Large impact features on Europa: Results of the Galileo Nominal Mission
Jeffrey M. Moore, Erik Asphaug, Robert J. Sullivan, James E. Klemaszewski, Kelly C. Bender, Ronald Greeley, Paul E. Geissler, Alfred S. McEwen, Elizabeth P. Turtle, Cynthia B. Phillips, B. Randy Tufts, James W. Head III, Robert T. Pappalardo, Kevin B. Jones, Clark R. Chapman, Michael J.S. Belton, Randolph L. Kirk, David Morrison
1998, Icarus (135) 127-145
The Galileo Orbiter examined several impact features on Europa at considerably better resolution than was possible from Voyager. The new data allow us to describe the morphology and infer the geology of the largest impact features on Europa, which are probes into the crust. We observe two basic types of...
Effects of topography on the interpretation of the deformation field of prominent volcanoes - Application to Etna
V. Cayol, F.H. Cornet
1998, Geophysical Research Letters (25) 1979-1982
We have investigated the effects of topography on the surface-deformation field of volcanoes. Our study provides limits to the use of classical half-space models. Considering axisymmetrical volcanoes, we show that interpreting ground-surface displacements with half-space models can lead to erroneous estimations of the shape of the...
Three-compartment model for contaminant accumulation by semipermeable membrane devices
Robert W. Gale
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 2292-2300
Passive sampling of dissolved hydrophobic contaminants with lipid (triolein)-containing semipermeable membrane devices (SPMDs) has been gaining acceptance for environmental monitoring. Understanding of the accumulation process has employed a simple polymer film-control model of uptake by the polymer-enclosed lipid, while aqueous film control has been only briefly discussed. A more complete...
Assessing sediments from Upper Mississippi River navigational pools using a benthic invertebrate community evaluation and the sediment quality triad approach
T.J. Canfield, E.L. Brunson, F.J. Dwyer, C.G. Ingersoll, N.E. Kemble
1998, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (35) 202-212
Benthic invertebrate samples were collected from 23 pools in the Upper Mississippi River (UMR) and from one station in the Saint Croix River (SCR) as part of a study to assess the effects of the extensive flooding of 1993 on sediment contamination in the UMR system. Sediment contaminants of concern...
Salts on Europa's surface detected by Galileo's near infrared mapping spectrometer
T. B. McCord, G. B. Hansen, F. P. Fanale, R. W. Carlson, D. L. Matson, T. V. Johnson, W. D. Smythe, J.K. Crowley, P. D. Martin, A. Ocampo, C. A. Hibbitts, J. C. Granahan
1998, Science (280) 1242-1245
Reflectance spectra in the 1- to 2.5-micrometer wavelength region of the surface of Europa obtained by Galileo's Near Infrared Mapping Spectrometer exhibit distorted water absorption bands that indicate the presence of hydrated minerals. The laboratory spectra of hydrated salt minerals such as magnesium sulfates and sodium carbonates and mixtures of...
Biodegradation of the surfactant linear alkylbenzenesulfonate in sewage-contaminated groundwater: A comparison of column experiments and field tracer tests
C.J. Krueger, K.M. Radakovich, T.E. Sawyer, L. B. Barber, R. L. Smith, J.A. Field
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 3954-3961
Transport and biodegradation of linear alkylbenzenesulfonate (LAS) in sewage-contaminated groundwater were investigated for a range of dissolved oxygen concentrations. Both laboratory column and an 80-day continuous injection tracer test field experiments were conducted. The rates of LAS biodegradation increased with increasing dissolved oxygen concentrations and indicated the preferential biodegradation of...
Lithological and hydrological influences on ground-water composition in a heterogeneous carbonate-clay aquifer system
S.J. Kauffman, J.S. Herman, B.F. Jones
1998, Geological Society of America Bulletin (110) 1163-1173
The influence of clay units on ground-water composition was investigated in a heterogeneous carbonate aquifer system of Miocene age in southwest Florida, known as the Intermediate aquifer system. Regionally, the ground water is recharged inland, flows laterally and to greater depths in the...
Tributary loading of mercury to Lake Michigan: Importance of seasonal events and phase partitioning
J.P. Hurley, S.E. Cowell, M.M. Shafer, P.E. Hughes
1998, Science of the Total Environment (213) 129-137
As a component of a lakewide mass balance study for Lake Michigan, we measured total mercury (Hg(T)) concentrations and fluxes in 11 selected tributaries. Unfiltered Hg(T) concentrations ranged from 0.56 ng l-61 at the Pete Marquette River to 182 ng l-1 at the Fox River. Highest mean Hg(T) concentrations were...
