In situ retention-transport response to nitrate loading and storm discharge in a third-order stream
Frank J. Triska, Vance C. Kennedy, Ronald J. Avanzino, Gary W. Zellweger, Kenneth E. Bencala
1990, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (9) 229-239
Nitrate retention was assayed in a 264-m reach of a third-order stream, Little Lost Man Creek, Humboldt County, California, USA. Nitrate budgets (24-48 hours) were calculated under background conditions, and during four other intervals of modified nitrate concentration caused by nutrient amendment or storm-enhanced discharge. Under background, low-flow conditions, the...
Development of slope valleys in the glacimarine environment of a complex subduction zone, Northern Gulf of Alaska
Paul R. Carlson, Terry R. Bruns, Michael A. Fisher
Julian A. Dowdeswell, James Scourse, editor(s)
1990, Book chapter, Glacimarine environments: Processes and sediments
Morphological, seismic-reflection, and sedimentological evidence indicates that glacial ice tongues cut large sea valleys into the Gulf of Alaska continental shelf during the Pleistocene. During the Holocene, glacially-derived sediments from the Copper River and other meltwater streams have been prograding seaward across the shelf, covering the glacial and glacimarine upper...
Enigmatic eight-meter trace fossils in the Lower Pennsylvanian Lee sandstone, central Appalachian basin, Tennessee
C. Wnuk, J. O. Maberry
1990, Journal of Paleontology (64) 440-450
Enigmatic tubular trace fossils up to eight meters long occur in the Lower Pennsylvanian Middlesboro Member of the Lee Formation. Two morphotypes occur: type 1 trace fossils are plain, smooth, vertical, nonbranching, parallel-walled, tubular structures; type 2 trace fossils branch, have walls with faint vertical striations, regularly...
Geotechnical engineering for ocean waste disposal. An introduction
Homa J. Lee, Kenneth R. Demars, Ronald C. Chaney
Demars Kenneth R.Chaney Ronald C., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, ASTM Special Technical Publication
As members of multidisciplinary teams, geotechnical engineers apply quantitative knowledge about the behavior of earth materials toward designing systems for disposing of wastes in the oceans and monitoring waste disposal sites. In dredge material disposal, geotechnical engineers assist in selecting disposal equipment, predict stable characteristics of dredge mounds, design mound...
Fine-grained rutile in the Gulf of Maine: Diagenetic origin, source rocks, and sedimentary environment of deposition
P. C. Valentine, J.A. Commeau
1990, Economic Geology (85) 862-876
The Gulf of Maine, an embayment of the New England margin, is floored by shallow, glacially scoured basins that are partly filled with late Pleistocene and Holocene silt and clay containing 0.7 to 1.0 wt percent TiO 2 , chiefly in the form of silt-size rutile. Eleven basins in the gulf are...
Sedimentary paleoenvironments of fossil platyrrhine localities, Miocene Pinturas Formation, Santa Cruz Province, Argentina
T. M. Bown
1990, Journal of Human Evolution (19) 87-119
The Pinturas Formation is a pyroclastic and epiclastic aeolian deposit of Miocene age lying discordantly upon Jurassic rocks in the elevated Andean precordillera of northwest Santa Cruz Province, Argentina. The history of development of the Pinturas Formation was significantly affected by the gradual, though sporadic, draping of this aeolian sediment...
Effects of elevated temperatures and rising sea level on Arctic Coast
Peter W. Barnes
1990, Journal of Cold Regions Engineering (4) 21-28
Ice is a major agent on the inner shelf, gouging the bottom, increasing hydraulic scour, transporting sediment, and influencing river flood patterns. Rapid coastal retreat is common and low barrier islands and beaches are constantly changing due to the influence of permafrost, ice‐push, waves, and currents. Coastal processes are presently...
Sedimentation of Lake Taneycomo, Missouri, 1913-1987
W.R. Berkas
1989, Water-Resources Investigations Report 89-4160
On the basis of the data from a sedimentation survey done by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, during 1935 and data collected by the U.S. Geological Survey during 1987, the volume of sediment accumulated in Lake Taneycomo from 1913 to 1935 and 1913 to 1987 was determined....
Use of surface-geophysical methods to assess riverbed scour at bridge piers
S.R. Gorin, F.P. Haeni
1989, Water-Resources Investigations Report 88-4212
A ground-penetrating-radar system, and three seismic systems--color fathometer, tuned transducer, and black-and-white fathometer--were used to evaluate river-bed scour at the Charter Oak, Founder 's and Bulkeley Bridges in Hartford, Connecticut. Cross-sections of the channel and some lateral sections were run at each bridge in June and July 1987, and significant...
Post-flood measurement of a refilled scour hole at the Bulkeley Bridge in Hartford, Connecticut
F.P. Haeni, S.R. Gorin
1989, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Bridge Scour Symposium
No abstract available....
Snow and ice perturbation during historical volcanic eruptions and the formation of lahars and floods
Jon J. Major, Christopher G. Newhall
1989, Bulletin of Volcanology (52) 1-27
Historical eruptions have produced lahars and floods by perturbing snow and ice at more than 40 volcanoes worldwide. Most of these volcanoes are located at latitudes higher than 35°; those at lower latitudes reach altitudes generally above 4000 m. Volcanic events can perturb mantles of snow and ice in...
Lagoonal deposits in the Upper Cretaceous Rock Springs Formation (Mesaverde Group), southwest Wyoming
M.A. Kirschbaum
1989, Marine Geology (88) 349-364
Most paleogeographic reconstructions of the Rock Springs Formation show shorelines having lobate to arcuate deltas. These shorelines are oriented NE-SW, with the sea to the southeast. Brackish-water bodies are usually shown in interdistributary areas or associated with abandoned delta lobes, and are open to the sea. In this study,...
