Role of geophysics in identifying and characterizing sites for high-level nuclear waste repositories.
J. C. Wynn, E.H. Roseboom
1987, Journal of Geophysical Research (92) 7787-7796
Evaluation of potential high-level nuclear waste repository sites is an area where geophysical capabilities and limitations may significantly impact a major governmental program. Since there is concern that extensive exploratory drilling might degrade most potential disposal sites, geophysical methods become crucial as the only nondestructive means to examine large volumes...
SEAFLOOR EXPLORATION AND CHARACTERIZATION: PREREQUISITE TO OCEAN SPACE UTILIZATION.
Gary Hill, Millington Lockwood
1987, Conference Paper, Oceans Conference Record (IEEE)
A historical survey of US bathymetric mapping is presented up through the major mapping project begun in response to the 1983, establishment of an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), 200 nautical miles seaward. The EEZ extends sovereign rights for the purposes of exploring, exploiting, conserving, and managing natural resources in the...
Influence of ore type and milling process on 222Rn emanation coefficients of U mill tailings
E. R. Landa
1987, Health Physics (53) 679-683
[No abstract available]...
The crustal structure of the axis of the Great Valley, California, from seismic refraction measurements
W.S. Holbrook, Walter D. Mooney
1987, Tectonophysics (140) 49-63
In 1982 the U.S. Geological Survey collected six seismic refraction profiles in the Great Valley of California: three axial profiles with a maximum shot-to-receiver offset of 160 km, and three shorter profiles perpendicular to the valley axis. This paper presents the results of two-dimensional raytracing and synthetic seismogram modeling of...
Volcanic hazards from Bezymianny- and Bandai-type eruptions
Lee Siebert, H. Glicken, T. Ui
1987, Bulletin of Volcanology (49) 435-459
Major slope failures are a significant degradational process at volcanoes. Slope failures and associated explosive eruptions have resulted in more than 20 000 fatalities in the past 400 years; the historic record provides evidence for at least six of these events in the past century. Several historic debris avalanches exceed...
Tidal and tidally averaged circulation characteristics of Suisun Bay, California
Lawrence H. Smith, Ralph T. Cheng
1987, Water Resources Research (23) 143-155
Availability of extensive field data permitted realistic calibration and validation of a hydrodynamic model of tidal circulation and salt transport for Suisun Bay, California. Suisun Bay is a partially mixed embayment of northern San Francisco Bay located just seaward of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. The model employs a...
Cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc determination in precipitation: A comparison of inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry and graphite furnace atomization atomic absorption spectrometry
M.M. Reddy, M.A. Benefiel, H.C. Claassen
1987, Mikrochimica Acta (88) 159-170
Selected trace element analysis for cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc in precipitation samples by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission Spectrometry (ICP) and by atomic absorption spectrometry with graphite furnace atomization (AAGF) have been evaluated. This task was conducted in conjunction with a longterm study of precipitation chemistry at high altitude...
Coupled vibrations of rectangular buildings subjected to normally-incident random wind loads
E. Safak, D.A. Foutch
1987, Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial Aerodynamics (26) 129-148
A method for analyzing the three-directional coupled dynamic response of wind-excited buildings is presented. The method is based on a random vibration concept and is parallel to those currently used for analyzing alongwind response. Only the buildings with rectangular cross-section and normally-incident wind are considered. The alongwind pressures and...
The U.S. Midcontinent: a new frontier for mineral exploration.
W. P. Pratt, P.K. Sims
1987, Episodes (10) 303-307
The north-central US Midcontinent is underlain by a considerable thickness of sedimentary rocks, mostly Paleozoic, which lie upon a heterogeneous basement of Precambrian granitoid and metamorphic rocks. This article describes a representative sample of Midcontinent geology and explains why the authors believe this region is a 'new frontier' for mineral...
