Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

Filter Total Items: 1333

New optically stimulated luminescence ages provide evidence of MIS3 and MIS2 eolian activity on Black Mesa, northeastern Arizona, USA

Eolian deposition on the semiarid southern Colorado Plateau has been attributed to episodic aridity during the Quaternary Period. However, OSL ages from three topographically controlled (e.g. falling) dunes on Black Mesa in northeastern Arizona indicate that eolian sediments there were deposited in deep tributary valleys as early as 35–30 ka, with most sand deposited before 20 ka. In contrast, the
Authors
A.L. Ellwein, Shannon A. Mahan, L. D. McFadden

Regional and climatic controls on seasonal dust deposition in the southwestern U.S.

Vertical dust deposition rates (dust flux) are a complex response to the interaction of seasonal precipitation, wind, changes in plant cover and land use, dust source type, and local vs. distant dust emission in the southwestern U.S. Seasonal dust flux in the Mojave–southern Great Basin (MSGB) deserts, measured from 1999 to 2008, is similar in summer–fall and winter–spring, and antecedent precipit
Authors
Marith C. Reheis, Frank Urban

Volatile abundances and oxygen isotopes in basaltic to dacitic lavas on mid-ocean ridges: The role of assimilation at spreading centers

Most geochemical variability in MOR basalts is consistent with low- to moderate-pressure fractional crystallization of various mantle-derived parental melts. However, our geochemical data from MOR high-silica glasses, including new volatile and oxygen isotope data, suggest that assimilation of altered crustal material plays a significant role in the petrogenesis of dacites and may be important in
Authors
V.D. Wanless, M.R. Perfit, W.I. Ridley, P.J. Wallace, Craig B. Grimes, E.M. Klein

The geochemistry and petrogenesis of the Paleoproterozoic Green Mountain arc: A composite(?), bimodal, oceanic, fringing arc

The inferred subduction affinity of the ∼1780-Ma Green Mountain arc, a dominantly bimodal igneous terrane (together with immature marine and volcaniclastic sedimentary rocks) accreted to the southern margin of the Wyoming province, is integral to arc-accretion models of the Paleoproterozoic growth of southern Laurentia. Conversely, the dominantly bimodal nature of many putative arc-related igneous
Authors
D.S. Jones, C. G. Barnes, Wayne R. Premo, A.W. Snoke

Holocene record of precipitation seasonality from lake calcite δ18O in the central Rocky Mountains, United States

A context for recent hydroclimatic extremes and variability is provided by a ∼10 k.y. sediment carbonate oxygen isotope (δ18O) record at 5–100 yr resolution from Bison Lake, 3255 m above sea level, in northwestern Colorado (United States). Winter precipitation is the primary water source for the alpine headwater lake in the Upper Colorado River Basin and lake water δ18O measurements reflect season
Authors
Lesleigh Anderson

Sea-level history of the past two interglacial periods: New evidence from U-series dating of reef corals from south Florida

As a future warm-climate analog, much attention has been directed to studies of the Last Interglacial period or marine isotope substage (MIS) 5.5, which occurred ∼120,000 years ago. Nevertheless, there are still uncertainties with respect to its duration, warmth and magnitude of sea-level rise. Here we present new data from tectonically stable peninsular Florida and the Florida Keys that provide e
Authors
Daniel R. Muhs, Kathleen Simmons, R. Randall Schumann, R. B. Halley

Using luminescence dating of coarse matrix material to estimate the slip rate of the Astaneh fault, Iran

In this paper, we present optically and infrared stimulated luminescence (OSL and IRSL) ages for four samples from alluvial fan surfaces in the Astaneh Valley. This valley is located in the north-east part of the Alborz range in Iran. Our morphologic interpretations recognize at least three generations of fans in the study area, all of which have been displaced along the left-lateral strike-slip A
Authors
M. Rizza, Shannon A. Mahan, J.-F. Ritz, H. Nazari, J. Hollingsworth, R. Salamati

Recent surface temperature trends in the interior of East Antarctica from borehole firn temperature measurements and geophysical inverse methods

We use measured firn temperatures down to depths of 80 to 90 m at four locations in the interior of Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica to derive surface temperature histories spanning the past few decades using two different inverse methods. We find that the mean surface temperatures near the ice divide (the highest‐elevation ridge of East Antarctic Ice Sheet) have increased approximately 1 to 1.
Authors
A. Muto, T. A. Scambos, K. Steffen, A.G. Slater, Gary D. Clow

Sea ice loss enhances wave action at the Arctic coast

Erosion rates of permafrost coasts along the Beaufort Sea accelerated over the past 50 years synchronously with Arctic‐wide declines in sea ice extent, suggesting a causal relationship between the two. A fetch‐limited wave model driven by sea ice position and local wind data from northern Alaska indicates that the exposure of permafrost bluffs to seawater increased by a factor of 2.5 during 1979–2
Authors
I. Overeem, R. Scott Anderson, C.W. Wobus, Gary D. Clow, Frank E. Urban, N. Matell

The angus mammoth: A decades-old scientific controversy resolved

The Angus Mammoth site in south-central Nebraska has been controversial since its discovery in 1931 when a fluted artifact was reported to be associated with the mammoth. For nearly 80 years it has not been known if Angus was a paleontological site predating the human occupation of North America as has been asserted by some geologists and paleontologists, or an archaeological site dating to the la
Authors
Steven R. Holen, D.W. May, Shannon A. Mahan

Cosmogenic nuclide and uranium-series dating of old, high shorelines in the western Great Basin, USA

Closed-basin pluvial lakes are sensitive recorders of effective moisture, and they provide a terrestrial signal of climate change that can be compared to marine and ice records of glacial-interglacial cycles. Although the most recent deep-lake cycle in the western Great Basin (at ca. 16 ka) has been studied intensively, comparatively little is known about the longer-term Quaternary lacustrine hist
Authors
G. Kurth, F. M. Phillips, Marith C. Reheis, J.L. Redwine, James B. Paces

Late-Holocene climate evolution at the WAIS Divide site, West Antarctica: Bubble number-density estimates

A surface cooling of ∼1.7°C occurred over the ∼two millennia prior to ∼1700 CE at the West Antarctic ice sheet (WAIS) Divide site, based on trends in observed bubble number-density of samples from the WDC06A ice core, and on an independently constructed accumulation-rate history using annual-layer dating corrected for density variations and thinning from ice flow. Density increase and grain growth
Authors
John M. Fegyveresi, R. B. Alley, M. K. Spencer, J. J. Fitzpatrick, E.J. Steig, J.W.C. White, J.R. McConnell, K.C. Taylor