Integrating a geographic information system, a scientific visualization system, and a precipitation model
L.E. Hay, L.K. Knapp
1996, Water Resources Bulletin (32) 357-369
Investigating natural, potential, and human-induced impacts on hydrologic systems commonly requires complex modeling with overlapping data requirements, plus massive amounts of one- to four-dimensional data at multiple scales and formats. Given the complexity of most hydrologic studies, the requisite software infrastructure must incorporate many components including simulation modeling and spatial...
Synthesis of data from studies by the National Irrigation Water-Quality Program
R. L. Seiler
1996, Water Resources Bulletin (32) 1233-1245
From 1986 to 1993, the National Irrigation Water-Quality Program (NIWQP) of the U.S, Department of the Interior studied whether contamination was induced by irrigation drainage in 26 areas of the Western United States. In 1992, a study to evaluate and synthesize data collected during these 26 investigations began. Selenium, boron,...
The 1954 Rainbow Mountain-Fairview Peak-Dixie Valley earthquakes: A triggered normal faulting sequence
K.M. Hodgkinson, R.S. Stein, G.C.P. King
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 25459-25471
In 1954, four earthquakes of M > 6.0 occurred within a 30 km radius in a period of six months. The Rainbow Mountain-Fairview Peak-Dixie Valley earthquakes are among the largest to have been recorded geodetically in the Basin and Range province. The Fairview Peak earthquake (M = 7.2, December 12, 1954) followed...
Low-velocity fault-zone guided waves: Numerical investigations of trapping efficiency
Y.-G. Li, J.E. Vidale
1996, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (86) 371-378
Recent observations have shown that shear waves trapped within low-velocity fault zones may be the most sensitive measure of fault-zone structure (Li et al., 1994a, 1994b). Finite-difference simulations demonstrate the effects of several types of complexity on observations of fault-zone trapped waves. Overlying sediments...
A two-stage model of fracture of rocks
V. Kuksenko, N. Tomilin, E. Damaskinskaya, D. Lockner
1996, Pure and Applied Geophysics (146)
In this paper we propose a two-stage model of rock fracture. In the first stage, cracks or local regions of failure are uncorrelated occur randomly throughout the rock in response to loading of pre-existing flaws. As damage accumulates in the rock, there is a gradual increase in the probability that...
The enigma of the New Madrid earthquakes of 1811-1812
A. C. Johnston, E.S. Schweig
1996, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences (24) 339-384
Continental North America's greatest earthquake sequence struck on the western frontier of the United States. The frontier was not then California but the valley of the continent's greatest river, the Mississippi, and the sequence was the New Madrid earthquakes of the winter of 1811–1812. Their described impacts on the land...
Rare, large earthquakes at the laramide deformation front - Colorado (1882) and Wyoming (1984)
W. Spence, C.J. Langer, G. L. Choy
1996, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (86) 1804-1819
The largest historical earthquake known in Colorado occurred on 7 November 1882. Knowledge of its size, location, and specific tectonic environment is important for the design of critical structures in the rapidly growing region of the Southern Rocky Mountains. More than one century later, on 18 October 1984, an mb 5.3 earthquake...
The composition of fluid inclusions in ore and gangue minerals from the Silesian-Cracow Mississippi Valley-type Zn-Pb deposits Poland: Genetic and environmental implications
J.G. Viets, A. H. Hofstra, P. Emsbo, A. Kozlowski
1996, Prace - Panstwowego Instytutu Geologicznego (154) 85-103
The composition of fluids extracted from ore and gangue sulfide minerals that span most of the paragenesis of the Silesian-Cracow district was determined using a newly developed ion chromatographic (IC) technique. Ionic species determined were Na+, NH+4, Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, Rb+, Sr2+, Ba2+, Cl-, Br-, F-, I-, PO3-4, CO2-3, HS-,...
