Publications
Filter Total Items: 2686
Preliminary geologic map of the onshore part of the Palo Alto 1:100,000 quadrangle, California
No abstract available.
Authors
E. E. Brabb
National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program, summaries of technical reports; volume XXXIV
No abstract available.
Authors
Muriel L. Jacobson
Bristol Lake basin--a deep sedimentary basin along the Bristol-Danby trough, Mojave Desert
No abstract available.
Authors
R.C. Jachens, Keith A. Howard
Kinematic evidence for extensional unroofing of the Franciscan Complex along the Coast Range Fault, Northern Diablo Range, California
Franciscan metagraywacke immediately below the Del Puerto ophiolite, an outlier of the Coast Range ophiolite in the northern Diablo Range, was sheared during top‐to‐the‐east displacement on the Coast Range fault. This represents normal faulting and extensional offset. It was accompanied by attenuation of the Coast Range ophiolite and Great Valley sequence in the hanging wall along layer‐parallel n
Authors
T.A. Harms, A. S. Jayko, M. Clark Blake
530 Ma zircon age for ophiolite from the New England orogen: Oldest rocks known from eastern Australia
New ion microprobe data provide constraints on the timing of formation of ophiolitic rocks in the New England tectonic collage in eastern Australia. Results for analyses of magmatic zircons from plagiogranite of the Weraerai terrane ophiolite at Upper Bingara give a 206pb/238|j ag e Qf 53Q ± 6 Ma (2a). This plagiogranite is the oldest rock from eastern Australia yet identified. Existing tectonic m
Authors
J.C. Aitchinson, T. R. Ireland, M. Clark Blake, P.G. Flood
Sampling design for spatially distributed hydrogeologic and environmental processes
A methodology for the design of sampling networks over space is proposed. The methodology is based on spatial random field representations of nonhomogeneous natural processes, and on optimal spatial estimation techniques. One of the most important results of random field theory for physical sciences is its rationalization of correlations in spatial variability of natural processes. This correlatio
Authors
G. Christakos, Ricardo A. Olea
Incorporation and redistribution of locally derived lithic fragments within a pyroclastic flow
The lower Miocene Peach Springs Tuff exposed in the Newberry Mountains, California, was deposited within a paleovalley trending S65°W. Exposures within the paleovalley contain lithic breccia intercalated with ash-rich ignimbrite. The clast assemblage of the lithic breccias matches the rock types of the paleovalley walls, and therefore the clasts were not derived from a distant eruptive vent. Flow
Authors
D.C. Buesch
Regional view in the search for kuroko deposits of the Hokuroku District, Japan
No abstract available.
Authors
Donald A. Singer, Ryoichi Kouda
Predicting sizes of undiscovered mineral deposits; an example using mercury deposits in California
A critical part of the exploration for mineral deposits or of quantitative mineral resource assessments is the estimation of how large undiscoveredeposits might be. Typically, this problem is addressed using grade and tonnage models in which a major source of variation in possible sizes is accounted for by the differences in types of deposits (Cox and Singer, 1986; Mosier and Page, 1988; Bliss, 19
Authors
C. F. Chung, Donald A. Singer, W. David Menzie
A quantitative link among mineral deposit modeling, geoscience mapping, and exploration-resource assessment
No abstract available.
Authors
C. F. Chung, C. W. Jefferson, D.A. Singer