Importance of rearing-unit design and stocking density to the behavior, growth and metabolism of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush)
Robert M. Ross, Barnaby J. Watten
1998, Aquacultural Engineering (19) 41-56
Juvenile lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) were held at different stocking densities (48 and 96 kg m−3) in rearing-units of different design (rectangular plug-flow, circular and cylindrical cross-flow) and the effects on behavior, growth and metabolism were examined. Ambient light levels and current velocities were measured in each of three tank...
Survival costs of chick rearing in black-legged kittiwakes
Gregory H. Golet, David B. Irons, James A. Estes
1998, Journal of Animal Ecology (67) 827-841
1. We tested for costs of chick rearing in the black-legged kittiwake Rissa tridactyla (Linnaeus) by removing entire clutches from 149 of 405 randomly selected nests, in which one or both mates was colour-banded. After the manipulation, we monitored adult nest attendance and body condition at unmanipulated and manipulated nests,...
Evolution of the Gorda Escarpment, San Andreas fault and Mendocino triple junction from multichannel seismic data collected across the northern Vizcaino block, offshore northern California
N. J. Godfrey, A.S. Meltzer, S.L. Klemperer, A.M. Trehu, B. Leitner, S. H. Clarke Jr., A. Ondrus
1998, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (103) 23813-23825
The Gorda Escarpment is a north facing scarp immediately south of the Mendocino transform fault (the Gorda/Juan de Fuca-Pacific plate boundary) between 126°W and the Mendocino triple junction. It elevates the seafloor at the northern edge of the Vizcaino block, part of the Pacific plate, ∼1.5 km above the seafloor...
In situ observations of a high-pressure phase of H2O ice
I.-M. Chou, J.G. Blank, A.F. Goncharov, Ho-kwang Mao, R.J. Hemley
1998, Science (281) 809-812
A previously unknown solid phase of H2O has been identified by its peculiar growth patterns, distinct pressure-temperature melting relations, and vibrational Raman spectra. Morphologies of ice crystals and their pressure-temperature melting relations were directly observed in a hydrothermal diamond-anvil cell for H2O bulk densities between 1203 and 1257 kilograms per...
Factors controlling mercury transport in an upland forested catchment
T. Scherbatskoy, J. B. Shanley, G.J. Keeler
1998, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (105) 427-438
Total mercury (Hg) deposition and input/output relationships were investigated in an 11-ha deciduous forested catchment in northern Vermont as part of ongoing evaluations of rig cycling and transport in the Lake Champlain basin. Atmospheric Hg deposition (precipitation + modeled vapor phase downward flux) was 425 mg ha-1 during the one-year...
Monitoring so2 emission at the Soufriere Hills volcano: Implications for changes in eruptive conditions
S.R. Young, P.W. Francis, J. Barclay, T. J. Casadevall, C. A. Gardner, B. Darroux, M. A. Davies, P. Delmelle, G.E. Norton, A.J.H. Maciejewski, C.M.M. Oppenheimer, J. Stix, I.M. Watson
1998, Geophysical Research Letters (25) 3681-3684
Correlation spectrometer measurements of sulfur dioxide (SO2) emission rates during the current eruption of the Soufriere Hills volcano, Montserrat, have contributed towards identifying different phases of volcanic activity. SO2 emission rate has increased from <200 tonnes per day (td−1; <2.3 kgs−1) in the early stages of dome...
Arsenic hydrogeochemistry in an irrigated river valley - A reevaluation
D. A. Nimick
1998, Groundwater (36) 743-753
Arsenic concentrations in ground water of the lower Madison River valley, Montana, are high (16 to 176 μg/L). Previous studies hypothesized that arsenic-rich river water, applied as irrigation, was evapoconcentrated during recharge and contaminated the thin alluvial aquifer. Based on additional data collection and a...
Carbon dioxide and helium emissions from a reservoir of magmatic gas beneath Mammoth Mountain, California
M.L. Sorey, William C. Evans, B. M. Kennedy, C. D. Farrar, L.J. Hainsworth, B. Hausback
1998, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (103) 15303-15323
Carbon dioxide and helium with isotopic compositions indicative of a magmatic source ( δ13C = −4.5 to −5‰, 3He/ 4He = 4.5 to 6.7 RA) are discharging at anomalous rates from Mammoth Mountain, on the southwestern rim of the Long Valley caldera in eastern California. The gas is released mainly as diffuse...
