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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

Mesozoic and Cenozoic structural trends under southern Bering Sea shelf

Mesozoic rocks exposed near the tip of the Alaska Peninsula form an antiformal structure that flanks the southern side of Bristol Bay basin and that can be traced with geophysical data about 700 km offshore to the vicinity of the Pribilof Islands. Upper Jurassic sandstone and Upper Cretaceous mudstone dredged from the top and flanks of this structure near the islands confirm that Mesozoic rocks ex
Authors
Michael S. Marlow, Alan K. Cooper

Coastal ocean dynamics

The main objective of the Coastal Ocean Dynamics Experiment (CODE) is to observe and describe the response of continental shelf waters to strong atmospheric forcing in a relatively simple geomorphological setting. In order to achieve this goal, CODE has been designed (1) to define the different space and time scales of the physical parameters important to the shelf flow field and (2) to identify a
Authors
J. Allen, R. Beardsley, W. Brown, D. A. Cacchione, R. Davis, C. Friehe, W. Grant, Adriana Huyer, J. Irish, M. Janopaul, A. Williams, Clinton D. Winant

Origin of gasoline-range hydrocarbons and their migration by solution in carbon dioxide in Norton basin, Alaska.

Carbon dioxide from a submarine seep in Norton Sound, Alaska, carries a minor component of gas- and gasoline-range hydrocarbons. The molecular and isotopic compositions of the hydrocarbon gases and the presence of gasoline-range hydrocarbons indicate that these molecules are derived from thermal alteration of marine and/or nonmarine organic matter buried within Norton basin. In the gasoline-range
Authors
Keith A. Kvenvolden, George E. Claypool

Determination of sulfate in seawater and natural brines by 133Ba and membrane dialysis

Dissolved sulfate is determined by precipitation with the radioisotope 133Ba and counting of the precipitate on a scintillation counter. Precipitation is carried out in dialysis bags; excess 133 Ba is removed via diffusion by soaking the bags in distilled water for 12 h, and the bags are then placed directly in the well of the scintillation counter. The procedure eliminates previous errors caused
Authors
William E. Seyfried, Robert J. Rosenbauer, James L. Bischoff

Biogenic and thermogenic gas in gas-charged sediment of Norton Sound, Alaska

Chemical and isotopic compositions of sediment gas from Norton Sound have been determined for near-surface, gas-charged sediments at two sites identified in acoustic profiles and bottom observations. At one site air-driven vibracorer penetrated sediment saturated with methane. The isotopic value suggests that the methane originated from active biological processes operating on peat in the top 4 m
Authors
Keith A. Kvenvolden, C.H. Nelson, D.R. Thor, Matthew C. Larsen, G.D. Redden, J. B. Rapp, D. J. Des Marais

Modern biogenic gas-generated craters (sea-floor “pockmarks”) on the Bering Shelf, Alaska

As many as 1,340 small craters per square kilometre cover the sea floor of Norton Sound in the northeastern Bering Sea. The craters are circular pits, 1 to 10 m in diameter and less than 1 m deep, observed on sonographs over 20,000 km2 of northern Norton Sound sea floor. Craters typically are associated with acoustic anomalies, near-surface peaty mud, and gas-charged sediment.The peaty mud is a th
Authors
Nelson C. Hans, D.R. Thor, Mark W. Sandstrom, Keith A. Kvenvolden

Thermogenic gases in near-surface sediments of Norton Sound, Alaska

A plume of hydrocarbon gases, assumed to be of thermogenic origin based on chemical compositions, has been noted by others in the water column of Norton Sound about 40 km south of Nome, Alaska. We used detailed geophysical transects, side-scan sonar, underwater television, and chromatographic analyses of gases in near-surface sediments to define a probable source area of hydrocarbon gases at the s
Authors
C. Hans Nelson, Keith A. Kvenvolden, Edward C. Clukey

VAMPs—Possible hydrocarbon-bearing structures in Bering Sea Basin: Geologic notes

Narrow (1 to 2 km) subsurface columns of concave reflection horizons are common time-base seismic profiles collected in the Bering Sea basin. The columns of recorded downflexures are thought to be velocity pulldowns and commonly are associated with one or more arched or gently domed high-amplitude reflection horizons about 100 m higher in the section. Inferred from this association is that subsurf
Authors
David W. Scholl, Alan K. Cooper

The Aleutian Basin, Bering Sea a frontier area for hydrocarbon exploration

The Aleutian Basin is the deep water (>3000 m) basin that lies north of the Aleutian Islands adjacent to the Bering Sea continental shelf. The basin, about the size of the state of Texas, is underlain by a 2-9 km-thick flat-lying sequence of mostly Cenozoic sediment and rock that includes diatomaceous silty clay interbedded with turbidities in the upper 1 km. Before 1974, geologic and geophysical
Authors
Alan K. Cooper, David W. Scholl, A.F. Marlow, Jonathan R. Childs, George D. Redden, Keith A. Kvenvolden

Geology of the Monterey Bay region

Geophysical data and sea floor samples collected from the continental shelf and slope between Ano Nuevo Point and Point Sur, California indicate that the Monterey Bay region has had a complex late Cenozoic tectonic history. Uplift and depression have produced a succession of regressive and transgressive sedimentary units, while contemporaneous right-slip along faults of the San Andreas system have
Authors
H. Gary Greene

Structure and evolution of Bering Sea shelf south of St. Lawrence Island

The virtually featureless Beringian shelf south of St. Lawrence Island is underlain structurally by at least 14 basins. Encompassing a total area of more than 300,000 sq km, most of the basins are either elongate structural sags, grabens, or half (asymmetric) grabens beneath the outer shelf. The regional trend of these basins is northwest, parallel with that of the continental margin. Two of the b
Authors
Michael S. Marlow, David W. Scholl, Alan K. Cooper, E. C. Buffington
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