36
This annotated list of the fishes of Lake Ontario and its watershed is based on published distribution records, museum collections, and reports of fish surveys that confirm the occurrence of fish species dating back to the 1850's. It includes 130 forms (129 spp. + the hybrid splake), 20 of which...
The geochemistry of the Fox Hills-Basal Hell Creek Aquifer in southwestern North Dakota and northwestern South Dakota
Donald C. Thorstenson, Donald W. Fisher, Mack G. Croft
1979, Water Resources Research (15) 1479-1498
The Late Cretaceous Fox Hills Formation and the basal portion of the overlying Hell Creek Formation constitute an important aquifer in the Fort Union coal region. Throughout most of southwestern North Dakota and northwestern South Dakota the aquifer is at depths ranging from 1000 to 2000 ft, except for exposures...
Potentials and limits for the use of ozone as a fish disease control agent
Gary A. Wedemeyer, Nancy C. Nelson, T. Yasutake
1979, Ozone: Science and Engineering (1) 295-318
Ozone and chlorine inactivation curves were determined in three types of freshwater at 20 C for the destruction of the fish pathogens Aeromonas salmonicida the etiologic agent of furunculosis, and Yersinia ruckeri the enteric redmouth bacterium (ERM). Ozone and chlorine inactivation curves were also obtained in the same water types at 10 C for...
Origin of reverse-graded bedding in air-fall pumice, Coso Range, California
W. A. Duffield, C. R. Bacon, G.R. Roquemore
1979, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (5) 35-48
The origin of reverse grading in air-fall pyroclastic deposits has been ascribed to: (1) changing conditions at an erupting vent; (2) deposition in water; or (3) rolling of large clasts over smaller clasts on the surface of a steep slope. Structural features in a deposit of air-fall pumice lapilli in...
Simulation of wetlands forest vegetation dynamics
Richard L. Phipps
1979, Ecological Modelling (7) 257-288
A computer program, SWAMP, was designed to simulate the effects of flood frequency and depth to water table on southern wetlands forest vegetation dynamics. By incorporating these hydrologic characteristics into the model, forest vegetation and vegetation dynamics can be simulated. The model, based on data from the White River National...
Martian channels and the search for extraterrestrial life
H. Masursky, M.E. Strobell, A.L. Dial
1979, Journal of Molecular Evolution (14) 39-55
The origin of the channels on Mars has been a subject of intense interest since they were first recognized on early Mariner 9 images (Driscoll, 1972; Masursky, 1973). Their presence on the planet, and their striking resemblance to terrestrial flood channels related to glacial outbursts or to dendritic river systems...
Arsenic and fluoride in the upper madison river system: Firehole and gibbon rivers and their tributaries, yellowstone national park, wyoming, and southeast montana
J. M. Thompson
1979, Environmental Geology (3) 13-21
Chemical analyses of 21 water samples from the Firehole and Gibbon Rivers, which combine to form the Madison River, gave arsenic and fluoride values above the Environmental Protection Agency Interim Primary Drinking Water maximum contaminant levels (0.05 mg/l arsenic and 2.0 mg/l fluoride). On 18 October, 1975, during a period...
Origin of dolomite in Miocene Monterey Shale and related formations in the Temblor Range, California
I. Friedman, K. J. Murata
1979, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (43) 1357-1365
Dolomites in thick sections of Miocene Monterey Shale and related formations in the Temblor Range of California acquired their isotopic compositions as they formed at shallow depth in the original sediment rich in organic matter, and retained the composition against the vicissitudes of burial diagenesis. The oxygen isotopes of dolomites...
D/H ratios in speleothem fluid inclusions: A guide to variations in the isotopic composition of meteoric precipitation?
R.S. Harmon, H.P. Schwarcz, J. R. O’Neil
1979, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (42) 254-266
D/H ratios of fluid inclusion waters extracted from230Th/234U-dated speleothems that were originally deposited under conditions of isotopic equilibrium should provide a direct estimate of the hydrogen isotopic composition of ancient meteoric waters. We present here D/H ratios for 47 fluid inclusion...
Solubility of some alkali and alkaline earth chlorides in water at moderate temperatures
M.A. Clynne, R.W. Potter II
1979, Journal of Chemical and Engineering Data (24) 338-340
Solubilities for the binary systems, salt-H2O, of the chlorides of lithium, rubidium, cesium, magnesium, calcium, strontium, and barium from near 0??C to the saturated boiling point are reported. The experimental data and coefficients of an equation for a smoothed curve describing each system are listed in the tables. The data...
