Use of dust storm observations on satellite images to identify areas vulnerable to severe wind erosion
C. S. Breed, J.F. McCauley
1986, Climatic Change (9) 243-258
Blowing dust is symptomatic of severe wind erosion and deterioration of soils in areas undergoing dessication and/or devegetation. Dust plumes on satellite images can commonly be traced to sources in marginally arable semiarid areas where protective lag gravels or vegetation have been removed and soils are dry, as demonstrated for...
Phase relations in the CuVS system
D. Wu, L.L.Y. Chang, C.R. Knowles
1986, Journal of the Less-Common Metals (115) 243-251
Phase relations in the system Cu-V-S were studied by using a sealedcapsule technique, reflected-light microscopy, X-ray powder diffraction and electron microprobe analysis. In the temperature range between 300 and 900 ??C, six vanadium sulfides exist in the V-S system. These are VS, V7S8, V3S4, V5S8, V3S5 and VS4. In the...
HOLOCENE AND LATE PLEISTOCENE(? ) EARTHQUAKE-INDUCED SAND BLOWS IN COASTAL SOUTH CAROLINA.
S. F. Obermeier, R. B. Jacobson, D.S. Powars, R.E. Weems, D.C. Hallbick, G. S. Gohn, H. W. Markewich
1986, Conference Paper
Multiple generations of prehistoric sand blows, interpreted as earthquake induced, have been discovered throughout coastal South Carolina. These sand blows extend far beyond 1886 earthquake induced sand blows, in sediments having approximately the same liquefaction susceptibility. The seismic source zone for the prehistoric sand blows is unknown. The different distributions...
A case study of soil gases as an exploration guide in glaciated terrain: Crandon massive sulfide deposit, Wisconsin
J. Howard McCarthy, R. N. Lambe, John A. Dietrich
1986, Economic Geology (81) 408-420
The Crandon massive sulfide deposit is covered by as much as 65 m of glacial drift. Soil gas was sampled at a depth of 0.5 m along several traverses over the deposit. Gases showing anomalies that correlate with the underlying deposit include CO 2 , CH 4 , and O 2 . CO 2 and CH 4 show positive anomalies...
A new model for humic materials and their interactions with hydrophobic organic chemicals in soil-water or sediment-water systems
R.L. Wershaw
1986, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (1) 29-45
A generalized model of humic materials in soils and sediments, which is consistent with their observed properties, is presented. This model provides a means of understanding the interaction of hydrophobic pollutants with humic materials. In this model, it is proposed that the humic materials in soils and sediments consist of...
Beatty, Nevada: A section in U.S. Geological Survey research in radioactive waste disposal - Fiscal years 1983, 1984, and 1985 (WRI 87-4009)
Jeffrey M. Fischer, William D. Nichols
G.A. Dinwiddie, N.J. Trask, editor(s)
1986, Report, U.S. Geological Survey research in radioactive waste disposal - Fiscal years 1983, 1984, and 1985 (WRI 87-4009)
A commercial low-level radioactive-waste disposal site has been operating near Beatty, Nevada, about 150 km northwest of Las Vegas, since 1962. The 32-ha site is situated in a desolate region of the Amargosa River Valley, sometimes referred to as the Amargosa Desert. Average annual precipitation is only about 114 mm....
SIMULATION OF FLOOD HYDROGRAPHS FOR GEORGIA STREAMS.
E. J. Inman, J.T. Armbruster
1986, Transportation Research Record 15-23
Flood hydrographs are needed for the design of many highway drainage structures and embankments. A method for simulating these flood hydrographs at urban and rural ungauged sites in Georgia is presented. The O'Donnell method was used to compute unit hydrographs from 355 flood events from 80 stations. An average unit...
Selective chemical dissolution of sulfides: An evaluation of six methods applicable to assaying sulfide-bound nickel
P.R. Klock, G.K. Czamanske, M. Foose, J. Pesek
1986, Chemical Geology (54) 157-162
Six analytical techniques for the selective chemical dissolution of sulfides are compared with the purpose of defining the best method for accurately determining the concentration of sulfide-bound nickel. Synthesized sulfide phases of known elemental content, mixed with well-analyzed silicates, were used to determine the relative and absolute efficiency, based on...
