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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Experimental Studies Of Fe-Mg Carbonates And Their Role In Petrogenesis Sep 1998

Experimental Studies Of Fe-Mg Carbonates And Their Role In Petrogenesis

Andrea M. Koziol

The occurrence of carbonate minerals in rocks and sediments is a mark of the interaction of the biosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere with the lithosphere. The studies described in this proposal will help geologists understand the conditions of formation of banded iron formations, carbonatites, and magnesite-bearing eclogites, among other parageneses.

The objectives of this study are to determine siderite (FeCO3), magnesite (MgCO3), and CO2 thermodynamic properties and the mixing relations of siderite-magnesite solid solutions. Selected carbonate univariant equilibria, experimentally reversed over a wide range of pressure and temperature, will provide this information. The equilibria siderite + hematite = magnetite + CO2, …


Ridgetop Splitting, Spreading, And Shattering Related To Earthquakes In Southern California, James P. Mccalpin Jan 1998

Ridgetop Splitting, Spreading, And Shattering Related To Earthquakes In Southern California, James P. Mccalpin

James P. McCalpin

Our mapping documents that anomalous ridgetop landforms are numerous in the San Gabriel and Santa Susana Mountains, and that many sites (37% of the San Gabriel sites, 16% of the Santa Susana sites) are not associated with any visible signs of landsliding. These sites may represent deep-seated gravitational spreading due to earthquake shaking. However, our factor analysis indicates that the spatial distribution of these suspected spreading landforms, with respect to ridge relief and distance to Late Quaternary faults, is essentially identical to that of landslides. Thus, it seems that if these spreading landforms represent the results of earthquake shaking, than …


Statistics Of Paleoseismic Data, James P. Mccalpin Jan 1998

Statistics Of Paleoseismic Data, James P. Mccalpin

James P. McCalpin

Compiled data from numerous neotectonic-geomorphic and trench studies reveals patterns in the spatial and temporal variation of coseismic fault displacement. Recurrence intervals between successive large earthquakes on faults define a near-symmetrical probability distribution with a coefficient of variance of 0.36. Normal faults have the most regular recurrence, and subduction zones the most variable. Variability in recurrence times at a site is not dependent on the number of recurrence intervals dated at that site. During historic surface-rupturing earthquakes slip has varied widely along strike. Based on 56 ruptures where more than 15 displacement measurements were made, the generic pattern is for …


Evaluation Of Chloride And Pesticide Transport In A Fractured Clayey Till Using Large Undisturbed Columns And Numerical Modeling, Peter R. Jorgensen, Larry Mckay, Niels H. Spliid Jan 1998

Evaluation Of Chloride And Pesticide Transport In A Fractured Clayey Till Using Large Undisturbed Columns And Numerical Modeling, Peter R. Jorgensen, Larry Mckay, Niels H. Spliid

Larry McKay

Saturated groundwater flow and tracer experiments using fluorescent dye, chloride, and the herbicides mecoprop and simazine were carried out in the laboratory using three large-diameter (0.5 m) undisturbed columns of fractured clayey till. Hydraulic conductivity of the columns ranged from 10−5 m/s in the shallowest column (1 m dept)) to 10−7 m/s in the deepest column (4 m depth) and were similar to field-measured values for these deposits. Results of the tracer experiments are consistent with a conceptual model of advective transport along the fractures combined with diffusion into the fine-grained matrix between the fractures. Arrival of the chloride tracer …


Geometry,Mechanisms, And Significance Of Extensional Folds From Examples In The Rockymountain Basin And Range Province, Susanne U. Janecke, C. J. Vandenburg, J. J. Blankenau Jan 1998

Geometry,Mechanisms, And Significance Of Extensional Folds From Examples In The Rockymountain Basin And Range Province, Susanne U. Janecke, C. J. Vandenburg, J. J. Blankenau

Susanne U. Janecke

No abstract provided.


Active Tectonics And Ultrahigh-Pressure Rocks, Ann Blythe Dec 1997

Active Tectonics And Ultrahigh-Pressure Rocks, Ann Blythe

Ann Blythe

This chapter compares modern exhumation and surface uplift rates with the rates needed for the preservation of ultrahigh pressure (UHP) metamorphic rocks. The highest recorded exhumation rates of ~ 5–10 mm/a are inferred from isotopic and fission-track analyses in the Himalaya, Southern Alps of New Zealand, and D’Entrecasteaux Islands. Similar rates (~7 mm/a) of surface uplift are measured from leveling surveys in Nepal and correlations of marine terraces in the Southern Alps. In Nepal, however, this surface uplift rate is occurring despite erosion, and the true rate of surface uplift is probably considerably higher. In restraining bends along the San …


Biogeography Of The Late Paleocene Benthic Foraminiferal Extinction, Ellen Thomas Dec 1997

Biogeography Of The Late Paleocene Benthic Foraminiferal Extinction, Ellen Thomas

Ellen Thomas

During the Late Paleocene Thermal Maximum (LPTM) benthic foraminifera at middle bathyal and greater depths suffered extinction of 30-50% of species during a few thousand years. Extinction was less severe at neritic to upper bathyal depths, where temporary changes in faunal composition prevailed. Pre-extinction deep-sea faunas were cosmopolitan and diverse, and contained heavily calcified species. Immediate post-extinction faunas were more variable geographically, exhibited low diversity, and were dominated by thin-walled calcareous or agglutinated taxa, possibly because CaCO3 dissolution increased globally from neritic to abyssal depths just before the extinction. These assemblages were dominated either by long-lived taxa such as Nuttallides …