Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

184769 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 5613, results 140301 - 140325

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Stable isotope variations in the Quaternary epithermal calcite-fluorite deposit at Monte delle Fate near Cerveteri (Latium, central Italy)
U. Masi, J. R. O’Neil
1980, Mineralium Deposita (15) 41-45
Carbon, oxygen and hydrogen isotope variations have been measured in samples from the epithermal fluorite vein deposit at Monte delle Fate, Latium. The ranges in ?? 13C and ??18O of calcite are -1.3 to 3.4 and 9.5 to 17.3, respectively. ??D values of water extracted from fluid inclusions are -49...
Growth rates of manganese nodules in Oneida Lake, New York
W.S. Moore, W.E. Dean, S. Krishnaswami, D.V. Borole
1980, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (46) 191-200
226Ra is used to document the growth histories of six manganese nodules from Oneida Lake, New York. Detailed sectioning and analysis reveal that there are discontinuous gradients in226Ra content in these samples. These gradients result from periods of rapid growth (>1...
Influence of San Gabriel submarine canyon on narrow-shelf sediment dynamics, southern California
Herman A. Karl
1980, Marine Geology (34) 61-78
Variations in the concentration of total suspended particulate matter (TSM) collected 1 m above bottom, changes in vertical profiles of light transmission, and substrate textural patterns reveal a corridor for preferential sediment transport on San Pedro continental shelf, California. During the winter, this corridor, designated the preferential transport corridor (PTC),...
Volcanic rocks cored on hess rise, Western Pacific Ocean
T.L. Vallier, K.E. Windom, K.E. Seifert, Jorn Thiede
1980, Nature (286) 48-50
Large aseismic rises and plateaus in the western Pacific include the Ontong-Java Plateau, Magellan Rise, Shatsky Rise, Mid-Pacific Mountains, and Hess Rise. These are relatively old features that rise above surrounding sea floors as bathymetric highs. Thick sequences of carbonate sediments overlie, what are believed to be, Upper Jurassic and...
Deep-sea spherules from Pacific clay: Mass distribution and influx rate
M.T. Murrell, P.A. Davis Jr., K. Nishiizumi, Hugh T. Millard Jr.
1980, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (44) 2067-2074
From 411 kg of Pacific clay, 22 mg of stony spherules and 50 mg of iron spherules larger than 150 μm were concentrated. The extraterrestrial origin of these particles was evaluated with the aid of both optical and electron microscopy as well as atomic absorption elemental analysis. The integral number...
Arctic sea-ice variations from time-lapse passive microwave imagery
W. J. Campbell, R.O. Ramseier, H.J. Zwally, P. Gloersen
1980, Boundary-Layer Meteorology (18) 99-106
This paper presents: (1) a short historical review of the passive microwave research on sea ice which established the observational and theoretical base permitting the interpretation of the first passive microwave images of Earth obtained by the Nimbus-5 ESMR; (2) the construction of a time-lapse motion picture film of a...
Direct computation of the sensible heat flux
K. Watson
1980, Geophysical Research Letters (7) 616-618
An algorithm to determine the sensible heat flux from simple field measurements (wind speed, air and ground temperatures) has been developed. It provides a direct solution, in parametric form, which can be displayed graphically or tabularly. This method has an advantage over the previous iterative solution...
Kinetic model for the short-term dissolution of a rhyolitic glass
A. F. White, H.C. Claassen
1980, Chemical Geology (28) 91-109
Aqueous dissolution experiments with the vitric phase of a rhyolitic tuff were performed at 25??C and constant pH in the range 4.5-7.5. Results suggest interchange of aqueous hydrogen ions for cations situated both on the surface and within the glass. At time intervals from 24 to 900 hr., dissolution kinetics...
Crude oil degradation as an explanation of the depth rule
L.C. Price
1980, Chemical Geology (28) 1-30
Previous studies of crude oil degradation by water washing and bacterial attack have documented the operation of these processes in many different petroleum basins of the world. Crude oil degradation substantially alters the chemical and physical makeup of a crude oil, changing a light paraffinic low-S "mature" crude to a...
Scaling variables and interpretation of eigenvalues in principal component analysis of geologic data
A.T. Miesch
1980, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (12) 523-538
The dominant feature distinguishing one method of principal components analysis from another is the manner in which the original data are transformed prior to the other computations. The only other distinguishing feature of any importance is whether the eigenvectors of the inner product-moment of the transformed data matrix are taken...
Treasures from the deep ( Metallic nodules).
