Instrumental shaking thresholds for seismically induced landslides and preliminary report on landslides triggered by the October 17, 1989, Loma Prieta, California earthquake
E. L. Harp
1993, Geografia Fisica e Dinamica Quaternaria (16) 13-15
The generation of seismically induced landslide depends on the characteristics of shaking as well as mechanical properties of geologic materials. A very important parameter in the study of seismically induced landslide is the intensity based on a strong-motion accelerogram: it is defined as Arias intensity and is proportional to the...
Modeling the tides of Massachusetts and Cape Cod Bays
H. L. Jenter, R. P. Signell, A.F. Blumberg
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
A time-dependent, three-dimensional numerical modeling study of the tides of Massachusetts and Cape Code Bays, motivated by construction of a new sewage treatment plant and ocean outfall for the city of Boston, has been undertaken by the authors. The numerical model being used is a hybrid version of the Blumberg...
Regional flow in the Baltic Shield during Holocene coastal regression
Clifford I. Voss, Johan Andersson
1993, Groundwater (31) 989-1006
The occurrence of saline waters in the Baltic Shield in Sweden is consistent with ongoing but incomplete Holocene flushing and depends on the geometry and connectivity of conductive structures at both regional and local scales, and on the surface topography. Numerical simulation of regional...
Crude oil in a shallow sand and gravel aquifer-III. Biogeochemical reactions and mass balance modeling in anoxic groundwater
M.J. Baedecker, I.M. Cozzarelli, R.P. Eganhouse, D. I. Siegel, P.C. Bennett
1993, Applied Geochemistry (8) 569-586
Crude oil floating on the water table in a sand and gravel aquifer provides a constant source of hydrocarbons to the groundwater at a site near Bemidji, Minnesota. The degradation of hydrocarbons affects the concentrations of oxidized and reduced aqueous species in the anoxic part of the contaminant plume that...
Relation of channel stability to scour at highway bridges over waterways in Maryland
Edward J. Doheny
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Data from assessments of channel stability and observed-scour conditions at 876 highway bridges over Maryland waterways were entered into a database. Relations were found to exist among specific, deterministic variables and observed-scour and debris conditions. Relations were investigated between (1) high-flow angle of attack and pier- and abutment-footing exposure, (2)abutment...
Pressure increases, the formation of chromite seams, and the development of the ultramafic series in the Stillwater Complex, Montana
Bruce R. Lipin
1993, Journal of Petrology (34) 955-976
This paper explores the hypothesis that chromite seams in the Stillwater Complex formed in response to periodic increases in total pressure in the chamber. Total pressure increased because of the positive δV of nucleation of CO2 bubbles in the melt and their subsequent rise through the magma chamber, during which...
Early and Late Cretaceous vol canism and reef-building in the Marshall Islands
J. M. Lincoln, M. S. Pringle, Isabella Premolia Silva
1993, Book chapter, The Mesozoic Pacific: Geology, tectonics, and volcanism
No abstract available ...
Calculation of multicomponent chemical equilibria in gas-solid-liquid systems: Calculation methods, thermochemical data, and applications to studies of high-temperature volcanic gases with examples from Mount St. Helens
Robert B. Symonds, Mark H. Reed
1993, American Journal of Science (293) 758-864
No abstract available....
Climatic impact on isovolumetric weathering of a coarse-grained schist in the northern Piedmont Province of the central Atlantic states
E.T. Cleaves
1993, Geomorphology (8) 191-198
The possible impact of periglacial climates on the rate of chemical weathering of a coarse-grained plagioclase-muscovite-quartz schist has been determined for a small watershed near Baltimore, Maryland. The isovolumetric chemical weathering model formulated from the geochemical mass balance study of the watershed...
Thortveitite and associated Sc-bearing minerals from Ravalli County, Montana
E.E. Foord, S.D. Birmingham, F. Demartin, T. Pilati, C.M. Gramaccioli, F.E. Lichte
1993, Canadian Mineralogist (31) 337-346
The rare Sc mineral thortveitite, (Sc,Y)2Si2O7, occurs as ??m- to mm-sized crystals in fluorite-bearing granitic pegmatites and the host melagabbro within the Crystal Mountain fluorite deposit, Ravalli County, Montana. Thortveitite is found as colorless and clear to smoky and translucent, subhedral to euhedral prisms up to 3 mm in length...
Culvert analysis program for indirect measurement of discharge
Janice M. Fulford
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
A program based on the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) methods for indirectly computing peak discharges through culverts allows users to employ input data formats used by the water surface profile program (WSPRO). The program can be used to compute discharge rating surfaces or curves that describe the behavior of flow...
Courant number and unsteady flow computation
Chintu Lai
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
The Courant number C, the key to unsteady flow computation, is a ratio of physical wave velocity, ??, to computational signal-transmission velocity, ??, i.e., C = ??/??. In this way, it uniquely relates a physical quantity to a mathematical quantity. Because most unsteady open-channel flows are describable by a set...
Nonpoint source contamination of the Mississippi river and its tributaries by herbicides
W. E. Pereira, F. D. Hostettler
1993, Environmental Science & Technology (27) 1542-1552
A study of the Mississippi River and its tributaries during July-August 1991, October-November 1991, and April-May 1992 has indicated that the entire navigable reach of the river is contaminated with a complex mixture of agrochemicals and their transformation products derived from nonpoint sources. Twenty-three compounds were identified, including triazine, chloroacetanilide,...
