Reduction of hexavalent chromium in water samples acidified for preservation
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, D.B. Grove
1985, Journal of Environmental Quality (14) 396-399
Reduction of hexavalent chromium, Cr(VI), in water samples, preserved by standard techniques, was investigated. The standard preservation technique for water samples that are to be analyzed for Cr(VI) consists of filtration through a 0.45‐µm membrane, acidification to a pH < 2, and storage in plastic bottles. Batch...
Depositional Relations of Umpqua and Tyee Formations (Eocene), Southwestern Oregon
C. M. Molenaar
1985, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (69) 1217-1229
Studies of the depositional relations of the Umpqua and Tyee Formations (Eocene) in southwestern Oregon indicate a need for reassessing the correlations and currently used terminology. The Umpqua Formation (as herein restricted) consists of as much as 10,000 ft (3,000 m) of mudstone, sandstone, and conglomerate of nonmarine to deep...
Assessment of the fisheries and limnology in Lake F.D. Roosevelt, 1980-1983
T.T. Terrell
1985, Report
No abstract available ...
Bioenergetics of juvenile salmon during the spring outmigration
D.W. Rondorf, M.S. Dutchuk, A.S. Kolok, M.L. Gross
1985, Report
No abstract available ...
Crustal refraction profile of the Long Valley caldera, California, from the January 1983 Mammoth Lakes earthquake swarm
James H. Luetgert, Walter D. Mooney
1985, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (75) 211-221
Seismic-refraction profiles recorded north of Mammoth Lakes, California, using earthquake sources from the January 1983 swarm complement earlier explosion refraction profiles and provide velocity information from deeper in the crust in the area of the Long Valley caldera. Eight earthquakes from a depth range of 4.9 to 8.0 km confirm...
Instability model for recurring large and great earthquakes in southern California
W.D. Stuart
1985, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (122) 793-811
The locked section of the San Andreas fault in southern California has experienced a number of large and great earthquakes in the past, and thus is expected to have more in the future. To estimate the location, time, and slip of the next few earthquakes, an earthquake instability model is...
Development of an effective transport media for juvenile spring Chinook salmon to mitigate stress and improve smolt survival during Columbia River fish hauling operations
Gary Wedemeyer, A. Palmisano, L. Salsbury
1985, Report
No abstract available ...
Professional registration of government engineers
Thomas J. Buchanan
1985, Journal of Professional Issues in Engineering (111) 81-87
Government engineers often are not required to be registered in the state in which they practice, even though their counterparts in the private sector must be registered. Government engineers have a responsibility to safeguard the public health and safety, and must develop in the public a sense of confidence that...
A new look at deep-sea video
H. Chezar, J. Lee
1985, Deep Sea Research Part A, Oceanographic Research Papers (32) 1429-1436
A deep-towed photographic system with completely self-contained recording instrumentation and power can obtain color-video and still-photographic transects along rough terrane without need for a long electrically conducting cable. Both the video- and still-camera systems utilize relatively inexpensive and proven off-the-shelf hardware adapted for deep-water environments. The small instrument frame makes...
Precambrian tholeiitic-dacitic rock-suites and Cambrian ultramafic rocks in the Pennine nappe system of the Alps: Evidence from Sm-Nd isotopes and rare earth elements
P. Stille, M. Tatsumoto
1985, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (89) 184-192
Major element, trace element and Sm-Nd isotope analyses were made of polymetamorphic hornblendefelses, plagioclase amphibolites and banded amphibolites from the Berisal complex in the Simplon area (Italy, Switzerland) to determine their age, origin and genetic relationships. In light of major and rare earth element data, the hornblendefelses are inferred to...
Tidal variation of seismic travel times in a Massachusetts granite quarry
Hsi-Ping Liu, Eugene D. Sembera, Robert E. Westerlund, Jon B. Fletcher, Paul Reasenberg, Duncan C. Agnew
1985, Geophysical Research Letters (12) 243-246
Conflicting results on tidal variation of seismic travel times exist in the literature. With improved methods, we have conducted a seismic survey at a Massachusetts granite quarry. The survey was conducted in the intervals (230d 23h, 231d11h) and (231d22h, 233d10h), 1983 (U.T.) along a 148 m...
Spatial analysis of extension fracture systems: A process modeling approach
C.C. Ferguson
1985, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (17) 403-425
Little consensus exists on how best to analyze natural fracture spacings and their sequences. Field measurements and analyses published in geotechnical literature imply fracture processes radically different from those assumed by theoretical structural geologists. The approach adopted in this paper recognizes that disruption of rock layers by layer-parallel extension results...
The near-source strong-motion accelerograms recorded by an experimental array in Tangshan, China
K. Peng, Lingtian Xie, S. Li, D.M. Boore, W.D. Iwan, T.L. Teng
1985, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (38) 92-109
A joint research project on strong-motion earthquake studies between the People's Republic of China and the United States is in progress. As a part of this project, an experimental strong-motion array, consisting of twelve Kinemetrics PDR-1 Digital Event Recorders, was deployed in the meizoseismal area of the Ms = 7.8...
