A system for reconstituting special water qualities for use in chronic toxicity studies
Steven J. Hamilton, Neil L. Faerber, Kevin J. Buhl
1989, Water Research (23) 159-165
A water treatment system and procedure are described that are designed for preparing large quantities of reconstituted water with specific chemical and physical characteristics for use in chronic toxicity studies with fish and invertebrates. Water treatment units produce high-purity water in large quantities for storage in high-density cross-linked polyethylene tanks,...
Bone characteristics and metal concentrations in white suckers (Catostomus commersoni) from one neutral and three acidified lakes in Maine
Steven J. Hamilton, Terry A. Haines
1989, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (46) 440-446
The bone characteristics of white suckers, Catostomus commersoni, from four lakes in Maine were studied in relation to lake water quality and metal concentrations in fish. Green Lake had a neutral pH, high buffering capacity, and low aluminum concentrations, whereas the other three lakes had low pH, low buffering capacity,...
Acute gastric dilatation and volvulus in a free-living polar bear
Steven C. Amstrup, Carol A. Nielsen
1989, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (25) 601-604
A large, adult male polar bear (Ursus maritimus) was found dead on a barrier island north of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska (USA), in June 1987. There were no external signs of trauma. A twisted distended stomach, distinctive parenchymal and fascial congestion, and significant difficulty in repositioning the...
Geochemical processes controlling selenium in ground water after mining, Powder River Basin, Wyoming, U.S.A.
D. L. Naftz, J. A. Rice
1989, Applied Geochemistry (4) 565-575
Geochemical data for samples of overburden from three mines in the Powder River Basin indicate a statistically significant (0.01 confidence level) positive correlation (r = 0.74) between Se and organic C. Results of factor analysis with varimax rotation on the major and trace element data from the rock samples indicate large...
Impacts of exploratory drilling for oil and gas on the benthic environment of Georges Bank
J. M. Neff, Michael H. Bothner, N. J. Maciolek, J. F. Grassle
1989, Marine Environmental Research (27) 77-114
A 3-year monitoring program was performed to assess the impacts of exploratory drilling for oil and gas on the benthic environment of Georges Bank, an important commercial fishery region in the North Atlantic east of Massachusetts, USA. Surficial sediments were sampled for chemical and benthic infaunal analysis and bottom still...
Answers from deep inside the Earth; Continental Scientific Drilling at Cajon Pass, California
D. P. Russ
1989, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (21) 79-84
Drilling of a 12,000-foot-deep scientific well has been completed at Cajon Pass in southern California to measure crustal properties, to determine crustal structure, and to better understanding the generation of earthquakes along the San Andreas fault. A joint effort of the National Science Foundation (NFS) and the U.S Geological Survey...
An algorithm for locating candidate labeling boxes within a polygon
Jan W. van Roessel
1989, American Cartographer (16) 201-209
Vector-based geographic information systems usually require annotation, such as a polygon number or attribute data, in a suitable location within a polygon. Traditional methods usually compute the polygon centroid, test the centroid for inclusion or exclusion, and select some alternative point when the centroid falls outside the polygon. Two problems...
Field test of a bioassay procedure for assessing habitat quality on fish spawning grounds
Bruce A. Manny, David J. Jude, Randy L. Eshenroder
1989, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (118) 175-182
A bioassay procedure to assess habitat quality was tested on Port Austin reef in southern Lake Huron, a spawning area of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush. In 1986, Plexiglas incubators filled with fertilized lake trout eggs were buried by scuba divers in rock rubble at two sites. The incubators then were attached...
Late Quaternary paleolimnology of Walker Lake, Nevada
Bradbury J. Platt, R. M. Forester, R.S. Thompson
1989, Journal of Paleolimnology (1) 249-267
Diatoms, crustaceans, and pollen from sediment cores, in conjunction with dated shoreline tufas provide evidence for lake level and environmental fluctuations of Walker Lake in the late Quaternary. Large and rapid changes of lake chemistry and level apparently resulted from variations in the course and discharge of the Walker River....
