Publications
Here you will find publications, reports and articles produced by Energy and Mineral scientists. For a comprehensive listing of all USGS publications, click the button below.
Filter Total Items: 1319
Geologic map of the Redding 1 x 2 degree quadrangle, Shasta, Tehama, Humboldt, and Trinity Counties, California Geologic map of the Redding 1 x 2 degree quadrangle, Shasta, Tehama, Humboldt, and Trinity Counties, California
No abstract available.
Authors
Luis A. Fraticelli, J. P. Albers, W. P. Irwin, M.C. Blake
Abstracts of papers presented at the Geographic information systems symposium, June 2-4, 1987, Reston, Virginia Abstracts of papers presented at the Geographic information systems symposium, June 2-4, 1987, Reston, Virginia
No abstract available.
Authors
Water Resources Division U.S. Geological Survey
New evidence on the state of stress of the San Andreas fault system New evidence on the state of stress of the San Andreas fault system
Contemporary in situ tectonic stress indicators along the San Andreas fault system in central California show northeast-directed horizontal compression that is nearly perpendicular to the strike of the fault. Such compression explains recent uplift of the Coast Ranges and the numerous active reverse faults and folds that trend nearly parallel to the San Andreas and that are otherwise...
Authors
Mark D. Zoback, M.L. Zoback, S. Van Mount, J. Suppe, J. P. Eaton, J. H. Healy, D. Oppenheimer, P. Reasenberg, L. Jones, C.B. Raleigh, I.G. Wong, O. Scotti, C. Wentworth
Implications of the northwestwardly younger age of the volcanic rocks of west-central California: Alternative Interpretation Implications of the northwestwardly younger age of the volcanic rocks of west-central California: Alternative Interpretation
Fox and others (1985) have made an important contribution to our understanding of iihe evolution of the Mendocino triple junction and the San Andreas transform. They have summarized a large amount of data on the ages and distribution of volcanic centers along the central California coast; their summary clearly shows that the locus of volcanism migrated northwestward along the coast...
Authors
Richard G. Stanley
New estimates of displacement along the San Andreas fault in central California based on paleobathymetry and paleogeography New estimates of displacement along the San Andreas fault in central California based on paleobathymetry and paleogeography
Studies of depth-related benthic foraminiferal biofacies permit the construction of paleobathymetric maps of the La Honda and San Joaquin basins of central California. These maps support the hypothesis that the La Honda and San Joaquin basins were contiguous during the late Oligocene and early Miocene and subsequently were separated by about 320–330 km of right-lateral displacement on...
Authors
Richard G. Stanley
The Steens Mountain (Oregon) geomagnetic polarity transition: 3. Its regional significance The Steens Mountain (Oregon) geomagnetic polarity transition: 3. Its regional significance
Study of the variations of direction and intensity of the geomagnetic field as recorded by the Miocene lava flows on Steens Mountain, southeastern Oregon, has resulted in a detailed description of total field behavior during a reversal in polarity. In addition to information about the polarity reversal itself, the detailed paleomagnetic record includes several thousand years of...
Authors
E. A. Mankinen, E.E. Larson, C. S. Grommé, M. Prevot, R. S. Coe
By
Blueschist metamorphism of the Eastern Franciscan belt, northern California Blueschist metamorphism of the Eastern Franciscan belt, northern California
Rocks of the Eastern Franciscan belt, northern California, are divided into two tectonostratigraphic terranes metamorphosed to the blueschist facies, both with a distinct lithologic association and deformational history. The easternmost terrane, the Pickett Peak terrane of Early Cretaceous isotopic age, consists of crenulated mica schist and gneissic to schistose metagraywacke, with...
Authors
A. S. Jayko, M.C. Blake, R.N. Brothers
Significance of Klamath rocks between the Franciscan Complex and Coast Range ophiolite, northern California Significance of Klamath rocks between the Franciscan Complex and Coast Range ophiolite, northern California
Small fault‐bounded slabs of low‐grade (prehnite‐pumpellyite‐bearing) slate, metagraywacke, and greenstone occur between the Coast Range ophiolite and South Fork Mountain Schist for at least 60 km south of the Klamath Mountains, northern California. The metagraywacke slabs differ from typical Franciscan Complex metagraywacke to the west by the absence of blueschist‐facies minerals and...
Authors
A. S. Jayko, Blake, R.N. Brothers
Tectonic evolution of Northwest California and Southwest Oregon Tectonic evolution of Northwest California and Southwest Oregon
Tectonostratigraphic terrances in northwest California and southwest Oregon record a complex history of subduction, collision, and transform faulting. During the late Jurassic Nevadan orogeny, the Elder Creek-Snow Camp and western Klamath terranes were imbricated during collision of an island-arc system with the continental margin. Subsequent collisions are recorded in the Pickett Peak...
Authors
M. Clark Blake, Angela S. Jayko
Paleomagnetism of Middle Tertiary volcanic rocks from the Western Cascade Series, northern California Paleomagnetism of Middle Tertiary volcanic rocks from the Western Cascade Series, northern California
The Western Cascade Series (WCS) is a 3.5‐km‐thick, crudely homoclinal (east dipping) calcalkaline volcanic sequence of mid‐Oligocene to early Miocene age that crops out near the southern tip of the Cascade Range in northern California. The mean direction of remanent magnetization in the WCS is D, 4.9°; I, 57.6° (N, 53; k, 14.4; α95, 5.3°). When compared to a reference direction for the...
Authors
Myrl E. Beck, Russell F. Burmester, Douglas E. Craig, C. Sherman Gromme, Ray E. Wells
Geophysics: A reversal of geomagnetic polarity Geophysics: A reversal of geomagnetic polarity
The detailed behaviour of the geomagnetic field during reversals is documented by palaeomagnetists to constrain models of the geomagnetic dynamo. Reversals are studied by measuring the magnetic remanence preserved in rocks to obtain both the direction and intensity of the ancient magnetic field.
Authors
Edward A. Mankinen
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