Isotopic and chemical composition of Parbati Valley geothermal discharges, north-west Himalaya, India
W.F. Giggenbach, R. Gonfiantini, B.L. Jangi, A.H. Truesdell
1983, Geothermics (12) 199-222
The isotopic compositions of the waters discharged from Parbati Valley geothermal areas indicate a higher altitude meteoric origin, with discharge temperatures reflecting variations in the depth of penetration of the waters to levels heated by the existence of a ‘normal’ geothermal gradient. On the basis of mixing models involving silica,...
Tuffaceous sediments as source rocks for uranium: A case study of the White River Formation, Wyoming
R. A. Zielinski
1983, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (18) 285-306
Fine-grained tuffaceous sediments of the White River Formation (Oligocene) are evaluated as a possible source of uranium for the sedimentary uranium deposits of Wyoming. The evaluation is based upon a model in which volcanic glass is considered to be a major host of uranium and thorium and in which uranium...
Dual extraction of R-mode and Q-mode factor solutions
D. Zhou, T. Chang, J.C. Davis
1983, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (15) 581-606
It is mathematically possible to extract both R-mode and Q-mode factors simultaneously (RQ-mode factor analysis)by invoking the Eckhart-Young theorem. The resulting factors will be expressed in measures determined by the form of the scalings that have been applied to the original data matrix. Unless the measures for both solutions are...
Eruptive history of Mount Mazama and Crater Lake Caldera, Cascade Range, U.S.A.
C. R. Bacon
1983, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (18) 57-115
New investigations of the geology of Crater Lake National Park necessitate a reinterpretation of the eruptive history of Mount Mazama and of the formation of Crater Lake caldera. Mount Mazama consisted of a glaciated complex of overlapping shields and stratovolcanoes, each of which was probably active for a comparatively short...
An examination of the southern California field test for the systematic accumulation of the optical refraction error in geodetic leveling
R. O. Castle, B.W. Brown Jr., T.D. Gilmore, R. K. Mark, R. C. Wilson
1983, Geophysical Research Letters (10) 1081-1084
Appraisals of the two levelings that formed the southern California field test for the accumulation of the atmospheric refraction error indicate that random error and systematic error unrelated to refraction competed with the systematic refraction error and severely complicate any analysis of the test results. If...
On the reported optical activity of amino acids in the Murchison meteorite
J.L. Bada, J.R. Cronin, M.-S. Ho, K.A. Kvenvolden, J.G. Lawless, S.L. Miller, John Oro, S. Steinberg
1983, Nature (301) 494-496
In analyses of extracts from the Murchison meteorite (a carbonaceous chondrite), Engel and Nagy1 reported an excess of L-enantiomers for several protein amino acids but found that the non-protein amino acids were racemic. They suggested that the excess of L-isomers might have resulted from an asymmetric synthesis or decomposition. Their...
Reassessment of the rates at which oil from natural sources enters the marine environment
K.A. Kvenvolden, J.W. Harbaugh
1983, Marine Environmental Research (10) 223-243
Previous estimates of the world-wide input of oil to the marine environment by natural seeps ranged from 0??2 to 6??0 million (metric) tonnes per year with a 'best estimate' of 0??6 million tonnes per year. Based on considerations of the availability of oil for seepage from the world's known and...
Thermal areas on Kilauea and Mauna Loa Volcanoes, Hawaii
Thomas J. Casadevall, Richard W. Hazlett
1983, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (16) 173-188
Active thermal areas are concentrated in three areas on Mauna Loa and three areas on Kilauea. High-temperature fumaroles (115-362°C) on Mauna Loa are restricted to the summit caldera, whereas high-temperature fumaroles on Kilauea are found in the upper East Rift Zone (Mauna Ulu summit fumaroles, 562°C), middle East Rift Zone...
Requirements for modeling trace metal partitioning in oxidized estuarine sediments
Samuel N. Luoma, J.A. Davis
1983, Marine Chemistry (12) 159-181
The fate of particulate-bound metals is of particular importance in estuaries because major biological energy flows involve consumption of detrital particles. The biological impact of particulate-bound metals is strongly influenced by the partitioning of metals among sediment components at the oxidized sediment-water interface. Adequate methods for directly measuring this partitioning...
Nitrate concentrations under irrigated agriculture
A. Zaporozec
1983, Environmental Geology (5) 35-38
In recent years, considerable interest has been expressed in the nitrate content of water supplies. The most notable toxic effect of nitrate is infant methemoglobinemia. The risk of this disease increases significantly at nitrate-nitrogen levels exceeding 10 mg/l. For this reason, this concentration has been established as a limit for...
Structure and petrology of the La Perouse gabbro intrusion, Fairweather Range, southeastern Alaska
R. A. Loney, G. R. Himmelberg
1983, Journal of Petrology (24) 377-423
The middle Tertiary La Perouse gabbro intrusion occurs in a Mesozoic metamorphic terrane (Chugach terrane) in the Fairweather Range, southeastern Alaska. The intrusion is 12 km wide and 27 km long, and has an exposed cumulate layering thickness of about 6000 m. The contact consists of biotite and hornblende...
Definition of mineral resource potential
R. B. Taylor, T. A. Steven
1983, Economic Geology (78) 1268-1270
No abstract available....
Paleotemperature oscillations in the Middle and Late Miocene of the northeastern Pacific.
