Walter A. Barnhardt, PhD (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 39
Geophysical and sampling data from the inner continental shelf: Northern Cape Cod Bay, Massachusetts
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) have cooperated to map approximately 480 km2 of the inner continental shelf in northern Cape Cod Bay, MA. This report contains geophysical and sampling data collected by the USGS during five research cruises between 2006 and 2008. The geophysical data include (1) swath bathymetry from...
Authors
Brian D. Andrews, Seth D. Ackerman, Wayne E. Baldwin, Walter Barnhardt
Geophysical and sampling data from the inner continental shelf: Duxbury to Hull, Massachusetts
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) have cooperated to map approximately 200 km² of the Massachusetts inner continental shelf between Duxbury and Hull. This report contains geophysical and geological data collected by the USGS on three cruises between 2006 and 2007. These USGS data are supplemented with a National Oceanic and...
Authors
Walter Barnhardt, Seth D. Ackerman, Brian D. Andrews, Wayne E. Baldwin
Tectonic controls on nearshore sediment accumulation and submarine canyon morphology offshore La Jolla, Southern California
CHIRP seismic and swath bathymetry data acquired offshore La Jolla, California provide an unprecedented three-dimensional view of the La Jolla and Scripps submarine canyons. Shore-parallel patterns of tectonic deformation appear to control nearshore sediment thickness and distribution around the canyons. These shore-parallel patterns allow the impact of local tectonic deformation to be...
Authors
Nicolas Le Dantec, Leah J. Hogarth, Neal W. Driscoll, Jeffrey M. Babcock, Walter Barnhardt, William C. Schwab
Automated feature extraction and spatial organization of seafloor pockmarks, Belfast Bay, Maine, USA
Seafloor pockmarks occur worldwide and may represent millions of m3 of continental shelf erosion, but few numerical analyses of their morphology and spatial distribution of pockmarks exist. We introduce a quantitative definition of pockmark morphology and, based on this definition, propose a three-step geomorphometric method to identify and extract pockmarks from high-resolution swath...
Authors
Brian D. Andrews, Laura L. Brothers, Walter Barnhardt
Coastal change along the shore of northeastern South Carolina— The South Carolina Coastal Erosion Study
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, conducted a 7-year, multidisciplinary study of coastal erosion in northeastern South Carolina. Shoreline behavior along the coast of Long Bay is dictated by waves, tidal currents, and sediment supply that act within the overall constraints of the regional geologic setting. Beaches are thin ribbons of...
Authors
W. C. Schwab, Paul T. Gayes, R.A. Morton, N. W. Driscoll, W. Trent Baldwin, Walter Barnhardt, J. F. Denny, M.S. Harris, M.P. Katuna, T.R. Putney, George Voulgaris, J.C. Warner, E.E. Wright
High-Resolution Geologic Mapping of the Inner Continental Shelf: Cape Ann to Salisbury Beach, Massachusetts
The geologic framework of the Massachusetts inner continental shelf between Cape Ann and Salisbury Beach has been shaped by a complicated history of glaciation, deglaciation, and changes in relative sea level. New geophysical data (swath bathymetry, sidescan sonar and seismic-reflection profiling), sediment samples, and seafloor photography provide insight into the geomorphic and...
Authors
Walter Barnhardt, Brian D. Andrews, Seth D. Ackerman, Wayne E. Baldwin, Christopher J. Hein
Coastal change along the shore of northeastern South Carolina: The South Carolina Coastal Erosion Study
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, conducted a 7-year, multi-disciplinary study of coastal erosion in northeastern South Carolina. The main objective was to understand the geologic and oceanographic processes that control sediment movement along the region's shoreline and thereby improve projections of coastal change. The study used...
Holocene reworking of a sand sheet in the Merrimack Embayment, Western Gulf of Maine
Recent bathymetric, backscatter, and seafloor sediment samples demonstrate that a large sand sheet was formed in the inner shelf by the reworking of the Merrimack River lowstand delta (deposited 12 kya; currently at 45 m depth) and braid plain during the Holocene transgression. Asymmetric bedforms and distinct grain size distributions suggest the sand sheet is actively being reworked by...
