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Publications

Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff

Filter Total Items: 1691

The Columbia River littoral cell: A sediment budget overview

No abstract available.
Authors
G. Gelfenbaum, C. R. Sherwood, C. D. Peterson, G. M. Kaminsky, Maarten C. Buijsman, D. C. Twichell, P. Ruggiero, A. E. Gibbs, C. Reed

Modern accumulation rates and a sediment budget for the Eel shelf: a flood-dominated depositional environment

The northern California continental margin is periodically impacted by geologically significant storms, which have a marked influence on terrigenous sediment supply, flood deposition, and long-term accumulation of fine-grained sediment on the Eel shelf. Accumulation of Eel River muds on the adjacent shelf was investigated using 210Pb and 137Cs geochronologies, in order to understand the fate of se
Authors
Christopher K. Sommerfield, Charles A. Nittrouer

Large-scale shoreline response to storms and fair weather

No abstract available.
Authors
Jeffrey H. List, Amy S. Farris

Seismic expression of the Chesapeake Bay impact crater: Structural and morphologic refinements based on new seismic data

This work refines previous interpretations of the structure and morphology of the Chesapeake Bay impact crater on the basis of more than 1,200 km of multichannel and single-channel seismic reflection profiles collected in the bay and on the adjacent continental shelf. The outer rim, formed in sedimentary rocks, is irregularly circular, with an average diameter of ~85 km. A 20–25-km-wide annular tr
Authors
C. Wylie Poag, Deborah R. Hutchinson, Steve M. Colman, Myung W. Lee

Tracing sediment dispersal on nourished beaches: Two case studies

The event- to decade-scale patterns of sediment dispersal on two artificially nourished beaches have been mapped using a combination of geophysical surveys, closely-spaced vibracores, and repeated beach profiles. At both Wrightsville Beach, NC and Folly Island, SC the sediment used for beach nourishment is macroscopically distinct from native sediment and can be used to identify sediment transport
Authors
E. Robert Thieler, Paul T. Gayes, William C. Schwab, M. Scott Harris

Time-series photographs of the sea floor in western Massachusetts Bay: June - October, 1996

No abstract available.
Authors
Bradford Butman, John Evans, William Lange, Chris F. Polloni

Great earthquakes, abundant sand, and high wave energy in the Columbia Cell, USA

No abstract available.
Authors
Curt D. Peterson, Guy R. Gelfenbaum, Harry M. Jol, Jim B. Phipps, Frank Reckendorf, Dave C. Twichell, Sandy Vanderberg, Lorraine Woxell

Cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts in the Pacific

Co-rich Fe-Mn crusts occur throughout the Pacific on seamounts, ridges, and plateaus where currents have kept the rocks swept clean of sediments at least intermittently for millions of years. Crusts precipitate out of cold ambient sea water onto hard-rock substrates forming pavements up to 250 mm thick. Crusts are important as a potential resource for Co, Ni, Pt, Mn, Tl, Te, and other metals, as w
Authors
James R. Hein, Andrea Koschinsky, Michael Bau, Frank T. Manheim, Jung-Keuk Kang, Leanne Roberts

Seismic reflections identify finite differences in gas hydrate resources

Gas hydrate is a gas-bearing, ice-like crystalline solid. The substance's build ing blocks consist of a gas molecule (generally methane) sur-rounded by a cage of water molecules. The total amount of methane in hydrate in the world is immense - the most recent speculative estimate centers on values of 21x1015 cu meters. Thus, it may represent a future energy resource. This estimate was presented by
Authors
William P. Dillon, M. Max

Anoxia pre-dates Frasnian–Famennian boundary mass extinction horizon in the Great Basin, USA

Major and trace metal results from three Great Basin stratigraphic sections with strong conodont biostratigraphy identify a distinct anoxic interval that precedes, but ends approximately 100 kyr before, the Frasnian–Famennian (F–F, mid-Late Devonian) boundary mass extinction horizon. This horizon corresponds to the final and most severe step of a more protracted extinction period. These results ar
Authors
John F. Bratton, William B. N. Berry, Jared R. Morrow

Contaminated-sediment database development and assessment in Boston Harbor

Bottom sediments have been regarded as memory banks for contaminant inputs to urban waterways. Bottom sediments accumulate by the addition of particles that enter the waterway from many sources (U.S. National Research Council, 1989). Sediments include solid contaminants, as well as contaminants from the water column that are adsorbed on organic matter or soil (rock) particles. Sediments from Bosto
Authors