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Pillar Mountain Landslide, Kodiak, Alaska Pillar Mountain Landslide, Kodiak, Alaska

Pillar Mountain landslide on the southeast face of Pillar Mountain is about 915 m (3,000 ft) southwest of the city of Kodiak, Alaska. The landslide is about 520 m (1,700 ft) wide at its base and extends approximately from sea level to an altitude of about 343 m (1,125 ft). The slide developed on an ancient and apparently inactive landslide. Renewed movement was first detected on December...
Authors
Reuben Kachadoorian, Willard H. Slater

Preliminary geomagnetic data, College Observatory, Fairbanks, Alaska: August 1978 Preliminary geomagnetic data, College Observatory, Fairbanks, Alaska: August 1978

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
J.B. Townshend, J.E. Papp, S.P. Tilton

Preliminary geomagnetic data, College Observatory, Fairbanks, Alaska: July 1978 Preliminary geomagnetic data, College Observatory, Fairbanks, Alaska: July 1978

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
J.B. Townshend, J.E. Papp, S.P. Tilton

IPOD-USGS multichannel seismic reflection profile from Cape Hatteras to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge IPOD-USGS multichannel seismic reflection profile from Cape Hatteras to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge

A 3,400-km-long multichannel seismic-reflection profile from Cape Hatteras to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge was acquired commercially under contract to the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Geological Survey. These data show evidence for massive erosion of the continental slope, diapirs at the base of the continental slope, and mantle reflections beneath the Hatteras Abyssal Plain.
Authors
John A. Grow, Rudi G. Markl

Pleistocene barrier bar seaward of ooid shoal complex near Miami, Florida Pleistocene barrier bar seaward of ooid shoal complex near Miami, Florida

An ooid sand barrier bar of Pleistocene age was deposited along the seaward side of an ooid shoal complex southwest of Miami, Florida. The bar is 35 km long, about 0.8 km wide, elongate parallel with the trend of the ooid shoal complex and perpendicular to channels between individual shoals. A depression 1.6 km wide, interpreted as a back-barrier channel, isolates the bar from the ooid...
Authors
Robert B. Halley, Shinn Shinn, J. Harold Hudson, Barbara H. Lidz

The effects of the α‐β phase transformation on the creep properties of hydrolytically‐weakened synthetic quartz The effects of the α‐β phase transformation on the creep properties of hydrolytically‐weakened synthetic quartz

Nine rectangular prisms of hydro‐thermally‐grown synthetic quartz crystals with 900 atomic ppm H+ were loaded in compression at 1400 bars stress and temperatures between 403 and 764°C. The a and c directions were at 45° to the compression direction, and the slip system appears to operate over the entire range of temperatures. The strain vs. time curves were sigmoidal in shape; an...
Authors
Stephen H. Kirby

Mechanical twinning in diopside Ca(Mg,Fe)Si2O6: Structural mechanism and associated crystal defects Mechanical twinning in diopside Ca(Mg,Fe)Si2O6: Structural mechanism and associated crystal defects

iopside twins mechanically on two planes, (100) and (001), and the associated macroscopic twinning strains are identical (Raleigh and Talbot, 1967). An analysis based on crystal structural arguments predicts that both twin mechanisms involve shearing of the (100) octahedral layers (containing Ca2+, Mg2+ and Fe2+ ions) by a magnitude of c/2. Small adjustments or shuffles occur in the...
Authors
Stephen H. Kirby, J.M. Christie

Wave propagation in soils Wave propagation in soils

No abstract available.
Authors
Roger D. Borcherdt

Beach cusps Beach cusps

No abstract available.
Authors
A. H. Sallenger

Topographic control and accumulation rate of some Holocene coral reefs: south Florida and Dry Tortugas Topographic control and accumulation rate of some Holocene coral reefs: south Florida and Dry Tortugas

Core drilling and examination of underwater excavation on 6 reef sites in south Florida and Dry Tortugas revealed that underlying topography is the major factor controlling reef morphology. Carbon-14 dating on coral recovered from cores enables calculation of accumulation rates. Accumulation rates were found to range from 0.38 m/1000 years in thin Holocene reefs to as much as 4.85 m/1000...
Authors
E.A. Shinn, J.H. Hudson, R. B. Halley, B. H. Lidz
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