Error bounds in cascading regressions
M.R. Karlinger, B.M. Troutman
1985, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (17) 287-295
Cascading regressions is a technique for predicting a value of a dependent variable when no paired measurements exist to perform a standard regression analysis. Biases in coefficients of a cascaded-regression line as well as error variance of points about the line are functions of the correlation coefficient between dependent and...
Genetics of sockeye salmon in Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska
R.L. Wilmot, C. V. Burger
1985, Report
No abstract available ...
The Steens Mountain (Oregon) geomagnetic polarity transition, 2. Field intensity variations and discussion of reversal models
M. Prevot, Edward A. Mankinen, Robert S. Coe, C. Sherman Gromme
1985, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (90) 10417-10448
We carried out an extensive paleointensity study of the 15.5±0.3 m.y. Miocene reversed‐to‐normal polarity transition recorded in lava flows from Steens Mountain (south central Oregon). One hundred eighty‐five samples from the collection whose paleodirectional study is reported by Mankinen et al. (this issue) were chosen for paleointensity investigations because of...
The Steens Mountain (Oregon) geomagnetic polarity transition: 1. Directional history, duration of episodes, and rock magnetism
Edward A. Mankinen, M. Prevot, C. Sherman Gromme, Robert S. Coe
1985, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (90) 10393-10416
The thick sequence of Miocene lava flows exposed on Steens Mountain in southeastern Oregon is well known for containing a detailed record of a reversed‐to‐normal geomagnetic polarity transition. Paleomagnetic samples were obtained from the sequence for a combined study of the directional and intensity variations recorded; the paleointensity study is...
TSX-PLUS MULTI-TASKING UPGRADE FOR THE NICOLET L-11 POWDER DIFFRACTION SYSTEM.
J. Fitzpatrick, David L. Queen
1985, Conference Paper, Advances in X-Ray Analysis
In August of 1982, a single-user, dual-translator, automated powder diffraction system was purchased by the Denver Research Institute for use on project work in the Chemical and Materials Sciences Division. Within a short period of time, the system had already become saturated with users. Scheduling conflicts arose. In view of...
Prediction of central California earthquakes from soil-gas helium fluctuations
G.M. Reimer
1985, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (122) 369-375
The observations of short-term decreases in helium soil-gas concentrations along the San Andreas Fault in central California have been correlated with subsequent earthquake activity. The area of study is elliptical in shape with radii approximately 160??80 km, centered near San Benito, and with the major axis parallel to the Fault....
Application of the 1:2,000,000-scale data base: A National Atlas sectional prototype
Donna M. Dixon
1985, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
A study of the potential to produce a National Atlas sectional prototype from the 1:2,000,000-scale data base was concluded recently by the National Mapping Division, U. S. Geological Survey. This paper discusses the specific digital cartographic production procedures involved in the preparation of the prototype map, as well as the...
Adsorption and desorption of hexavalent chromium in an alluvial aquifer near Telluride, Colorado
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, D.B. Grove
1985, Journal of Environmental Quality (14) 150-155
A laboratory investigation of reactions between hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] and alluvium was conducted to evaluate reactions of Cr(VI) contaminating an alluvial aquifer near Telluride, CO and to determine the mechanisms responsible for these reactions. Uncontaminated alluvium and groundwater (spiked with CrO42−) from the study site were used...
Scientific knowledge and modern prospecting
G. J. Neuerburg
1985, Mineralium Deposita (20) 30-32
Modern prospecting is the systematic search for specified and generally ill-exposed components of the Earth's crust known as ore. This prospecting depends entirely on reliable, or scientific knowledge for guidance and for recognition of the search objects. Improvement in prospecting results from additions and refinements to scientific knowledge. Scientific knowledge...
CONMAP - USGS MARINE MAPPING PROGRAM.
Edward C. Escowitz
1985, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Congress of Surveying and Mapping
The U. S. Geological Survey has commenced a marine mapping program, CONMAP (the Continental Margin Maps), which is supported by, and dependent on, a foundation of digital data-bases. The goal of the program's first phase is to prepare a series of maps that completely cover the Exclusive Economic Zone. The...
In-situ fluid-pressure measurements for earthquake prediction: An example from a deep well at Hi Vista, California
J. H. Healy, T. C. Urban
1985, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (122) 255-279
Short-term earthquake prediction requires sensitive instruments for measuring the small anomalous changes in stress and strain that precede earthquakes. Instruments installed at or near the surface have proven too noisy for measuring anomalies of the size expected to occur, and it is now recognized that even to have the possibility...
SPECTRAL REFLECTANCE METHOD TO MEASURE ACID DEPOSITION EFFECTS ON BUILDING STONE.
Marguerite J. Kingston, Cathy M. Ager
1985, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of the American Society of Photogrammetry, Annual Meeting
As part of the National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program (NAPAP), the U. S. Geological Survey is cooperating with other agencies to test the effects of acid deposition on building stone. A 10-year test-site study has been organized for the purpose of correlating possible stone deterioration with environmental factors. In Summer...