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Conference Papers

Browse almost 5,000 conference papers authored by our scientists and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.

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U.S. Geological Survey studies of water co-produced with oil and gas: Implications for future petroleum resource development U.S. Geological Survey studies of water co-produced with oil and gas: Implications for future petroleum resource development

The U.S. Geological Survey is conducting research on the impacts of produced waters on petroleum resource development and the environment. Ongoing multidisciplinary investigations are focused on the 1) quantity and quality of current water production, 2) geologic and geochemical parameters that influence the viability of injection wells, and 3) processes that affect the dispersion of...
Authors
George N. Breit, Yousif K. Kharaka, Robert A. Zielinski, C. A. Rice, Bruce D. Smith, Jennie L. Ridgley

Feather mineral content of redheads (Aythya americana) wintering along the Gulf of Mexico Feather mineral content of redheads (Aythya americana) wintering along the Gulf of Mexico

No abstract available.
Authors
Steven B. Murden, Marc C. Woodin, Thomas C. Michot, Milton W. Weller, Joseph L. Moore, S.E. Adair, K.L. Risenhoover

Sr-isotopic evidence for leakage of pore water from clay-silt confining units to the Atlantic City 800-foot sand, Atlantic City, New Jersey Sr-isotopic evidence for leakage of pore water from clay-silt confining units to the Atlantic City 800-foot sand, Atlantic City, New Jersey

The evolution of water quality in confined aquifers in the New Jersey Coastal Plain may be affected by leakage of pore water from the adjacent confining units. We investigated the distribution and sources of solutes, particularly Sr, in pore water mechanically extracted from clay-silt core samples collected from depths of 552–840 ft (168–256 m) in the lower Miocene Kirkwood Formation at...
Authors
Zoltan Szabo, A. A. Pucci, Mark D. Feigenson

Initiation of debris flows in tributaries of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, Arizona Initiation of debris flows in tributaries of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, Arizona

Debris flows are initiated in tributaries of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon when intense rainfall causes failures in colluvium and (or) bedrock. Most debris flows occur in the summer during localized convective thunderstorms with rainfall intensities as high as 40 mm/hr. Rarer and larger debris flows occur during unusually warm frontal storms in winter. Hourly precipitation data...
Authors
Peter G. Griffiths, Robert Webb, Theodore S. Melis

Debris flows in Grand Canyon National Park: Peak discharges, flow transformations, and hydrographs Debris flows in Grand Canyon National Park: Peak discharges, flow transformations, and hydrographs

Direct measurements of debris-flow hydrograph and flow behavior in remote drainage areas are rare. We infer hydrographs and flow behavior for recent debris flow in bedrock tributaries of the Colorado River from preserved stratigraphic relations, sedimentology and surface morphology of debris fans and evidence of flow-surface elevations. We propose that 3 types of debris-flow hydrographs...
Authors
Theodore S. Melis, Robert Webb, Peter G. Griffiths

Effects of acidic deposition on water quality and forest health in Georgia Effects of acidic deposition on water quality and forest health in Georgia

Biogeochemical studies at the Panola Mountain Research Watershed near Atlanta, Ga., and in the Coastal Plain Province of Georgia have provided an assessment of some of the potential effects of acid deposition on streamwater quality and forest health in Georgia. Historically, "acid rain" has not been considered a potentially serious problem in the southeastern United States; however...
Authors
Thomas G. Huntington, R. P. Hooper

Effects of El Nino on streamflow, lake level, and landslide potential Effects of El Nino on streamflow, lake level, and landslide potential

One of the most important sources of year-to-year climate variation in the Southwest is the El Niño phenomenon of the tropical Pacific Ocean. El Niño is a natural but largely unpredictable condition that results from complex interplay among clouds and storms, regional winds, oceanic temperatures, and ocean currents along the equatorial Pacific. Under "normal" conditions, the tropical...
Authors
Richard L. Reynolds, Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel Cayan, Doyle Stephens, Lynn M. Highland, Raymond C. Wilson

Hydrologic inferences from strontium isotopes in pore water from the unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain, Nevada Hydrologic inferences from strontium isotopes in pore water from the unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain, Nevada

Calcite is ubiquitous at Yucca Mountain, occurring in the soils and as fracture and cavity coatings within the volcanic tuff section. Strontium is a trace element in calcite, generally at the tens to hundreds of ppm level. Because calcite contains very little rubidium and the half-life of the 87Rb parent is billions of years, the 87Sr/86Sr ratios of the calcite record the ratio in the...
Authors
Brian D. Marshall, Kiyoto Futa, Zell E. Peterman

Cross‐hole radar attenuation tomography using a frequency centroid down‐shift method: Consideration of non‐linear frequency dependence of EM wave attenuation Cross‐hole radar attenuation tomography using a frequency centroid down‐shift method: Consideration of non‐linear frequency dependence of EM wave attenuation

This paper presents a cross-hole radar attenuation tomography method based on analysis of the down-shift in the spectrum centroid frequency, and spectral broadening of the received radar signals. The method uses a parameter that combines centroid frequency down shift and variance increase for the projection function to construct the tomography algorithm. In comparison with other methods...
Authors
Lanbo Liu, Chaoguang Zhou, John W. Lane, F.P. Haeni
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