Soil and soil solution chemistry under red spruce stands across the northeastern united states
M.B. David, G.B. Lawrence
1996, Soil Science (161) 314-328
Red spruce ecosystems in the northeastern United States are of interest because this species is undergoing regional decline. Their underlying soils have been examined closely at only a few sites, and information available on red spruce soils throughout this region is limited.This study was conducted to examine soil and soil...
Factors affecting suspended-solids concentrations in South San Francisco Bay, California
D. H. Schoellhamer
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (101) 12087-12095
Measurements of suspended-solids concentration (SSC) were made at two depths at three sites in South San Francisco Bay (South Bay) to determine the factors that affect SSC. Twenty-eight segments of reliable and continuous SSC time series data longer than 14 days were collected from late 1991 or 1992 through September...
The long-term salinity field in San Francisco Bay
R.J. Uncles, D. H. Peterson
1996, Continental Shelf Research (16) 2005-2039
Data are presented on long-term salinity behaviour in San Francisco Bay, California. A two-level, width averaged model of the tidally averaged salinity and circulation has been written in order to interpret the long-term (days to decades) salinity variability. The model has been used to simulate daily averaged salinity in the...
Trace fossils and sedimentary facies from a Late Cambrian‐Early Ordovician tide‐dominated shelf (Santa Rosita Formation, northwest Argentina): Implications for ichnofacies models of shallow marine successions
M. Gabriela Mángano, Luis A. Buatois, Guillermo F. Acenolaza
1996, Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces (5) 53-88
The Santa Rosita Formation is one the most widely distributed lower Paleozoic units of northwest Argentina. At the Quebrada del Salto Alto section, east of Purmamarca, Jujuy Province, it is represented by four sedimentary facies: thick‐bedded planar cross‐stratified quartzose sandstones (A), thin‐bedded planar cross‐stratified quartzose sandstones and mudstones (B), wave‐rippled...
Film cameras or digital sensors? The challenge ahead for aerial imaging
D.L. Light
1996, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (62) 285-291
Cartographic aerial cameras continue to play the key role in producing quality products for the aerial photography business, and specifically for the National Aerial Photography Program (NAPP). One NAPP photograph taken with cameras capable of 39 lp/mm system resolution can contain the equivalent of 432 million pixels at 11 ??m...
Comparison of damping in buildings under low-amplitude and strong motions
M. Çelebi
1996, Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial Aerodynamics (59) 309-323
This paper presents a comprehensive assessment of damping values and other dynamic characteristics of five buildings using strong-motion and low-amplitude (ambient vibration) data. The strong-motion dynamic characteristics of five buildings within the San Francisco Bay area are extracted from recordings of the 17 October 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake (LPE). Ambient...
Integrating a geographic information system, a scientific visualization system and an orographic precipitation model
L. Hay, L. Knapp
1996, IAHS-AISH Publication 123-131
Investigating natural, potential, and man-induced impacts on hydrological systems commonly requires complex modelling with overlapping data requirements, and massive amounts of one- to four-dimensional data at multiple scales and formats. Given the complexity of most hydrological studies, the requisite software infrastructure must incorporate many components including simulation modelling, spatial analysis...
Grazing trails formed by soldier fly larvae (Diptera: Stratiomyidae) and their paleoenvironmental and paleoecological implications for the fossil record
M. Gabriela Mángano, Luis A. Buatois, Guillermo L. Claps
1996, Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces (4) 163-167
Recent trails formed by soldier fly larvae (Díptera: Stratiomyidae) were examined in a shallow pond in the floodplain of a braided river in Jujuy Province, northwestern Argentina. Collected specimens were identified as Stratiomys convexa van der Wulp. Simple, irregularly meandering trails were produced across the surface of a muddy‐silty substrate. Since soldier...
