Climatic significance of the bristlecone pine latewood frost-ring record at Almagre Mountain, Colorado, U.S.A.
F. Craig Brunstein
1996, Arctic and Alpine Research (28) 65-76
From 1900 to 1993, latewood frost rings occurred in 1903, 1912, 1941, 1961, and 1965 in 10 to 21% of the sampled bristlecone pines at Almagre Mountain, Colorado. In early to mid September in each of those years, a severe outbreak of unseasonably cold air from higher latitudes produced a...
Fluor-ferro-leakeite, NaNa2(FC2+2Fe3+2Li)Si8O22F2, a new alkali amphibole from the Canada Pinabete pluton, Questa, New Mexico, U.S.A.
Frank C. Hawthorne, R. Oberti, L. Ungaretti, L. Ottolini, Joel D. Grice, G.K. Czamanske
1996, American Mineralogist (81) 226-228
Fluor-ferro-leakeite is a new amphibole species from the Canada Pinabete pluton, Questa, New Mexico, U.S.A.; it occurs in association with quartz, alkali feldspar, acmite, ilmenite, and zircon. It forms as anhedral bluish black crystals elongated along c and up to 1 mm long. It is brittle, H = 6, Dmeas...
The effect of using different 0.45 μm filter membranes on 'dissolved' element concentrations in natural waters
G.E.M. Hall, G. F. Bonham-Carter, A. J. Horowitz, K. Lum, C. Lemieux, B. Quemerais, J.R. Garbarino
1996, Applied Geochemistry (11) 243-249
The effect of 4 different 0.45 μm pore size filter membrane systems on the ‘dissolved’ concentration of 28 elements in 5 natural water samples of varying matrix is reported. In 3 of the 5 waters, consistently higher concentrations of most elements (minor and trace) are obtained using Nucleopore 47 mm...
Coliform contamination of a coastal embayment: Sources and transport pathways
P.K. Weiskel, B.L. Howes, G.R. Heufelder
1996, Environmental Science & Technology (30) 1872-1881
Fecal bacterial contamination of nearshore waters has direct economic impacts to coastal communities through the loss of shellfisheries and restrictions of recreational uses. We conducted seasonal measurements of fecal coliform (FC) sources and transport pathways contributing to FC contamination of Buttermilk Bay, a shallow embayment adjacent to Buzzards Bay, MA....
Preliminary assessment of the occurrence and possible sources of MTBE in groundwater in the United States, 1993-1994
P. J. Squillace, J.S. Zogorski, W. G. Wilber, C. V. Price
1996, Environmental Science & Technology (30) 1721-1730
The 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments require fuel oxygenates to be added to gasoline used in some metropolitan areas to reduce atmospheric concentrations of carbon monoxide or ozone. Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) is the most commonly used fuel oxygenate and is a relatively new gasoline additive. Nevertheless, out of 60...
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...
An earthquake history derived from stratigraphic and microfossil evidence of relative sea-level change at Coos Bay, southern coastal Oregon
A.R. Nelson, A. E. Jennings, K. Kashima
1996, Geological Society of America Bulletin (108) 141-154
Much of the uncertainty in determining the number and magnitude of past great earthquakes in the Cascadia subduction zone of western North America stems from difficulties in using estuarine stratigraphy to infer the size and rate of late Holocene relative sea-level changes. A...
The generation of HCl in the system CaCl2-H2O: Vapor-liquid relations from 380-500°C
James L. Bischoff, Robert J. Rosenbauer, Robert O. Fournier
1996, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (60) 7-16
We determined vapor-liquid relations (P-T-x) and derived critical parameters for the system CaCl2-H2O from 380-500??C. Results show that the two-phase region of this system is extremely large and occupies a significant portion of the P-T space to which circulation of fluids in the Earth's crust is constrained. Results also show...
Friction-term response to boundary-condition type in flow models
R.W. Schaffranek, C. Lai
1996, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (122) 73-81
The friction-slope term in the unsteady open-channel flow equations is examined using two numerical models based on different formulations of the governing equations and employing different solution methods. The purposes of the study are to analyze, evaluate, and demonstrate the behavior of the term in a set of controlled numerical...
Occurrence of alachlor and its sulfonated metabolite in rivers and reservoirs of the midwestern United States: The importance of sulfonation in the transport of chloroacetanilide herbicides
E.M. Thurman, D. A. Goolsby, D.S. Aga, M.L. Pomes, M. T. Meyer
1996, Environmental Science & Technology (30) 569-574
Alachlor and its metabolite, 2-[(2',6'-diethylphenyl)- (methoxymethyl)amino]-2-oxoethanesulfonate (ESA), were identified in 76 reservoirs in the midwestern United States using immunoassay, liquid chromatography, and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The median concentration of ESA (0.48 ??g/L) exceeded the median concentration of alachlor (<0.05 ??g/L), with highest values in the upper Midwest. ESA also was...
Trends in nutrients
A.L. Heathwaite, P.J. Johnes, N.E. Peters
1996, Hydrological Processes (10) 263-293
The roles of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) as key nutrients determining the trophic status of water bodies are examined, and evidence reviewed for trends in concentrations of N and P species which occur in freshwaters, primarily in northern temperate environments. Data are reported for...
Triggering mechanisms and depositional rates of postglacial slope-movement processes in the Yosemite Valley, California
G. F. Wieczorek, S. Jager
1996, Geomorphology (15) 17-31
We examined information collected from 395 reports of slope-movement events during about the past 150 years in Yosemite National Park, central Sierra Nevada, California, to identify the most prevalent types of slope movements and their triggering mechanisms. Rock slides and rock falls have been more numerous than debris slides, debris...
