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Page 56, results 1376 - 1400

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Geochemical data for samples collected in 2007 near the concealed pebble porphyry Cu-Au-Mo deposit, southwest Alaska
David L. Fey, Matthew Granitto, Stuart A. Giles, Steven M. Smith, Robert G. Eppinger, Karen D. Kelley
2008, Open-File Report 2008-1132
In the summer of 2007, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) began an exploration geochemical research study over the Pebble porphyry copper-gold-molydenum (Cu-Au-Mo) deposit in southwest Alaska. The Pebble deposit is extremely large and is almost entirely concealed by tundra, glacial deposits, and post-Cretaceous volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks. The deposit is...
Potentiometric Surface of the Upper Floridan Aquifer, West-Central Florida, September 2007
A.G. Ortiz
2008, Open-File Report 2008-1105
The Floridan aquifer system consists of the Upper and Lower Floridan aquifers separated by the middle confining unit. The middle confining unit and the Lower Floridan aquifer in west-central Florida generally contain highly mineralized water. The water-bearing units containing fresh water are herein referred to as the Upper Floridan aquifer....
Potentiometric Surface of the Upper Floridan Aquifer, West-Central Florida, May 2007
A.G. Ortiz
2008, Open-File Report 2007-1380
The Floridan aquifer system consists of the Upper and Lower Floridan aquifers separated by the middle confining unit. The middle confining unit and the Lower Floridan aquifer in west-central Florida generally contain highly mineralized water. The water-bearing units containing fresh water are herein referred to as the Upper Floridan aquifer....
Salinity trends in the upper Colorado River basin upstream from the Grand Valley Salinity Control Unit, Colorado, 1986-2003
Kenneth J. Leib, Nancy J. Bauch
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5288
In 1974, the Colorado River Basin Salinity Control Act was passed into law. This law was enacted to address concerns regarding the salinity content of the Colorado River. The law authorized various construction projects in selected areas or "units" of the Colorado River Basin intended to reduce the salinity load...
Questa baseline and pre-mining ground-water quality investigation 22 — Groundwater budget for the Straight Creek drainage basin, Red River Valley, New Mexico, with a section on Sulphur Gulch water budget
Douglas P. McAda, Cheryl A. Naus
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5149
In April 2001, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) began a cooperative study to infer the pre-mining ground-water chemistry at the Molycorp molybdenum mine site in the Red River Valley. The Molycorp mine has been in operation since the 1920s. Because ground-water conditions prior...
Lithofacies, Age, and Sequence Stratigraphy of the Carboniferous Lisburne Group in the Skimo Creek Area, Central Brooks Range
Julie A. Dumoulin, Michael T. Whalen, Anita G. Harris
2008, Professional Paper 1739-B
The Lisburne Group, a mainly Carboniferous carbonate succession that is widely distributed across northern Alaska, contains notable amounts of oil and gas at Prudhoe Bay. Detailed studies of the Lisburne in the Skimo Creek area, central Brooks Range, delineate its lithofacies, age, conodont biofacies, depositional environments, and sequence stratigraphy and...
Determination of premining geochemical background and delineation of extent of sediment contamination in Blue Creek downstream from Midnite Mine, Stevens County, Washington
Stan E. Church, Frederick E. Kirschner, LaDonna M. Choate, Paul J. Lamothe, James R. Budahn, Zoe Ann Brown
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5262
Geochemical and radionuclide studies of sediment recovered from eight core sites in the Blue Creek flood plain and Blue Creek delta downstream in Lake Roosevelt provided a stratigraphic geochemical record of the contamination from uranium mining at the Midnite Mine. Sediment recovered from cores in a wetland immediately downstream from...
Increasing eolian dust deposition in the western United States linked to human activity
J. C. Neff, A. P. Ballantyne, G. L. Farmer, N. M. Mahowald, C. C. Landry, J. T. Overpeck, T. H. Painter, C. R. Lawrence, Richard L. Reynolds
2008, Nature Geoscience (1) 189-195
Mineral aerosols from dust are an important influence on climate and on marine and terrestrial biogeochemical cycles. These aerosols are generated from wind erosion of surface soils. The amount of dust emission can therefore be affected by human activities that alter surface sediments. However, changes in regional- and global-scale dust...
