Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

1130 results.

Alternate formats: Download search results as RIS  |  CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 43, results 1051 - 1075

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Man-induced channel adjustment in Tennessee streams
C. H. Robbins, Andrew Simon
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 82-4098
Channel modifications in Tennessee, particularly in the western part, have led to large-scale instabilities in the channelized rivers and may have contributed to several bridge failures. These modifications, together with land-use practices, led to downcutting, headward erosion, downstream aggradation, accelerated scour, and bank instabilities. Changes in gradient by channel straightening...
Assessment of gray whale feeding grounds and sea floor interaction in the northeastern Bering Sea
C.H. Nelson, K.R. Johnson, John H. Barber
1983, Open-File Report 83-727
A dense ampeliscid amphipod community in Chirikov Basin and around St. Lawrence Island in the northeastern Bering Sea has been outlined by summarizing biological studies, analyzing bioturbation in sediment samples, and examining sea floor photos and videotapes. The amphipod population is associated with a homogeneous, relict fine-grained sand body 0.10-1.5...
The compositionally zoned eruption of 1912 in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, Katmai National Park, Alaska
W. Hildreth
1983, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (18) 1-56
On June 6–8, 1912, ∼ 15 km3 of magma erupted from the Novarupta caldera at the head of the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (VTTS), producing ∼ 20 km3 of air-fall tephra and 11–15 km3 of ash-flow tuff within ∼ 60 hours. Three discrete periods of ash-fall at Kodiak correlate, respectively, with Plinian...
Comparisons of 210Pb and pollen methods for determining rates of estuarine sediment accumulation
G. S. Brush, E.A. Martin, R.S. DeFries, C. A. Rice
1982, Quaternary Research (18) 196-217
Comparisons of sedimentation rates obtained by 210Pb and pollen analyses of 1-m cores collected throughout the Potomac Estuary show good agreement in the majority of cores that can be analyzed by both methods. Most of the discrepancy between the methods can be explained by the analytical precision of the 210Pb method and...
A regional assessment of potential environmental hazards to and limitations on petroleum development of the Southeastern United States Atlantic continental shelf, slope, and rise, offshore North Carolina
Peter Popenoe, E. L. Coward, K. V. Cashman
1982, Open-File Report 82-136
More than 11,000 km of high-resolution seismic-reflection data, 325 km of mid-range sidescan-sonar data, and 500 km of long-range sidescan-sonar data were examined and used to construct an environmental geology map of the Continental Shelf, Slope, and Rise for the area of the U.S. Atlantic margin between lats. 32?N. and...
Ice sculpture in the Martian outflow channels
Baerbel K. Lucchitta
1982, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (87) 9951-9973
Many landforms in Martian outflow channels have characteristics that suggest sculpture by glaciers, ice streams, or ice sheets. Viking Orbiter and terrestrial satellite images were examined at similar resolution to compare features of the Martian outflow channels to features produced by the movement of ice on earth. Many resemblances were...
Bank stability and channel width adjustment, East Fork River, Wyoming
E.D. Andrews
1982, Water Resources Research (18) 1184-1192
Frequent surveys of eight cross sections located in self-formed reaches of the East Fork River, Wyoming, during the 1974 snowmelt flood showed a close relation between channel morphology and scour and fill. Those cross sections narrower than the mean reach width filled at discharges less than bankfull and scoured at...
Cyclic deposits and hummocky cross-stratification of probable storm origins in Upper Cretaceous rocks of the Cape Sebastian area, southwestern Oregon
R. E. Hunter, H. Clifton
1982, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology (52) 127-143
Cyclic deposits containing hummocky cross-stratification occur in the upper part of the Cape Sebastian Sandstone of Bourgeois (1980), a shallow marine transgressive sandstone of Late Cetaceous age on the southern Oregon coast. The cycles average 1.6 m in thickness and consist, where complete,...
Substrate conditions and abundance of lake trout eggs in a traditional spawning area in southeastern Lake Michigan
John A. Dorr III, Daniel V. O’Connor, Neal R. Foster, David J. Jude
