Publications
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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
Quake Forecasting- An Emerging Capability Quake Forecasting- An Emerging Capability
No abstract available.
Authors
Andrew Michael, Paul Reasenberg, Peter H. Stauffer, James W. Hendley
The stable oxygen and carbon isotopic record from a coral growing in Florida Bay: a 160 year record of climatic and anthropogenic influence The stable oxygen and carbon isotopic record from a coral growing in Florida Bay: a 160 year record of climatic and anthropogenic influence
A 160 year record of skeletal δ13C and δ18O was examined in a specimen of the coral Solenastrea bournonigrowing in Florida Bay. Variations in the δ18O of the skeleton can be correlated to changes in salinity while changes in the δ13C reflect cycling of organic material within the Bay. Based on the correlation between salinity and skeletal δ18O, we have concluded that there has been no...
Authors
Peter K. Swart, Genevieve F. Healy, Richard E. Dodge, Philip Kramer, J. Harold Hudson, Robert B. Halley, Michael B. Robblee
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
Landslides triggered by the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake Landslides triggered by the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake
The 17 January 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake (Mw = 6.7) triggered more than 11,000 landslides over an area of about 10,000 km2. Most of the landslides were concentrated in a 1000-km2 area that included the Santa Susana Mountains and the mountains north of the Santa Clara River valley. We mapped landslides triggered by the earthquake in the field and from 1:60,000-nominal-scale...
Authors
E. L. Harp, R.W. Jibson
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
Origin of high mountains in the continents: The Southern Sierra Nevada Origin of high mountains in the continents: The Southern Sierra Nevada
Active and passive seismic experiments show that the southern Sierra, despite standing 1.8 to 2.8 kilometers above its surroundings, is underlain by crust of similar seismic thickness, about 30 to 40 kilometers. Thermobarometry of xenolith suites and magnetotelluric profiles indicate that the upper mantle is eclogitic to depths of 60 kilometers beneath the western and central parts of...
Authors
B. Wernicke, R. Clayton, Mihai N. Ducea, C.H. Jones, S. Park, S. Ruppert, J. Saleeby, J.K. Snow, L. Squires, M. Fliedner, G. Jiracek, Rebecca Hylton Keller, S. Klemperer, J. Luetgert, P. Malin, K. Miller, Walter D. Mooney, H. Oliver, R. Phinney
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
Geology of 243 Ida Geology of 243 Ida
The surface of 243 Ida is dominated by the effects of impacts. No complex crater morphologies are observed. A complete range of crater degradation states is present, which also reveals optical maturation of the surface (darkening and reddening of materials with increasing exposure age). Regions of bright material associated with the freshest craters might be ballistically emplaced...
Authors
R. Sullivan, R. Greeley, R. Pappalardo, E. Asphaug, Johnnie N. Moore, D. Morrison, M. J. S. Belton, M. Carr, C. R. Chapman, Paul E. Geissler, R. Greenberg, J. Granahan, J. W. Head, Randolph L. Kirk, A. McEwen, P. Lee, P.C. Thomas, J. Veverka