J.A. Barron, G. Keller
1983, Micropaleontology (29) 150-181
The paleoclimatic and paleoceanographic history has been studied in a N-S transect encompassing DSDP Site 173, the Newport Beach surface section, and DSDP Site 470, based on quantitative diatom and planktic foraminiferal analyses. Fourteen cold and 12 warm events that show close agreement with other microfossil studies as well as...
Tectonic uplift of a middle Wisconsin marine platform near the Mendocino triple junction California
R. J. McLaughlin, K. R. Lajoie, D. H. Sorg, S.D. Morrison, J. A. Wolfe
1983, Geology (11) 35-39
An uplifted wave-cut marine platform eroded across bedrock of the Franciscan Complex at Point Delgada, northern California, is overlain by 0.5 to 5 m of wave-worked pea gravel, which is in turn directly overlain by fluvial gravel and silt deposited as alluvial fans....
In situ capture gamma-ray analysis of coal in an oversize borehole
J.L. Mikesell, D.W. Dotson, F. E. Senftle, R.S. Zych, J. Koger, L. Goldman
1983, Nuclear Instruments and Methods In Physics Research (215) 561-566
In situ capture gamma-ray analysis in a coal seam using a high resolution gamma-ray spectrometer in a close-fitting borehole has been reported previously. In order to check the accuracy of the method under adverse conditions, similar measurements were made by means of a small-diameter sonde in an oversize borehole in...
Ground water for oil-shale development, Piceance Basin, Colorado
W.M. Alley
1983, Ground Water (21) 456-464
Vast deposits of oil shale are contained in the Piceance basin in northwestern Colorado. The basin may contain as much as 40 million acre-feet of stored water associated with these deposits, much of which may have to be drained for mining. Yet, most analyses of...
Preparing a Detailed Landslide-Inventory Map for Hazard Evaluation and Reduction
Gerald F. Wieczorek
1983, Bulletin of the Association of Engineering Geologists (21) 337-342
A method of preparing a detailed landslide-inventory map has been developed which provides the engineering geologist with the basic information for evaluating and reducing landslide hazards or risk on a regional or community level. For each landslide, the map depicts state of activity, certainty of identification, dominant type of slope...
Regional significance of pre-Wisconsinan till from Nantucket Island, Massachusetts
R. N. Oldale, D.M. Eskenasy
1983, Quaternary Research (19) 302-311
A major pre-Wisconsinan glacial event is the only possible source of the lower till on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts. The till occurs near the late Wisconsinan drift border and below fossiliferous marine beds of oxygen-isotope stage 5 (Sangamonian) age. It is considered to be Illinoian in age, but the evidence is...
Nd and Sr isotopic studies on cenozoic mafic lavas from West Antarctica: Another source for continental alkali basalts
K. Futa, W.E. Le Masurier
1983, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (83) 38-44
The Nd and Sr isotopic ratios on a suite of continental alkali basalts from Marie Byrd Land, West Antarctica, define a change in the source over the range of K/Ar dates between 1 and 28 m.y. ago. The 87Sr/86Sr isotopic ratios (0.7026 to 0.7031) are unusually low for continental alkali...
The Eastern Gas Shales Project (EGSP) Data System: A case study in data base design, development, and application
T. S. Dyman, L.A. Wilcox
1983, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (15) 363-369
The U.S. Geological Survey and Petroleum Information Corporation in Denver, Colorado, developed the Eastern Gas Shale Project (EGSP)Data System for the U.S. Department of Energy, Morgantown, West Virginia. Geological, geochemical, geophysical, and engineering data from Devonian shale samples from more than 5800 wells and outcrops in the Appalachian basin were...
Correlation of metal occurrence and terrane attributes in the northwestern conterminous United States
E. W. Tooker
1983, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (20) 1030-1039
The regional distribution patterns for 20 critical metals derived by an areal-pattern recognition technique leads me to conclude that metals are regularly distributed preferentially in the accreted and cratonic terranes studied in and surrounding the state of Oregon in the northwestern United States. The distribution patterns along distinctively different zones...
Seabirds between Alaska and Hawaii
Patrick J. Gould
1983, The Condor (85) 286-291
Seabirds were observed between Alaska and Hawaii along 158°W longitude from 24 October to 6 November 1976. Their distributions and abundances corresponded remarkably well to oceanographic regions. Indices of seabird density dropped in a series of plateaus from 44 birds/km2 in the Alaska Current System to less than 1 bird/km2...
Rangeland applications
D. M. Carneggie, B.J. Schrumpf, D.A. Mouat
1983, Book chapter, Manual of remote sensing
No abstract available....
Feeding activity, rate of consumption, daily ration and prey selection of major predators in the John Day Pool
G.A. Gray, D.E. Palmer, B.L. Hilton, P.J. Connolly, H.C. Hansel, J.M. Beyer, G.M. Sonnevil
1983, Report
No abstract available ...
Salmonella enteritidis isolated from an eared grebe (Podiceps nigricollis)
Ruth M. Duncan, Richard K. Stroud, Louis N. Locke
1983, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (19) 63-64
The reported prevalence of salmonellosis in wild birds is relatively low, though the number of species of birds reported as having the disease or being carriers of the organism is increasing (Faddoul et al., 1966, Avian Dis. 10: 89- 94). The course of the disease in birds ranges from acute...