D.Z. Piper
1980, Water Spectrum (13) 8-15
The composition, distribution, metric growth rates and variations in sea-floor metallic nodules are outlined and discussed The considerable age, slow accretion and relationship to underlying sediments are problems of origin which are yet to be solved and some speculative answers are discussed. Mining of the nodules is reviewed and its...
Multiple ice flow directions during the Fraser Glaciation in the lower Skagit River drainage, northern Cascade Range, Washington
Paul L. Heller
1980, Arctic and Alpine Research (12) 299-308
Stratigraphic mapping and pebble-count data suggest that ice flowed in three different directions in the lower Skagit drainage of the northern Cascade Range during the Fraser Glaciation (∼ 10K to 20K BP). Glacier reconstructions suggest that till exposed at one site in the lower Skagit Valley was deposited by a...
Goat paddock cryptoexplosion crater, Western Australia
J.E. Harms, D.J. Milton, J. Ferguson, D.J. Gilbert, W.K. Harris, B. Goleby
1980, Nature (286) 704-706
Goat Paddock, a crater slightly over 5 km in diameter (18??20??? S, 126??40???E), lies at the north edge of the King Leopold Range/Mueller Range junction in the Kimberley district, Western Australia (Fig. 1). It was noted as a geological anomaly in 1964 during regional mapping by the Bureau of Mineral...
Remote sensing of snow and ice
M. F. Meier
1980, Hydrological Sciences Bulletin (25) 307-330
Monitoring of snow and ice on the Earth's surface will require increasing use of satellite remote sensing techniques. These techniques are evolving rapidly. Active and passive sensors operating in the visible, near infrared, thermal infrared, and microwave wavelengths are described in regard to general applications and in regard to specific...
Nest site and colony characteristics of wading birds in selected Atlantic Coast colonies
Donald L. Beaver, Ronald G. Osborn, Thomas W. Custer
1980, The Wilson Bulletin (92) 200-220
Nests of 5 species of wading birds were identified and marked during the breeding season at 6 locations from Massachusetts to North Carolina. At the end of the breeding season 12 characteristics of nest-site location were measured. Nest locations were mapped to examine dispersion and nearest neighbor relationships. Multivariate analyses...
The isolation of a herpes virus from captive cranes with an inclusion body disease
D. E. Docherty, D.J. Henning
1980, Avian Diseases (24) 278-283
A viral agent, identified as a herpesvirus and tentatively called 'inclusion body disease of cranes' (IBDC), was isolated from captive cranes involved in a die-off at the International Crane Foundation near Baraboo, Wisconsin. Preliminary animal susceptibility tests, based on experimental infections, suggested that White Pekin ducklings up to 17 days...
Paleozoic paleomagnetism and northward drift of the Alexander terrane, southeastern Alaska
R. Van Der Voo, M. Jones, C. S. Grommé, G.D. Eberlein, M. Churkin Jr.
1980, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (85) 5281-5296
Paleozoic limestone, graywacke, sandstone, milestone, red beds and volcanic rocks of the Alexander terrane, southeastern Alaska, have yielded six paleomagnetic pole positions after thermal and alternating-field demagnetization. These poles are from sample groups of late Middle Ordovician, Late Ordovician, Devonian, Late Devonian, and early and late Carboniferous age. To test...
Evolution of the continental margin of southern Spain and the Alboran Sea
William P. Dillon, James M. Robb, H. Gary Greene, Juan Carlos Lucena
1980, Marine Geology (36) 205-226
Seismic reflection profiles and magnetic intensity measurements were collected across the southern continental margin of Spain and the Alboran basin between Spain and Africa. Correlation of the distinct seismic stratigraphy observed in the profiles to stratigraphic information obtained from cores at Deep Sea Drilling Project site 121 allows effective dating...
Seismic hazard study of the western portion of the Garlock fault [California]
J.C. Stepp, John LaViolette, Gary Christenson
1980, Open-File Report 80-1172
Investigations of the western segment of the Garlock fault were conducted at Castac Lake, Twin Lakes and Oak Creek Canyon. Studies were concentrated on the youngest fault trace as delineated by Clark (1973). Seismic refraction surveys, topographic surveys and geologic mapping provided positive evidence for fault offsets in Quaternary deposits...
Effects of the rate of releases from Sam Rayburn Reservoir on the aeration capacity of the Angelina River, eastern Texas
Jack Rawson, Richard L. Goss, Ira G. Rathbun
1980, Water-Resources Investigations Report 80-58
A three-phase study was conducted during July and August 1979 to determine the effects of varying release rates through the power-outlet works at Sam Rayburn Reservoir, eastern Texas, on aeration capacity of a 14-mile reach of the Angelina River below Sam Rayburn Dam. The dominant factors that affected the aeration...