James Flocks
James Flocks is a Research Geologist at the St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Science and Products
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Archive of Boomer seismic reflection data collected during USGS Cruise 99ASR01, Lake Okeechobee, Florida, 29 June - 30 June, 1999
No abstract available.
Authors
Gina M. Brewer, Shawn V. Dadisman, Jack L. Kindinger, Dana S. Wiese, James G. Flocks
Geologic controls on the formation of Florida sinkhole lakes
No abstract available.
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, James G. Flocks
Climatic-eustatic control of Holocene nearshore parasequence development, southeastern Texas coast
Sediment cores, seismic profiles, radiocarbon dates, and faunal assemblages were used to interpret the depositional setting and geological evolution of the southeastern Texas coast during the last glacio-eustatic cycle. Discrete lithofacies and biofacies zones in the ebb-dominated Sabine Lake estuary and adjacent chenier plain record alternating periods of rapid marine flooding and gradual shoalin
Authors
Robert A. Morton, Jack L. Kindinger, James G. Flocks, Laura B. Stewart
Geologic controls on the formation of lakes in north-central Florida
Fluid exchange between surficial waters and groundwater, as well as the processes that control this exchange, are of critical concern to water management districts and planners. Digital high-resolution seismic systems were used to collect geophysical data from 30 lakes of north-central Florida. Although using seismic profile data in the past has been less than successful, the use of digital techno
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Jeffrey B. Davis, James G. Flocks
Seismic stratigraphy of the central Indian River region
No abstract available.
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Jeffrey B. Davis, James G. Flocks
Stratigraphy of the Mississippi-Alabama shelf and the Mobile River incised-valley system
The Mobile River incised-valley system located in the northern Gulf of Mexico occupies an area from southern Alabama through Mobile Bay to the outer Mississippi-Alabama continental shelf. During the Wisconsinan regression, this incised-valley system was fluvially eroded and extended across the exposed shelf to a shelf-margin delta complex. The last postglacial transgression drowned the entrenched
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Peter S. Balson, James G. Flocks
High-resolution single-channel seismic reflection surveys of Orange Lake and other selected sites of north central Florida
The potential fluid exchange between lakes of north central Florida and the Floridan aquifer and the process by which exchange occurs is of critical concern to the St. Johns Water Management District. High-resolution seismic tools with relatively new digital technology were utilized in collecting geophysical data from Orange, Kingsley, Lowry and Magnolia Lakes, and the Drayton Island area of St. J
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Jeffrey B. Davis, James G. Flocks
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 14
Filter Total Items: 27
No Result Found
Filter Total Items: 103
Archive of Boomer seismic reflection data collected during USGS Cruise 99ASR01, Lake Okeechobee, Florida, 29 June - 30 June, 1999
No abstract available.
Authors
Gina M. Brewer, Shawn V. Dadisman, Jack L. Kindinger, Dana S. Wiese, James G. Flocks
Geologic controls on the formation of Florida sinkhole lakes
No abstract available.
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, James G. Flocks
Climatic-eustatic control of Holocene nearshore parasequence development, southeastern Texas coast
Sediment cores, seismic profiles, radiocarbon dates, and faunal assemblages were used to interpret the depositional setting and geological evolution of the southeastern Texas coast during the last glacio-eustatic cycle. Discrete lithofacies and biofacies zones in the ebb-dominated Sabine Lake estuary and adjacent chenier plain record alternating periods of rapid marine flooding and gradual shoalin
Authors
Robert A. Morton, Jack L. Kindinger, James G. Flocks, Laura B. Stewart
Geologic controls on the formation of lakes in north-central Florida
Fluid exchange between surficial waters and groundwater, as well as the processes that control this exchange, are of critical concern to water management districts and planners. Digital high-resolution seismic systems were used to collect geophysical data from 30 lakes of north-central Florida. Although using seismic profile data in the past has been less than successful, the use of digital techno
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Jeffrey B. Davis, James G. Flocks
Seismic stratigraphy of the central Indian River region
No abstract available.
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Jeffrey B. Davis, James G. Flocks
Stratigraphy of the Mississippi-Alabama shelf and the Mobile River incised-valley system
The Mobile River incised-valley system located in the northern Gulf of Mexico occupies an area from southern Alabama through Mobile Bay to the outer Mississippi-Alabama continental shelf. During the Wisconsinan regression, this incised-valley system was fluvially eroded and extended across the exposed shelf to a shelf-margin delta complex. The last postglacial transgression drowned the entrenched
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Peter S. Balson, James G. Flocks
High-resolution single-channel seismic reflection surveys of Orange Lake and other selected sites of north central Florida
The potential fluid exchange between lakes of north central Florida and the Floridan aquifer and the process by which exchange occurs is of critical concern to the St. Johns Water Management District. High-resolution seismic tools with relatively new digital technology were utilized in collecting geophysical data from Orange, Kingsley, Lowry and Magnolia Lakes, and the Drayton Island area of St. J
Authors
Jack L. Kindinger, Jeffrey B. Davis, James G. Flocks