Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

These publications showcase the significant science conducted in our Science Centers.

Filter Total Items: 16734

Numerical modelling of uplift and subsidence adjacent to the Transantarctic Mount front Numerical modelling of uplift and subsidence adjacent to the Transantarctic Mount front

The Transantarctic Mountains form one of the largest rift shoulder uplifts in the world. Uplift of the mountains, and coeval subsidence in the Ross Embayment, are modelled with both elastic flexure equations and with the viscoelastic finite element method. Most of the geological constraints are adequately satisfied by the elastic flexure equations. Uplife of the Transantarctic Mountains...
Authors
T.A. Stern, Uri S. ten Brink, M.P. Bott

Diagenetic formation of bedded chert: Evidence from chemistry of the chert-shale couplet Diagenetic formation of bedded chert: Evidence from chemistry of the chert-shale couplet

Theories concerning the formation of bedded chert traditionally have emphasized either depositional or diagenetic processes. Major and rare earth element data from Franciscan assemblage (Mesozoic) and Claremont Formation (Miocene) bedded chert sequences, along with physical observations such as the presence of rare and highly corroded radiolarians in shale interbeds, are most consistent...
Authors
Richard L. Murray, David L. Jones, Marilyn R. Buchholtz ten Brink

Gravity modelling across the Transantarctic Mountains, Northern Victoria Land Gravity modelling across the Transantarctic Mountains, Northern Victoria Land

During GANOVEX V and GANOVEX VI, new gravity data were collected in northern Victoria Land. The GANOVEX V data cover the Mt. Melbourne 1:250.000 quadrangle, while the GANOVEX VI data Transantarctic Mountains south of the Drygalski Ice Tongue. The two data sets are connected by a coastal traverse. The measurements were constrained by satellite-positioned elevation (GPS) data and, in some...
Authors
T.F. Redfield, J. C. Behrendt

Acid base accounting--An improved method of interpreting overburden chemistry to predict the quality of coal-mine drainage Acid base accounting--An improved method of interpreting overburden chemistry to predict the quality of coal-mine drainage

Acidic mine drainage (AMD), which results from the accelerated oxidation of pyrite (FeS2 ) in mined coal and overburden, has contaminated thousands of miles of streams in the Appalachian region of the United States. Acid‐base accounting (ABA), which simplifies the complex hydrogeochemical system through use of a limited number of variables, commonly is used to predict the post‐mining...
Authors
Keith Brady, Charles A. Cravotta

Varied records of early Wisconsinan alpine glaciation in the western United States derived from weathering-rind thicknesses Varied records of early Wisconsinan alpine glaciation in the western United States derived from weathering-rind thicknesses

Weathering-rind thicknesses were measured on volcanic clasts in sequences of glacial deposits in seven mountain ranges in the western United States and in the Puget lowland. Because the rate of rind development decreases with time, ratios of rind thicknesses provide limits on corresponding age ratios. In all areas studied, deposits of late Wisconsinan age are obvious; deposits of late...
Authors
Peter U. Clark, P.D. Lea

Rare earth, major and trace element composition of Leg 127 sediments Rare earth, major and trace element composition of Leg 127 sediments

The relative effects of paleoceanographic and paleogeographic variations, sediment lithology, and diagenetic processes on the final preserved chemistry of Japan Sea sediments are evaluated by investigating the rare earth element (REE), major element, and trace element concentrations in 59 squeeze-cake whole-round and 27 physical-property sample residues from Sites 794, 795, and 797...
Authors
R.W. Murray, Marilyn R. Buchholtz ten Brink, Hans-Juergen Brumsack, David C. Gerlach, G. Price Russ

Holocene coastal development on the Florida peninsula Holocene coastal development on the Florida peninsula

The Florida peninsula contains five distinct coastal sections, each resulting from its own spectrum of coastal processes and sediment availability during a slowly rising, late Holocene sea level. The east coast barrier system is wave-dominated and has a large cuspate foreland (Cape Canaveral) near its middle. The Florida Keys and reef tract represent the only coastal carbonate system in...
Authors
Richard Davis, Albert C. Hine, Eugene A. Shinn

Modeling tidal exchange and dispersion in Boston Harbor Modeling tidal exchange and dispersion in Boston Harbor

Tidal dispersion and the horizontal exchange of water between Boston Harbor and the surrounding ocean are examined with a high-resolution (200 m) depth-averaged numerical model. The strongly varying bathymetry and coastline geometry of the harbor generate complex spatial patterns in the modeled tidal currents which are verified by shipboard acoustic Doppler surveys. Lagrangian exchange...
Authors
Richard P. Signell, Bradford Butman

Interactive effects of selenium, methionine, and dietary protein on survival, growth, and physiology in mallard ducklings Interactive effects of selenium, methionine, and dietary protein on survival, growth, and physiology in mallard ducklings

Concentrations of over 100 ppm (100 mg/kg) selenium (Se) have been found in aquatic food chains associated with irrigation drainwater. Both quantity and composition of dietary protein for wild ducklings may vary in selenium-contaminated environments. Day-old mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) ducklings received one of the following diets containing 22% protein: unsupplemented (controls), 15...
Authors
David J. Hoffman, C. J. Sanderson, L. J. LeCaptain, Eugene Cromartie, Grey W. Pendleton

Aluminum in soil solutions from a subalpine spruce-fir forest at Whiteface Mountain, New York Aluminum in soil solutions from a subalpine spruce-fir forest at Whiteface Mountain, New York

Direct or indirect Al toxicity has been suggested as a principal factor in forest tree declines. We monitored ambient soil solutions in undisturbed and experimentally manipulated soils from a fir [Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.]-spruce forest on Whiteface Mountain, NY, in order to characterize soil solution Al concentrations over a range of acid anion loadings. Under both natural and...
Authors
E. K. Miller, Thomas G. Huntington, A. H. Johnson, A. J. Friedland
Was this page helpful?