Occurrence and significance of Silurian K-bentonite beds at Arisaig, Nova Scotia, eastern Canada
Stig M. Bergstrom, W.D. Huff, Dennis R. Kolata, Michael J. Melchin
1997, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (34) 1630-1643
The most extensive succession of K-bentonite beds known in the Silurian of North America occurs at Arisaig on the northern coast of Nova Scotia. At least 40 ash beds are present in the Llandoverian Ross Brook Formation and at least four in the early Ludlovian McAdam Brook Formation. Most of...
Grain-size-induced weakening of H2O ices I and II and associated anisotropic recrystallization
L.A. Stern, W.B. Durham, S. H. Kirby
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 5313-5325
Grain-size-dependent flow mechanisms tend to be favored over dislocation creep at low differential stresses and can potentially influence the rheology of low-stress, low-strain rate environments such as those of planetary interiors. We experimentally investigated the effect of reduced grain size on the solid-state flow of water ice I, a principal...
Eustatic and tectonic control of deposition of the lower and middle Pennsylvanian strata of the Central Appalachian Basin
D.R. Chesnut Jr.
1997, Prace - Panstwowego Instytutu Geologicznego 39-41
Stratigraphic analysis of Lower and Middle Pennsylvanian rocks of part of the Central Appalachian Basin reveals two orders of cycles and one overall trend in the vertical sequence of coal-bearing rocks. The smallest order cycle, the coal-clastic cycle, begins at the top of a major-resource coal bed and is composed...
Crustal structure, evolution, and volcanic unrest of the Alban Hills, Central Italy
C. Chiarabba, A. Amato, P.T. Delaney
1997, Bulletin of Volcanology (59) 161-170
The Alban Hills, a Quaternary volcanic center lying west of the central Apennines, 15-25 km southeast of Rome, last erupted 19ka and has produced approximately 290 km3 of eruptive deposits since the inception of volcanism at 580 ka. Earthquakes of moderate intensity have been generated there at least since the...
The inverse problem of argon diffusion from minerals: Determination of kinetic parameters from stepwise-heating experiments
Stephen B. Brandt, S.V. Rasskazov, I.S. Brandt, A.V. Ivanov, Michael J. Kunk
1997, Isotopes in Environmental and Health Studies (33) 399-409
Results of two routine 40Ar/39Ar stepwise heating experiments on a biotite and a basanite are interpreted in terms of Fick's and Arrhenius' laws. Both patterns represent a saddle-shaped 39Ar release. Argon isotope spectra are suggested to be controlled by the activation energy of diffusion E and the frequency factor Do . The activation energy of 39Ar is...
Slope failures in Northern Vermont, USA
F. T. Lee, J. K. Odum, J.D. Lee
1997, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (3) 161-182
Rockfalls and debris avalanches from steep hillslopes in northern Vermont are a continuing hazard for motorists, mountain climbers, and hikers. Huge blocks of massive schist and gneiss can reach the valley floor intact, whereas others may trigger debris avalanches on their downward travel. Block movement is facilitated by major joints...
Mississippian coral latitudinal diversity gradients (western interior United States): Testing the limits of high resolution diversity data
G.E. Webb, W.J. Sando, A. Raymond
1997, Journal of Paleontology (71) 780-791
Analysis of high resolution diversity data for Mississippian corals in the western interior United States yielded mild latitudinal diversity gradients despite the small geographic area covered by samples and a large influence on diversity patterns by geographic sampling intensity (sample bias). Three competing plate tectonic reconstructions were...
Flooding in southeastern United States from tropical storm Alberto, July 1994
Timothy C. Stamey
George H. Leavesley, Harry F. Lins, Franz Nobilis, Randolph S. Parker, Verne R. Schneider, Frans H.M. van de Ven, editor(s)
1997, Conference Paper, Destructive water: water-caused natural disasters, their abatement and control (IAHS Publication no. 239)
In July 1994, parts of central and southwestern Georgia, southeastern Alabama, and the western panhandle of Florida were devastated by floods resulting from rainfall produced by Tropical Storm Alberto. Entire communities were inundated by flood waters as numerous streams reached peak stages and discharges far greater than previous floods in...