Aquatic dissipation of triclopyr in Lake Seminole, Georgia
K.B. Woodburn, W. R. Green, H.E. Westerdahl
1993, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (41) 2172-2177
A field study was conducted to evaluate the environmental dissipation of triclopyr herbicide under aquatic-use conditions. Three 4-h plots in Lake Seminole, Georgia, were selected for use: one control, one aerial plot, and one subsurface plot; both applications were at the maximum aquatic-use rate of 2.5 mg/L. Water, sediment, plants,...
Late Mississippian productoid brachiopods Inflatia, Keokukia, and Adairia, Ozark region of Oklahoma and Arkansas
M. Gordon Jr., T. W. Henry, J.D. Treworgy
1993, Journal of Paleontology (67)
Specimens of the Late Mississippian productoid genera Inflatia and Keokukia from northeastern Oklahoma and northwestern Arkansas, collected from the Boone and “Moorefield” Formations, Hindsville Limestone, and Fayetteville Shale, display morphologic similarities and differences that delineate species and determine their biostratigraphic ranges. Generic assignments are based primarily on internal characters....
Carbon isotopic data from test hole USW UZ-1, Yucca Mountain, Nevada
In C. Yang, C.A. Peters, D.C. Thorstenson
1993, Conference Paper, High Level Radioactive Waste Management
Rock-CO2-gas analyses in test hole USW UZ-1 at Yucca Mountain indicate that gas movement in the unsaturated zone is likely through a dry-fracture system with little porewater or caliche-calcite interaction. This is because near-surface ??13C values are of biogenic origin and have changed little throughout the total depth. Post-bomb 14C...
Recovery planning and reintroduction of the Federally threatened Pitcher's thistle (Cirsium pitcheri) in Illinois
M. Bowles, R. Flackne, Kathryn McEachern, N. Pavlovic
1993, Natural Areas Journal (13) 164-176
No abstract available....
Differentiation of debris-flow and flash-flood deposits: implications for paleoflood investigations
Christopher F. Waythomas, Robert D. Jarrett
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Debris flows and flash floods are common geomorphic processes in the Colorado Rocky Mountain Front Range and foothills. Usually, debris flows and flash floods are associated with excess summer rainfall or snowmelt, in areas were unconsolidated surficial deposits are relatively thick and slopes are steep. In the Front Range and...
Biomonitoring of lead-contaminated Missouri streams with an assay for erythrocyte δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase activity in fish blood
C.J. Schmitt, M. L. Wildhaber, J. B. Hunn, T. Nash, M. N. Tieger, B. L. Steadman
1993, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (25) 464-475
The activity of the enzyme δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALA-D) in erythrocytes has long been used as a biomarker of lead exposure in humans and waterfowl and, more recently, in fishes. The assay was tested for ALA-D activity in fishes from streams affected by lead in combination with other metals from...
Caspian tern reproduction in the Saginaw Bay ecosystem following a 100-year flood event
James P. Ludwig, Heidi J. Auman, Hiroko Kurita, Matthew E. Ludwig, Loraine M. Campbell, John P. Giesy, Donald E. Tillitt, Paul Jones, Nobu Yamashita, Shinsuke Tanabe, Ryo Tatsukawa
1993, Journal of Great Lakes Research (19) 96-108
In the 2 years that followed the 100-year flood incident of September 1986 in the Saginaw River/Bay ecosystem, the reproduction of Caspian terns collapsed and then slowly recovered. Egg viability and fledging rates of hatched chicks were drastically depressed in 1987 and 1988. Eggs from clutches laid later in the...
Acute toxicity of the herbicide bromoxynil to Daphnia magna
Kevin J. Buhl, Steven J. Hamilton, James C. Schmulbach
1993, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (12) 1455-1468
The acute toxicities of technical-grade bromoxynil octanoate (BO) and two commercial formulations, Buctril® and Bronate®, to < 24-h-old neonate Daphnia magna (Straus) were determined in soft, hard, and oligosaline water. In addition, effects of life stage, feeding, aging the herbicide, and exposure duration on BO toxicity to daphnids were investigated....
234U/238U as a ground-water tracer, SW Nevada-SE California
K.R. Ludwig, Z. E. Peterman, K. R. Simmons, E. D. Gutentag
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 4th annual international conference on high level radioactive waste management
The 234U/238U ratio of uranium in oxidizing ground waters is potentially an excellent ground-water tracer because of its high solubility and insensitivity to chemical reactions. Moreover, recent advances in analytical capability have made possible very precise uranium-isotopic analyses on modest (approx.100 ml) amounts of normal ground water. Preliminary results on...
Geomorphic observations of rivers in the Oregon Coast Range from a regional reconnaissance perspective
S. Rhea
1993, Geomorphology (6) 135-150
Changes in long profile, gradient, gradient index, pseudo-hypsometric integral, valley incision, and sinuosity fractal dimension for rivers in western Oregon were studied to determine their usefulness in assessing an hypothesis of differential uplift within the Coast Range. All data were gathered from...
Coal resources of the Sonda coal field, Sindh Province, Pakistan
R. E. Thomas, Khan M. Riaz, Khan S. Ahmed
1993, International Journal of Coal Geology (23) 159-191
Approximately 4.7 billion t of original coal resources, ranging from lignite A to subbituminous C in rank, are estimated to be present in the Sonda coal field. These resources occur in 10 coal zones in the Bara Formation of Paleocene age....
Radionuclides in ground water of the Carson River Basin, western Nevada and eastern California, U.S.A.
J. M. Thomas, A. H. Welch, M.S. Lico, J. L. Hughes, R. Whitney
1993, Applied Geochemistry (8) 447-471
Ground water is the main source of domestic and public supply in the Carson River Basin. Ground water originates as precipitation primarily in the Sierra Nevada in the western part of Carson and Eagle Valleys, and flows down gradient in the direction of the Carson River through Dayton and Churchill...