Total-field aeromagnetic and derivative maps of the Lawton area, southwestern Oklahoma
Meridee Jones-Cecil
1995, Geophysical Investigations Map 998-A
Geologic map of the Lehman Caves quadrangle, White Pine County, Nevada
Elizabeth L. Miller, Susan P. Grier, Janet L. Brown
1995, Geologic Quadrangle 1758
Environmental considerations of active and abandoned mine lands; lessons from Summitville, Colorado
Trude V. V. King, editor(s)
1995, Bulletin 2220
Survey for blood parasites in redheads (Aythya americana) wintering at the Chandeleur Islands, Louisiana
Thomas C. Michot, Mary C. Garvin, Earl H. Weidner
1995, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (31) 90-92
We detected no infections with species of Plasmodium, Haemoproteus, Leucocytozoon, Sarcocystis or Trypanosoma in blood smears, liver and spleen impressions, and muscle tissue from 136 redheads (Aythya americana) collected or captured at the Chandeleur Islands, Louisiana (USA), during three winters (1987 to 1990). One bird, a juvenile male, was infected with an unidentified species of microfilaria. Thus,...
Late Pleistocene and Holocene paleoenvironments of the North Pacific coast
D.H. Mann, T. D. Hamilton
1995, Quaternary Science Reviews (14) 449-471
Unlike the North Atlantic, the North Pacific Ocean probably remained free of sea ice during the last glacial maximum (LGM), 22,000 to 17,000 BP. Following a eustatic low in sea level of ca. −120 m at 19,000 BP, a marine transgression had flooded the Bering and Chukchi shelves by 10,000...
Ribbon Cliff landslide Washington, and the earthquake of 14 December 1872
Richard F. Madole, Robert L. Schuster, Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki
1995, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (85) 986-1002
Estimates of the epicentral location and maximum intensity of the earthquake of 14 December 1872, the largest and oldest historic earthquake documented in the Pacific Northwest, are controversial largely because the estimates are based on ground effects. The Ribbon Cliff landslide is one of the more critical ground effects used...
Spatial and temporal patterns of late quaternary eolian deposition, Eastern Colorado, U.S.A
Richard F. Madole
1995, Quaternary Science Reviews (14) 155-177
Eolian sediment covers about 60% of Colorado east of the Rocky Mountains; about 30% of the sediment is sand and 70% is loess. Initially, flood plains were the principal sources of eolian sediment, but during the Holocene, dunes formed from older eolian sand and alluvium on uplands. Since latest Pleistocene...
Seismological and engineering aspects of the 1995 Hyogoken-Nanbu (Kobe) earthquake
V. Bertero, Roger D. Borcherdt, Peter W. Clark, Douglas S. Dreger, Filip C. Filippou, D.A. Foutch, Lind Gee, Masahiko Higashino, Susumu Kono, Le-Wu Lu, Jack P. Moehle, Mark Murray, Julio Ramirez, B. Romanowicz, Nicholas Sitar, Christopher R. Thewalt, Stephen Tobriner, Andrew S. Whittaker, James K. Wight, Yan Xiao
1995, Report
Immediately following the Jan. 17, 1995, Kobe earthquake, a reconnaissance team was organized under the auspices of the Earthquake Hazard Mitigation Program of the Engineering Directorate of the National Science Foundation. The mission of the team was to provide a timely, first-hand overview of the type and extent of the...
Intraglacial volcanism in the Wells Gray–Clearwater volcanic field, east-central British Columbia, Canada
C.J. Hickson, James G. Moore, L. Calk, P. Metcalfe
1995, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (32) 838-851
Small-volume, subaerial, subaqueous and subglacial basaltic eruptions occurred in the Wells Gray–Clearwater area during Quaternary time. Part of this time, significant thicknesses of glacial ice were present. Dating of intraglacial volcanic features corroborates other evidence of an Early Pleistocene, Cordilleran-wide ice sheet. Of the intraglacial volcanoes investigated, three were studied...
Offshore geology of Mauna Loa and adjacent areas, Hawaii
James G. Moore, William W Chadwick
J.M. Rhodes, J. P. Lockwood, editor(s)
1995, Book chapter, Mauna Loa revealed: Structure, composition, history, and hazards
No abstract available....
Petrology of Submarine Lavas from Kilauea's Puna Ridge, Hawaii
D. A. Clague, James G. Moore, J.E. Dixon, W.B. Friesen
1995, Journal of Petrology (36) 299-349
We have studied 30 quenched tholeiitic lava flows recovered by 20 dredge hauls and one submersible dive along Puna Ridge, the submarine part of the East Rift Zone of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii Glass grains from numerous additional flows were recovered in turbidite sands cored in the Hawaiian Trough. These quenched...
The 9 June 94 Bolivian Deep Earthquake: An exceptional event in an extraordinary subduction zone
Stephen H. Kirby, E.A. Okal, E. Robert Engdahl
1995, Geophysical Research Letters (22) 2233-2236
We investigate the physical setting of the Bolivian shock based on the history of the subducting Nazca plate, intraslab seismicity, deep seismic moment release, and seismic tomography. South America has two broad regions of reverse arc curvature. Subduction constrained to this unique geometry produces slab kinking contortions that may cause...
Frequency-moment distribution of deep earthquakes; Implications for the seismogenic zone at the bottom of slabs
E.A. Okal, Stephen H. Kirby
1995, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (92) 169-187
We present a systematic investigation of the variation with depth of the frequency of earthquake occurrence vs. seismic moment based on 16 years of Harvard Centroid Moment Tensor (CMT) solutions. We analyze depth variations of earthquake size distribution in terms of variations in the absolute value of the slope of...
