Conference Papers
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The USGS provides unbiased, objective, and impartial scientific information upon which our audiences, including resource managers, planners, and other entities, rely.
Browse almost 5,000 conference papers authored by our scientists and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.
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Mineralogy-swelling potential relationships for expansive shales
The extent to which mineralogy and swelling potential is correlated in the expansive clays and shales is studied. Sites are selected in Cretaceous shales, including Pierre Shale, that are uplifted into steeply dipping strata near the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. Swelling potentials are obtained on limited suites of samples with conventional and labor-intensive schemes including Seed and Chen'
Authors
H. W. Olsen, L. Krosley, K. Nelson, S. Chabrillat, A. F. H. Goetz, D.C. Noe
Multispectral image sharpening using wavelet transform techniques and spatial correlation of edges
Several reported image fusion or sharpening techniques are based on the discrete wavelet transform (DWT). The technique described here uses a pixel-based maximum selection rule to combine respective transform coefficients of lower spatial resolution near-infrared (NIR) and higher spatial resolution panchromatic (pan) imagery to produce a sharpened NIR image. Sharpening assumes a radiometric correl
Authors
George P. Lemeshewsky, Robert A. Schowengerdt
NASQAN: The design and implementation of a large-river suspended sediment and trace element flux programme
In 1996 the US Geological Survey (USGS) began a national flux-based water quality monitoring programme in the Mississippi, Columbia, Colorado, and Rio Grande basins. Suspended sediment flux estimates for periods greater than a year are generally accurate within ??15%. Discharge and suspended sediment concentrations varied much more than chemical levels. Most trace element concentrations are not el
Authors
A. J. Horowitz
Numerical modelling of geothermal and reflux circulation in Enewetak Atoll: Implications for dolomitization
Two types of regional-scale seawater circulation have been proposed to explain the formation of Enewetak Atoll dolomites: geothermal and reflux circulation. We have used a finite element groundwater flow model to examine the pattern, magnitude and dynamic interaction of these two different circulation mechanisms in Enewetak Atoll. Geothermal circulation is concentrated around the atoll-margin wher
Authors
G. Jones, F. Whitaker, P. Smart, W. Sanford
Observed changes in early mortality syndrome in Lake Michigan coho and chinook salmon from 1994-1999
No abstract available at this time
Authors
J. Hnath, M. Wolgamood, S.V. Marcquenski, S.B. Brown, J.D. Fitzsimons, D. E. Tillitt, D. C. Honeyfield
Offshore-onshore correlation of upper Pleistocene strata, New Jersey Coastal Plain to continental shelf and slope
High-resolution seismic reflection profiles (~ 1-5 m resolution), including Geopulse(TM), Uniboom(TM), minisparker, small air gun, and water gun sources, are used to trace the ?? 18O stage 5 portion of the outcropping Cape May Formation across the shelf to the continental slope. The ?? 18O stage 5/6 boundary identified at Ocean Drilling Project (ODP) Site 903 on the continental slope anchors the o
Authors
R. E. Sheridan, G.M. Ashley, K.G. Miller, J.S. Waldner, D. W. Hall, J. Uptegrove
Oil and gas reserve growth-a model for the Volga-Ural Province, Russia
An understanding of reserve growth in known oil and gas fields has become a critical component of energy resource analysis. Significant statistical studies of reserve growth have been published in the U.S., whereas little information is available on other regions of the world. It may be expected that in many countries the magnitude of reserve growth is different from that in the U.S. because of di
Authors
M.K. Verma, G. F. Ulmishek, A.P. Gilbershtein
Overview of Pacific Island carbonate beach systems
Beach systems in Pacific Islands are Holocene deposits of reef-dervied and terrigenous sediment. Thus, geologic setting is important in determining the success at which beach systems are established. Generally, older islands exhibit better beach system development. Although modern beach systems are composed of Holocene sediment, development of suitable accommodation space requires more geologic ti
Authors
B. M. Richmond
Palaeohydrology, vegetation, and climate since the late Illinois Episode (~130 ka) in south-central Illinois
Our interpretation of pollen and ostracode successions from four basins in south-central Illinois provides a new synthesis of palaeovegetation, palaeohydrology, and palaeoclimate for the period from the late Illinois Episode (about 130,000 years ago) to near the end of the Wisconsin Episode (about 25,000 years ago). Correlations of pollen biozones between Raymond, Pittsburg, and Bald Knob basins a
Authors
B. Brandon Curry, R. G. Baker
Paleoclimate reconstruction along the Pole-Equator-Pole transect of the Americas (PEP 1)
Examples are presented of inter-hemispheric comparison of instrumental climate and paleoclimate proxy records from the Americas for different temporal scales. Despite a certain symmetry of seasonal precipitation patterns along the PEP I transect, decadal variability of winter precipitation shows different characteristics in terms of amplitude and frequency in both the last 100 and last 1000 years.
Authors
Vera Markgraf, T.R. Baumgartner, J.P. Bradbury, Henry F. Diaz, R. B. Dunbar, B.H. Luckman, G.O. Seltzer, T.W. Swetnam, R. Villalba
Paradigm shifts in theory and methods: regression quantile analysis enables new insights for ecology
No abstract available.
Authors
C.E. Bock, Brian S. Cade
Pesticide transport in the San Joaquin River Basin
Pesticide occurrence and concentrations were evaluated in the San Joaquin River Basin to determine potential sources and mode of transport. Land use in the basin is mainly agricultural. Spatial variations in pesticide occurrence were evaluated in relation to pesticide application and cropping patterns in three contrasting subbasins and at the mouth of the basin. Temporal variability in pesticide o
Authors
Neil M. Dubrovsky, Charles R. Kratzer, Sandra Y. Panshin, JoAnn M. Gronberg, Kathryn M. Kuivila