The discovery and development of the El Dorado (Kansas) oil field
L.H. Skelton
1997, Northeastern Geology and Environmental Sciences (19) 48-53
Pioneers named El Dorado, Kansas, in 1857 for the beauty of the site and the promise of future riches but not until 58 years later was black rather than mythical yellow gold discovered when the Stapleton No. 1 oil well came in on October 5, 1915. El Dorado's leaders were...
Regional interpretation of water-quality monitoring data
Richard A. Smith, Gregory E. Schwarz, Richard B. Alexander
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 2781-2798
We describe a method for using spatially referenced regressions of contaminant transport on watershed attributes (SPARROW) in regional water-quality assessment. The method is designed to reduce the problems of data interpretation caused by sparse sampling, network bias, and basin heterogeneity. The regression equation relates measured transport rates in streams to...
Resolution of matrix effects on analysis of total and methyl mercury in aqueous samples from the Florida Everglades
M.L. Olson, L.B. Cleckner, J.P. Hurley, D. P. Krabbenhoft, T.W. Heelan
1997, Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry (358) 392-396
Aqueous samples from the Florida Everglades present several problems for the analysis of total mercury (HgT) and methyl mercury (MeHg). Constituents such as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and sulfide at selected sites present particular challenges due to interferences with standard analytical techniques. This is manifested by 1) the inability...
Permian deposition in the north central Brooks Range, Alaska: Constraints for tectonic reconstructions
K.E. Adams, C. G. Mull, R.K. Crowder
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 20727-20748
Two opposing tectonic models have been offered to explain the regional structural relations in the north central Brooks Range fold-thrust belt of northern Alaska. The first suggests that rocks of the northern Endicott Mountains were thrust from south to north over the area of the present Mount Doonerak high and...
XAFS studies of Pb(II)-chloro and Hg(II)-chloro ternary complexes on goethite
J.R. Bargar, Petra Persson, Gordon E. Brown Jr.
1997, Journal De Physique. IV : JP (7) C825-C826
EXAFS spectroscopy was used to study Pb(II) and Hg(II) adsorption complexes on goethite (α-FeOOH) in the presence of Cl-. At pH 7, the dominant Pb(II) species are bonded to edges of FeO6 octahedra and are similar to complexes that occur in the absence of Cl-. At pH≤6, Pb(II)-chloro ternary complexes pedominate...
Mineralogy and stable isotopes of black shale-hosted manganese ores, Southwestern Taurides, Turkey
H. Ozturk, J.R. Hein
1997, Economic Geology (92) 733-744
No abstract available....
A comparative study of modern and fossil cone scales and seeds of conifers: A geochemical approach
Stankiewicz B. Artur, Maria Mastalerz, M.A. Kruge, P. F. Van Bergen, A. Sadowska
1997, New Phytologist (135) 375-393
Modern cone scales and seeds of Pinus strobus and Sequoia sempervirens, and their fossil (Upper Miocene, c. 6 Mar) counterparts Pinus leitzii and Sequoia langsdorfi have been studied using pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS), electron-microprobe and scanning electron microscopy. Microscopic observations revealed only minor microbial activity and high-quality structural preservation of...
The origin and distribution of HAPs elements in relation to maceral composition of the A1 lignite bed (Paleocene, Calvert Bluff Formation, Wilcox Group), Calvert mine area, east-central Texas
Sharon S. Crowley, Peter D. Warwick, Leslie F. Ruppert, James Pontolillo
1997, International Journal of Coal Geology (34) 327-343
The origin and distribution of twelve potentially Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAPs; As, Be, Cd, Cr, Co, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb, Sb, Se, and U) identified in the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments were examined in relation to the maceral composition of the A1 bed (Paleocene, Calvert Bluff Formation, Wilcox Group)...