High-resolution seismic-reflection interpretations of some sediment deposits, Antarctic continental margin: Focus on the western Ross Sea
Herman A. Karl
1989, Marine Geology (85) 205-223
High-resolution seismic-reflection data have been used to a varying degree by geoscientists to interpret the history of marine sediment accumulations around Antarctica. Reconnaissance analysis of 1-, 3.5-, and 12-kHz data collected by the U.S. Geological Survey in the western Ross Sea...
Local scour at bridge abutments
David C. Froehlich
1989, Conference Paper
Comparison of local scour depths at bridge abutments computed using different equations yields a large variation in predicted values. To consolidate the fragmented results of previous investigations and assemble the most comprehensive data set possible, reported laboratory measurements of local scour at the end of an obstruction protruding from the...
ROV dives under Great Lakes ice
S. J. Bolsenga, John E. Gannon, Gregory Kennedy, D. C. North, Charles E. Herdendorf
1989, Cold Regions Science and Technology (16) 89-93
Observations of the underside of ice have a wide variety of applications. Severe under-ice roughness can affect ice movements, rough under-ice surfaces can scour the bottom disturbing biota and man-made structures such as pipelines, and the flow rate of rivers is often affected by under-ice roughness. A few...
Hydraulic analysis of the Schoharie Creek bridge
David C. Froehlich, Roy E. Trent
1989, Conference Paper
Ten people died on April 5, 1987 as a result of the collapse of two spans of a New York State Thruway bridge into the floodwaters of Schoharie Creek. The cause of the bridge failure was determined to be scour of bed material from under the foundations of piers supporting...
Rates and processes of channel development and recovery following the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington
D. F. Meyer, H. A. Martinson
1989, Hydrological Sciences Journal (34) 115-127
Stream channel development in response to the eruption of Mount St. Helens on 18 May 1980, resulted in some of the largest sediment yields documented anywhere on earth. Development of new channels on the 2.7 km3 debris-avalanche deposit in the North Fork Toutle River caused net erosion of as much as...
Sedimentation in Lake Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 1982-86
L. J. Slack, J.L. Pritchett
1988, Water-Resources Investigations Report 87-4256
Lake Tuscaloosa, created in 1969 by the impoundment of North River, provides the primary water supply for Tuscaloosa, Alabama , and surrounding areas. This report describes the rate of sedimentation in the lake from its principal tributaries. The rate of sediment deposition in the lake is low. The maximum sediment...
Sedimentation and water quality in the West Branch Shade River basin, Ohio, 1983-85
C. J. Oblinger Childress, R.L. Jones
1988, Water-Resources Investigations Report 87-4262
Loss of channel conveyance from deposition of sediment from abandoned surface mines in the West Branch Shade River basin has resulted in frequent flooding. In addition, water quality in the West Branch Shade River and some of its tributaries is typical of streams affected by acid mine drainage. About 938...
Aggradation and degradation of alluvial sand deposits, 1965 to 1986, Colorado River, Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
J. C. Schmidt, J.B. Graf
1988, Open-File Report 87-555
High discharges occurring between 1983-1985 resulted in redistribution of sand stored in zones of recirculating current in the Colorado River in Grand Canyon National Park. Redistribution resulted in net loss in the number of reattachment deposits in narrow reaches and aggradation of some separation deposits. Separation deposits were more stable...
Late Pleistocene drainage systems beneath Delaware Bay
H.J. Knebel, R.C. Circe
1988, Marine Geology (78) 285-302
Analyses of an extensive grid of seismic-reflection profiles, along with previously published sedimentary data and geologic information from surrounding coastal areas, outline the ancestral drainage systems of the Delaware River beneath lower Delaware Bay. Major paleovalleys within these systems have southeast trends, relief of 10-35 m, widths of 1-8 km,...
Late Wisconsinan-Holocene paleogeography of Delaware Bay; a large coastal plain estuary
H.J. Knebel, C.H. Fletcher III, J.C. Kraft
1988, Marine Geology (83) 115-133
Analyses of an extensive grid of seismic reflection profiles along with previously published core data and modern sedimentary environment information from surrounding coastal areas permit an outline of the paleogeography of the large Delaware Bay estuary during the last transgression of sea level. During late Wisconsinan times, the Delaware River...
Erosional furrows formed during the lateral blast at Mount St. Helens, May 18, 1980
S. W. Kieffer, B. Sturtevant
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 14793-14816
Nearly horizontal, quasi-periodic erosional features of 7-m average transverse wavelength and of order 100-m length occur in scattered locations from 3.5 to 9 km from the crater at Mount St. Helens under deposits of the lateral blast of May 18, 1980. We attribute the erosional features to scouring by longitudinal...
Analysis of onsite measurements of scour at piers
David C. Froehlich
1988, Conference Paper
Existing onsite measurements of local scour at bridge piers were assembled and analyzed to obtain an equation that predicts the expected maximum depth of local scour at a bridge pier. A safety factor is suggested that provides a reasonable margin of error for design purposes....
Errors in slope-area computations of peak discharges in mountain streams
R.D. Jarrett
1987, Journal of Hydrology (96) 53-67
During an evaluation of 70 slope-area measurements on higher-gradient streams (stream slopes greater than 0.002) throughout the United States, peak discharge measurements were found to be affected by n values, scour, expansion and contraction losses, viscosity, unsteady flow, number of cross sections, state of flow and stream slope. Problems due to measurement...