Acceleration spectra for subduction zone earthquakes
J. Boatwright, G. L. Choy
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 15541-15553
We estimate the source spectra of shallow earthquakes from digital recordings of teleseismic P wave groups, that is, P + pP + sP, by making frequency dependent corrections for the attenuation and for the interference of the free surface. The correction for the interference of the free surface assumes that the earthquake radiates energy from a range...
Coprecipitation and redox reactions of manganese oxides with copper and nickel
J.D. Hem, Carol J. Lind, C. E. Roberson
1989, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (53) 2811-2822
Open-system, continuous-titration experiments have been done in which a slow flux of ∼0.02 molar solution of Mn2+ chloride, nitrate, or perchlorate with Cu2+ or Ni2+ in lesser concentrations was introduced into an aerated reactor solution held at constant temperature and at constant pH by a pH-stat...
Criteria for a sediment data set
Douglas G. Glysson
1989, Conference Paper
The transport of sediment through a hydrologic system or basin is an extremely complex phenomenon. Many factors affect this movement. Criteria are established for an 'ultimate' or complete sediment data set, and guidelines are given for the collection of alluvial data. The paper describes what parameters need to be measured...
Origin and age of the Lake Nyos maar, Cameroon
J. P. Lockwood, M. Rubin
1989, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (39) 117-124
Lake Nyos occupies a young maar crater in the Precambrian granitic terrane of northwest Cameroon. The lake is partly surrounded by poorly consolidated, ultramafic nodule-bearing pyroclastic surge deposits that were explosively ejected from the Nyos crater at the time of its formation. Radiocarbon dates show that the maar probably formed...
Cryptic tectonic domains of the Klamath Mountains, California and Oregon
W. P. Irwin
1989, Engineering Geology (27) 433-448
Numerous fragments of oceanic crust and island arcs make up the Klamath Mountains province. These fragments were joined together (amalgamated) in an oceanic setting during Paleozoic and Mesozoic collisional events and were accreted to North America as a composite unit during latest Jurassic or earliest Cretaceous time. The roughly arcuate...
High-precision UPb ages of metamorphic rutile: Application to the cooling history of high-grade terranes
K. Mezger, G. N. Hanson, S.R. Bohlen
1989, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (96) 106-118
Metamorphic rutiles occurring in granulite and upper amphibolite facies metapelitic rocks of the Archean Pikwitonei granulite domain (Manitoba) and the Proterozoic Adirondack terrane (New York) give concordant and near concordant UPb ages. The Pb concentrations in rutile range from 2.85 to 168 ppm, U concentrations range...
Physical and chemical characteristics of a metal-contaminated overbank deposit, west-central South Dakota, USA
D. C. Marron
1989, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (14) 419-432
The deposit along the Belle Fourche River is typically up to 2 m thick and extends about 90 m away from the channel along the insides of meander bends. The sediments contain above-background levels of copper, iron, manganese, zinc, and particularly arsenic. An influx at high streamflow of uncontaminated sediment...
Estimating constituent loads
Timothy A. Cohn, Lewis L. DeLong, Edward J. Gilroy, Robert M. Hirsch, Deborah K. Wells
1989, Water Resources Research (25) 937-942
Several recent articles have called attention to the problem of retransformation bias, which can arise when log linear regression models are used to estimate sediment or other constituent loads. In some cases the bias can lead to underestimation of constituent loads by as much as 50%, and several procedures have...
Undiscovered lode tin resources of the Seward Peninsula, Alaska
B.L. Reed, W. D. Menzie, M. McDermott, D. H. Root, W. Scott, L.J. Drew
1989, Economic Geology (84) 1936-1947
The United States is a net importer of many important minerals, including tin. Consumption of primary tin in the United States is about 36,000 metric tons per year. Identified U.S. tin resources consist of about 40,000 metric tons. Although such figures provide insight about vulnerability to supply disruptions in the...
Interrelationships among hydrologic-budget components of a northern Wisconsin seepage lake and implications for acid-deposition modeling
Dennis A. Wentz, William J. Rose
1989, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (18) 147-155
Components of the hydrologic budget for a northern Wisconsin seepage lake were analyzed by applying correlation and regression techniques to monthly data. Analyses for the 1981–83 water years revealed a statistically significant, direct relationship between storage change and precipitation-evaporation balance. Ground-water outflow was negatively correlated with ground-water inflow, and this...
Dynamic rupture modeling with laboratory-derived constitutive relations
P. G. Okubo
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 12321-12335
A laboratory-derived state variable friction constitutive relation is used in the numerical simulation of the dynamic growth of an in-plane or mode II shear crack. According to this formulation, originally presented by J. H. Dieterich, frictional resistance varies with the logarithm of the slip rate and with the logarithm of...
A terracing operator for physical property mapping with potential field data
L. Cordell, A. E. McCafferty
1989, Geophysics (54) 621-634
The terracing operator works iteratively on gravity or magnetic data, using the sense of the measured field's local curvature, to produce a field comprised of uniform domains separated by abrupt domain boundaries. The result is crudely proportional to a physical-property function defined in one (profile case) or two (map case)...
Dinoflagellate species and organic facies evidence of marine transgression and regression in the atlantic coastal plain
D. Habib, J. A. Miller
1989, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (74) 23-47
Palynological evidence is used to date and interpret depositional environments of sediments of Campanian, Maestrichtian and early Danian ages cored in three wells from South Carolina and Georgia. The evidence is usefil for distinguishing environments which lithofacies evidence indicates a range from nonmarine to coastal to inner neritic shallow shelf....
