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Eruption-triggered avalanche, flood, and lahar at Mount St. Helens - Effects of winter snowpack Eruption-triggered avalanche, flood, and lahar at Mount St. Helens - Effects of winter snowpack

An explosive eruption of Mount St. Helens on 19 March 1982 had substantial impact beyond the vent because hot eruption products interacted with a thick snowpack. A blast of hot pumice, dome rocks, and gas dislodged crater-wall snow that avalanched through the crater and down the north flank. Snow in the crater swiftly melted to form a transient lake, from which a destructive flood and...
Authors
R. B. Waitt, T.C. Pierson, N. S. MacLeod, R. J. Janda, B. Voight, R. T. Holcomb

Deep structure of northern Mississippi embayment Deep structure of northern Mississippi embayment

In September 1980, the U. S. Geological Survey conducted a seismic refraction investigation of the northern Mississippi Embayment. During the investigation, 34 shots from nine shotpoints were recorded along a series of profiles. The profiles were parallel to and across an inferred Precambrian rift zone which is outlined by a series of magnetic anomalies and covers an area at least 200 km...
Authors
A. Ginzburg, Walter D. Mooney, A.W. Walter, W. J. Lutter, J. H. Healy

Experimental deformation of polycrystalline H2O ice at high pressure and low temperature: Preliminary results Experimental deformation of polycrystalline H2O ice at high pressure and low temperature: Preliminary results

Interest in the mechanical properties of water ice under the conditions in which it exists in the outer solar system has motivated the development and use of a new high‐pressure, low‐temperature triaxial deformation apparatus. Constant displacement rate tests on 70 samples of pure polycrystalline water ice have been performed at temperatures 77≤≤258 K, confining pressures 0.1≤≤350 MPa...
Authors
W.B. Durham, H. C. Heard, Stephen H. Kirby

Rheology of the lithosphere Rheology of the lithosphere

During the quadrennial term 1979–1982, major advances have been made in our knowledge of the rheology of the oceanic lithosphere by the skillful combination of experimental and theoretical rock mechanics, seismology and marine geophysics in increasingly sophisticated models for the flexure of the oceanic lithosphere at seamounts and island chains, along transform faults, and at...
Authors
Stephen H. Kirby

The Galilean satellite geological mapping program The Galilean satellite geological mapping program

The Galilean Satellite Geological Mapping Program was established to illuminate detailed geologic relations on the four large satellites of Jupiter. The program involves about 40 investigators from various universities, reseach institutes, and government offices in the United Sttes, England, Germany, and Italy. A total of 24 researchers have been assigned to map 10 quadrangles on...
Authors
Baerbel K. Lucchitta

Channels and valleys on Mars Channels and valleys on Mars

The discovery of channels, valleys, and related features of aqueous origin on Mars is of profound importance in comparative planetology. Models of the evolution of planetary surfaces and atmospheres must be reconciled with the diversity, abundance, and origins of channels and valleys on Mars. The term “channel” is properly restricted to those Martian troughs that display at least some...
Authors

delta18O variations in the Halimeda of Virgin Islands sands: evidence of cool water in the northeast Caribbean, late Holocene delta18O variations in the Halimeda of Virgin Islands sands: evidence of cool water in the northeast Caribbean, late Holocene

Halimeda segments from carbonate sands on the Virgin Islands platform have delta 18 O versus PDB isotopic values ranging from -0.3% to -1.3% (x = -0.9%). Modern Halimeda segments from the same area have a measured delta18 O ranging from -2.0% to -2.5% PDB (x = -2.15%), and the carbonate skeleton appears to have formed in isotopic equilibrium with the oceanic waters on the platform...
Authors
Charles W. Holmes

Sedimentology of Southwestern Roads region, U.S. Virgin Islands: origin and rate of sediment accumulation Sedimentology of Southwestern Roads region, U.S. Virgin Islands: origin and rate of sediment accumulation

Sand deposits on southern insular shelf of St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, were investigated to determine their origin, environmental processes and accumulation rates. Sea-floor samples show that the sand has been derived (in situ) mainly from calcareous algae and molluscs. Zonation of the dominant sand producers is related to the present environmental setting; water depth has the...
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Ronald J. Miller, Charles W. Holmes

High-porosity Cenozoic carbonate rocks of South Florida: Progressive loss of porosity with depth High-porosity Cenozoic carbonate rocks of South Florida: Progressive loss of porosity with depth

Porosity measurements by borehole gravity meter in subsurface Cenozoic carbonates of south Florida reveal an extremely porous mass of limestone and dolomite which is transitional in total pore volume between typical porosity values for modern carbonate sediments and ancient carbonate rocks. A persistent decrease of porosity with depth, similar to that of chalks of the Gulf Coast, occurs...
Authors
Robert B. Halley, James W. Schmoker

Preliminary geomagnetic data, College Observatory, Fairbanks, Alaska: July 1983 Preliminary geomagnetic data, College Observatory, Fairbanks, Alaska: July 1983

The preliminary geomagnetic data included here is made available to scientific personnel and organizations, as part of a cooperative effort and on a data exchange basis because of the early need by some users. To avoid delay, all of the data is copied from original forms processed at the observatory; therefore it should be regarded as preliminary.
Authors
John B. Townshend, J.E. Papp, E.A. Sauter, L.Y. Torrence, T.K. Cunningham
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