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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Dispersal patterns of red foxes relative to population density
Stephen H. Allen, Alan B. Sargeant
1993, Journal of Wildlife Management (57) 526-533
Factors affecting red fox (Vulpes vulpes) dispersal patterns are poorly understood but warranted investigation because of the role of dispersal in rebuilding depleted populations and transmission of diseases. We examined dispersal patterns of red foxes in North Dakota based on recoveries of 363 of 854 foxes tagged as pups and...
An episode of reinflation of the Long Valley Caldera, eastern California: 1989-1991
J. Langbein, D.P. Hill, T.N. Parker, S.K. Wilkinson
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research (98) 15851-15870
Following the episodes of inflation of the resurgent dome associated with the May 1980 earthquake sequence (four M 6 earthquakes) and the January 1983 earthquake swarm (two M 5.2 events), 7 years of frequently repeated two-color geodimeter measurements spanning the Long Valley caldera document gradually decreasing extensional strain rates...
Quality control and quality assurance plan for bridge channel-stability assessments in Massachusetts
Gene W. Parker, Harlow Pinson
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
A quality control and quality assurance plan has been implemented as part of the Massachusetts bridge scour and channel-stability assessment program. This program is being conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey, Massachusetts-Rhode Island District, in cooperation with the Massachusetts Highway Department. Project personnel training, data-integrity verification, and new data-management technologies...
Scour at a bridge over the Weldon River, Iowa
Edward E. Fischer
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Contraction scour at the State Highway 2 bridge over the Weldon River in south-central Iowa was caused by a flood of record proportions on September 14 and 15, 1992. The peak discharge was 1, 930 cubic meters per second,which was 4 times the probable 100-year flood used to design the...
Evaluation of historical scour at selected stream crossings in Indian
David S. Mueller, Robert L. Miller
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Geophysical data were collected by means of ground-penetrating radar and tuned transducer systems to estimate the historical scour at ten bridges in Indiana. These geophysical data were used to compare and evaluate the results of 13 published pier-scour equations. In order to make this comparison, it was assumed that the...
The Klamath Falls, Oregon, earthquakes on September 20, 1993
S.R. Brantley
1993, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (24) 104-146
The strongest earthquake to strike Oregon in more than 50 yrs struck the southern part of the State on September 20, 1993. These shocks, a magnitude 5.9 earthquake at 8:28pm and a magnitude 6.0 earthquake at 10:45pm, were the opening salvo in a swarm of earthquakes that continued for more...
Development of bridge-scour instrumentation for inspection and maintenance personnel
David S. Mueller, Mark N. Landers
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Inspecting bridges and monitoring scour during high flow can improve public transportation safety by providing early identification of scour and stream stability problems at bridges. Most bridge-inspection data are collected during low flow, when scour holes may have refilled. More than 25 percent of the States that responded to a...
Slumgullion; Colorado’s natural landslide laboratory
L.M. Highland
1993, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (24) 208-221
The mammoth Slumgullion landslide in southwestern Colorado is the largest actively moving landslide in Colorado and, perhaps, the entire country. To learn more about how and why landslides move the way they do, scientists at the U.S Geological Survey (USGS) have observed and monitored the remarkably regular movement of this...
The Golden bypass landslide, Golden, Colorado
L.M. Highland, W. M. Brown III
1993, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (24) 4-14
Slope instability along a new highway bypass in Golden, Colorado, became a major concern in 1993. Rains and snowmelt accelerated movement of a landslide that had begun to develop before the bypass was opened to traffic in July of 1991. The downslope movement of earth materials increased significantly in 1993. During...
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...
Bridge scour and change in contracted section, Razor Creek
Stephen R. Holnbeck, Charles Parrett, Todd N. Tillinger
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Two large floods, 3 and 4 times the estimated 100-year peak discharge, occurred in 1986 and 1991 at a timber-pile bridge over Razor Creek in Montana. A bridge section surveyed after the 1991 flood was compared with a 1955 design section and showed total scour of 0.85 m at the...
Organochlorines and heavy metals in 17-year cicadas pose no apparent dietary threat to birds
D. R. Clark Jr.
1992, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (20) 47-54
Organochlorine and heavy metal concentrations in 17-year cicadas from Prince Georges and Anne Arundel Counties, Maryland, were well below levels known to be harmful to birds. Cicadas contained concentrations of metals similar to or less than other local invertebrates except they contained more copper than did earthworms. Copper and lead...
Geology and Stream Infiltration of North Halawa Valley, Oahu, Hawaii
Scot K. Izuka
1992, Water-Resources Investigations Report 91-4197
A geohydrologic investigation of North Halawa Valley, Oahu, Hawaii, and its stream was undertaken in response to concern that runoff from the H-3 highway draining into the stream might seep into the ground and seriously contaminate potable water pumped at a nearby skimming well. North Halawa Stream flows over highly weathered...
Thin, low‐velocity crust beneath the southern Yukon‐Tanana Terrane, east central Alaska: Results from Trans‐Alaska crustal transect refraction/wide‐angle reflection data
Bruce C. Beaudoin, Gary S. Fuis, Walter D. Mooney, Warren J. Nokleberg, Nikolas I. Christensen
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (97) 1921-1942
A seismic refraction/wide‐angle reflection survey for the Trans‐Alaska Crustal Transect program reveals a thin, reflective crust beneath the southern Yukon‐Tanana terrane (YTT) in east central Alaska. These data are the first detailed refraction survey of the southern YTT and compose a 130‐km‐long reversed profile along the Alaska...
The ten-year eruption of Kilauea Volcano
D.A. Clague, C. Heliker
1992, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (23) 244-254
The Pu'u 'O' o-Kupaianaha eruption now ranks as the longest-lived historic eruption on the East Rift Zone and the most destructive in Kilauea's recent history. About 1 km3 of lava erupted during the first 0 years of the eruption. Lava flows have destroyed 181 houses and severed the coastal highway along...