A statistical approach to the interpretation of aliphatic hydrocarbon distributions in marine sediments
J. B. Rapp
1991, Chemical Geology (93) 163-177
Q-mode factor analysis was used to quantitate the distribution of the major aliphatic hydrocarbon (n-alkanes, pristane, phytane) systems in sediments from a variety of marine environments. The compositions of the pure end members of the systems were obtained from factor scores and the distribution of the systems within each sample...
Resetting of RbSr ages of volcanic rocks by low-grade burial metamorphism
Y. Asmeroma, P. Damon, M. Shafiqullah, W.R. Dickinson, R. E. Zartman
1991, Chemical Geology: Isotope Geoscience Section (87) 167-173
We report a nine-point RbSr whole-rock isochron age of 70±3 Ma (MSWD 3.97) for Mid-Jurassic volcanic rocks. The same rocks have also been dated by the UThPb method on zircon, giving a crystallization age of 166 ± 11 Ma, over twice as old as the RbSr age. The data demonstrate...
The interaction between biology and the management of aquatic macrophytes
S. A. Nichols
1991, Aquatic Botany (41) 225-252
‘Management’ refers to controlling nuisance aquatic species and to restoring or restructing aquatic plant communities. Producing stable, diverse, aquatic plant communities containing a high percentage of desirable species is a primary management goal.There are a variety of techniques including harvesting, herbicides, water-level fluctuation, sediment alteration, nutrient limitation, light alteration, and...
Chemical bonding in the outer core: high-pressure electronic structures of oxygen and sulfur in metallic iron
David M. Sherman
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research (96) 18029-18036
From its density the outer core is believed to be an alloy of iron and a light element such as sulfur or oxygen. The nature of the light element in the core is an important constraint for theories of the Earth's formation. In this paper the...
Coprecipitation mechanisms and products in manganese oxidation in the presence of cadmium
J.D. Hem, Carol J. Lind
1991, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (55) 2435-2451
Manganese oxidation products were precipitated in an aerated open-aqueous system where a continuous influx of mixed Mn2+ and Cd2+ solution was supplied and pH was maintained with an automated pH-stat adding dilute NaOH. X-ray diffraction and electron diffraction identified the solids produced as mixtures of Cd2Mn34+O8, Mn2+2Mn4+3O8, MnO2 (ramsdellite), and CdCO3. Mean oxidation...
Analysis of borehole expansion and gallery tests in anisotropic rock masses
B. Amadei, W. Z. Savage
1991, International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences & Geomechanics Abstracts (28) 383-396
Closed-form solutions are used to show how rock anisotropy affects the variation of the modulus of deformation around the walls of a hole in which expansion tests are conducted. These tests include dilatometer and NX-jack tests in boreholes and gallery tests in tunnels. The effects of rock anisotropy on the...
Genesis and continuity of quaternary sand and gravel in glacigenic sediment at a proposed low-level radioactive waste disposal site in east-central Illinois
K. G. Troost, B. Brandon Curry
1991, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (18) 159-170
The Illinois Department of Nuclear Safety has characterized the Martinsville Alternative Site (MAS) for a proposed low-level radioactive waste disposal facility. The MAS is located in east-central Illinois approximately 1.6 km (1 mi) north of the city of Martinsville. Geologic investigation of the 5.5-km2 (1380-acre) site revealed a sequence of...
Neogene biostratigraphy and paleoenvironments of Enewetak Atoll, equatorial Pacific Ocean
T. M. Cronin, L.M. Bybell, E. M. Brouwers, T. G. Gibson, R. Margerum, R.Z. Poore
1991, Marine Micropaleontology (18) 101-114
Micropaleontologic analyses of Neogene sediments from Enewetak Atoll, Marshall Islands, provide data on the age of lagoonal deposits, stratigraphic disconformities and the paleoenvironmental and subsidence history of the atoll. Benthic foraminifers, planktic foraminifers, calcareous nannofossils and ostracodes were studied from six boreholes, the deepest penetrating 1605 feet below the lagoon...