Manganese biogeochemistry in a small Adirondack forested lake watershed
James B. Shanley
1986, Water Resources Research (22) 1647-1656
In September and October 1981, manganese (Mn) concentrations and pH were intensively monitored in a small forested lake watershed in the west-central Adirondack Mountains, New York, during two large acidic storms (each ∼5 cm rainfall, pH 4.61 and 4.15). The data were evaluated to identify biogeochemical pathways of Mn and to assess...
Isotopic constraints on the origin of the Atlantis II, Suakin and Valdivia brines, Red Sea
R.A. Zierenberg, Wayne C. Shanks III
1986, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (50) 2205-2214
The origin of three Red Sea submarine brine pools was investigated by analysis of the S and O isotope ratios of dissolved sulfate and Sr isotope ratios of dissolved Sr in the brines. Sulfur and O isotope ratios of sulfate and Sr isotope ratios of evaporitic source rocks for the...
Fumarole emissions at Mount St. Helens volcano, June 1980 to October 1981: Degassing of a magma-hydrothermal system
T.M. Gerlach, T. J. Casadevall
1986, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (28) 141-160
This study is an investigation of the chemical changes in the Mount St. Helens fumarole gases up to October 1981, the sources of the fumarole gases, and the stability of gas species in the shallow magma system. These problems are investigated by calculations of element compositions, thermodynamic equilibria, and magmatic...
Suspended sediment transport in an estuarine tidal channel within San Francisco Bay, California
R.W. Sternberg, D.A. Cacchione, D.E. Drake, K. Kranck
1986, Marine Geology (71) 237-258
A recently developed instrumentation system has been used to monitor simultaneously flow conditions and suspended sediment distribution in the bottom boundary layer of a tidal channel within San Francisco Bay, California. Measurements were made every 15 min over six successive flood and ebb tidal cycles. They included mean velocity profiles...
Optical reflection from planetary surfaces as an operator-eigenvalue problem
R.L. Wildey
1986, Earth, Moon and Planets (36) 103-116
The understanding of quantum mechanical phenomena has come to rely heavily on theory framed in terms of operators and their eigenvalue equations. This paper investigates the utility of that technique as related to the reciprocity principle in diffuse reflection. The reciprocity operator is shown to be unitary and Hermitian; hence,...
RECOVERY OF FRESHWATER STORED IN SALINE AQUIFERS IN PENINSULAR FLORIDA.
Michael L. Merritt
1986, Conference Paper
Subsurface freshwater storage has been operationally tested at seven sites in central and south Florida. Injection was into a high chloride water aquifer at six sites, and into a high sulfate water aquifer at the seventh. Recovery efficiency has ranged from 0 to 75 percent in high chloride water aquifers,...
Isotopic variation in the Tuolumne Intrusive Suite, central Sierra Nevada, California
R. W. Kistler, B. W. Chappell, D. L. Peck, P. C. Bateman
1986, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (94) 205-220
Granitoid rocks of the compositionally zoned Late Cretaceous Toulumne Intrusive Suite in the central Sierra Nevada, California, have initial87Sr/86Sr values (Sri) and143Nd/144Nd values (Ndi) that vary from 0.7057 to 0.7067 and from 0.51239 to 0.51211 respectively. The observed variation of both Sri and Ndi and of chemical composition in rocks...
Deformation of poorly consolidated sediment during shallow emplacement of a basalt sill, Coso Range, California
W. A. Duffield, C. R. Bacon, P.T. Delaney
1986, Bulletin of Volcanology (48) 97-107
A 150-m-long, wedge-shaped unit of folded and faulted marly siltstone crops out between undeformed sedimentary rocks on the north flank of the Coso Range, California. The several-meter-thick blunt end of this wedge abuts the north margin of a basaltic sill of comparable thickness. Chaotically deformed siltstone crops out locally at...
A paleomagnetic and stable isotope study of the pluton at Rio Hondo near Questa, New Mexico: Implications for CRM related to hydrothermal alteration
J.T. Hagstrum, C.M. Johnson
1986, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (78) 296-314
Paleomagnetic and rock magnetic data combined with stable isotope data from the middle Tertiary pluton along the Rio Hondo in northern New Mexico suggest that its magnetic remanence has both thermal (TRM) and high-temperature chemical (CRM) components. Oxygen isotope temperatures indicate...