Sex-steroid and thyroid hormone concentrations in juvenile alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) from contaminated and reference lakes in Florida, USA
D.A. Grain, L.J. Guillette Jr., D.B. Pickford, H.F. Percival, A.R. Woodward
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 446-452
Sex-steroid and thyroid hormones are critical regulators of growth and reproduction in all vertebrates, and several recent studies suggest that environmental chemicals can alter circulating concentrations of these hormones. This study examines plasma concentrations of estradiol-171?? (E2), testosterone (T), triiodothyronine (T3), and thyroxine (T4) in juvenile alligators (60-140 cm total...
Characterizing ground water flow in the municipal well fields of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, with selected environmental tracers
Robert A. Boyd
1998, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (34) 507-518
Cedar Rapids obtains its municipal water supply from a shallow alluvial aquifer along the Cedar River in east‐central Iowa. Water samples were collected and analyzed for selected isotopes and chlorofluorocarbons to characterize the ground‐water flow system near the municipal well fields. Analyses of deuterium and oxygen‐18 indicate that water in...
Structure, age, and tectonic setting of a multiply reactivated shear zone in the piedmont in Washington, D.C., and vicinity
A.H. Fleming, Avery A. Drake Jr.
1998, Southeastern Geology (37) 115-140
The Rock Creek shear zone is the dominant tectonic feature in the Piedmont in Washington, D.C. and adjacent parts of Maryland, has an exposed length of 25 km, and a width of up to 3 km. The shear zone is characterized by a complicated composite fabric produced by the imposition...
Magnetic Susceptibility and Mineral Zonations Controlled by Provenance in Loess along the Illinois and Central Mississippi River Valleys
D.A. Grimley, L.R. Follmer, E.D. McKay
1998, Quaternary Research (49) 24-36
Magnetic susceptibility (MS) patterns have proven useful for regional stratigraphic correlations of zones within thick, oxidized Peoria and Roxana Silts along the Illinois and Central Mississippi River valleys for more than 350 km. Variations in MS of C horizon loess are controlled by silt-sized magnetite content and are interpreted to...
Discovery of microscopic evidence for shock metamorphism at the Serpent Mound structure, south-central Ohio: Confirmation of an origin by impact
R.W. Carlton, C. Koeberl, M.T. Baranoski, G.A. SchuMacHer
1998, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (162) 177-185
The origin of the Serpent Mound structure in south-central Ohio has been disputed for many years. Clearly, more evidence was needed to resolve the confusion concerning the origin of the Serpent Mound feature either by endogenic processes or by hypervelocity impact. A petrographic study of 21 samples taken from a...
A primer on the geological occurrence of gas hydrate
K.A. Kvenvolden
1998, Geological Society Special Publication (137) 9-30
This paper is part of the special publication Gas hydrates: relevance to world margin stability and climatic change (eds J.P. Henriet and J. Mienert).Natural gas hydrates occur world-wide in polar regions, usually associated with onshore and offshore permafrost, and in sediment of outer continental and insular margins. The total amount...
Faulting along the southern margin of Reelfoot Lake, Tennessee
R. Van Arsdale, J. Purser, W. Stephenson, J. Odum
1998, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (88) 131-139
Approximately 320 km of deep seismic-reflection profiles in northwestern Tennessee reveal the structure of a major portion of the southeastern margin of the Reelfoot Rift. This rift margin consists of at least two major down-to-the-west late Precambrian to Cambrian normal faults. Maximum fault displacement at one location is 3 km....
Plant taphonomy in incised valleys: Implications for interpreting paleoclimate from fossil plants
T.M. Demko, R. F. Dubiel, Judith T. Parrish
1998, Geology (26) 1119-1122
Paleoclimatic interpretations of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation (Colorado Plateau) based on plants conflict with those based on the sedimentary rocks. The plants are suggestive of a humid, equable climate, whereas the rocks are more consistent with deposition under highly seasonal precipitation and...
Geochemistry of coalbed gas - a review
J.L. Clayton
1998, International Journal of Coal Geology (35) 159-173
Coals are both sources and reservoirs of large amounts of gas that has received increasing attention in recent years as a largely untapped potential energy resource. Coal mining operations, such as ventilation of coalbed gas from underground mines, release coalbed CH4 into the atmosphere, an important greehouse gas whose concentration...