A method for estimating ground-water return flow to the lower Colorado River in the Yuma area, Arizona and California
Omar J. Loeltz, S. A. Leake
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4220
No abstract available....
Impact of changes in land use on the ground-water system in the Sequim-Dungeness Peninsula, Clallam County, Washington
B. W. Drost
1983, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4094
A digital-computer model was developed to simulate three-dimensional ground-water flow in aquifers underlying the Sequim-Dungeness peninsula, Clallam County, Washington. Analysis using the model shows that leakage from irrigation ditches is the area 's most important source of ground-water recharge. Termination of the irrigation system would lead to lower heads throughout...
Sea-floor-mounted rotating side-scan sonar for making time-lapse sonographs
David M. Rubin, David S. McCulloch, Harry R. Hill
1983, Continental Shelf Research (1) 295-301
A rotating side-scan sonar system was designed to make time-lapse sonographs of a circular area of the sea floor. To construct the system, the transducers of a commercial side-scan system (frequency 105 kHz; pulse length 0.1 ms; horizontal beam width 1°; vertical beam width 20°; beam depressed 10° with respect...
Sedimentology of Southwestern Roads region, U.S. Virgin Islands: origin and rate of sediment accumulation
Jack L. Kindinger, Ronald J. Miller, Charles W. Holmes
1983, Journal of Sedimentary Research (53) 439-447
Sand deposits on southern insular shelf of St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, were investigated to determine their origin, environmental processes and accumulation rates. Sea-floor samples show that the sand has been derived (in situ) mainly from calcareous algae and molluscs. Zonation of the dominant sand producers is related to the...
Talc in the suspended matter of the northwestern Atlantic
Lawrence J. Poppe, John C. Hathaway, Carol M. Parmenter
1983, Clays and Clay Minerals (31) 60-64
Knowledge of the distribution, concentration, and composition of suspended particulate matter in seawater is important to the understanding of sedimentation processes on the Continental Shelf. Because the surfaces of both organic and inorganic particles have high affinities for pollutants, such as certain trace metals, chlorinated hydrocarbons, and petroleum (Bothner et...
Furrowed outcrops of Eocene chalk on the lower continental slop offshore New Jersey
James M. Robb, John R. Kirby, John C. Hampson, Patricia R. Gibson, Barbara Hecker
1983, Geology (11) 182-186
A sea bottom of middle Eocene calcareous claystone cut by downslope-trending furrows was observed during an Alvin dive to the mouth of Berkeley Canyon on the continental slope off New Jersey. The furrows are 10 to 50 m apart, 4 to 13 m deep, linear, and nearly parallel in water depths of...
Variation in survival and recovery rates of ring-necked ducks
Michael J. Conroy, Robert T. Eberhardt
1983, Journal of Wildlife Management (47) 127-137
Band recovery data were used to examine sex-specific, geographic, and temporal variations in survival and recovery rates of ring-necked ducks (Aythya collaris). Survival rates were higher (P < 0.05) for males than for females in the preseason-banded sample and in 2 of 3 postseason samples; recovery rates were higher (P...
High-porosity Cenozoic carbonate rocks of South Florida: Progressive loss of porosity with depth
Robert B. Halley, James W. Schmoker
1983, AAPG Bulletin (67) 191-200
Porosity measurements by borehole gravity meter in subsurface Cenozoic carbonates of south Florida reveal an extremely porous mass of limestone and dolomite which is transitional in total pore volume between typical porosity values for modern carbonate sediments and ancient carbonate rocks. A persistent decrease of porosity with depth, similar to...
delta18O variations in the Halimeda of Virgin Islands sands: evidence of cool water in the northeast Caribbean, late Holocene
Charles W. Holmes
1983, Journal of Sedimentary Research (53) 429-438
Halimeda segments from carbonate sands on the Virgin Islands platform have delta 18 O versus PDB isotopic values ranging from -0.3% to -1.3% (x = -0.9%). Modern Halimeda segments from the same area have a measured delta18 O ranging from -2.0% to -2.5% PDB (x = -2.15%), and the carbonate skeleton appears to...
Comparison of rapid methods for chemical analysis of milligram samples of ultrafine clays
S.L. Rettig, J.W. Marinenko, Hani N. Khoury, B.F. Jones
1983, Clays and Clay Minerals (31) 440-446
Two rapid methods for the decomposition and chemical analysis of clays were adapted for use with 20–40-mg size samples, typical amounts of ultrafine products (≤0.5-µm diameter) obtained by modern separation methods for clay minerals. The results of these methods were compared with those of “classical” rock analyses. The two methods...
Water quality and the rotifer populations in the Atchafalaya River Basin, Louisiana
L. E. Holland, C.F. Bryan, J.P. Newman Jr.
1983, Hydrobiologia (98) 55-69
We compiled distributional and ecological information on the class Rotifera from both flood controlled and uncontrolled reaches of the Atchafalaya River Basin, a large river-swamp in the south-central United States. In the minimally altered lower basin a variety of aquatic habitats within a small area resulted...