Paleogeothermal gradients and timing of oil generation in the Belden Formation, Eagle Basin, northwestern Colorado
V. F. Nuccio, S. Y. Johnson, Christopher J. Schenk
1989, Mountain Geologist (26) 31-41
Paleogeothermal gradients and timing of oil generation for the Lower and Middle Pennsylvanian Belden Formation have been estimated for four locations in the Eagle Basin of northwestern Colorado, by comparing measured vitrinite reflectance with maturity modeling. Two thermal models were made for each location: one assumes a constant paleogeothermal gradient...
Retention and transport of nutrients in a third-order stream: Channel processes
Frank J. Triska, Vance C. Kennedy, Ronald J. Avanzino, Gary W. Zellweger, Kenneth E. Bencala
1989, Ecology (70) 1877-1892
Chloride was injected as a conservative tracer with nitrate to examine nitrate retention (storage plus biotic uptake) and transport in a 327—m reach of a third—order stream draining a forested basin in northwestern California. Prior to injections, diel patterns of nutrient concentrations were measured under background conditions. Nitrate concentration of...
Speciation and equilibrium relations of soluble aluminum in a headwater stream at base flow and during rain events
Douglas A. Burns
1989, Water Resources Research (25) 1653-1665
In a small watershed in the Shenandoah National Park, Virginia, the short-term dynamics of soluble aluminum in stream water sampled during rain events differed significantly from stream water sampled during base flow conditions. Three fractions of dissolved aluminum were measured. The inorganic monomeric fraction made up approximately two thirds of...
Pleistocene Suvero slide, Paola basin, southern Italy
F. Trincardi, W. R. Normark
1989, Marine and Petroleum Geology (6) 324-335
The Suvero slide covers an area of about 225 km2 in the Paola slope basin on the Eastern Tyrrhenian margin. The shape and lateral extent of the deposit reflect topographic confinement of the slide between the continental slope and a morphologic barrier formed by a margin-parallel slope ridge. No headwall...
Regional Jurassic geologic framework of Alabama coastal waters area and adjacent Federal waters area
R.M. Mink, B.L. Bearden, E. A. Mancini
1989, Marine Geology (90) 39-50
To date, numerous Jurassic hydrocarbon fields and pools have been discovered in the Cotton Valley Group, Haynesville Formation, Smackover Formation and Norphlet Formation in the tri-state area of Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, and in Alabama State coastal waters and adjacent Federal...
The Relief Canyon gold deposit, Nevada: A mineralized solution breccia
A. R. Wallace
1989, Economic Geology (84) 279-290
The Relief Canyon gold deposit in the Humboldt Range of western Nevada is a low-grade, high-tonnage orebody of Tertiary or younger age. The host rocks include limestones of the Triassic Cane Spring Formation, which are overlain by shales of the Triassic Grass Valley Formation. The rocks were folded and metamorphosed...
Late Cretaceous paleomagnetism and clockwise rotation of the Silver Bell Mountains, south central Arizona
J.T. Hagstrum, D.A. Sawyer
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 17847-17860
Late Cretaceous ash flow volcanism in the Silver Bell Mountains of southern Arizona (32.3°N, 248.5°E) was associated with caldera formation and porphyry copper mineralization. Oriented samples from 34 sites in volcanic, volcaniclastic, and intrusive units related to this episode of igneous activity (73–69 Ma) yield a mean paleomagnetic direction of I =...
Exploration computer applications to primary dispersion halos: Kougarok tin prospect, Seward Peninsula, Alaska, USA
Jeffrey C. Reid
1989, Conference Paper, Application of Computers and Operations Research in the Mineral Industry
Computer processing and high resolution graphics display of geochemical data were used to quickly, accurately, and efficiently obtain important decision-making information for tin (cassiterite) exploration, Seward Peninsula, Alaska (USA). Primary geochemical dispersion patterns were determined for tin-bearing intrusive granite phases of Late Cretaceous age with exploration bedrock lithogeochemistry at the...
Organic geochemistry and brine composition in Great Salt, Mono, and Walker Lakes
Joseph L. Domagalski, W. H. Orem, H.P. Eugster
1989, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (53) 2857-2872
Samples of Recent sediments, representing up to 1000 years of accumulation, were collected from three closed basin lakes (Mono Lake, CA, Walker Lake, NV, and Great Salt Lake, UT) to assess the effects of brine composition on the accumulation of total organic...
Interaction of fine sediment with alluvial streambeds
Harvey E. Jobson, William P. Carey
1989, Water Resources Research (25) 135-140
More knowledge is needed about the physical processes that control the transport of fine sediment moving over an alluvial bed. The knowledge is needed to design rational sampling and monitoring programs that assess the transport and fate of toxic substances in surface waters because the toxics are often associated with...
Survey of three-dimensional numerical estuarine models
Ralph T. Cheng, Peter E. Smith
1989, Conference Paper
This paper surveys the existing 3-D estuarine hydrodynamic and solute transport models by a review of the commonly used assumptions and approximations, and by an examination of the methods of solution. The model formulations, methods of solution, and known applications are surveyed and summarized in tables. In conclusion, the authors...
On the similarity of theories of anelastic and scattering attenuation
Leif Wennerberg, Arthur D. Frankel
1989, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (79) 1287-1293
We point out basic parallels between theories of anelastic and scattering attenuation. We consider approximations to scattering effects presented by O'Doherty and Anstey (1971), Sato (1982), and Wu (1982). We use the linear theory of anelasticity. We note that the frequency dependence of Q can be related to a distribution...