Wrinkle-like slip pulse on a fault between different materials
D.J. Andrews, Y. Ben-Zion
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 553-571
Pulses of slip velocity can propagate on a planar interface governed by a constant coefficient of friction, where the interface separates different elastic materials. Such pulses have been found in two-dimensional plane strain finite difference calculations of slip on a fault between elastic media with wave speeds differing by 20%....
Altered streamflow and sediment entrainment in the Gunnison Gorge
J. G. Elliott, R. S. Parker
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 1041-1054
The Gunnison River in the Gunnison Gorge is a canyon river where upstream dams regulate mainstem discharge but do not affect debris-flow sediment supply from tributaries entering below the reservoirs. Regulation since 1966 has altered flood frequency, streambed mobility, and fluvial geomorphology creating potential resource-management issues. The duration of moderate...
Quantifying Anderson's fault types
R.W. Simpson
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 17909-17919
Anderson [1905] explained three basic types of faulting (normal, strike-slip, and reverse) in terms of the shape of the causative stress tensor and its orientation relative to the Earth's surface. Quantitative parameters can be defined which contain information about both shape and orientation [Célérier, 1995], thereby offering a way to distinguish...
Unraveling the strands of Saturn's F ring
C.D. Murray, M.K. Gordon, Winter S.M. Giuliatti
1997, Icarus (129) 304-316
Several high-resolution Voyager 2 images of Saturn's F ring show that it is composed of at least four separate, non-intersecting strands extending ~45?? in longitude. Voyager 1 images show that the two brightest strands appear to intersect, giving rise to a "braided" morphology. From a study of all available Voyager...
Claudeonychia babini nov. gen. et nov. sp. of Ordovician Ambonychiid pelecypods from Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
John Pojeta Jr.
1997, Geobios (30) 433-436
A new genus of anteriorly-posteriorly elongate, posterodorsally alate, simplicicostate, strongly prosocline Ordovician ambonychiids is described. To honor Claude Babin and his extensive work with Ordovician pelecypods, the genus is named Claudeonychia. The type species is Claudeonychia babini nov. sp. In addition to the type species, the Ordovician species Byssonychia? byrnesi Ulrich, (1895), Opisthoptera notabilis Ulrich,...
Logistic model of nitrate in streams of the upper-midwestern United States
D. K. Mueller, B. C. Ruddy, W.A. Battaglin
1997, Journal of Environmental Quality (26) 1223-1230
Nitrate in surface water can have adverse effects on aquatic life and, in drinking-water supplies, can be a risk to human health. As part of a regional study, nitrates as N (NO3-N) was analyzed in water samples collected from streams throughout 10 Midwestern states during synoptic surveys in 1989, 1990,...
How wide is a road? The association of roads and mass-wasting in a forested montane environment
M. C. Larsen, J.E. Parks
1997, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (22) 835-848
A spatial data base of 1609 landslides was analysed using a geographic information system to determine landslide frequency in relation to highways. A 126 km long transportation network in a 201km2 area of humid-tropical, mountainous, forested terrain in Puerto Rico was used in conjunction with a series of 20 buffer...
Debris-flow hazard map units from gridded probabilities
Russell H. Campbell, Richard L. Bernknopf
1997, Conference Paper, International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation: Mechanics, Prediction, and Assessment, Proceedings
The common statistical practice of dividing a range of probabilities into equal probability intervals may not result in useful landslide-hazard map units for areas populated by equal-area cells, each of which has a unique probability. Most hazard map areas contain very large numbers of cells having low probability of failure,...
Scale and modeling issues in water resources planning
H.F. Lins, D.M. Wolock, G.J. McCabe
1997, Climatic Change (37) 63-88
Resource planners and managers interested in utilizing climate model output as part of their operational activities immediately confront the dilemma of scale discordance. Their functional responsibilities cover relatively small geographical areas and necessarily require data of relatively high spatial resolution. Climate models cover a large geographical, i.e. global, domain and...