U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin

U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin
Author: J. Christopher Haley
Publisher:
Total Pages: 446
Release: 1983
Genre: Asphalt
ISBN:

This history of placer mining of the gold deposits of east central Alaska, near the town of Circle, covers its development from 1893 to date and includes a summary of the regional geology and of the gravels of each creek.

Function of Soils for Human Societies and the Environment

Function of Soils for Human Societies and the Environment
Author: Emmanuel Frossard
Publisher: Geological Society of London
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2006
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9781862392076

The papers in this volume address issues of soil formation, soil management, soil protection and the role of biodiversity that must be considered for a sustainable soil use. The papers are aimed at geoscientists in the broadest sense, and others concerned with soil use who will also find chapters relevant to their interests. Soils knowledge used within other Earth sciences is essential for maintaining healthy ecosystems, for the solutions of problems in environmental quality and for sustainable use of soils by humans.

Post-Bonneville Paleoearthquake Chronology of the Salt Lake City Segment, Wasatch Fault Zone, from the 1999 "Megatrench" Site

Post-Bonneville Paleoearthquake Chronology of the Salt Lake City Segment, Wasatch Fault Zone, from the 1999
Author: James McCalpin
Publisher: Utah Geological Survey
Total Pages: 45
Release: 2002
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1557916705

This report presents the results of a paleoseismic investigation designed to date a long series of consecutive earthquakes on the Wasatch fault zone and to measure the variability of recurrence times between the events. Geologists have long recognized that the comparatively short average recurrence interval (compared to most other basin-and-range normal faults) between large surface-faulting earthquakes on the Salt Lake City segment of the Wasatch fault zone during mid- to late-Holocene time is potentially anomalous, and possibly affected by the rise and fall of Lake Bonneville. This study extends the paleoearthquake record back to Bonneville time, nearly doubling the previous record, and provides new information on the timing and periodicity of surface faulting on the Salt Lake City segment from the latest Pleistocene through the Holocene. The trench and accompanying auger hole for this study exposed 26 meters of vertical section, roughly four times that of a typical paleoseismic trench on the Wasatch fault zone, hence the name “Megatrench.”