Publications
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A new model for the emplacement of Columbia River basalts as large, inflated pahoehoe lava flow fields A new model for the emplacement of Columbia River basalts as large, inflated pahoehoe lava flow fields
Extensive flows of the Columbia River Basalt (CRB) Group in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho are dominantly inflated compound pahoehoe sheet lavas. Early studies recognized that CRB lavas are compound pahoehoe flows, with textures suggesting low flow velocities, but it was thought that the great thickness and extent of the major flows required very rapid emplacement as turbulent floods of...
Authors
S. Self, Th. Thordarson, L. Keszthelyi, G.P.L. Walker, K. Hon, M.T. Murphy, P. Long, S. Finnemore
Growth of the Tongariro volcanic complex: New evidence from K-Ar age determinations Growth of the Tongariro volcanic complex: New evidence from K-Ar age determinations
New K-Ar age determinations indicate that the exposed portion of the Tongariro volcanic complex has grown steadily since at least 275 ka, with intervals of vigorous cone growth at 210-200.130-70. and 25 ka to the present day.
Authors
B.J. Hobden, Bruce F. Houghton, M. A. Lanphere, I.A. Nairn
The initial cooling of pahoehoe flow lobes The initial cooling of pahoehoe flow lobes
In this paper we describe a new thermal model for the initial cooling of pahoehoe lava flows. The accurate modeling of this initial cooling is important for understanding the formation of the distinctive surface textures on pahoehoe lava flows as well as being the first step in modeling such key pahoehoe emplacement processes as lava flow inflation and lava tube formation. This model is
Authors
L. Keszthelyi, R. Denlinger
Rockslide-debris avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington Rockslide-debris avalanche of May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens Volcano, Washington
This report provides a detailed picture of the rockslide-debris avalanche of the May 18, 1980, eruption of Mount St. Helens volcano. It provides a characterization of the deposit, a reinterpretation of the details of the first minutes of the eruption of May 18, and insight into the transport mechanism of the mass movement. Details of the rockslide event, as revealed by eyewitness...
Authors
Harry Glicken
Catalog of earthquake hypocenters for Augustine, Redoubt, Iliamna, and Mount Spurr volcanoes, Alaska: January 1, 1991 - December 31, 1993 Catalog of earthquake hypocenters for Augustine, Redoubt, Iliamna, and Mount Spurr volcanoes, Alaska: January 1, 1991 - December 31, 1993
The Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO), a cooperative program of the U.S. Geological Survey, the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, and the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, has maintained a program of seismic monitoring at potentially active volcanoes in the Cook Inlet region since 1988. The principal objectives of this program include the...
Authors
Arthur D. Jolly, John A. Power, Scott D. Stihler, Lalitha N. Rao, Gail Davidson, John F. Paskievitch, Steve Estes, John C. Lahr
Tectonics and seismicity of the southern Washington Cascade range Tectonics and seismicity of the southern Washington Cascade range
Geophysical, geological, and seismicity data are combined to develop a transpressional strain model for the southern Washington Cascades region. We use this model to explain oblique fold and fault systems, transverse faults, and a linear seismic zone just west of Mt. Rainier known as the western Rainier zone. We also attempt to explain a concentration of earthquakes that connects the...
Authors
W. D. Stanley, S. Y. Johnson, A.I. Qamar, C.S. Weaver, J. M. Williams
Geyser periodicity and the response of geysers to deformation Geyser periodicity and the response of geysers to deformation
Numerical simulations of multiphase fluid and heat transport through a porous medium define combinations of rock properties and boundary conditions which lead to geyser‐like periodic discharge. Within the rather narrow range of conditions that allow geyser‐like behavior, eruption frequency and discharge are highly sensitive to the intrinsic permeabilities of the geyser conduit and the...
Authors
S. E. Ingebritsen, S.A. Rojstaczer
Hot dry rock and the U.S. geological survey: a question of priorities Hot dry rock and the U.S. geological survey: a question of priorities
The enactment of the Energy Policy Act of 1992 saw the assignment of definite responsibilities relating to hot dry rock (HDR) to the US Geological Survey (USGS). This mandate provided some explicit guidelines and individual tasks in areas in which the USGS already had close ties to the Department of Energy and a number of its national laboratories. This paper discusses various tasks in...
Authors
John H. Sass
Thermal conductivity of water-saturated rocks from the KTB pilot hole at temperatures of 25 to 300°C Thermal conductivity of water-saturated rocks from the KTB pilot hole at temperatures of 25 to 300°C
The conductivitites of selected gneiss (two) and amphibolite (one) core samples have been measured under conditions of elevated temperature and pressure with a needle‐probe. Water‐saturated thermal conductivity measurements spanning temperatures from 25 to 300°C and hydrostatic pressures of 0.1 and 34 MPa confirm the general decrease in conductivity with increasing temperature but...
Authors
D. Pribnow, C.F. Williams, J.H. Sass, R. Keating
Mount St. Augustine volcano fumarole wall rock alteration: Mineralogy, zoning, composition and numerical models of its formation process Mount St. Augustine volcano fumarole wall rock alteration: Mineralogy, zoning, composition and numerical models of its formation process
Intensely altered wall rock was collected from high-temperature (640 °C) and low-temperature (375 °C) vents at Augustine volcano in July 1989. The high-temperature altered rock exhibits distinct mineral zoning differentiated by color bands. In order of decreasing temperature, the color bands and their mineral assemblages are: (a) white to grey (tridymite-anhydrite); (b) pink to red...
Authors
A. Getahun, M.H. Reed, R. Symonds
Origin and depositional environment of clastic deposits in the Hilo drill hole, Hawaii Origin and depositional environment of clastic deposits in the Hilo drill hole, Hawaii
Volcaniclastic units cored at depths of about 87, 164, 178, 226, and 246 m below sea level and carbonate units located between depths of 27 and 53 m below sea level in the Hilo drill core were found to be deposited at or near sea level. Four of these units are hydroclastic deposits, formed when subaerially erupted Mauna Loa lava flows entered the ocean and fragmented to produce quenched...
Authors
M.H. Beeson, D.A. Clague, J. P. Lockwood
Exsolved magmatic fluid and its role in the formation of comb-layered quartz at the Cretaceous Logtung W-Mo deposit, Yukon Territory, Canada Exsolved magmatic fluid and its role in the formation of comb-layered quartz at the Cretaceous Logtung W-Mo deposit, Yukon Territory, Canada
Comb-layered quartz is a type of unidirectional solidification texture found at the roofs of shallow silicic intrusions that are often associated spatially with Mo and W mineralisation. The texture consists of multiple layers of euhedral, prismatic quartz crystals (Type I) that have grown on subplanar aplite substrates. The layers are separated by porphyritic aplite containing equant...
Authors
J. B. Lowenstern, W.D. Sinclair