Sulfur and lead isotope studies of stratiform Zn-Pb-Ag deposits, Anvil Range, Yukon: Basinal brine exhalation and anoxic bottom-water mixing (Canada)
Wayne C. Shanks III, L. G. Woodruff, G.A. Jilson, D.S. Jennings, J.S. Modene, B.D. Ryan
1987, Economic Geology (82) 600-634
Five stratiform Zn-Pb-Ag deposits are known in Early Cambrian metapelitic rocks along a curvilinear trend in the Anvil Range, central Yukon. The Anvil Range deposits occur along the southwestern boundary of the Selwyn basin in the stratigraphic transition zone between metapelites of the Mt. Mye unit and calcareous phyllites of...
BOREHOLE NEUTRON ACTIVATION: THE RARE EARTHS.
J.L. Mikesell, F. E. Senftle
1987, IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science (35)
Neutron-induced borehole gamma-ray spectroscopy has been widely used as a geophysical exploration technique by the petroleum industry, but its use for mineral exploration is not as common. Nuclear methods can be applied to mineral exploration, for determining stratigraphy and bed correlations, for mapping ore deposits, and for studying mineral concentration...
NEARSHORE SAND SOURCES FOR AMERICAN SAMOA: AN ALTERNATIVE TO USING BEACH SAND.
John R. Dingler, Thomas E. Reiss
1987, Conference Paper
Using a combination of geophysical techniques, in situ observations, and sampling by scuba divers, we investigated along the south shore of Tutuila Island, American Samoa, for nearshore sand deposits. To minimize the impact of future sand dredging on the island's littoral sediments, the search took place in a narrow zone...
Unusual bed forms on the North Aleutian Shelf, Bristol Bay, Alaska
W. C. Schwab, B. F. Molnia
1987, Geo-Marine Letters (7) 207-215
Side-scan sonar records collected over an area of the North Aleutian Shelf, approximately 250 km west of the head of Bristol Bay, Alaska, identified widespread evidence of active sea floor erosion processes, including sediment transport. Thousands of sea floor depressions, many linear and some containing rippled floors, were identified in...
Reflections from midcrustal rocks within the Mesozoic subduction complex near the eastern Aleutian Trench
M. A. Fisher, Roland E. von Huene, G.L. Smith
1987, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (92) 7907-7915
Seismic reflection data collected in 1973 by Western Geophysical Company show that highly reflective rocks make up the midcrust of the convergent margin adjacent to the eastern Aleutian Trench. These rocks form an arch that strikes obliquely across the strongly expressed northeast-southwest structural grain of exposed Mesozoic rocks. In an...
Stress rotation during the Coalinga aftershock sequence
A.J. Michael
1987, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (92) 7963-7979
This study considers spatial and temporal changes of the stress regime during the 1983 Coalinga aftershock sequence. In both cases the observed changes manifest themselves as rotations of the most compressive stress axis. Inversion of 165 M≥3 aftershocks shows that in the southern aftershock zone the azimuth of the most compressional...
The periodic structure of the natural record, and nonlinear dynamics
H. R. Shaw
1987, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (68) 1651-1661
Concepts of cyclicity in geology have involved many famous protagonists in the history of Earth sciences. Early in this century, sophisticated theories of terrestrial rhythms had been formulated by such pioneers as T. C. Chamberlin [1909], R. T. ,Chamberlin [1914], Barrell [1917], Stille [1924], Joly [1925, 1930], Holmes [1926], Lull [1929], Schuchert [1932], Grabau [1940], and Umbgrove [1939a,b, 1947] (see the review...
Integration of channel and floodplain suites. I. Developmental sequence and lateral relations of alluvial paleosols.
T. M. Bown, M. J. Kraus
1987, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology (57) 587-601
The lower Eocene Willwood Formation of the Bighorn Basin, northwest Wyoming, consists of about 770 m of alluvial rocks that exhibit extensive mechanical and geochemical modifications resulting from Eocene pedogenesis. Willwood paleosols vary considerably in their relative degrees of maturity; maturity is defined...