Importance of geologic characterization of potential low-level radioactive waste disposal sites
C.P. Weibel, R. C. Berg
1991, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (18) 209-214
Using the example of the Geff Alternative Site in Wayne County, Illinois, for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste, this paper demonstrates, from a policy and public opinion perspective, the importance of accurately determining site stratigraphy. Complete and accurate characterization of geologic materials and determination of site stratigraphy at potential...
Chaparral & fire ecology: role of fire in seed germination
N.L.C. Steele, Jon E. Keeley
1991, American Biology Teacher (53) 432-435
No abstract available at this time...
Geochemistry of dissolved inorganic carbon in a Coastal Plain aquifer. 1. Sulfate from confining beds as an oxidant in microbial CO2 production
F. H. Chapelle, P.B. McMahon
1991, Journal of Hydrology (127) 85-108
A primary source of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the Black Creek aquifer of South Carolina is carbon dioxide produced by microbially mediated oxidation of sedimentary organic matter. Groundwater chemistry data indicate, however, that the available mass of inorganic electron acceptors (oxygen, Fe(III),...
Late Cretaceous paleomagnetism of the Tucson Mountains: Implications for vertical axis rotations in south central Arizona
J.T. Hagstrum, P. W. Lipman
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research (96) 16069-16081
The Tucson Mountains of southern Arizona are the site of an Upper Cretaceous caldera from which the rhyolitic Cat Mountain Tuff was erupted at about 72 Ma. Two magnetic units within the Cat Mountain Tuff are distinguished by paleomagnetic data in both the northern and...
Cretaceous-Eocene (Laramide) landscape development and Oligocene- Pliocene drainage reorganization of transition zone and Colorado Plateau, Arizona
D. P. Elston, R.A. Young
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research (96) 12389-12406
Landscape development of central and northern Arizona can no longer be ascribed mainly to events of Miocene and Pliocene age. New information on the age and distribution of older Cenozoic deposits has led to the recognition of a regional Cretaceous-Paleocene(?) surface of erosion that conforms...
Low intensity of the geomagnetic field in early Jurassic time
M. Perrin, M. Prevot, E. A. Mankinen
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research (96) 14197-14210
From a large collection of Jurassic continental tholeiites cropping out in Europe and Africa, we selected 90 samples for paleointensity determinations. The samples were carefully selected to avoid any secondary magnetizations, especially viscous magnetization. Use of the Thellier method reveals that magnetic property changes due to...
Comparison of Vibroseis and explosive source methods for deep crustal seismic reflection profiling in the Basin and Range province
T.M. Brocher, P. E. Hart
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research (96) 18197-18213
Direct comparison of low-fold, high-energy explosive and high-fold, lower-energy Vibroseis methods for acquiring deep crustal seismic reflection data in the Basin and Range Province suggests that the high-fold common midpoint (CMP) method there does not provide the best possible image of lower crustal structure. During...
Petrography of Permian “Gondwana” coals from boreholes in northwestern Bangladesh, based on semiautomated reflectance scanning
Neely Bostick, William J. Betterton, Harold J. Gluskoter, Islam M. Nazrul
1991, Organic Geochemistry (17) 399-413
Drilling through Quaternary alluvium and Tertiary cover at low-gravity anomalies in northwestern Bangladesh showed the presence of Permian sedimentary rocks in depressions that may be as much as a thousand meters deep in the crystalline basement. These Permian strata include low-sulfur, high-volatile bituminous coals in beds as thick as 15...
Field-scale investigation of infiltration into a compacted soil liner
Samuel V. Panno, Beverly L. Herzog, Keros Cartwright, Kenneth R. Rehfeldt, Ivan G. Krapac, Bruce R. Hensel
1991, Groundwater (29) 914-921
Little field-scale research has been done to evaluate the effectiveness of compacted soil barriers in retarding the movement of water and leachates. In response to this need, the Illinois State Geological Survey constructed and instrumented an experimental compacted soil liner. Infiltration of water into...
