Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

Filter Total Items: 937

Uranium contents of glassy and devitrified andesites and dacites, Mount Mazama, Oregon Uranium contents of glassy and devitrified andesites and dacites, Mount Mazama, Oregon

By direct comparison of devitrified and granophyrically crystallized specimens with nonhydrated glassy materials from the same units, Rosholt and coworkers (Rosholt and Noble, 1969; Rosholt et al., 1971) showed that specimens of primarily crystallized but otherwise unaltered peralkaline and subalkaline rhyolite from the western United States had lost from 30 to 80 percent of the uranium...
Authors
D. C. Noble, W.I. Rose, Robert A. Zielinski

Uranium in secondary silica: A possible exploration guide Uranium in secondary silica: A possible exploration guide

Study of uraniferous silica precipitates in the Shirley Basin, Wyoming, identified areas where ancient uraniferous ground water once ponded. Chalcedony collected from and directly beneath thick accumulations of rhyolite ash contain as much as 250 ppm uranium in a pre-ash topographic low and lesser concentrations (10 to 160 ppm) elsewhere. Differences in the U concentration of chalcedony...
Authors
Robert A. Zielinski

Organic composition of some Upper Cretaceous shale, Powder River Basin, Wyoming Organic composition of some Upper Cretaceous shale, Powder River Basin, Wyoming

The lower Upper Cretaceous strata in northeastern Wyoming, which have yielded major quantities of oil and gas, were sampled at boreholes in Converse, Johnson, and Weston Counties. Cores of noncalcareous shale of largely nearshore-marine origin were obtained from the Frontier Formation and the overlying Cody Shale at depths of 3,780.6 to 3,879.9 m in Converse County, near the axis of the...
Authors
E. Allen Merewether, George E. Claypool

Uranium abundances and distribution in associated glassy and crystalline rhyolites of the western United States Uranium abundances and distribution in associated glassy and crystalline rhyolites of the western United States

The abundance and distribution of uranium have been determined in 11 units of rhyolitic lava and ash-flow tuff of calc-alkaline and transitional composition from the western United States in order to further evaluate the potential of rhyolitic glass as a source of uranium ores. Samples consist of coexisting obsidians, perlites, and felsites that range in age from Pleistocene to Oligocene...
Authors
Robert A. Zielinski

Uranium in waters and aquifer rocks at the Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada Uranium in waters and aquifer rocks at the Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada

Previous chemical, geological, and hydrological information describing the physical and chemical environment of the Nevada Test Site (a Federal reserve for the testing of nuclear explosive devices) has been combined with new radiochemical and isotope data for water and rock samples in order to explain the behavior of uranium during alteration of thick sequences of rhyolitic volcanic...
Authors
Robert A. Zielinski, John N. Rosholt

Geologic interpretation of gravity data from the Date Creek basin and adjacent areas, west-central Arizona Geologic interpretation of gravity data from the Date Creek basin and adjacent areas, west-central Arizona

A gravity survey of the Date Creek Basin and adjacent areas was conducted in June 1977 to provide information for the interpretation of basin geology. A comparison of facies relations in the locally uraniferous Chapin Wash Formation and the position of the Anderson mine gravity anomaly in the Date Creek Basin suggested that a relationship between gravity lows and the development of thick
Authors
James K. Otton, Jeffrey C. Wynn

Geology and coal resources of the Hanging Woman Creek Study Area, Big Horn and Powder River Counties, Montana Geology and coal resources of the Hanging Woman Creek Study Area, Big Horn and Powder River Counties, Montana

In an area of 7,200 acres (29 sq km) In the Hanging Woman Creek study area, the Anderson coal bed contains potentially surface minable resources of 378 million short tons (343 million metric tons) of subbituminous C coal that ranges in thickness from 26 to 33 feet (7.9-10.1 m) at depths of less than 200 feet (60 m). Additional potentially surface minable resources of 55 million short...
Authors
William Craven Culbertson, Joseph R. Hatch, Ronald H. Affolter

Trace-element variations at Summer Coon volcano, San Juan Mountains, Colorado, and the origin of continental-interior andesite Trace-element variations at Summer Coon volcano, San Juan Mountains, Colorado, and the origin of continental-interior andesite

The Oligocene Summer Coon center, an eroded continental-interior volcano of the eastern San Juan Mountains, Colorado, was the source of magmas ranging in composition from basaltic andesite to rhyolite. Previous Pb and Sr isotope studies indicate derivation of the magmas from an isotopically homogeneous source. This study presents new data for rare-earth elements (REE), U, Th, Ba, Sr, Rb...
Authors
Robert A. Zielinski, Peter W. Lipman
Was this page helpful?