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...
A brief Oligocene period of flood volcanism in Yemen: Implications for the duration and rate of continental flood volcanism at the Afro-Arabian triple junction
J. Baker, L. Snee, M. Menzies
1996, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (138) 39-55
40Ar29Ar dating of mineral separates and whole-rock (WR) samples has established that basaltic continental flood volcanism (CFV) began between 30.9 and 29.2 Ma in northwestern and southwestern Yemen, respectively. Rhyolitic volcanism commenced at 29.0–29.3 Ma throughout Yemen. Lower basaltic lavas were erupted every 10–100 kyr, whereas upper bimodal volcanic units were erupted...
Directional topographic site response at Tarzana observed in aftershocks of the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake: Implications for mainshock motions
P. Spudich, M. Hellweg, W.H.K. Lee
1996, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (86) S193-S208
The Northridge earthquake caused 1.78 g acceleration in the east-west direction at a site in Tarzana, California, located about 6 km south of the mainshock epicenter. The accelerograph was located atop a hill about 15-m high, 500-m long, and 130-m wide, striking about N78°E. During...
Petrography and geochemistry of the San Miguel lignite, Jackson Group (Eocene), south Texas
Peter D. Warwick, Sharon S. Crowley, Leslie F. Ruppert, James Pontolillo
1996, Organic Geochemistry (24) 197-217
The San Miguel lignite deposit (late Eocene, lower Jackson Group) of south Texas consists of four or more thin (generally < 1 m thick) lignite benches that are separated by claystone and mudstone partings. The partings are composed of altered volcanic air-fall ash that has been reworked by tidal or...
This dynamic earth: the story of plate tectonics
W. Jacquelyne Kious, Robert I. Tilling
1996, Report
In the early 1960s, the emergence of the theory of plate tectonics started a revolution in the earth sciences. Since then, scientists have verified and refined this theory, and now have a much better understanding of how our planet has been shaped by plate-tectonic processes. We now know that, directly or indirectly,...
Occurrence and morphology of carbonate concretions in the Beulah-Zap coal bed, Williston basin, North Dakota
C.W.M. Keighin, R. M. Flores, T. Rowland
1996, Conference Paper, Organic Geochemistry
Carbonate concretionary bodies were encountered during mining of the Beulah-Zap lignite seam in the Coteau Properties' Freedom mine, Mercer County, North Dakota. Preliminary studies show that areal and vertical distribution of the concretions are variable. All concretions examined are composed almost entirely of calcite. They occur as thin tabular bodies,...
Equatorial origin for Lower Jurassic radiolarian chert in the Franciscan Complex, San Rafael Mountains, southern California
J.T. Hagstrum, B.L. Murchey, R.S. Bogar
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 613-626
Lower Jurassic radiolarian chert sampled at two localities in the San Rafael Mountains of southern California (∼20 km north of Santa Barbara) contains four components of remanent magnetization. Components A, B′, and B are inferred to represent uplift, Miocene volcanism, and subduction/accretion overprint magnetizations, respectively. The fourth component (C), isolated between 580° and 680°C,...
U. S. Geological Survey yearbook, fiscal year 1995; understanding the Earth
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1996, Report
Reactive solute transport in streams: 1. Development of an equilibrium- based model
Robert L. Runkel, Kenneth E. Bencala, Robert E. Broshears, Steven C. Chapra
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 409-418
An equilibrium-based solute transport model is developed for the simulation of trace metal fate and transport in streams. The model is formed by coupling a solute transport model with a chemical equilibrium submodel based on MINTEQ. The solute transport model considers the physical processes of advection, dispersion, lateral inflow, and...
Thermal and unroofing history of a thick, tilted Basin-and-Range crustal section in the Tortilla Mountains, Arizona
K. A. Howard, D.A. Foster
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 511-522
We estimate here a geothermal gradient of only 17 ± 5°C km−1 for the tilted Grayback fault block in southeastern Arizona when extension began ∼25 Ma. This gradient is lower than preextension gradients estimated elsewhere in the Basin and Range, is only about 50% of typical gradients in the Basin and...
A one-pot procedure for the quantitative conversion of glycosides into acetylated glycosyl fluorides
B.A. Bergamaschi, J. I. Hedges
1996, Carbohydrate Research (280) 345-350
[No abstract available]...
Hydrologic and microbiological factors affecting persistence and migration of petroleum hydrocarbons spilled in a continuous-permafrost region
J.F. Braddock, K. A. McCarthy
1996, Environmental Science & Technology (30) 2626-2633
Fuel spills, totaling about 1300 m3, occurred between 1976 and 1978 adjacent to Imikpuk Lake, a drinking water source near Barrow, AK. Substantial contamination of soils and groundwater near the lake persists. We examined the magnitude and direction of groundwater flux and the microbial activity at this site to understand...
Anaerobic mineralization of vinyl chloride in Fe(III)-reducing, aquifer sediments
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle
1996, Environmental Science & Technology (30) 2084-2086
Within anaerobic aquifer systems, reductive dehalogenation of polychlorinated ethenes commonly results in the accumulation of vinyl chloride, which is highly toxic and carcinogenic to humans. Anaerobic reduction of vinyl chloride is considered to be slow and incomplete. Here, we provide the first evidence for anaerobic oxidation of vinyl chloride under...