Water-soluble material on aerosols collected within volcanic eruption clouds
D. B. Smith, R. A. Zielinski, W.I. Rose Jr., B.J. Huebert
1982, Journal of Geophysical Research - Oceans (87) 4963-4972
In February and March of 1978, filter samplers mounted on an aircraft were used to collect the aerosol fraction of the eruption clouds from three active Guatemalan volcanoes (Fuego, Pacaya, and Santiaguito). The samples were collected on Teflon (Fluoropore) filters with a nominal pore diameter of 0.5μm. The mass of...
A model for managing sources of groundwater pollution
Steven M. Gorelick
1982, Water Resources Research (18) 773-781
The waste disposal capacity of a groundwater system can be maximized while maintaining water quality at specified locations by using a groundwater pollutant source management model that is based upon linear programing and numerical simulation. The decision variables of the management model are solute waste disposal rates at various facilities...
Mineral composition of small-grain cultivars from a uniform test plot in South Dakota
J. A. Erdman, R.C. Moul
1982, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (30) 169-174
Seventy-five cultivated varieties (cultivars) of hard red spring wheat (HRS), hard red winter wheat (HRW), durum wheat, oats, and barley were harvested in 1974 from a small-grain trial plot in Harding County, SD, just north of Buffalo. Analysis of the grains reported here includes crude protein for only the wheat...
Survival of duck plaque virus in water from Lake Andes National Wildlife Refuge, South Dakota
K. Wolf, C.N. Burke
1982, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (18) 437-440
An isolant of duck plague herpesvirus from the Lake Andes Refuge outbreak was seeded in raw and filter-decontaminated water from two locations on the refuge, held at 4 C, and assayed for infectivity intermittently over a period of 2 mo. From an initial...
Three FORTRAN programs for finite-difference solutions to binary diffusion in one and two phases with composition-and time-dependent diffusion coefficients
R.F. Sanford
1982, Computers & Geosciences (8) 235-263
Geological examples of binary diffusion are numerous. They are potential indicators of the duration and rates of geological processes. Analytical solutions to the diffusion equations generally do not allow for variable diffusion coefficients, changing boundary conditions, and impingement of diffusion fields. The three programs presented here are based on Crank-Nicholson...
Stratigraphy, structure, absolute age, and paleontology of the upper Pleistocene deposits at Sankaty Head, Nantucket Island, Massachusetts
Robert N. Oldale, Page C. Valentine, T. M. Cronin, E.C. Spiker, B. W. Blackwelder, D. F. Belknap, J.F. Wehmiller, Barney J. Szabo
1982, Geology (10) 246-252
The Sankaty Head cliff exposes drift of at least two glaciations and interglacial marine deposits. Radiocarbon, amino-acid- racemization, and uranium-thorium analyses were used to determine the absolute ages of the beds. The results indicate that 1) the Sankaty Sand correlates with oxygen-isotope stage 5 (Sangamonian), 2) the underlying drift is...
Sedimentation of lithogenic particles in the deep ocean
S. Honjo, S.J. Manganini, L.J. Poppe
1982, Marine Geology (50) 199-220
Investigation of lithogenic particles collected by sediment traps in open-ocean stations revealed that the sediment flux increased linearly with depth in the water column. This rate of increase decreased with distance of the station from the continent; it was largest at the Panama Basin station and almost negligible at the...
An analysis of input errors in precipitation-runoff models using regression with errors in the independent variables
Brent M. Troutman
1982, Water Resources Research (18) 947-964
Errors in runoff prediction caused by input data errors are analyzed by treating precipitation-runoff models as regression (conditional expectation) models. Independent variables of the regression consist of precipitation and other input measurements; the dependent variable is runoff. In models using erroneous input data, prediction errors are inflated and estimates of...
Differentiation of soluble proteins in cataracts caused by deficiencies of methionine, riboflavin or zinc in diets fed to Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar, rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri, and lake trout, Salvelinus namaycush
H. Barash, H. A. Poston, G. L. Rumsey
1982, Cornell Veterinarian (72) 361-371
Limits to northward drift of the Paleocene Cantwell Formation, central Alaska
John W. Hillhouse, C. S. Grommé
1982, Geology (10) 552-556
Volcanic rocks of the Paleocene Cantwell Formation in central Alaska apparently originated at a paleolatitude of 83°N (α95 = 9.7°), as indicated by paleomagnetic results. When compared with the Paleocene pole for the North American craton, the 95% confidence limits of the results suggest...
Chemical and isotopic diversity in basalts dredged from the East Pacific Rise at 10°S, the fossil Galapagos Rise and the Nazca plate
Rodey Batiza, Richard Oestrike, Kiyoto Futa
1982, Marine Geology (49) 115-132
We present petrographic, chemical and isotopic data for fresh lava samples dredged from three regions: (1) the fossil Galapagos Rise; (2) an elongate volcano near this extinct spreading center; and (3) the East Pacific Rise at 10°S. The samples from the Galapagos Rise are among the first samples from...
Cretaceous biostratigraphy in the Wyoming thrust belt.
D. J. Nichols, S.R. Jacobson
1982, Mountain Geologist (19) 73-78
In the Cretaceous section of the thrust belt, fossils are especially useful for dating and correlating repetitive facies of different ages in structurally complex terrain. The biostratigraphic zonation for the region is based on megafossils (chiefly ammonites) , which permit accurate dating and correlation of outcrop sections, and which have...
Chemical and mineralogical analysis of devonian black-shale samples from Martin County, Kentucky; Carroll and Washington counties, Ohio; Wise County, Virginia; and Overton County, Tennessee, U.S.A.