Ground- and surface-water chemistry of Handcart Gulch, Park County, Colorado, 2003-2006
Philip L. Verplanck, Andrew H. Manning, Briant A. Kimball, R. Blaine McCleskey, Robert L. Runkel, Jonathan S. Caine, Monique Adams, Pamela A. Gemery-Hill, David L. Fey
2008, Open-File Report 2007-1020
As part of a multidisciplinary project to determine the processes that control ground-water chemistry and flow in mineralized alpine environments, ground- and surface-water samples from Handcart Gulch, Colorado were collected for analysis of inorganic solutes and water and dissolved sulfate stable isotopes in selected samples. The primary aim of this...
Large-magnitude Miocene extension of the Eocene Caetano caldera, Shoshone and Toiyabe Ranges, Nevada
Joseph P. Colgan, David A. John, Christopher D. Henry, Robert J. Fleck
2008, Geosphere (4) 107-130
Because major mineral deposits in north-central Nevada predate significant Basin and Range extension, a detailed understanding of the timing and kinematics of extensional faulting is necessary to place these deposits in their original structural context. The complexity of pre-Cenozoic deformation in northern Nevada makes restoring Basin and Range faulting difficult...
Chemistry, mineralogy, and petrology of amphibole in Mount St. Helens 2004-2006 dacite
Carl R. Thornber, John S. Pallister, Heather Lowers, Michael C. Rowe, Charlie Mandeville, Gregory P. Meeker
David R. Sherrod, William E. Scott, Peter H. Stauffer, editor(s)
2008, Professional Paper 1750-32
Textural, compositional, and mineralogical data are reported and interpreted for a large population of clinoamphibole phenocrysts in 22 samples from the seven successive dacite spines erupted at Mount St. Helens between October 2004 and January 2006. Despite the uniformity in bulk composition of magma erupted since 2004, there is striking...
Quantitative approaches to characterizing natural chemical weathering rates
Arthur F. White
Susan L. Brantley, J. D. Kubicki, Arthur F. White, editor(s)
2008, Book chapter, Kinetics of water-rock interaction
Silicate minerals, constituting more than 90% of the rocks exposed at the earth’s surface, are commonly formed under temperature and pressure conditions that make them inherently unstable in surficial environments. Undoubtedly, the most significant aspect of chemical weathering resulting from this instability is the formation of soils which makes life...
Arsenic transformation and mobilization from minerals by the arsenite oxidizing strain WAO
E.D. Rhine, K.M. Onesios, M.E. Serfes, J.R. Reinfelder, L.Y. Young
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 1423-1429
Analysis of arsenic concentrations in New Jersey well water from the Newark Basin showed up to 15% of the wells exceed 10 ??g L-1, with a maximum of 215 ??g L-1. In some geologic settings in the basin, this mobile arsenic could be from the weathering of pyrite (FeS2) found...
Effect of well disinfection on arsenic in ground water
M. Gotkowitz, K. Ellickson, A. Clary, G. Bowman, J. Standridge, W. Sonzogni
2008, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (28) 60-67
Domestic water wells are routinely subjected to in situ chemical disinfection treatments to control nuisance or pathogenic bacteria. Most treatments are chlorine based and presumably cause strongly oxidizing conditions in the wellbore. Water resource managers in Wisconsin were concerned that such treatments might facilitate release of arsenic from sulfide minerals...
Nanomaterial synthesis and characterization for toxicological studies: TiO2 case study
E. Valsami-Jones, D. Berhanu, A. Dybowska, S. Misra, A.R. Boccaccini, T.D. Tetley, S. N. Luoma, J.A. Plant
2008, Conference Paper, Mineralogical Magazine
In recent years it has become apparent that the novel properties of nanomaterials may predispose them to a hitherto unknown potential for toxicity. A number of recent toxicological studies of nanomaterials exist, but these appear to be fragmented and often contradictory. Such discrepancies may be, at least in part, due...