Present and former equilibrium-line altitudes near Mount Everest, Nepal and Tibet
V. S. Williams
1983, Arctic and Alpine Research (15) 201-211
New information on equilibrium-line altitudes (ELAs) of present and former glaciers in the Mount Everest area of eastern Nepal and southern Tibet has been derived from field mapping and interpretation of topographic maps and Landsat imagery. Present ELAs rise from south to north across the Himalayan Range from 5200 to...
Phase relations in the system NaCl-KCl-H2O II: Differential thermal analysis of the halite liquidus in the NaCl-H2O binary above 450°c
W.D. Gunter, I.-M. Chou, Sven Girsperger
1983, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (47) 863-873
Thermal analysis of the halite liquidus in the system NaCl-H2O has been conducted for NaCl mole fractions (XNaCl) greater than 0.25 (i.e., > 50 wt. % NaCl) at pressures between 0.3 and 4.1 kb and temperatures greater than 450°C. The position of the liquidus was located by differential thermal...
Terpenoid marker compounds derived from biogenic precursors in volcanic ash from Mount St. Helens, Washington
W. E. Pereira, Colleen E. Rostad
1983, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (47) 2287-2291
A volcanic-ash sample obtained after the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington, was analyzed for cyclic terpenoid organic compounds and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons using capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-computer techniques. Various tricyclic diterpenoid acids and hydrocarbons were identified including dehydroabietic acid, dehydroabietin, dehydroabietane, simonellite, and retene. Preliminary evidence indicates that...
Methanogenesis of phenolic compounds by a bacterial consortium from a contaminated aquifer in St. Louis Park, Minnesota
E.M. Godsy, D.F. Goerlitz, G. G. Ehrlich
1983, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (30) 261-268
No abstract available....
Trends in Engineering Geologic and Related Mapping 1972–1983
David J. Varnes, Jeffrey R. Keaton
1983, Bulletin of the Association of Engineering Geologists (21) 255-267
Progress is reviewed that has been made during the period 1972-1982 in producing medium- and small-scale engineering geologic maps with a variety of content. Improved methods to obtain and present information are evolving. Standards concerning text and map content, soil and rock classification, and map symbols have been proposed. Application...
A procedure to estimate the parent population of the size of oil and gas fields as revealed by a study of economic truncation
J.H. Schuenemeyer, L.J. Drew
1983, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (15) 145-161
An estimation technique has been derived to predict the number of small fields in a geologic play or basin. Historically, many small oil and gas fields went unreported because they were not economical. This led to an underestimation of the number of undiscovered small fields. A study of the distributions...
Site 534: Blake-Bahama Basin
Shipboard Scientific Party
1983, Book chapter, Initial reports of the deep sea drilling project
No abstract available....
Crustal structure beneath the southern Appalachians: Nonuniqueness of gravity modeling
Deborah R. Hutchinson, John A. Grow, Kim D. Klitgord
1983, Geology (11) 611-615
Gravity models computed for a profile across the long-wavelength paired negative-positive Bouguer anomalies of the southern Appalachian Mountains show that the large negative anomaly can be explained by a crustal root zone, whereas the steep gradient and positive anomaly east of the root may be explained equally well by three...
Response: Uranium series ages of the Del Mar Man and Sunnyvale skeletons
James L. Bischoff, Robert J. Rosenbauer
1983, Science (217) 576
No abstract available....
A Canada goose project in Connecticut
Kathryn A. Converse
1983, The Connecticut Warbler (1) 36-38
It wasn't so long ago that the wild cries of Canada geese overhead were enough to draw most people out of their homes to look skyward. It was a rare sound heard only in the spring and fall when migrating flocks of these magnificent birds marked the change of the...
Assessment of water quality in canals of eastern Broward County, Florida, 1969-74
Bradley G. Waller, Wesley L. Miller
1982, Water-Resources Investigations Report 82-3
An intensive water-quality monitoring program was started in 1969 to determine the effects of man-induced contaminants on the water quality in the primary canal system of eastern Broward County, Florida. This report covers the first 6 years of the program and provides a data base that can be used to...
Effects of land use on ground-water quality in the East Everglades, Dade County, Florida
B.G. Waller
1982, Water-Resources Investigations Report 82-4093
Groundwater quality characteristics of the Biscayne aquifer from September 1978 through June 1979 were determined for seven land use areas within the East Everglades in Dade County, Florida. Four agricultural areas, two low-density residential areas, and Chekika Hammock State Park were investigated. The effects of land use on the groundwater...
Areal extent of a plume of mineralized water from a flowing artesian well in Dade County, Florida
Bradley G. Waller
1982, Water-Resources Investigations Report 82-20
A flowing artesian well that taps the Floridan aquifer at Chekika Hammock State Park is contaminating the overlying Biscayne aquifer with saline water. The plume of mineralized water extends approximately 7 miles southeast of the well and ranges in width from 1 to 2 miles. The areal extent of contamination...
Effects of land use on surface-water quality in the East Everglades, Dade County, Florida
Bradley G. Waller
1982, Water-Resources Investigations Report 81-59
Water-quality characteristics were determined at five developed areas in the East Everglades, Dade County, Florida, during the 1978 wet season (June through October). These areas are designated as: Coopertown; Chekika Hammock State Park; residential area; rock-plowed tomato field; and Cracker Jack Slough agricultural area. Data from the developed areas were...