Authors
C.J. Hein, D. M. FitzGerald, Walter Barnhardt
Seismic stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington
The delta front of the Duwamish River valley near Elliott Bay and Harbor Island is founded on young Holocene deposits shaped by sea-level rise, episodic volcanism, and seismicity. These river-mouth deposits are highly susceptible to seismic soil liquefaction and are potentially prone to submarine landsliding and disintegrative flow failure. A highly developed commercial-industrial...
Authors
Robert E Kayen, Walter Barnhardt
Geologic framework of the long bay inner shelf: implications for coastal evolution in South Carolina
The inner continental shelf off northern South Carolina is a sediment-limited environment characterized by extensive hardground areas, where coastal plain strata and ancient channel-fill deposits are exposed at the sea floor. Holocene sand is concentrated in large shoals associated with active tidal inlets, an isolated shore-detached sand body, and a widespread series of low-relief sand...
Authors
Walter Barnhardt, J. F. Denny, W. Trent Baldwin, W. C. Schwab, R. Daniel Morton, Paul T. Gayes, N. W. Driscoll
Holocene evolution of the merrimack embayment, northern massachusetts, interperted from shallow seismic stratigraphy
Recent multi-beam, backscatter, and bottom sediment data demonstrate that a large sand sheet was formed in the inner shelf by the reworking of the Merrimack River lowstand delta and braid plain (12 kya) during the Holocene transgression. Seismic data reveal the presence of widespread channel cut-and-fill structures landward of the delta suggesting that much of the sand sheet consists of...
Authors
C.J. Hein, D. M. FitzGerald, Walter Barnhardt
High-resolution geologic mapping of the inner continental shelf: Boston Harbor and approaches, Massachusetts
This report presents the surficial geologic framework data and information for the sea floor of Boston Harbor and Approaches, Massachusetts (fig. 1.1). This mapping was conducted as part of a cooperative program between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM), and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The primary...
Authors
Seth D. Ackerman, Bradford Butman, Walter Barnhardt, William W. Danforth, James M. Crocker
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 39
Geophysical and sampling data from the inner continental shelf: Northern Cape Cod Bay, Massachusetts
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) have cooperated to map approximately 480 km2 of the inner continental shelf in northern Cape Cod Bay, MA. This report contains geophysical and sampling data collected by the USGS during five research cruises between 2006 and 2008. The geophysical data include (1) swath bathymetry from...
Authors
Brian D. Andrews, Seth D. Ackerman, Wayne E. Baldwin, Walter Barnhardt
Geophysical and sampling data from the inner continental shelf: Duxbury to Hull, Massachusetts
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) have cooperated to map approximately 200 km² of the Massachusetts inner continental shelf between Duxbury and Hull. This report contains geophysical and geological data collected by the USGS on three cruises between 2006 and 2007. These USGS data are supplemented with a National Oceanic and...
Authors
Walter Barnhardt, Seth D. Ackerman, Brian D. Andrews, Wayne E. Baldwin
Tectonic controls on nearshore sediment accumulation and submarine canyon morphology offshore La Jolla, Southern California
CHIRP seismic and swath bathymetry data acquired offshore La Jolla, California provide an unprecedented three-dimensional view of the La Jolla and Scripps submarine canyons. Shore-parallel patterns of tectonic deformation appear to control nearshore sediment thickness and distribution around the canyons. These shore-parallel patterns allow the impact of local tectonic deformation to be...
Authors
Nicolas Le Dantec, Leah J. Hogarth, Neal W. Driscoll, Jeffrey M. Babcock, Walter Barnhardt, William C. Schwab
Automated feature extraction and spatial organization of seafloor pockmarks, Belfast Bay, Maine, USA
Seafloor pockmarks occur worldwide and may represent millions of m3 of continental shelf erosion, but few numerical analyses of their morphology and spatial distribution of pockmarks exist. We introduce a quantitative definition of pockmark morphology and, based on this definition, propose a three-step geomorphometric method to identify and extract pockmarks from high-resolution swath...
