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Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff

Filter Total Items: 1691

Evidence for faulting related to dissociation of gas hydrate and release of methane off the southeastern United States

This paper is part of the special publication Gas hydrates: relevance to world margin stability and climatic change (eds J.P. Henriet and J. Mienert). An irregular, faulted, collapse depression about 38 x 18 km in extent is located on the crest of the Blake Ridge offshore from the south- eastern United States. Faults disrupt the sea floor and terminate or sole out about 40-500 m below the sea floo
Authors
William P. Dillon, W. W. Danforth, D. R. Hutchinson, R.M. Drury, M.H. Taylor, J.S. Booth

The Toms Canyon structure, New Jersey outer continental shelf: A possible late Eocene impact crater

The Toms Canyon structure [~20-22 km wide] is located on the New Jersey outer continental shelf beneath 80-100 m of water, and is buried by ~1 km of upper Eocene to Holocene sedimentary strata. The structure displays several characteristics typical of terrestrial impact craters (flat floor; upraised faulted rim: brecciated sedimentary fill), but several other characteristics are atypical (an unusu
Authors
C. W. Poag, L. J. Poppe

Hydrodynamic forcing and sediment character in Boston Harbor

Calculated annual excess skin friction stress at various locations in Quincy Bay (outer Boston Harbor) was found to be correlated positively with sediment sand content. The correlation was optimized when a critical shear stress (??c) of 0.085 Pa was assumed for the bay. The excess shear stress was correlated negatively with sediment lead (Pb) and polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) concentrations. Thes
Authors
T.M. Ravens, O.S. Madsen, R. P. Signell, E.E. Adams, P.M. Gschwend

Evidence from Lake Baikal for Siberian glaciation during oxygen-isotope substage 5d

The paleoclimatic record from bottom sediments of Lake Baikal (eastern Siberia) reveals new evidence for an abrupt and intense glaciation during the initial part of the last interglacial period (isotope substage 5d). This glaciation lasted about 12 000 yr from 117 000 to 105 000 yr BP according to correlation with the SPEC-MAP isotope chronology. Lithological and biogeochemical evidence of glaciat
Authors
E.B. Karabanov, A.A. Prokopenko, D.F. Williams, Steven M. Colman

New seismic images of the cascadia subduction zone from cruise SO 108-ORWELL

In April and May 1996, a geophysical study of the Cascadia continental margin off Oregon and Washington was conducted aboard the German R/V Sonne. This cooperative experiment by GEOMAR and the USGS acquired wide-angle reflection and refraction seismic data, using ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS) and hydrophones (OBH), and multichannel seismic reflection (MCS) data. The main goal of this experiment
Authors
E.R. Flueh, M. A. Fisher, J. Bialas, J.R. Childs, D. Klaeschen, Nina Kukowski, T. Parsons, D.W. Scholl, Uri S. ten Brink, A.M. Trehu, N. Vidal

Water-level changes in Lake Baikal, Siberia: Tectonism versus climate

Relative changes in the level of Lake Baikal, amounting to hundreds of meters in Quaternary time, are well documented. Data presented here show that tectonic displacements of the lake outlet or former shoreline features are entirely sufficient to explain these relative lake-level changes. In contrast, the morphology and hydrology of the lake make its level hydrologically insensitive to climate cha
Authors
Steven M. Colman

Oceanic methane hydrate: The character of the Blake Ridge hydrate stability zone, and the potential for methane extraction

Oceanic methane hydrates are mineral deposits formed from a crystalline 'ice' of methane and water in sea-floor sediments (buried to less than about 1 km) in water depths greater than about 500 m; economic hydrate deposits are probably restricted to water depths of between 1.5 km and 4 km. Gas hydrates increase a sediment's strength both by 'freezing' the sediment and by filling the pore spaces in
Authors
M.D. Max, William P. Dillon

A new view into the Cascadia subduction zone and volcanic arc: Implications for earthquake hazards along the Washington margin

In light of suggestions that the Cascadia subduction margin may pose a significant seismic hazard for the highly populated Pacific Northwest region of the United States, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the Research Center for Marine Geosciences (GEOMAR), and university collaborators collected and interpreted a 530-km-long wide-angle onshore-offshore seismic transect across the subduction zone a
Authors
T. Parsons, A.M. Trehu, J. H. Luetgert, K. Miller, F. Kilbride, R. E. Wells, M. A. Fisher, E. Flueh, Uri S. ten Brink, N.I. Christensen

The reconstruction of short intense cooling events in northern Asia during interglacial period (isotopic stages 5, 7, 9) from the long continental records from Lake Baikal sediments

No abstract available.
Authors
E.B. Karabanov, D. Williams, A.A. Prokopenko, S. Fowell, Pierre Francus, S. Colman, Mikhail I. Kuzmin, E. Bezrukova, V. Misharina

Geophysical evidence for late Cenozoic subglacial volcanism beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet and additional speculation as to its origin

No abstract available.
Authors
John C. Behrendt, D. D. Blankenship, D. Damaske, A. K. Cooper, C. Finn, R.E. Bell, C. Ricci

Heat flow and geothermal field in Siberia

No abstract available.
Authors
A.J. Golmshtok, A. Duchkov, D. R. Hutchinson, S.B. Khanukaev, A.I. El'nikov