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Publications

Scientific reports, journal articles, and information products produced by USGS Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center scientists.

Filter Total Items: 1337

Measurements of storm-generated bottom stresses on the continental shelf

Large values of bottom friction velocity, u*, and roughness length, z0, determined from burst-averaged speed data taken on the continental shelf in outer Norton Sound, Alaska, with the GEOPROBE tripod during a storm in September 1977 are correlated with extremely large values of near-bottom concentration of total suspended particulate matter (TSM). Combined wind-driven and tidal currents exceeding
Authors
D. A. Cacchione, D. E. Drake

Uranium-series and soil-geomorphic dating of the Calico archaeological site, California

Lithic specimens identified as artifacts have been recovered from near the base of the Yermo fan deposits at Calico, California. The soil on the fan surface is a strongly developed relict paleosol. Comparison of this soil with dated paleosols elsewhere in the southwestern United States suggests that the surface is about 80,000 to 125,000 yr old. Clasts near the base of the deposit are well cemente
Authors
James L. Bischoff, Roy J. Shlemon, T. L. Ku, R.D. Simpson, Robert J. Rosenbauer, Fred E. Budinger, Jr.

Petrographic and chemical characteristics of pyrite-marcasite mineralization in hole 465A, southern Hess Rise

Core recovered from Hess Rise contains concentrations of pyrite, marcasite, and barite in the lowermost meter of limestone (Unit II) and in the brecciated upper part of the underlying volcanic basement (Unit HI). Petrographic and chemical data indicate that the sulfide-barite assemblage in the limestone is mainly a product of low-temperature diagenetic processes. The iron-sulfide phases are biogen
Authors
Randolph A. Koski, James R. Hein

Age estimations based on amino acid racemization: Reply to comments of J.F. Wehmiller

Determining geologic ages of fossils by amino acid racemization techniques is often difficult because of the uncertainties in assumptions about diagenetic temperatures. Two kinetic model methods have been employed. Method 1, used by us, assumes that racemization of amino acids in the bivalve mollusk Saxidomus giganteus from Willapa Bay, Washington, follows linear kinetics. Ages are calculated by m
Authors
Keith A. Kvenvolden, D. Blunt, H. Edward Clifton

Geochemistry of amino acids in sediments from Clear Lake, California

By studying the geochemistry of amino acids, we attempt to clarify uncertainties in the radiocarbon chronology and in correlations of ash beds and pollen spectra in lacustrine sediment from Clear Lake, California. Two amino acids, aspartic acid and alanine, are considered in detail. Relative concentrations of aspartic acid decrease with depth, a result likely due to diagenesis and to preferential
Authors
D. Blunt, Keith A. Kvenvolden, John D. Sims

Thermogenic hydrocarbons in unconsolidated sediment of Eel river basin, offshore northern California

Thermally produced hydrocarbons were recovered from unconsolidated sediment ponded within a bathymetric depression on the surface of a shale diapir in the offshore Eel River Basin of northern California. Evidence that the hydrocarbons are thermogenic consists of the following: (1) very high concentrations of hydrocarbon gases, particularly ethane through butanes (C2-C4); (2) methane having a carbo
Authors
Keith A. Kvenvolden, Michael E. Field

Organic geochemistry in the Deep Sea Drilling Project

Since the beginning of the Deep Sea Drilling Project DSDP in 1968 and extending through 1975 organic geochemical studies have been undertaken on about 2300 samples recovered on Legs I through 44 from sediments beneath the ocean floors These studies have provided fundamental information regarding the distribution of carbon in oceanic sediments and have yielded a better understanding of the processe
Authors
Keith A. Kvenvolden

Multichannel seismic evidence bearing on the origin of Bowers Ridge, Bering Sea

Bowers Ridge is a large, arcuate sub-marine ridge that extends north and west from the Aleutian Ridge and separates the abyssal Aleutian and Bowers Basins in the Bering Sea. Two multichannel seismic-reflection lines recorded in 1976 over Bowers Ridge and the adjacent basins confirm the existence of 8- to 10-km-thick sediment wedges on the north side of Bowers Ridge and at the base of the Bering co
Authors
Alan K. Cooper, Michael S. Marlow, Z. Ben-Avraham

Early evolution of the Bering Sea by collision of oceanic rises and North Pacific subduction zones

Three major bathymetric features exist in the Bering Sea: Shirshov Ridge, Bowers Ridge, and Umnak Plateau. New refraction data over Umnak Plateau and previous geophysical data across Bowers Ridge indicate that a thickened welt of crustal material is present beneath both features. The crustal structure is transitional between oceanic and continental types.Various models for the origin of these feat
Authors
Z. Ben-Avraham, Alan K. Cooper

Variability of currents and sediment transport on continental shelves: Optical and current meter studies of the bottom boundary layer

The Continental Margin Sediment Dynamics program of the U.S. Geological Survey has been using a variety of optical instruments to monitor water turbidity as part of our studies of sediment transport. Although we suspect that optical devices will eventually be supplanted by more direct measures of suspended sediments, results of several field experiments indicate that for now transmissometers and n
Authors
H. A. Karl, D. E. Drake, D. A. Cacchione

Liquefaction potential of the Yukon Prodelta, Bering Sea

The Yukon prodelta is exposed to large storm waves propagating northward from the southern Bering Sea. Shallow water depths of the prodelta enhance the transfer of energy from the surface waves to the bottom. As the bottom deposits are cyclically loaded by large storm waves, potential decrease in their resistance to shear could ultimately cause liquefaction. A preliminary assessment of the enginee
Authors
E.C. Clukey, D. A. Cacchione, C.H. Nelson

Organic geochemistry

No abstract available.
Authors
Keith A. Kvenvolden
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