Publications
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Where lava meets the sea; Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii Where lava meets the sea; Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
Active volcanoes on the island of Hawai'i provide scientists with exceptional opportunities to observe volcanic phenomena at close range. Such an opportunity occurred on November 24, 1992, when geologists from the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) witnessed spectacular explosive interactions between lava and seawater on the southeast coast of the island. As seawater invaded submarine...
Authors
T. N. Mattox
Slumgullion; Colorado’s natural landslide laboratory Slumgullion; Colorado’s natural landslide laboratory
The mammoth Slumgullion landslide in southwestern Colorado is the largest actively moving landslide in Colorado and, perhaps, the entire country. To learn more about how and why landslides move the way they do, scientists at the U.S Geological Survey (USGS) have observed and monitored the remarkably regular movement of this landslide for more than 30 years. Located near Lake City in the...
Authors
L.M. Highland
Instrumental shaking thresholds for seismically induced landslides and preliminary report on landslides triggered by the October 17, 1989, Loma Prieta, California earthquake Instrumental shaking thresholds for seismically induced landslides and preliminary report on landslides triggered by the October 17, 1989, Loma Prieta, California earthquake
The generation of seismically induced landslide depends on the characteristics of shaking as well as mechanical properties of geologic materials. A very important parameter in the study of seismically induced landslide is the intensity based on a strong-motion accelerogram: it is defined as Arias intensity and is proportional to the duration of the shaking record as well as the amplitude...
Authors
E. L. Harp
Time-dependent landslide probability mapping Time-dependent landslide probability mapping
Case studies where time of failure is known for rainfall-triggered debris flows can be used to estimate the parameters of a hazard model in which the probability of failure is a function of time. As an example, a time-dependent function for the conditional probability of a soil slip is estimated from independent variables representing hillside morphology, approximations of material...
Authors
Russell H. Campbell, Richard L. Bernknopf
Map of debris-flow hazard in the Honolulu District of Oahu, Hawaii Map of debris-flow hazard in the Honolulu District of Oahu, Hawaii
No abstract available.
Authors
Stephen D. Ellen, Robert K. Mark, Susan H. Cannon, Donna L. Knifong
Isolated carbonate bodies composed of stacked debris-flow deposits on a fine-grained carbonate lower slope of Devonian age, Antelope Peak, Elko County, Nevada Isolated carbonate bodies composed of stacked debris-flow deposits on a fine-grained carbonate lower slope of Devonian age, Antelope Peak, Elko County, Nevada
No abstract available.
Authors
Peter M. Sheehan, John M. Pandolfi, Keith B. Ketner
Publications of the Branch of Atlantic Marine Geology for Calendar Year 1992 Publications of the Branch of Atlantic Marine Geology for Calendar Year 1992
This U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report contains a listing of publications authored or co-authored by members of the Branch of Atlantic Marine Geology and published in calendar year 1992. The Branch conducts a broad geologic and geophysical research and mapping program, primarily along the U.S. Atlantic Margin, in the Great Lakes, the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean and polar regions...
Authors
Margaret C. Mons-Wengler, Robert N. Oldale
Steady movement of landslides in fine-grained soils; a model for sliding over an irregular slip surface Steady movement of landslides in fine-grained soils; a model for sliding over an irregular slip surface
No abstract available.
Authors
Rex L. Baum, Arvid M. Johnson
The Loma Prieta, California, Earthquake of October 17, 1989: Societal response The Loma Prieta, California, Earthquake of October 17, 1989: Societal response
Professional Paper 1553 describes how people and organizations responded to the earthquake and how the earthquake impacted people and society. The investigations evaluate the tools available to the research community to measure the nature, extent, and causes of damage and losses. They describe human behavior during and immediately after the earthquake and how citizens participated in...
Authors
Dennis S. Coordinated by Mileti
Mt. Spurr's 1992 eruptions Mt. Spurr's 1992 eruptions
On June 27, 1992, the Crater Peak vent on the south side of Mt. Spurr awoke from 39 years of dormancy and burst into subplinian eruption after 10 months of elevated seismicity. Two more eruptions followed in August and September. The volcano lies 125-km west of Anchorage, which is Alaska's largest city and an important international hub for air travel. The Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO...
Assessment and prediction of debris-flow hazards Assessment and prediction of debris-flow hazards
Study of debris-flow geomorphology and initiation mechanism has led to better understanding of debris-flow processes. This paper reviews how this understanding is used in current techniques for assessment and prediction of debris-flow hazards.
Authors
Gerald F. Wieczorek