Interpretation of gravity data in a complex volcano-tectonic setting, southwestern Nevada
David B. Snyder, W. J. Carr
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (89) 10193-10206
This regional gravity study, based on an irregular 2-km data grid, was conducted during the past few years at Yucca Mountain, southern Nye County, Nevada, as part of a program to locate a suitable repository for high-level nuclear waste. About 100 surface rock samples, three borehole gamma-gamma logs, and one...
Paleomagnetic constraints on the interpretation of early Cenozoic Pacific Northwest paleogeography
Ray E. Wells
1984, Pacific Section S.E.P.M. (42) 231-237
Widespread Cenozoic clockwise tectonic rotation in the Pacific Northwest is an established fact; however, the geologic reconstructions based on these rotations are the subject of continuing debate. Three basic mechanisms have been proposed to explain the rotations: (1) simple shear rotation of marginal terranes caught in the dextral shear couple...
Nest sites and eggs of Kittlitz's and Marbled murrelets
Robert H. Day, Karen L. Oakley, D.R. Barnard
1983, Condor (85) 265-273
Fourteen known and three probable nests of Kittlitz's Murrelet (Brachyramphus brevirostris) and eight known and one probable nest of Marbled Murrelet (B. marmoratus) have been reported. Nests of Kittlitz's Murrelet tend to be at higher elevations and farther inland than those of Marbled Murrelet. Kittlitz's nests have much less vegetative...
Feeding habitats of nesting wading birds: Spatial use and social influences
R. Michael Erwin
1983, The Auk (100) 960-970
In an effort to relate social interactions to feeding-habitat use, I observed six species of wading birds near a major colony site in coastal North Carolina. Three spatial scales of habitat use were considered: the general orientation to and from the colony (coarsest level), the habitat "patch," and (at the...
Reduced fecundity in small populations of the rare plant Gentianopsis ciliate (Gentianaceae)
C.S. Robbins
1983, American Birds (37) 519
Habitat destruction is the main cause for the biodiversity crisis. Surviving populations are often fragmented, i.e., small and isolated from each other. Reproduction of plants in small populations is often reduced, and this has been attributed to inbreeding depression, reduced attractiveness for pollinators, and reduced habitat quality in...
Pack size and wolf pup survival: their relationship under varying ecological conditions
Fred H. Harrington, L. David Mech, Steven H. Fritts
1983, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology (13) 19-26
The relationship between pack size and two parameters of reproductive success (litter size at 7–8 months and pup weights at 5–6 months) were determined for two wolf (Canis lupus) populations in northern Minnesota. Pup weights were not correlated with pack size for either population. Litter size, however,...
Heavy-mineral distribution in modern and ancient bay deposits, Willapa Bay, Washington, U.S.A.
Gretchen Luepke, H. Edward Clifton
1983, Sedimentary Geology (35) 233-247
Analysis of heavy-mineral distribution in modern sediments of Willapa Bay, Washington, indicates a dominance of two mineralogic assemblages, one with approximately equivalent amounts of hornblende, orthopyroxene and clinopyroxene, the other dominated by clinopyroxene. The hornblende-orthopyroxene-clinopyroxene suite is derived from the Columbia River, which discharges into the ocean a short distance...
Surface deformation in volcanic rift zones
David D. Pollard, Paul T. Delaney, Wendell A. Duffield, Elliot T. Endo, Arnold T. Okamura
1983, Tectonophysics (94) 541-584
The principal conduits for magma transport within rift zones of basaltic volcanoes are steeply dipping dikes, some of which feed fissure eruptions. Elastic displacements accompanying a single dike emplacement elevate the flanks of the rift relative to a central depression. Concomitant normal faulting may transform the depression into a graben...
Hydrology of the Jasper (Miocene) Aquifer in the Southeast Texas coastal plain
E.T. Baker
1983, Open-File Report 83-677
The Jasper (Miocene) aquifer is one of several important hydrologic units in the Gulf Coastal Plain. Because the Jasper aquifer underlies shallower aquifers in many areas, regional water withdrawals from the Jasper are not significant; however, it is capable of yielding 3,000 gallons per minute (200 liters per second) or...
Geology of the Volga-Ural petroleum province and detailed description of the Ramashkino and Arlan oil fields
James A. Peterson, James W. Clarke
1983, Open-File Report 83-711
The Volga-Ural petroleum province is in general coincident with the Volga-Ural regional high, a broad upwarp of the east-central part of the Russian (East European) platform. The central part of the province is occupied by the Tatar arch, which contains the major share of the oil fields of the province....
Habitat Suitability Index Models: Southern red-backed vole (western United States)
Arthur W. Allen
1983, FWS/OBS 82/10.42
Habitat preferences of the southern red-backed vole (Clethrionomys gapperi) are described in this publication, which is one of a series of Habitat Suitability Index (HSI) models. A review and synthesis of the literature is followed by development of a model of the species-habitat requirements of the southern red-backed vole. Habitat suitability...
Montana; basic data for thermal springs and wells as recorded in Geotherm
James D. Bliss
1983, Open-File Report 83-432
Changes in ground-water withdrawals, water levels, and quality of water occurred in the artesian aquifers of the Sevier Desert, Utah during 1963-81. Ground-water withdrawals increased from an average of 9,500 acre-feet (11.7 cubic hectometers) per year between 1951 and 1963 to an average of 27,500 acre-feet (33.9 cubic hectometers) per...