Repetitive digital NOAA-AVHRR data for Alaskan engineering and scientific applications
William M. Christie, Robert J. Pawlowski, Michael D. Fleming
1986, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Society of Photogrammetry, Fall Technical Meeting
Selected digitally enhanced NOAA - Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) images taken by the NOAA 6, 7, 8 and 9 Polar Orbiting Satellites demonstrate the capability and application of repetitive low-resolution satellite data to Alaska's engineering and science community. Selected cloud-free visible and thermal infrared images are enhanced to...
Effects of the 1906 Earthquake on the Bald Hill Outlet System, San Mateo County, California
Earl H. Pampeyan
1986, Bulletin of the Association of Engineering Geologists (23) 197-208
Following the earthquake of April 18, 1906, it was discovered that a brick forebay and other parts of the reservoir outlet system were in the slip zone of the San Andreas fault. The original outlet through which water was directed to San Francisco consisted of two tunnels joined at the...
Correlation between electron spin resonance spectra and oil yield in eastern oil shales
M. Choudhury, K.F. Rheams, J.W. Harrell Jr.
1986, Fuel (65) 1028-1029
Organic free radical spin concentrations were measured in 60 raw oil shale samples from north Alabama and south Tennessee and compared with Fischer assays and uranium concentrations. No correlation was found between spin concentration and oil yield for the complete set of samples. However, for a 13 sample set taken...
Origin of late Archean granite: geochemical evidence from the Vermilion Granitic Complex of northern Minnesota
W. C. Day, P.W. Weiblen
1986, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (93) 283-296
The 2,700-Ma Vermilion Granitic Complex of northern Minnesota is a granite-migmatite terrane composed of supracrustal metasedimentary rocks, mafic rocks, tonalitic and granodioritic plutonic rocks, and granite. The metasedimentary rocks are predominantly graywacke, which has been regionally metamorphosed to garnet-sillimanite-muscovite-bearing biotite schist, and has locally undergone anatexis. The mafic rocks form...
Organic metamorphism in the Lower Mississippian-Upper Devonian Bakken shales. Part 1: Rock-Eval pyrolysis and vitrinite reflectance
L.C. Price, T. Daws, M. Pawlewicz
1986, Journal of Petroleum Geology (9) 125-162
Detailed organic geochemistry has been performed on a large number of Lower Mississippian-Upper Devonian Bakken shales from the North Dakota portion of the Williston Basin, and 28 oils mainly from Mississippian Madison Group rocks from different basinal areas. Here we report results of Rock-Eval pyrolysis and vitrinite reflectance (Ro) analyses....
Aqueous dissolution, solubilities and thermodynamic stabilities of common aluminosilicate clay minerals: Kaolinite and smectites
Howard M. May, D.G. Klnniburgh, P.A. Helmke, Melanie L. Jackson
1986, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (50) 1667-1677
Determinations of the aqueous solubilities of kaolinite at pH 4, and of five smectite minerals in suspensions set between pH 5 and 8, were undertaken with mineral suspensions adjusted to approach equilibrium from over- and undersaturation. After 1,237 days, Dry Branch, Georgia kaolinite...
A soil catena on schist in northwestern California
D. C. Marron, J.H. Popenoe
1986, Geoderma (37) 307-324
Soil characteristics in a small steepland watershed underlain by schist in a rainy, tectonically active area in northwestern California show close associations with drainage-basin position and slope characteristics. Five soil-topography units based on these associations are defined in the study watershed. Spatial relationships of soil series, and patterns of soil...
The initial giant umbrella cloud of the May 18th, 1980, explosive eruption of Mount St. Helens
R. S. J. Sparks, J.G. Moore, C.J. Rice
1986, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (28) 257-274
The initial eruption column of May 18th, 1980 reached nearly 30 km altitude and released 1017 joules of thermal energy into the atmosphere in only a few minutes. Ascent of the cloud resulted in forced intrusion of a giant umbrella-shaped cloud between altitudes of 10 and 20 km at radial...