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Page 333, results 8301 - 8325

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Applications of inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry in environmental radiochemistry
J.S. Grain
1996, Spectroscopy (11) 30-39
The state of the art in ICP-MS is now such that there are few discernible differences between radiochemical and mass spectrometric determinations of longlived radionuclides. Indeed, ICP-MS may provide better (more sensitive) data for many radionuclides, depending upon how one wishes to define "long-lived." In lowlevel determinations, sample preparation remains...
Occurrence and significance of stalactites within the epithermal deposits at Creede, Colorado
W. R. Campbell, P. B. Barton Jr.
1996, Canadian Mineralogist (34) 905-930
In addition to the common and abundant features in karst terranes, stalactites involving a wide variety of minerals have also been found in other settings, including epigenetic mineral deposits, but these are almost always associated with supergene stages. Here we describe a different mode of occurrence from the Creede epithermal...
Late Quaternary transgressive large dunes on the sediment-starved Adriatic shelf
A. Correggiari, M.E. Field, F. Trincardi
1996, Geological Society Special Publication (117) 155-169
The Adriatic epicontinental basin is a low-gradient shelf where the late-Quaternary transgressive systems tract (TST) is composed of thin parasequences of backbarrier, shoreface and offshore deposits. The facies and internal architecture of the late-Quaternary TST in the Adriatic epicontinental basin changed consistently from early transgression to late transgression reflecting: (1)...
Large-magnitude Middle Ordovician volcanic ash falls in North America and Europe: Dimensions, emplacement and post-emplacement characteristics
W.D. Huff, Dennis R. Kolata, Stig M. Bergstrom, Y.-S. Zhang
1996, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (73) 285-301
Middle Ordovician K-bentonites represent some of the largest known fallout ash deposits in the Phanerozoic Era. They cover minimally 2.2 ?? 106 km2 in eastern North America and 6.9 ?? 105 km2 in northwestern Europe, and represents the coeval accumulation of plinian and co-ignimbrite ash on both Laurentia and Baltica...
Intraguild predation and cannibalism among larvae of detritivorous caddisflies in subalpine wetlands
Scott A Wissinger, G. B. Sparks, G. L. Rouse, W. S. Brown, Heidi Steltzer
1996, Ecology (77) 2421-2430
Comparative data from subalpine wetlands in Colorado indicate that larvae of the limnephilid caddisflies, Asynarchus nigriculus and Limnephilus externus, are reciprocally abundant among habitats–Limnephilus larvae dominate in permanent waters, whereas Asynarchus larvae dominate in temporary basins. The purpose of this paper is to report on field and laboratory experiments that...
Development of gypsum alteration on marble and limestone
E. S. McGee
1996, ASTM Special Technical Publication (1258) 376-397
Blackened alteration crusts of gypsum plus particulates that form on sheltered areas on marble and limestone buildings pose a challenge for rehabilitation and cleaning. Fresh marble and limestone samples exposed at monitored exposure sites present conditions of simple geometry and well-documented exposures but have short exposure histories (one to five...
Source and tectonic implications of tonalite-trondhjemite magmatism in the Klamath Mountains
C. G. Barnes, S. W. Petersen, R. W. Kistler, R. Murray, M. A. Kays
1996, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (123) 40-60
In the Klamath Mountains, voluminous tonalite-trondhjemite magmatism was characteristic of a short period of time from about 144 to 136 Ma (Early Cretaceous). It occurred about 5 to 10 m.y. after the ∼165 to 159 Ma Josephine ophiolite was thrust beneath older parts of the province during the Nevadan orogeny (thrusting from ∼155...
Stress/strain changes and triggered seismicity at The Geysers, California
J. Gomberg, S. Davis
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 733-749
The principal results of this study of remotely triggered seismicity in The Geysers geothermal field are the demonstration that triggering (initiation of earthquake failure) depends on a critical strain threshold and that the threshold level increases with decreasing frequency, or, equivalently, depends on strain rate. This threshold function derives from...
AMS radiocarbon analyses from Lake Baikal, Siberia: Challenges of dating sediments from a large, oligotrophic lake
Steven M. Colman, Glenn A. Jones, M. Rubin, J.W. King, J.A. Peck, W. H. Orem
1996, Quaternary Science Reviews (15) 669-684
A suite of 146 new accelerator-mass spectrometer (AMS) radiocarbon ages provides the first reliable chronology for late Quaternary sediments in Lake Baikal. In this large, highly oligotrophic lake, biogenic and authigenic carbonate are absent, and plant macrofossils are extremely rare. Total organic carbon is therefore the primary material available for...
Direct simulation of groundwater age
Daniel J. Goode
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 289-296
A new method is proposed to simulate groundwater age directly, by use of an advection-dispersion transport equation with a distributed zero-order source of unit (1) strength, corresponding to the rate of aging. The dependent variable in the governing equation is the mean age, a mass-weighted average age. The governing equation...
The accuracy of seismic estimates of dynamic strains: an evaluation using strainmeter and seismometer data from Piñon Flat Observatory, California
Joan S. Gomberg, Duncan Carr Agnew
1996, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (86) 212-220
The dynamic strains associated with seismic waves may play a significant role in earthquake triggering, hydrological and magmatic changes, earthquake damage, and ground failure. We determine how accurately dynamic strains may be estimated from seismometer data and elastic-wave theory by comparing such estimated...