Preliminary isotopic studies of fluids from the Cerro Prieto geothermal field
A.H. Truesdell, R. O. Rye, F. J. Pearson Jr., E.R. Olson, N.L. Nehring, J. F. Whelan, M.A. Huebner, T.B. Coplen
1979, Geothermics (8) 223-229
Preliminary isotopic studies of Cerro Prieto geothermal fluids and earlier studies of Mexicali Valley ground waters suggest local recharge of the geothermal system from the area immediately to the west. Oxygen isotope exchange of water with reservoir rock minerals at temperatures increasing with depth has produced fluids with oxygen-18 contents...
Digital model of the Bayou Bartholomew alluvial aquifer stream system, Arkansas
J.E. Reed, Matthew E. Broom
1979, Open-File Report 79-685
A digital model of the Bayou Bartholomew aquifer-stream system in Arkansas was calibrated for the purpose of predicting hydrologic responses to stresses of water development. The simulated-time span for model calibration was from 1953 to 1970, during which time the system was stressed largely by ground- and surface-water diversions for...
Methanogenic activity in plankton samples and fish intestines A mechanism for in situ methanogenesis in oceanic surface waters
Ronald S. Oremland
1979, Limnology and Oceanography (24) 1136-1141
When plankton samples were incubated anaerobically with a cysteine-sulfide reducing agent, pronounced methane evolution occurred. This activity was inhibited by air, CHCl3, C2H2, and 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid. Adding [14C]CO32− resulted in accumulation of [14C]CH4. Portions of the digestive tracts of three fishes were incubated in methanogenic media, and two of the samples...
Surface faults in the gulf coastal plain between Victoria and Beaumont, Texas
Earl R. Verbeek
1979, Tectonophysics (52) 373-375
Displacement of the land surface by faulting is widespread in the Houston-Galveston region, an area which has undergone moderate to severe land subsidence associated with fluid withdrawal (principally water, and to a lesser extent, oil and gas). A causative link between subsidence and fluid extraction has been convincingly reported in...
Disequilibrium in the 238uranium series in samples from Yeelirrie, Western Australia
R.S. Lively, R.S. Harmon, A. A. Levinson, C.J. Bland
1979, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (12) 57-65
Uranium-series disequilibrium studies carried out on samples from the Yeelirrie uranium deposit, Western Australia, indicate that uranium and radium have been migrating within the deposit during recent times, and are actually being removed from the deposit. Samples collected for 230Th/234U age dating were found to be substantially out of equilibrium,...
Low temperature basalt alteration by sea water: an experimental study at 70°C and 150°C
W.E. Seyfried Jr., J. L. Bischoff
1979, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (43) 1937-1947
Basaltic glass and diabase were reacted with seawater at 70°C at 1 bar and 150°C at 500 bars to determine fluid composition and alteration mineralogy. All experiments were performed at a water/ rock mass ratio of 10. The changes in seawater chemistry depended on temperature and crystallinity of the...
Beach-cusp formation
A. H. Sallenger Jr.
1979, Marine Geology (29) 23-37
Field experiments on beach-cusp formation were undertaken to document how the cuspate form develops and to test the edge-wave hypothesis on the uniform spacing of cusps. These involved observations of cusps forming from an initially plane foreshore. The cuspate form was observed to be a product of swash modification of an...
Methods of ultimate carbonaceous BOD determination
J. K. Stamer, S. W. McKenzie, R.N. Cherry
1979, Journal of the Water Pollution Control Federation (51) 918-925
Studies were conducted to provide an accurate and practical technique for determining the concentration of ultimate carbonaceous biochemical oxygen demand and the rate at which this demand is exerted. The three methods evaluated were carbon derived, nitrification adjusted, and nitrification inhibited. The studies indicate that comparable concentrations and reaction rates...
Recent developments in uranium exploration using the U.S. Geological Survey's mobile helium detector
G.M. Reimer, E.H. Denton, I. Friedman, J. K. Otton
1979, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (11) 1-12
A mobile mass spectrometer to measure He concentrations has been developed by the U.S. Geological Survey. This instrument has been tested in areas of known uranium deposits, and He anomalies have been found in both soil gas and water. A gas sample is collected in a hypodermic syringe, injected into...
Notes on sedimentation activities calendar year 1977
U.S. Interagency Advisory Committee on Water Data- Subcommittee on Sedimentation
1979, Report
The need for disseminating current information on activities in the field of sedimentation was proposed by the Chairman of the Federal Interagency River Basin Committee's Subcommittee on Sedimentation shortly after the subcommittee was formed in May 1946. At the fifth meeting of the subcommittee on September 17, 1946, the members...
Fall foods of migrant common snipe in North Dakota
E.K. Fritzell, G.A. Swanson, M.I. Meyer
1979, Journal of Wildlife Management (43) 253-257
Studies of foods consumed by common snipe (Capella gallinago) during fall migration (Sperry 1940, Erickson 1941, Choate in Tuck 1972, Tuck 1972) have shown that diets vary among habitats. More recently, Fogarty and Arnold (1977) expressed the need for more detailed information on snipe food habits and more refined knowledge...