Authors
Brian D. Andrews, Laura L. Brothers, Walter Barnhardt
Coastal change along the shore of northeastern South Carolina— The South Carolina Coastal Erosion Study
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, conducted a 7-year, multidisciplinary study of coastal erosion in northeastern South Carolina. Shoreline behavior along the coast of Long Bay is dictated by waves, tidal currents, and sediment supply that act within the overall constraints of the regional geologic setting. Beaches are thin ribbons of...
Authors
W. C. Schwab, Paul T. Gayes, R.A. Morton, N. W. Driscoll, W. Trent Baldwin, Walter Barnhardt, J. F. Denny, M.S. Harris, M.P. Katuna, T.R. Putney, George Voulgaris, J.C. Warner, E.E. Wright
High-Resolution Geologic Mapping of the Inner Continental Shelf: Cape Ann to Salisbury Beach, Massachusetts
The geologic framework of the Massachusetts inner continental shelf between Cape Ann and Salisbury Beach has been shaped by a complicated history of glaciation, deglaciation, and changes in relative sea level. New geophysical data (swath bathymetry, sidescan sonar and seismic-reflection profiling), sediment samples, and seafloor photography provide insight into the geomorphic and...
Authors
Walter Barnhardt, Brian D. Andrews, Seth D. Ackerman, Wayne E. Baldwin, Christopher J. Hein
Coastal change along the shore of northeastern South Carolina: The South Carolina Coastal Erosion Study
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, conducted a 7-year, multi-disciplinary study of coastal erosion in northeastern South Carolina. The main objective was to understand the geologic and oceanographic processes that control sediment movement along the region's shoreline and thereby improve projections of coastal change. The study used...
Holocene reworking of a sand sheet in the Merrimack Embayment, Western Gulf of Maine
Recent bathymetric, backscatter, and seafloor sediment samples demonstrate that a large sand sheet was formed in the inner shelf by the reworking of the Merrimack River lowstand delta (deposited 12 kya; currently at 45 m depth) and braid plain during the Holocene transgression. Asymmetric bedforms and distinct grain size distributions suggest the sand sheet is actively being reworked by...
Authors
C.J. Hein, D. M. FitzGerald, Walter Barnhardt
Seismic stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington
The delta front of the Duwamish River valley near Elliott Bay and Harbor Island is founded on young Holocene deposits shaped by sea-level rise, episodic volcanism, and seismicity. These river-mouth deposits are highly susceptible to seismic soil liquefaction and are potentially prone to submarine landsliding and disintegrative flow failure. A highly developed commercial-industrial...
Authors
Robert E Kayen, Walter Barnhardt
Geologic framework of the long bay inner shelf: implications for coastal evolution in South Carolina
The inner continental shelf off northern South Carolina is a sediment-limited environment characterized by extensive hardground areas, where coastal plain strata and ancient channel-fill deposits are exposed at the sea floor. Holocene sand is concentrated in large shoals associated with active tidal inlets, an isolated shore-detached sand body, and a widespread series of low-relief sand...
Authors
Walter Barnhardt, J. F. Denny, W. Trent Baldwin, W. C. Schwab, R. Daniel Morton, Paul T. Gayes, N. W. Driscoll
Holocene evolution of the merrimack embayment, northern massachusetts, interperted from shallow seismic stratigraphy
Recent multi-beam, backscatter, and bottom sediment data demonstrate that a large sand sheet was formed in the inner shelf by the reworking of the Merrimack River lowstand delta and braid plain (12 kya) during the Holocene transgression. Seismic data reveal the presence of widespread channel cut-and-fill structures landward of the delta suggesting that much of the sand sheet consists of...
Authors
C.J. Hein, D. M. FitzGerald, Walter Barnhardt
High-resolution geologic mapping of the inner continental shelf: Boston Harbor and approaches, Massachusetts
This report presents the surficial geologic framework data and information for the sea floor of Boston Harbor and Approaches, Massachusetts (fig. 1.1). This mapping was conducted as part of a cooperative program between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM), and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The primary...
Authors
Seth D. Ackerman, Bradford Butman, Walter Barnhardt, William W. Danforth, James M. Crocker