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Conference Papers

Browse almost 5,000 conference papers authored by our scientists and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.

Filter Total Items: 5321

Interpretation of Na-K-Mg relations in geothermal waters

When using a Na-K-???Mg triangular diagram as an aid in the interpretation of a geothermal water, the estimated temperature of last water-rock equilibration may change by as much as 50??C, depending on which of the many Na/K geothermometers one assumes is correct. A particular geothermometer may work well in one place and not in another because of differences in the mineralogy of the phases that a
Authors
R.O. Fournier

Interpreting Yosemite geology: the role of the United States Geological Survey

No abstract available 
Authors
N. K. Huber

Introduction

No abstract available 
Authors
P.B. Fryer, J.A. Pearce, L.B. Stokking, J.R. Ali, R.J. Arculus, D.L. Ballotti, M.M. Burke, Giuliano Ciampo, J.A. Haggerty, R.B. Haston, Dietrich Heling, M.A. Hobart, Teruaki Ishii, L.E. Johnson, Yves Lagabrielle, F.W. McCoy, Hirokazu Maekawa, M. S. Marlow, G.J. Milner, M.J. Mottl, B.J. Murton, S.P. Phipps, C.A. Rigsby, K.L. Saboda, Bjorg Stabell, S.R. Van der Laan, Yulin Xu

Laboratory simulation of the effects of overburden stress on the specific storage of shallow artesian aquifers

A laboratory experiment to measure the specific storage of an aquifer material was conducted. A known dead load, simulating an overburden load, was applied to a sample of completely saturated aquifer material contained inside a cylinder. After the dead load was applied, water was withdrawn from the sample, causing the hydrostatic pressure to decrease and the effective stress to increase. The resul
Authors
Nicasio Sepúlveda, A. L. Zack

Location and mapping of hydrologic regimes and thermal waters in Hawai'i: the use of electrical geophysical techniques

Useful information on several different hydrologic regimes can be obtained using a combination of electrical geophysical surveys. Fresh-water lenses and laterally-confined aquifers can be located and mapped. However, more studies are required to evaluate the utility of geophysical methods for assessing perched aquifers.
Authors
Jim Kauahikaua

Major sedimentation issues for the USGS

Historically, sediment information has been used primarily in planning for engineering structures that were designed to meet a single or a very limited number of objectives. Today most water-resource systems are fully developed, but society is asking that the existing systems be operated to meet multiple objectives, which often were not considered in the original system design. Sediment related pr
Authors
Harvey E. Jobson, Edmund D. Andrews

Monitoring St. Lawrence Island and Cape Thompson seabird populations

About 1.8 million seabirds of 12 species breed on St. Lawrence Island (Figure 1) - one of the largest aggregations of breeding seabirds in the subarctic Pacific. Colonies of least and crested auklets alone, totaling 1.5 million birds, contain a substantial proportion (perhaps 20%) of these species’ world populations. Large seabird colonies occur also at Cape Thompson (Figure 2), where thick-billed
Authors
Scott A. Hatch, John F. Piatt, Brian S. Fadely, Bay D. Roberts

Monitoring the hydrologic system for potential effects of geothermal and ground-water development in the Long Valley caldera, Mono County, California, U.S.A

In the early 1980's, renewed interest in the geothermal potential of the Long Valley caldera, California, highlighted the need to balance the benefits of energy development with the established recreational activities of the area. The Long Valley Hydrologic Advisory Committee, formed in 1987, instituted a monitoring program to collect data during the early stages of resource utilization to evaluat
Authors
Christopher Farrar, Daniel Lyster

Mudflow rheology in a vertically rotating flume

Joint research by the U.S. Geological Survey and the University of Missouri-Rolla currently (1990) is being conducted on a 3.05 meters in diameter vertically rotating flume used to simulate mudflows under steady-state conditions. Observed mudflow simulations indicate flow patterns in the flume are similar to those occurring in natural mudflows. Variables such as mean and surface velocity, depth, a
Authors
Robert R. Holmes, Jerome A. Westphal, Harvey E. Jobson

Multidisciplinary hydrologic investigations at Yucca Mountain, Nevada

Future climatic conditions and tectonic processes have the potential to cause significant changes of the hydrologic system in the southern Great Basin, where a nuclear-waste repository is proposed for construction above the water table at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Geothermal anomalies in the vicinity of Yucca Mountain probably result from the local and regional transport of heat by ground-water flow
Authors
William W. Dudley

Multielement extraction system for determining 19 trace elements in gold exploration samples

A multielement extraction system is being used successfully to provide essentially interference-free geochemical analyses to aid in gold exploration. The Methyl isobutyl ketone-Amine synerGistic Iodide Complex (MAGIC) extraction system separates Ag, As, Au, Bi, Cd, Cu, Ga, Hg, In, Mo, Pb, Pd, Pt, Sb, Se, Sn, Te, Tl, and Zn from interfering geological matrices. Quantitative extraction of these elem
Authors
J. Robert Clark, John G. Viets

Natural sources of greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide emissions from volcanoes

Volcanic degassing of carbon dioxide plays an important role in keeping the atmosphere-ocean portion of the carbon geochemical cycle in balance. The atmosphere-ocean carbon deficit requires replenishment of 6??1012 mol CO2/yr, and places an upper limit on the output of carbon dioxide from volcanoes. The CO2 output of the global mid-oceanic ridge system is ca. 0.7??1012 mol/yr, thus supplying only
Authors
Terrence Gerlach