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Publications

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Fate of carbon in Alaskan Landscapes Project: Database for soils from eddy covariance tower sites, Delta Junction, AK

Soils in Alaska, and in high latitude terrestrial ecosystems in general, contain significant amounts of organic carbon, most of which is believed to have accumulated since the start of the Holocene about 10 ky before present. High latitude soils are estimated to contain 30-40% of terrestrial soil carbon (Melillo et al., 1995; McGuire and Hobbie, 1997), or ~ 300-400 Gt C (Gt = 1015 g), which equals
Authors
Stagg King, Jennifer Harden, Kristen L. Manies, Jennie Munster, L. Douglas White

Response plan for volcano hazards in the Long Valley Caldera and Mono Craters region, California

No abstract available.
Authors
David P. Hill, Daniel Dzurisin, William L. Ellsworth, Elliot T. Endo, D. L. Galloway, Terry M. Gerlach, Malcolm S.J. Johnston, John Langbein, Ken A. McGee, C. Dan Miller, David Oppenheimer, Michael L. Sorey

Analysis of long-period events recorded at Mount Etna (Italy) in 1992, and their relationship to eruptive activity

Seismic activity recorded at Mount Etna during 1992 was characterized by long-period (LP) events and tremor with fluctuating amplitudes. These signals were associated with the evolution of the eruptive activity that began on December 14, 1991. Following the occurrence of numerous volcano-tectonic earthquakes at the onset of the eruption, LP events dominated the overall seismicity starting in Janua
Authors
S. Falsaperla, Eugenio Privitera, Bernard A. Chouet, Phillip B. Dawson

Anderson receives 2001 Bowen Award

Alfred T. Anderson, Jr. received the Bowen Award, presented by the Volcanology, Geochemistry, and Petrology Section at the 2001 Fall Meeting in San Francisco, California, last December.
Authors
Charles R. Bacon, Alfred T. Anderson

Whole-rock and glass major-element geochemistry of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, near-vent eruptive products: September 1994 through September 2001

This report presents major-element geochemical data for glasses and whole-rock aliquots among 523 lava samples collected near the vent on Kilauea's east rift zone between September 1994 and October 2001. Information on sample collection, analysis techniques and analytical standard reproducibility are presented as a PDF file, which also includes a detailed explantion of the categories of sample inf
Authors
Carl R. Thornber, David R. Sherrod, David F. Siems, Christina C. Heliker, Gregory P. Meeker, Robert L. Oscarson, James P. Kauahikaua

Volcanic breccia and hyaloclastite in blocks from the Nuuanu and Wailau landslides, Hawaii

Steep slopes of giant landslide blocks in the Nuuanu and Wailau landslides expose fragmental volcanic rocks subdivided into monomict and polymic t hyaloclastite and breccia. The various samples form as 1) secondary slopemantling unlithified polymict breccia consisting of clasts set in a mud matrix; 2 ) monomict and polymict hyaloclastite and polymict breccia, with zeolite cement, that form downslo
Authors
D. Clague, James G. Moore, A. S. Davis

Seismicity, gas emission and deformation from 18 July to 25 September 1995 during the initial phreatic phase of the eruption of Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat

On 18 July 1995, after more than three years of irregularly increasing seismicity, phreatic explosions opened a new vent on Soufrière Hills Volcano, about 4 km east of the capital city of Plymouth, Montserrat. By early August 1995, the volcano was monitored by a nine-station seismic network, three telemetered electronic tiltmeters, and daily correlation spectroscopy (COSPEC) flights to measure SO2
Authors
Cynthia A. Gardner, Randall A. White

Paleoenvironments of sedimentary interbeds in the Pliocene and Quaternary Big Lost Trough, eastern Snake River Plain, Idaho

No abstract available.
Authors
Erick A. Bestland, Paul K. Link, Marvin A. Lanphere, Duane E. Champion

Publications of the Volcano Hazards Program 2001

The Volcano Hazards Program of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is part of the Geologic Hazards Assessments subactivity as funded by Congressional appropriation. Investigations are carried out in the Geology and Hydrology Disciplines of the USGS and with cooperators at the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, University of Ha
Authors
Manuel Nathenson

Sulfur dioxide emission rates from Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, an update: 1998-2001

Introduction Sulfur dioxide (SO2) emission rates from Kilauea Volcano were first measured by Stoiber and Malone (1975) and have been measured on a regular basis since 1979 (Greenland and others, 1985; Casadevall and others, 1987; Elias and others, 1998; Sutton and others, 2001). A compilation of SO2 emission-rate and wind-vector data from 1979 through 1997 is available as Open-File Report 98-462 (
Authors
Tamar Elias, A. Jefferson Sutton

Preliminary volcano-hazard assessment for Kanaga Volcano, Alaska

Kanaga Volcano is a steep-sided, symmetrical, cone-shaped, 1307 meter high, andesitic stratovolcano on the north end of Kanaga Island (51°55’ N latitude, 177°10’ W longitude) in the western Aleutian Islands of Alaska. Kanaga Island is an elongated, low-relief (except for the volcano) island, located about 35 kilometers west of the community of Adak on Adak Island and is part of the Andreanof Islan
Authors
Christopher F. Waythomas, Thomas P. Miller, Christopher J. Nye