Inelastic models of lithospheric stress - II. Implications for outer-rise seismicity and dynamics
S. Mueller, W. Spence, G. L. Choy
1996, Geophysical Journal International (125) 54-72
Outer-rise seismicity and dynamics are examined using inelastic models of lithospheric deformation, which allow a more realistic characterization of stress distributions and failure behaviour. We conclude that thrust- and normal-faulting outer-rise earthquakes represent substantially different states of stress within the oceanic lithosphere. Specifically, the normal-faulting events occur in response...
Extension across Tempe Terra, Mars, from measurements of fault scarp widths and deformed craters
M.P. Golombek, K. L. Tanaka, B.J. Franklin
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (101) 26119-26130
Two independent methods, with no common assumptions, have been used to estimate the extension across the heavily deformed Tempe Terra province of the Tharsis region of Mars. One method uses measurements of normal fault scarp width with average scarp slope data for simple grabens and rifts on Mars to estimate...
Geomagnetic storms, the Dst ring-current myth and lognormal distributions
W.H. Campbell
1996, Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics (58) 1171-1187
The definition of geomagnetic storms dates back to the turn of the century when researchers recognized the unique shape of the H-component field change upon averaging storms recorded at low latitude observatories. A generally accepted modeling of the storm field sources as a magnetospheric ring current was settled about 30...
Modeling impact of small Kansas landfills on underlying aquifers
M. Sophocleous, N.G. Stadnyk, M. Stotts
1996, Journal of Environmental Engineering (122) 1067-1077
Small landfills are exempt from compliance with Resource Conservation and Recovery Act Subtitle D standards for liner and leachate collection. We investigate the ramifications of this exemption under western Kansas semiarid environments and explore the conditions under which naturally occurring geologic settings provide sufficient protection against ground-water contamination. The methodology...
Isolation of Geobacter species from diverse sedimentary environments
J.D. Coaxes, Elizabeth J.P. Phillips, D.J. Lonergan, H. Jenter, Derek R. Lovley
1996, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (62) 1531-1536
In an attempt to better understand the microorganisms responsible for Fe(III) reduction in sedimentary environments, Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms were enriched for and isolated from freshwater aquatic sediments, a pristine deep aquifer, and a petroleum-contaminated shallow aquifer. Enrichments were initiated with acetate or toluene as the electron donor and Fe(III) as the...
Recent volcanism in the Siqueiros transform fault: Picritic basalts and implications for MORB magma genesis
M.R. Perfit, D.J. Fornari, W.I. Ridley, P.D. Kirk, John F. Casey, K.A. Kastens, J.R. Reynolds, M. Edwards, D. Desonie, R. Shuster, S. Paradis
1996, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (141) 91-108
Small constructional volcanic landforms and very fresh-looking lava flows are present along one of the inferred active strike-slip faults that connect two small spreading centers (A and B) in the western portion of the Siqueiros transform domain. The most primitive lavas (picritic and olivine-phyric basalts), exclusively recovered from the young-looking...
Integrated borehole logging methods for wellhead protection applications
Frederick L. Paillet, W.H. Pedler
1996, Engineering Geology (42) 155-165
Modeling of ground water infiltration and movement in the wellhead area is a critical part of an effective wellhead protection program. Such models depend on an accurate description of the aquifer in the wellhead area so that reliable estimates of contaminant travel times can be used in defining a protection...
Outburst floods from glacier-dammed lakes: The effect of mode of lake drainage on flood magnitude
Joseph S. Walder, John E. Costa
1996, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (21) 701-723
Published accounts of outburst floods from glacier‐dammed lakes show that a significant number of such floods are associated not with drainage through a tunnel incised into the basal ice—the process generally assumed—but rather with ice‐marginal drainage, mechanical failure of part of the ice dam, or both. Non‐tunnel floods are strongly correlated with...
Pesticides in streams draining agricultural and urban areas in Colorado
R. A. Kimbrough, D. W. Litke
1996, Environmental Science & Technology (30) 908-916
A study was conducted from April 1993 through April 1994 to describe and compare the occurrence and distribution of pesticides in streams in a small agricultural and a small urban area in Colorado. Twenty-five water samples collected at least monthly at the mouths of two tributary streams of the South...
Level II scour analysis for Bridge 25 (CRAFTH00220025) on Town Highway 22, crossing the Wild Branch Lamoille River, Craftsbury, Vermont
Erick M. Boehmler, Michael A. Ivanoff
1996, Open-File Report 96-312
This report provides the results of a detailed Level II analysis of scour potential at structure CRAFTH00220025 on town highway 22 crossing the Wild Branch Lamoille River, Craftsbury, Vermont (figures 1–8). A Level II study is a basic engineering analysis of the site, including a quantitative analysis of stream stability...
Level II scour analysis for Bridge 25 (BRNAVT00120025) on State Highway 12, crossing Locust Creek, Barnard, Vermont
Michael A. Ivanoff, Matthew A. Weber
1996, Open-File Report 96-388
This report provides the results of a detailed Level II analysis of scour potential at structure BRNAVT00120025 on State Highway 12 crossing Locust Creek, Barnard, Vermont (figures 1–8). A Level II study is a basic engineering analysis of the site, including a quantitative analysis of stream stability and scour (U.S....