Shaded relief map of US topography from digital elevations
R.J. Pike, G.P. Thelin
1989, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (70) 843-853
Much geologic and geophysical information that lies encoded within land surface form can be revealed by image processing large files of digitized elevations in fast machines and mapping the results. This convergence of computers, analytic software, data, and output devices has created exciting opportunities for automating...
On numerical modeling of one-dimensional geothermal histories
R. A. Haugerud
1989, Computers & Geosciences (15) 825-836
Numerical models of one-dimensional geothermal histories are one way of understanding the relations between tectonics and transient thermal structure in the crust. Such models can be powerful tools for interpreting geochronologic and thermobarometric data. A flexible program to calculate these models on a microcomputer is available and examples of its...
Earthquakes triggered by fluid extraction
P. Segall
1989, Geology (17) 942-946
Seismicity is correlated in space and time with production from some oil and gas fields where pore pressures have declined by several tens of megapascals. Reverse faulting has occurred both above and below petroleum reservoirs, and normal faulting has occurred on the flanks of at...
Transformation of dilative and contractive landslide debris into debris flows-An example from Marin County, California
R. W. Fleming, S. D. Ellen, M.A. Algus
1989, Engineering Geology (27) 201-223
The severe rainstorm of January 3, 4 and 5, 1982, in the San Francisco Bay area, California, produced numerous landslides, many of which transformed into damaging debris flows. The process of transformation was studied in detail at one site where only...
A reinterpretation of the δDH2O of inclusion fluids in contemporaneous quartz and sphalerite, Creede mining district, Colorodo: a generic problem for shallow orebodies?
Nora K. Foley, Philip M. Bethke, Robert O. Rye
1989, Economic Geology (84) 1966-1977
Water extracted from fluid inclusions in quartz from shallow epithermal ore deposits often has a hydrogen isotope composition (δD) different from that of water extracted from inclusions in associated minerals. This difference is usually attributed to the involvement of primary fluids from multiple sources. Isotopic and homogenization and freezing temperature...
Graphical method for determining the coefficient of consolidation c from a flow-pump permeability test
Roger H. Morin, Harold W. Olsen, Karl R. Nelson, James D. Gill
1989, Geotechnical Testing Journal (12) 302-307
A graphical method has been developed for determining the coefficient of consolidation from the transient phases of a flow-pump permeability test. The flow pump can be used to infuse fluid into or withdraw fluid from a laboratory sediment specimen at a constant volumetric rate in order to obtain data that...
Lead and cadmium associated with saltwater intrusion in a New Jersey aquifer system
Amleto A. Pucci Jr., Douglas A. Harriman, Elisabeth M. Ervin, Lisa Bratton, Alison Gordon
1989, Water Resources Bulletin (25) 1267-1272
The U.S. Geological Survey collected ground-water samples from the upper and middle aquifers of the Potomac-Raritan-Magothy aquifer system in a 400-square-mile area of New Jersey from 1984 through 1986. Concentrations of lead were greater than the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency maximum contaminant level (MCL) of 50 micrograms per liter in...
Tectono-stratigraphic evolution of the Early Proterozoic Wisconsin magmatic terranes of the Penokean Orogen
P.K. Sims, W. R. Van Schmus, K. J. Schulz, Z. E. Peterman
1989, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (26) 2145-2158
The Early Proterozoic Penokean Orogen developed along the southern margin of the Archean Superior craton. The orogen consists of a northern deformed continental margin prism overlying an Archean basement and a southern assemblage of oceanic arcs, the Wisconsin magmatic terranes. The south-dipping Niagara fault (suture) zone separates the south-facing continental...