Marine and nonmarine gas-bearing rocks in Upper Cretaceous Blackhawk and Neslen Formations, eastern Uinta Basin, Utah: Sedimentology, diagenesis, and source rock potential
Janet K. Pitman, Karen J. Franczyk, Donald E. Anders
1987, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (71) 76-94
The Upper Cretaceous Blackhawk and Neslen Formations in the eastern Uinta basin contain large amounts of thermogenic gas that was generated from interbedded humic-rich source rocks. The geometry and distribution of hydrocarbon source and reservoir rocks are controlled by depositional environment. The Blackhawk, composed of laterally extensive sandstone and locally...
Limitations of determining density or magnetic boundaries from the horizontal gradient of gravity or pseudogravity data
V. J. S. Grauch, L. Cordell
1987, Geophysics (52) 118-121
The horizontal-gradient method has been used since 1982 to locate density or magnetic boundaries from gravity data (Cordell, 1979) or pseudogravity data (Cordell and Grauch, 1985). The method is based on the principle that a near-vertical, fault-like boundary produces a gravity anomaly whose horizontal gradient is largest directly over the...
ESTIMATING LOW-FLOW FREQUENCIES OF UNGAGED STREAMS IN NEW ENGLAND.
S. William Wandle Jr.
1987, Conference Paper
Equations to estimate low flows were developed using multiple-regression analysis with a sample of 48 river basins, which were selected from the U. S. Geological Survey's network of gaged river basins in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont, and southwestern Maine. Low-flow characteristics are represented by the 7Q2 and 7Q10...
Volcanism and massive sulfide formation at a sedimented spreading center, Escanaba Trough, Gorda Ridge, northeast Pacific
J. L. Morton, M.L. Holmes, R.A. Koski
1987, Geophysical Research Letters (14) 769-772
Seismic-reflection profiles over the sediment-filled Escanaba Trough at the southern Gorda Ridge reveal a series of volcanic centers that pierce the sediment. The volcanic edifices are 3 to 6 km in diameter and are spaced at 15 to 20 km intervals along the axis of the...
Heat transport by fluids during late Cretaceous regional metamorphism in the Big Maria Mountains, southeastern California
T.D. Hoisch
1987, Geological Society of America Bulletin (98) 549-553
The Big Maria Mountains of southeastern California comprise a Late Cretaceous regional metamorphic terrain involving Paleozoic cratonal sediments. Siliceous limestone of the upper Paleozoic Supai Formation has reacted to form massive wollastonite, requiring an enormous fluid flux. The minimum volume ratio of fluid:rock that is necessary to explain the formation...
Tourmaline (dravite) from the Boehls Butte anorthosite, Idaho, U.S.A.
Anna Hietanen
1987, Geological Society of Finland, Bulletin (59) 91-95
Tourmaline (dravite) from a layered two-plagioclase anorthosite in the Boehls Butte quadrangle, Idaho, has the following structural formula: (Na0.55Ca0.17)0.72(Mg1.96Fe0.57Mn0.01Ti0.04V0.03Al0.47)3.08Al6(BO3)3.02Si5.98O18(OH,F)3.35. The indices of refraction are ω = 1.647(1) and ε = 1.621(1), and the unit cell parameters are a = 15.9425(6) and c = 7.1883(3)....
Heat capacity measurements for cryolite (Na3AlF6) and reactions in the system NaFeAlSiOF
Lawrence M. Anovitz, B. S. Hemingway, E.F. Westrum Jr., G.W. Metz, E.J. Essene
1987, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (51) 3087-3103
The heat capacity of cryolite (Na3AlF6) has been measured from 7 to 1000 K by low-temperature adiabatic and high-temperature differential scanning calorimetry. Low-temperature data were obtained on material from the same hand specimen in the calorimetric laboratories of the University of Michigan and U.S. Geological Survey. The results obtained are...
Sediment-yield history of a small basin in southern Utah, 1937-1976: Implications for land management and geomorphology
R. Hereford
1987, Geology (15) 954-957
Alluvium deposited in a reservoir from 1937 to 1976 records the sediment-yield history of a small (2.8 km2), high-relief basin in semiarid southern Utah. Stratification in the alluvium shows that sediment was deposited in the reservoir only 21 times in 38 yr, a...