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Hydrothermal alteration mineralogy of SOH drill holes, Kilauea East Rift Zone geothermal area, Hawaii Hydrothermal alteration mineralogy of SOH drill holes, Kilauea East Rift Zone geothermal area, Hawaii

Thirty-eight hydrothermal minerals were identified from 356 drill-core specimens that were obtained from three Scientific Observation Holes (SOH-1, SOH-2, and SOH-4) drilled along the lower East Rift Zone (ERZ) of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii. The minerals formed during alteration of basaltic rocks and glass by hot, circulating, waters in aquifers consisting of variable mixtures of meteoric...
Authors
Keith E. Bargar, Terry E.C. Keith, Frank A. Trusdell, S.R. Evans, M.L. Sykes

Pre-1980 tephra-fall deposits erupted from Mount St. Helens, Washington Pre-1980 tephra-fall deposits erupted from Mount St. Helens, Washington

More than 100 tephra-fall deposits erupted from Mount St. Helens within about the last 40,000 years are grouped into tephra sets and layers distinguished from each other chiefly by differences in mineral composition and age. The tephra deposits record a complex history of the volcano, form important time-stratigraphic markers, and provide information about probable kinds, frequencies...
Authors
Donal R. Mullineaux

Earthquake-induced burial of archaeological sites along the southern Washington coast about A.D. 1700 Earthquake-induced burial of archaeological sites along the southern Washington coast about A.D. 1700

Although inhabited by thousands of people when first reached by Europeans, the Pacific coast of southern Washington has little recognized evidence of prehistoric human occupation. This apparent contradiction may be explained partly by geologic evidence for coastal submergence during prehistoric earthquakes on the Cascadia subduction zone. Recently discovered archaeological sites, exposed...
Authors
Steve C. Cole, Brian F. Atwater, Patrick T. McCutcheon, Julie K. Stein, Eileen Hemphill-Haley

Modeling of fluidized ejecta emplacement over digital topography on Venus Modeling of fluidized ejecta emplacement over digital topography on Venus

The FLOW computer model of McEwen and Malin (1989) modified for application to the study of Venus fluidized ejecta blankets (FEBs) demonstrates that relatively low viscosities, yield strengths, and initial velocities are required to duplicate the observed flow paths of the outflow materials. The model calculates the velocities and simulated flow paths of gravity flows over Magellan...
Authors
Jeffrey R. Johnson, Lisa R. Gaddis

Submarine landslides Submarine landslides

Landslides are common on inclined areas of the seafloor, particularly in environments where weak geologic materials such as rapidly deposited, finegrained sediment or fractured rock are subjected to strong environmental stresses such as earthquakes, large storm waves, and high internal pore pressures. Submarine landslides can involve huge amounts of material and can move great distances...
Authors
M. A. Hampton, H.J. Lee, J. Locat

Intermediate‐depth intraslab earthquakes and arc volcanism as physical expressions of crustal and uppermost mantle metamorphism in subducting slabs Intermediate‐depth intraslab earthquakes and arc volcanism as physical expressions of crustal and uppermost mantle metamorphism in subducting slabs

We elaborate on the well-known spatial association between axc volcanoes and Wadati Benioff zones and explore in detail their genetic relationships as dual physical expressions of slab metamorphism of the oceanic crust and uppermost mantle. At hypocentral depths less than 200 km intra slab Wadati-Benioff earthquakes tend to occur near the top surfaces of slabs. Subduction of very young...
Authors
Stephen H. Kirby, E. Robert Engdahl, Roger P. Denlinger

Decomposition of AVIRIS spectra: Extraction of spectral reflectance, atmospheric, and instrumental components Decomposition of AVIRIS spectra: Extraction of spectral reflectance, atmospheric, and instrumental components

Presents techniques that use only information contained within a raw, high-spectral-resolution, hyperspectral Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS) scene to estimate and remove additive components (atmospheric scattering and instrument dark current). These techniques allow normalization of multiplicative components (instrument gain, topography, atmospheric transmission)...
Authors
Lisa R. Gaddis, Laurence A. Soderblom, Hugh H. Kieffer, Kris J. Becker, James M. Torson, Kevin F. Mullins

Volatile emissions from the crater and flank of Oldoinyo Lengai volcano, Tanzania Volatile emissions from the crater and flank of Oldoinyo Lengai volcano, Tanzania

As a comparison to airborne infrared (IR) flux measurements, ground-based sampling of fumarole and soil gases was used to characterize the quiescent degassing of CO2 from Oldoinyo Lengai volcano. Aerial and ground-based measurements are in good agreement: ∼75% of the aerially measured CO2 flux at Lengai (0.05–0.06 × 1012 mol yr−1 or 6000–7200 tonnes CO2 d−1) can be attributed to seven...
Authors
K.W. Koepenick, S.L. Brantley, J. M. Thompson, G.L. Rowe, A.A. Nyblade, C. Moshy

Long-term geochemical surveillance of fumaroles at Showa-Shinzan dome, Usu volcano, Japan Long-term geochemical surveillance of fumaroles at Showa-Shinzan dome, Usu volcano, Japan

This study investigates 31 years of fumarole gas and condensate (trace elements) data from Showa-Shinzan, a dacitic dome-cryptodome complex that formed during the 1943-1945 eruption of Usu volcano. Forty-two gas samples were collected from the highest-temperature fumarole, named A-1, from 1954 (800??C) to 1985 (336??C), and from lower-temperature vents. Condensates were collected...
Authors
R.B. Symonds, Y. Mizutani, Paul H. Briggs

Observed discrepancy between geodolite and GPS distance measurements Observed discrepancy between geodolite and GPS distance measurements

Comparison of contemporaneous measurements of 84 distances in the range of 10 to 50 km by both Global Positioning System (GPS) and Geodolite (an electro-optical distance-measuring instrument) indicates that the Geodolite measurements are systematically longer by 0.283 ± 0.100 parts per million of the measured distance. Quoted uncertainty is 1 standard deviation. This amounts to 11.3 ± 4...
Authors
J.C. Savage, M. Lisowski, W.H. Prescott
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