Publications
Filter Total Items: 2695
Communications award goes to earthquake expert
No abstract available.
A water-resources appraisal of the Mount Shasta area in northern California, 1985
Present Mount Shasta, California, area hydrologic characteristics were documented to compare future changes due to land use or volcanic activity. Lower flanks of Mount Shasta consist of broad aprons of pyroclastic-flow, debris flow, and fluvial deposits, with incised channels on upper parts of the mountain. Data include glacial areas and volumes, streamflow, sediment concentrations, temperature, a
Authors
J. C. Blodgett, K.R. Poeschel, J.L. Thornton
Historical unrest at large calderas of the world
No abstract available.
Authors
Christopher G. Newhall, Daniel Dzurisin
No evidence for post-icesheet cirque glaciation in New England
No abstract available.
Authors
Richard B. Waitt, P. Thompson Davis
Compositional evolution of the zoned calcalkaline magma chamber of Mount Mazama, Crater Lake, Oregon
The climactic eruption of Mount Mazama has long been recognized as a classic example of rapid eruption of a substantial fraction of a zoned magma body. Increased knowledge of eruptive history and new chemical analyses of ∼350 wholerock and glass samples of the climactic ejecta, preclimactic rhyodacite flows and their inclusions, postcaldera lavas, and lavas of nearby monogenetic vents are used her
Authors
C. R. Bacon, T. H. Druitt
The significance of observations at active volcanoes; A review and annotated bibliography of studies at Kilauea and Mount St. Helens
Study of active volcanoes yields information of much broader significance than to only the discipline of volcanology. Some applications are 1) interpretation of lava-flow structures, stratigraphic complexities, and petrologic relations in older volcanic units; 2) interpretation of bulk properties of the mantle and constraints on partial melting and deep magma transport; 3) interpretation of geophy
Authors
Thomas L. Wright, Don Swanson
Geomorphic and hydrologic dynamics of zero-order basins
The 1987 International Symposium on Erosion and Sedimentation in the Pacific Rim, held August 3–7, 1987, in Corvallis, Oreg., included a special session on the geomorphic and hydrologic dynamics of zero-order drainage basins. “Zero-order basin” is one of several terms used to describe unchanneled swales or hollows that may occupy considerable areas of higher-order drainage basins. These basins ser
Authors
Richard M. Iverson
Hawaii Volcano Observatory 75th anniversary
The 75th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) was celebrated during January 1987. The festivities began on January 9 with the opening in Hilo of a major exhibit at the Wailoa Center on the current work of HVO, its history, and its special relationship to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. In addition to spectacular photographs of volcanic
Authors
Thomas L. Wright, R. Decker
Book review of The Stability of Slopes, by E.N. Bromhead, Chapman and Hall, New York, 373. p.
No abstract available.
Authors
Richard M. Iverson
Eocene siliceous and calcareous phytoplankton, Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 95
Eocene siliceous and calcareous phytoplankton, with emphasis on silicoflagellates, were studied in 62 samples from DSDP Sites 612 and 613 on the continental slope and rise off New Jersey. The mid-latitude assemblages correlate well with assemblages from California, Peru, and offshore of southern Brazil, but are distinctly different from high-latitude cold-water assemblages of the Falkland Plateau
Authors
David Bukry