Earthquakes in the Los Angeles metropolitan region: A possible fractal distribution of rupture size
S. E. Hough
1995, Science (267) 211-213
Although there is debate on the maximum size of earthquake that is possible on any of several known fault systems in the greater Los Angeles metropolitan region, it is reasonable to assume that the distribution of earthquakes will follow a fractal distribution of rupture areas. For this assumption and an...
Response of high-rise and base-isolated buildings to a hypothetical M w 7.0 blind thrust earthquake
T. H. Heaton, J. F. Hall, D.J. Wald, M.W. Halling
1995, Science (267) 206-211
High-rise flexible-frame buildings are commonly considered to be resistant to shaking from the largest earthquakes. In addition, base isolation has become increasingly popular for critical buildings that should still function after an earthquake. How will these two types of buildings perform if a large earthquake occurs beneath a metropolitan area?...
Geologic map of the Clifton Creek Quadrangle, Bannock and Power counties, southeastern Idaho
L.B. Platt
1995, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2278
Historic trail map of the Lamar 1° x 2° quadrangle, Colorado and Kansas
G. R. Scott
1995, IMAP 2469
No abstract available....
Seismic stratigraphic evidence of ice-sheet advances on the Wilkes Land margin of Antarctica
S. L. Eittreim, Alan K. Cooper, J. Wannesson
1995, Sedimentary Geology (96) 131-156
The Wilkes Land continental shelf, similar to other Antarctic shelves, is underlain by thick sequences of steeply prograded glacial diamictons. On the outer shelf, banks that are shallower than 400 m are separated by broad outer-shelf troughs that deepen landward. The prograded sequences are found preferentially in these broad outer-shelf...
Strides made in understanding Antarctic stratigraphy and Cenozoic glacial history
Alan K. Cooper, Peter Webb, Giuliano Brancolini
1995, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (76) 97-101
It is known that the Antarctic ice sheet greatly affected global climate, sea‐level, ocean circulation, and Southern Hemisphere biota during Cenozoic times, but until recently, how remained largely a mystery. Because few Cenozoic rocks are exposed on the Antarctic continent, the only way to investigate the evolution of the Antarctic...
A proposed North American amphibian monitoring program
C. Bishop, D. Bradford, G. Casper, S. Corn, Sam Droege, G. Fellers, P. Geissler, D.M. Green, R. Heyer, M. Lannoo, D. Larson, D. Johnson, R. McDiarmid, J. Sauer, B. Shaffer, H. Whiteman, H. Wilbur
1995, Canadian Association of Herpetologists Bulletin (9) 6-13
No abstract available....
The Pennsylvanian Fire Clay tonstein of the Appalachian basin—Its distribution, biostratigraphy, and mineralogy: Discussion and reply
William Outerbridge, C. L. Rice, Harvey E. Belkin, T.W. Henry, Michael J. Kunk
1995, GSA Bulletin (108) 120-125
No abstract available....
Composition of biotite phenocrysts in Ordovician tephras casts doubt on the proposed trans-Atlantic correlation of the Millbrig K-bentonite (United States) and the Kinnekulle K-bentonite (Sweden)
John T. Haynes, W.G. Melson, Michael J. Kunk
1995, Geology (23) 847-850
Biotite phenocryst compositions in three thick, widespread Ordovician K-bentonites, the Deicke and Millbrig from Big Ridge, Alabama, and the Kinnekulle from Mossen, Västergötland, Sweden, fall into three distinct groups, and so the proposed intercontinental correlation of the Millbrig and the Kinnekulle is suspect. Because the biotites are nearly pristine compositionally,...
An 40Ar/39Ar thermochronology of the Ofoten‐Troms region: Implications for terrane amalgamation and extensional collapse of the northern Scandinavian Caledonides
Janet E. Coker, Mark G. Steltenpohl, A. Andersen, Michael J. Kunk
1995, Tectonics (14) 435-447
Fifteen 40Ar/39Ar cooling ages are reported for metamorphic hornblende and muscovite from far traveled terranes constituting the Ofoten nappe stack of northern Norway. Eight cooling ages on hornblende range from 425 to 394 Ma and seven muscovite ages, from the same or nearby outcrops as the hornblendes, range from 400 to...
Mudflow generated by retrogressive slope failure, Santa Barbara Basin, California continental borderland
Brian D. Edwards, Homa J. Lee, Michael E. Field
1995, Journal of Sedimentary Research (A65) 57-68
The morphology and internal geometry of a mudflow deposit on the mainland slope of the Santa Barbara Basin are defined using high-resolution seismic-reflection data in combination with core samples. Sediment failure occurred on a 4 degrees slope in the uppermost part of late Quaternary well-bedded slope deposits. The failure zone...
Age of the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary in the Western Interior of the United States
B. J. Kowallis, Eric H. Christiansen, Alan L. Deino, Michael J. Kunk, L. Heaman
1995, Cretaceous Research (16) 109-129
High precision 40Ar/39Ar laser-microprobe ages of individual sanidines,40Ar/39Ar plateau age spectra on bulk sanidine concentrates, U-Pb zircon ages, and zircon and apatite fission-track ages from three bentonites bracketing the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary in the Western Interior of the United States suggest an age for the boundary of 93.1 ± 0.3 (2σ. The...