Regional flow in the Dakota aquifer: A study of the role of confining layers
John D. Bredehoeft, C. E. Neuzil, P. C. Milly
1983, Water Supply Paper 2237
The Dakota Sandstone in South Dakota is one of the classic artesian aquifers; it was first studied by N. H. Darton at the turn of the century. Since then, hydrogeologists have debated the source of the large quantities of water which have been discharged by artesian flow from the Dakota....
Preliminary appraisal of the hydrology of the Rock Island area, Le Flore County, Oklahoma
M.V. Marcher
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4013
Bed rock in the Rock Island area of northeastern Le Flore County in southeastern Oklahoma consists of shale, siltstone, and sandstone of the McAlester, Hartshorne, and Atoka Formations of Pennsylvanian age. The area is on the south flank of the Backbone anticline; the rocks dip to the south at 5o-45o....
New data on the age of Lepidocyclina in California
E. E. Brabb, Kristen McDougall, R.Z. Poore
1983, Journal of Foraminiferal Research (13) 167-178
During the 1930's and early 1940's, controversy about the age of Lepidocyclina californica and faunas associated with it led to unreconcilable differences of opinion in the attempt to provide a standard stratigraphic framework for Cenozoic rocks of western North America. Two standards with significantly different series age assignments were provided,...
The ophiolitic North Fork terrane in the Salmon River region, central Klamath Mountains, California
C.J. Ando, W. P. Irwin, D. L. Jones, J.B. Saleeby
1983, GSA Bulletin (94) 236-252
The North Fork terrane is an assemblage of ophiolitic and other oceanic volcanic and sedimentary rocks that has been internally imbricated and folded. The ophiolitic rocks form a north-trending belt through the central part of the region and consist of a disrupted sequence of homogeneous gabbro, diabase, massive to pillowed...
Strain‐rate profile across the Elsinore, San Jacinto, and San Andreas Faults near Palm Springs, California, 1973‐81
N.E. King, James C. Savage
1983, Geophysical Research Letters (10) 55-57
A profile of the strain accumulation rate along a line trending N50°E across the subparallel Elsinore, San Jacinto, and San Andreas faults near Palm Springs, California, has been constructed from trilateration surveys in the 1973‐81 interval. The strain accumulation is principally right‐lateral shear across a vertical plane parallel to fault...
Strain accumulation in western United States
James C. Savage
1983, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences (11) 11-43
This review is principally concerned with recent geodetic strain measurements in western United States undertaken by the US Geological Survey as part of the earthquake studies program and, as a consequence, is heavily biased toward the author's own publications. Most of the publications reporting crustal-strain measurements in western United States...
Effect of retorted-oil shale leachate on a blue-green alga (Anabaena flos-aquae)
Diane M. McKnight, Wilfred E. Pereira, Colleen E. Rostad, Eric A. Stiles
1983, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (30) 6-16
In the event of the development of the large oil shale reserves of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming, one of the main environmental concerns will be disposal of retorted-oil shale which will be generated in greater volume than the original volume oI the mined oil shale. Investigators have found that leachates...
K-Ar ages and the opening of the South Atlantic Ocean: Basaltic rock from the Brazilian margin
R.V. Fodor, E.H. McKee, H.E. Asmus
1983, Marine Geology (54) M1-M8
New K-Ar ages for 13 samples of basalt, gabbro, wehrlite, and trachyandesite drilled from the Brazilian continental shelf and coastline yield information about the timing of the opening of the South Atlantic and the nature of the crust seaward from the Brazil...
Thematic mapper: detailed radiometric and geometric characteristics
Hugh Kieffer
1983, Pecora VIII Symposium 75-75
Those radiometric characteristics of the Landsat 4 Thematic Mapper (TM) that can be established without absolute calibration of spectral data have been examined. Subscenes of radiometric all raw data (B-data) were examined on an individual detector basis: areas of uniform radiance were used to characterize subtle radiometric differences and...
Transport of reacting solutes in porous media: Relation between mathematical nature of problem formulation and chemical nature of reactions
Jacob Rubin
1983, Water Resources Research (19) 1231-1252
Examples involving six broad reaction classes show that the nature of transport-affecting chemistry may have a profound effect on the mathematical character of solute transport problem formulation. Substantive mathematical diversity among such formulations is brought about principally by reaction properties that determine whether (1) the reaction can be regarded as...
Opening of the Red Sea: Constraints from a palaeomagnetic study of the As Sarat volcanic field, south‐western Saudi Arabia
Karl S. Kellogg, R. L. Reynolds
1983, Geophysical Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society (74) 649-665
Four stratigraphic sections through alkali basalt flows of Oligocene to Miocene age (29‐24 Ma) in the As Sarat volcanic field, south‐western Saudi Arabia, were sampled for palaeomagnetic study. After systematic alternating‐field demagnetization, 42 magnetically acceptable flows (139 samples) yield a mean direction of magnetization of =355.3°, =15.2° (α=4.3°), which defines...
Seedling establishment on a landslide site
Cliff R. Hupp
1983, Castanea (48) 89-98
Two landslide scars (slide tracks) were plot sampled one and two years after landsliding to determine plant species involved in ecesis. The study site is located in a blockfield cove on Massanutten Mountain, northern Virginia. Old growth forest, adjacent to the slide tracks, is composed primarily of hemlock (Tsuga canadensis)...
Effective record length for the T-year event
Gary D. Tasker
1983, Journal of Hydrology (64) 39-47
The effect of serial dependence on the reliability of an estimate of the T-yr. event is of importance in hydrology because design decisions are based upon the estimate. In this paper the reliability of estimates of the T-yr. event from two common distributions is given as a function of number of observations...