Diagenesis, compaction, and fluid chemistry modeling of a sandstone near a pressure seal: Lower Tuscaloosa Formation, Gulf Coast
Suzanne Weedman, Susan L. Brantley, R. Shiraki, Simon R. Poulson
1996, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (80) 1045-1063
Petrographic, isotopic, and fluid-inclusion evidence from normally and overpressured sand-stones of the lower Tuscaloosa Formation (Upper Cretaceous) in the Gulf Coast documents quartz-overgrowth precipitation at 90°C or less, calcite cement precipitation at approximately 100° and 135°C, and prismatic quartz cement precipitation at about 125°C. Textural evidence suggests that carbonate cement...
Thermal conductivity of water-saturated rocks from the KTB pilot hole at temperatures of 25 to 300°C
D. Pribnow, C.F. Williams, J.H. Sass, R. Keating
1996, Geophysical Research Letters (23) 391-394
The conductivitites of selected gneiss (two) and amphibolite (one) core samples have been measured under conditions of elevated temperature and pressure with a needle‐probe. Water‐saturated thermal conductivity measurements spanning temperatures from 25 to 300°C and hydrostatic pressures of 0.1 and 34 MPa confirm the general decrease in conductivity with increasing...
Effect of horizontal heat and fluid flow on the vertical temperature distribution in a semiconfining layer
Ning Lu, Shemin Ge
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 1449-1453
By including the constant flow of heat and fluid in the horizontal direction, we develop an analytical solution for the vertical temperature distribution within the semiconfining layer of a typical aquifer system. The solution is an extension of the previous one-dimensional theory by Bredehoeft and Papadopulos [1965]. It provides a quantitative tool...
Effects of thermal vapor diffusion on seasonal dynamics of water in the unsaturated zone
Paul C.D. Milly
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 509-518
The response of water in the unsaturated zone to seasonal changes of temperature (T) is determined analytically using the theory of nonisothermal water transport in porous media, and the solutions are tested against field observations of moisture potential and bomb fallout isotopic (36Cl and 3H) concentrations. Seasonally varying land surface temperatures...
Testing and validating environmental models
J.W. Kirchner, R. P. Hooper, C. Kendall, C. Neal, G. Leavesley
1996, Science of the Total Environment (183) 33-47
Generally accepted standards for testing and validating ecosystem models would benefit both modellers and model users. Universally applicable test procedures are difficult to prescribe, given the diversity of modelling approaches and the many uses for models. However, the generally accepted scientific principles of documentation and disclosure provide a useful framework...
Spatial radon anomalies on active faults in California
C.-Y. King, B.-S. King, William C. Evans, W. Zhang
1996, Applied Geochemistry (11) 497-510
Radon emanation has been observed to be anomalously high along active faults in many parts of the world. We tested this relationship by conducting and repeating soil air radon surveys with a portable radon meter across several faults in California. The results confirm the existence of fault-associated radon anomalies, which...
Origin and depositional environment of clastic deposits in the Hilo drill hole, Hawaii
M.H. Beeson, D.A. Clague, J. P. Lockwood
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 11617-11629
Volcaniclastic units cored at depths of about 87, 164, 178, 226, and 246 m below sea level and carbonate units located between depths of 27 and 53 m below sea level in the Hilo drill core were found to be deposited at or near sea level. Four of these units...
Groundwater inflow measurements in wetland systems
Randy J. Hunt, David P. Krabbenhoft, Mary P. Anderson
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 495-507
Our current understanding of wetlands is insufficient to assess the effects of past and future wetland loss. While knowledge of wetland hydrology is crucial, groundwater flows are often neglected or uncertain. In this paper, groundwater inflows were estimated in wetlands in southwestern Wisconsin using traditional Darcy's law calculations and three...
Uranium-series disequilibrium, sedimentation, diatom frustules, and paleoclimate change in Lake Baikal
D.N. Edgington, J. A. Robbins, Steven M. Colman, K.A. Orlandini, M.-P. Gustin
1996, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (142) 29-42
The large volume of water, approximately one-fifth of the total surface fresh water on the planet, contained in Lake Baikal in southeastern Siberia is distinguished by having a relatively high concentration of uranium (ca. 2 nM), and, together with the surface...