1981, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (1) 165-172
Spawning by planted lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) was documented by sampling with a diver-assisted pump in a traditional spawning area in southeastern Lake Michigan near Saugatuck, Michigan in mid-November in 1978 and 1979. Bottom depths at the 11 locations sampled ranged from 3 to 12 m and substrate size from...
Hydrologic and morphologic changes in channels of the Platte River basin: A historical perspective
T.R. Eschner, R. F. Hadley, K.D. Crowley
1981, Open-File Report 81-1125
The channels of the Platte River and its major tributaries, the South Platte and North Platte Rivers in Colorado, Wyoming, and Nebraska, have undergone major changes in hydrologic regime and morphology since 1860. These changes are attributed here to agricultural, municipal, and industrial water use.Although water-resource development varied temporally throughout...
Effects of erosion control structures along a portion of the northern Chesapeake Bay shoreline
C.F. Zabawa, R.T. Kerhin, S. Bayley
1981, Environmental Geology (3) 201-211
A 6.500-meter reach of western Chesapeake Bay shoreline (lower Mayo Peninsula) lost about 1.1??106 cubic meters of sediment (equivalent to 170 cubic meters lost per meter of shoreline) between 1846 and 1932, when the first aerial photographs show the shoreline already substantially protected by a system of groins and intermittent...
Differentiation of delta-front and barrier lithofacies of the Upper Cretaceous Pictured Cliffs Sandstone, southwest San Juan Basin, New Mexico.
R. M. Flores, Michael F. Erpenbeck
1981, Mountain Geologist (18) 23-34
This Sandstone represents a regressive littoral marine unit deposited during the final retreat of the Cretaceous epeiric sea. Differences in rock type, internal and penecontemporaneous deformation structures, textural sequences, mineral composition and trace fossil content permit recognition of laterally contemporaneous delta-front and barrier lithofacies. The delta-front lithofacies consists of distal...
Preliminary bathymetry of McCarty Fiord and Neoglacial changes of McCarty Glacier, Alaska
Austin Post
1980, Open-File Report 80-424
Preliminary bathymetry (at 1:20,000 scale) and other scientific studies of McCarty Fiord, Alaska, Conducted by the Research Vessel Growler in 1978, showed this 15 mile-long waterway to be a narrow, deeply scoured basin enclosed by a terminal-moraine shoal. This valley was formerly filled by McCarty Glacier, which began a drastic...
Summary of regional geology, petroleum potential, resource assessment and environmental considerations for oil and gas lease sale area #56
William P. Dillon, Kim D. Klitgord, Charles K. Paull, John A. Grow, Mahlon M. Ball, Gordon Dolton, Richard B. Powers, Abdul S. Khan, Peter Popenoe, James M. Robb
1980, Open-File Report 82-398
This report summarizes our general knowledge of the petroleum potential, as well as problems and hazards associated with development of petroleum resources in the area proposed for nominations for lease sale number 56. This area includes the U.S. eastern continental margin from the North Carolina-Virginia border south to approximately Cape...
Field data describing the movement and storage of sediment in the East Fork River, Wyoming: Part II, Bed elevations, 1979
Robert H. Meade, Robert M. Myrick, William W. Emmett
1980, Open-File Report 80-1190
At 39 cross sections in a 3.3-kilometer reach of East Fork River Wyo., bed elevations were measured daily during a month-long period that included the peak snowmelt runoff. Elevations were measured at less frequent intervals for a week before and several weeks after peak runoff. Considerable scour and fill was...
Geologic map of the Phaethontis Quadrangle of Mars
J. H. Howard III
1979, IMAP 1145
The Phaethontis quadrangle of Mars is dominated by densely cratered uplands and plateaus which form some of the oldest surfaces on the planet. Extensive low-lying areas within the cratered terrains, including the...
Potential geologic hazards and constraints for blocks in proposed Mid-Atlantic OCS oil and gas lease sale 49
H. Robert Ensminger
R.W. Hall, editor(s)
1979, Open-File Report 79-264
Analysis of side-scan sonar, subbottom profiler, processed sparker, and fathometer data (approximately 5060 km) from the 136 blocks in the proposed Outer Continental Shelf Lease Sale 49 disclosed features that are potential geologic hazards to oil and gas exploration and development operations. These potential hazards are past mass sediment movement...