Natural disasters and insurance and reinsurance
G. Berz
1991, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 99-102
Great natural disasters, that is, those exceeding the economic capacity of the affected region and requiring national or international assistance, have increased dramatically in number and scope over the past few decades. As the accompanying graph shows, on average, from the 1960's to the 1980's there has been a five-fold...
Diet of juvenile lake trout in southern Lake Ontario in relation to abundance and size of prey fishes, 1979-1987
Joseph H. Elrod, Robert O’Gorman
1991, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (120) 290-302
We examined the diet of juvenile lake trout Salvelinus namaycush (<450 mm, total length) in Lake Ontario during four sampling periods (April–May, June, July–August, and October 1979–1987) in relation to changes in prey fish abundance in the depth zone where we caught the lake trout. Over all years combined, slimy...
Heavy metal contamination of sediments in the upper connecting channels of the Great Lakes
S. Jerrine Nichols, Bruce A. Manny, Donald W. Schloesser, Thomas A. Edsall
1991, Hydrobiologia (219) 307-315
In 1985, sampling at 250 stations throughout the St. Marys, St. Clair, and Detroit rivers and Lake St. Clair — the connecting channels of the upper Great Lakes — revealed widespread metal contamination of the sediments. Concentrations of cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, mercury, nickel, and zinc each exceeded U.S. Environmental...
Growth and survival of stocked lake trout with nuclear cataracts in Lake Ontario
Harold L. Kincaid, Joseph H. Elrod
1991, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (11) 429-434
Four strains of yearling lake trout Salvelinus namaycush from the 1985 and 1986 year-classes at the Allegheny National Fish Hatchery were evaluated for nuclear cataracts prior to stocking in Lake Ontario in June 1986 and 1987. Lake trout recaptured by bottom trawling from April to August 1987 and 1988 were examined for...
Distribution, abundance, and biology of the alewife in U.S. waters of Lake Superior
Charles R. Bronte, James H. Selgeby, Gary L. Curtis
1991, Journal of Great Lakes Research (17) 304-313
Alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus) were first reported in Lake Superior in 1954 and gradually increased in abundance in the late 1950s. In the 1960s and early 1970s, the fish were widespread in the lake but scarce. We determined the more recent abundance and distribution of alewives by cross-contour trawling in the...
Heavy metals in aquatic macrophytes drifting in a large river
Bruce A. Manny, Susan J. Nichols, Donald W. Schloesser
1991, Hydrobiologia (219) 333-344
Macrophytes drifting throughout the water column in the Detroit River were collected monthly from May to October 1985 to estimate the quantities of heavy metals being transported to Lake Erie by the plants. Most macrophytes (80–92% by weight) drifted at the water surface. Live submersed macrophytes made up the bulk...
Changes in the nearshore and offshore zooplankton communities in Lake Ontario: 1981-88
Ora E. Johannsson, Edward L. Mills, Robert O’Gorman
1991, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (48) 1546-1557
We examined trends and factors influencing changes in nearshore and offshore zooplankton abundance and composition in Lake Ontario between 1981 and 1988. In the nearshore (southshore and eastern basin), zooplankton abundance decreased and shifts occurred in the relative abundances of Bosmina longirostris and Daphnia retrocurva (eastern basin) and Daphnia retrocurva...
Effect of environment on reproduction and growth of Mysis relicta
Alfred M. Beeton, John E. Gannon
1991, American Fisheries Society Symposium (9) 144-148
Published and unpublished data were examined to determine whether the time to first reproduction, brood size, and growth rate of Mysis relicta are related to environmental conditions. Time to first reproduction ranged from 1 year in eutrophic lakes to 4 years in a ultraoligotrophic lake. Mysids in nutrient-rich lakes may...