J.S. Leventhal, J. W. Hosterman
1982, Chemical Geology (37) 239-264
Core samples of Devonian shales from five localities in the Appalachian basin have been analyzed chemically and mineralogically. The amounts of major elements are similar; however, the minor constituents, organic C, S, phosphate and carbonate show ten-fold variations in amounts. Trace elements Mo, Ni, Cu, V, Co, U, Zn, Hg,...
U.S. Geological Survey Federal-State Program
T.J. Buchanan, B.K. Gilbert
1982, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (108) 37-45
The U.S. Geological Survey Federal-State Cooperative Water Resource Program is a partnership between the Geological Survey and State and local agencies for the collection of the hydrologic information needed for the continuing determination and evaluation of the quantity, quality, and use of the Nation's water resources. The first Cooperative Program...
Immersion and injection vaccination of salmonids against furunculosis with an avirulent strain of Aeromonas salmonicida
R. C. Cipriano, C. E. Starliper
1982, Progressive Fish-Culturist (44) 167-169
Replicate groups of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) immunized by intraperitoneal injection of graded dilutions of an avirulent strain of Aeromonas salmonicida were protected from a virulent challenge. Mean mortality after challenge was 88% in control trout, 66% in trout immunized with 3 × 106 or 3 × 105 cells, and 39% in...
Dynamic ice-wallow relief of northern Alaska's nearshore
E. Reimnitz, E. Kempema
1982, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology (52) 451-462
Contour maps with 0.5-m depth interval were prepared for a small area seaward of Reindeer Island, a barrier island in the Beaufort Sea, Alaska, by repeated surveys with very accurate navigation and very close trackline spacing. The maps reveal numerous closed depressions and...
Notes. Characterization of plutonium in ground water near the idaho chemical processing plant
Jess M. Cleveland, Terry F. Rees
1982, Environmental Science and Technology (16) 437-439
Plutonium is present in very low concentrations in ground water near the disposal well at the Idaho Chemical Processing Plant but was not detected in waters at greater distances. Because of the absence of strong complexing agents, the plutonium is present as an uncomplexed (perhaps hydrolyzed) tetravalent species, which is...
The memory of the accreting plate boundary and the continuity of fracture zones
Hans Schouten, Kim D. Klitgord
1982, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (59) 255-266
A detailed aeromagnetic anomaly map of the Mesozoic seafloor-spreading lineations southwest of Bermuda reveals the dominant magnetic grain of the oceanic crust and the character of the accreting boundary at the time of crustal formation. The magnetic anomaly pattern is that of a series of elongate lobes perpendicular to the...
Biological effects of dietary T-2 toxin on rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri
H. A. Poston, J. L. Coffine, G. F. Combs Jr.
1982, Aquatic Toxicology (2) 79-88
A 16-wk feeding study was conducted to evaluate the chronic toxicity of graded levels (0, 1.0, 2.5.5, 10 and 15 mg/kg of chemically pure dietary T-2 toxin (4,15-diacetoxy-8-(3-methylbutyryloxy)-12,13-epoxy-Δ9-tricothecen-3-ol) in 1-g rainbow trout, Salmo gairdneri, held in 9°C single-passage well water. Levels of T-2 toxin > 2.5 mg/kg depressed growth, efficiency of...
A quantitative index of soil development from field descriptions: Examples from a chronosequence in central California
J.W. Harden
1982, Geoderma (28) 1-28
A soil development index has been developed in order to quantitatively measure the degree of soil profile development. This index, which combines eight soil field properties with soil thickness, is designed from field descriptions of the Merced River chronosequence in central California. These eight properties are: clay films, texture plus...
Stratigraphic reference section for Georges Bank Basin - Depositional model for New England passive margin.
C. Wylie Poag
1982, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (66) 1021-1041
A multichannel seismic reflection profile (U.S. Geological Survey line 19), calibrated with the COST G-1, COST G-2, and Shell Mohican I-100 wells, and seismic-sequence analysis shows that the chronostratigraphic and lithostratigraphic units and depositional history of the Georges Bank basin are similar to those of the Scotian basin. Carbonate rocks...
The 1982 eruption of El Chichon volcano, southeastern Mexico
R.I. Tilling
Henry Spall, editor(s)
1982, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (14) 164-172
Late in the evening on March 28, El Chichon roared into life with a tremendous explosion that sent a column of ash and gases 10 miles high within an hour. There were no immediate warning signals of the eruption of El Chichon, although increased earthquake activity had been noted for...
Geometry of a mapping satellite.
J.P. Snyder
1982, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (48) 1593-1602
The proposed mapping satellite Mapsat is to consist of fixed fore, vertical, and aft linear detector arrays, any two of which may be used simultaneously to obtain digital images for one- dimensional stereo correlation. The satellite attitude may be varied according to Fourier series to enable a given detector on...
Leaching of radionuclides from uranium ore and mill tailings ( Ra- 226, Tn-230).
E. R. Landa
1982, Uranium (1) 53-63
The major part of the extractable uranium is associated with a readily acid-soluble fraction in both ore and tailings. The major part of the extractable 226Ra was associated with an iron, manganese hydrous-oxide fraction in the ore and tailings. Thorium-230 was the least leachable of the radionuclides studied. The major...
Pyridine radical cation and its fluorine substituted derivatives
V.E. Bondybey, J.H. English, R.H. Shiley
1982, Journal of Chemical Physics (77) 4826-4831
The spectra and relaxation of the pyridine cation and of several of its fluorinated derivatives are studied in low temperature Ne matrices. The ions are generated by direct photoionization of the parent compounds. Of the compounds studied, laser induced → and → fluorescence is observed only for the 2, 6‐difluoropyridine...