Petrologic constraints on rift-zone processes - Results from episode 1 of the Puu Oo eruption of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
M.O. Garcia, R.A. Ho, J.M. Rhodes, E.W. Wolfe
1989, Bulletin of Volcanology (52) 81-96
The Puu Oo eruption in the middle of Kilauea volcano's east rift zone provides an excellent opportunity to utilize petrologic constraints to interpret rift-zone processes. Emplacement of a dike began 24 hours before the start of the eruption on 3 January 1983. Seismic and geodetic evidence indicates that the dike...
Eustatic and tectonic controls on deposition of hybrid siliciclastic/carbonate basinal cycles: Discussion with examples
James F. Dolan
1989, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (73) 1233-1246
Changes in sea level represent one of the dominant controls on basinal sedimentation adjacent to mixed carbonate siliciclastic sediment-source areas. Sedimentary responses to sea level change of the siliciclastic and carbonate components of these hybrid systems commonly result in deposition of alternating siliciclastic and shelf-derived carbonate basinal deposits. Such deposition...
The influence of formation material properties on the response of water levels in wells to Earth tides and atmospheric loading
S. Rojstaczer, D.C. Agnew
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 12403-12411
The water level in an open well can change in response to deformation of the surrounding material, either because of applied strains (tidal or tectonic) or surface loading by atmospheric pressure changes. Under conditions of no vertical fluid flow and negligible well bore storage (static-confined conditions), the sensitivities to these...
Constraints from fluid inclusions on sulfide precipitation mechanisms and ore fluid migration in the Viburnum Trend lead district, Missouri
E. L. Rowan, D. L. Leach
1989, Economic Geology (84) 1948-1965
Measurements on fluid inclusions in hydrothermal dolomite cements place constraints on sulfide precipitation mechanisms and on the thermal-hydrologic processes which formed the Viburnum Trend Mississippi Valley-type lead district. Homogenization temperatures and freezing point depressions were determined for fluid inclusions in Bonneterre Dolomite-hosted dolomite cements in mine samples, as well as...
Rice available to waterfowl in harvested fields in the Sacramento Valley, California
M. R. Miller, D.E. Sharp, D.S. Gilmer, W.R. Mulvaney
1989, California Fish and Game (75) 113-123
Rice fields in the Sacramento Valley, California were sampled in 1985 and 1986 to determine the weight of rice seed remaining in the fields immediately after harvest and again after the fields were burned. No significant differences were found between years (P>0.05). The pooled mean was 388 kg/ha in harvested...
Geologic framework of the offshore region adjacent to Delaware
R.N. Benson, J.H. Roberts
1989, Marine Geology (90) 103-111
Several multichannel, common depth point (CDP) seismic reflection profiles concentrated in the area of the entrance to Delaware Bay provide a tie between the known onshore geology of the Coastal Plain of Delaware and the offshore geology of the Baltimore Canyon...
Chemistry and origin of minor and trace elements in vitrinite concentrates from a rank series from the eastern United States, England, and Australia
P.C. Lyons, C.A. Palmer, N. H. Bostick, J.D. Fletcher, F.T. Dulong, F. W. Brown, Z. A. Brown, M.R. Krasnow, L.A. Romankiw
1989, International Journal of Coal Geology (13) 481-527
A rank series consisting of twelve vitrinite concentrates and companion whole-coal samples from mined coal beds in the eastern United States, England, and Australia were analyzed for C, H, N, O, ash, and 47 trace and minor elements by standard elemental,...
Mineralogical studies of the nitrate deposits of Chile: VI. Hectorfloresite, Na9(IO3)(SO4)4, a new saline mineral
G. E. Ericksen, H. T. Evans Jr., M.E. Mrose, J. J. McGee, J.W. Marinenko, J.A. Konnert
1989, American Mineralogist (74) 1207-1214
The new mineral hectorfloresite, known to occur in only one locality in the nitrate fields of northern Chile, consists of tiny prismatic crystals, generally less than 1 mm long and 0.2 mm in diameter, in cavities in dense nitrate ore consisting of saline-cemented silt, sand, and small rock fragments. The...