Application of multiple isotopic and geochemical tracers for investigation of recharge, salinization, and residence time of water in the Souss-Massa aquifer, southwest of Morocco
L. Bouchaou, J.L. Michelot, A. Vengosh, Y. Hsissou, M. Qurtobi, C.B. Gaye, T.D. Bullen, G.M. Zuppi
2008, Journal of Hydrology (352) 267-287
Groundwater and surface water in Souss-Massa basin in the west-southern part of Morocco is characterized by a large variation in salinity, up to levels of 37 g L-1. The high salinity coupled with groundwater level decline pose serious problems for current irrigation and domestic water supplies as well as future...
The evolution of volcano-hosted geothermal systems based on deep wells from Karaha-Telaga Bodas, Indonesia
J.N. Moore, R.G. Allis, M. Nemcok, T.S. Powell, C.J. Bruton, P.E. Wannamaker, I.B. Raharjo, D.I. Norman
2008, American Journal of Science (308) 1-48
Temperature and pressure surveys, fluid samples, and petrologic analyses of rock samples from deep drill holes at the Karaha - Telaga Bodas geothermal field on the volcanic ridge extending northward from Galunggung Volcano, West Java, have provided a unique opportunity to characterize the evolution of an active volcano-hosted geothermal system....
Geochemical investigation of weathering processes in a forested headwater catchment: Mass-balance weathering fluxes
B.F. Jones, J.S. Herman
2008, Conference Paper, Mineralogical Magazine
Geochemical research on natural weathering has often been directed towards explanations of the chemical composition of surface water and ground water resulting from subsurface water-rock interactions. These interactions are often defined as the incongruent dissolution of primary silicates, such as feldspar, producing secondary weathering products, such as clay minerals and...
Cathodoluminescence, laser ablasion inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, electron probe microanalysis and electron paramagnetic resonance analyses of natural sphalerite
M. Karakus, R.D. Hagni, A. Koenig, E. Ciftc
2008, Conference Paper, Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy Publication Series
Natural sphalerite associated with copper, silver, lead-zinc, tin and tungsten deposits from various world-famous mineral deposits have been studied by cathodoluminescence (CL), laser ablasion inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to determine the relationship between trace element type and content and...
Isotopic variations of dissolved copper and zinc in stream waters affected by historical mining
David M. Borrok, David Nimick, Richard B. Wanty, William I. Ridley
2008, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (72) 329-344
Zinc and Cu play important roles in the biogeochemistry of natural systems, and it is likely that these interactions result in mass-dependent fractionations of their stable isotopes. In this study, we examine the relative abundances of dissolved Zn and Cu isotopes in a variety of stream waters draining six historical...
Carbonate precipitation by the thermophilic archaeon Archaeoglobus fulgidus: A model of carbon flow for an ancient microorganism
L. L. Robbins, K. A. Van Cleave, P. Ostrom
2008, Biogeosciences Discussions (5) 3409-3432
Microbial carbonate precipitation experiments were conducted using the archaeon bacteria Archaeoglobus fulgidus to determine chemical and isotopic fractionation of organic and inorganic carbon into mineral phases. Carbonate precipitation was induced in two different experiments using A. fulgidus to determine the relative abundance of organically derived carbon incorporated into carbonate minerals...
Great Basin paleontological database
N. Zhang, R. B. Blodgett, A. H. Hofstra
2008, Geosphere (4) 520-535
The U.S. Geological Survey has constructed a paleontological database for the Great Basin physiographic province that can be served over the World Wide Web for data entry, queries, displays, and retrievals. It is similar to the web-database solution that we constructed for Alaskan paleontological data (www.alaskafossil.org). The first phase of...
Progression in sulfur isotopic compositions from coal to fly ash: Examples from single-source combustion in Indiana
Jiang Yaofa, E.R. Elswick, Maria Mastalerz
2008, International Journal of Coal Geology (73) 273-284
Sulfur occurs in multiple mineral forms in coals, and its fate in coal combustion is still not well understood. The sulfur isotopic composition of coal from two coal mines in Indiana and fly ash from two power plants that use these coals were studied using geological and geochemical methods. The...