Title |
Rio Grande Delta in Texas-Sea-Level, Climate, Neotectonic and Anthropogenic Effects |
Subject |
Neotectonics; Nature -- Effect of human beings on; Climatic changes |
Spatial Coverage |
Rio Grande; Texas; New Mexico; Mexico |
Description |
The major Holocene coastal depocenter west of the Mississippi delta in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico is the Rio Grande delta at the Texas-State of Tamaulipas, Mexico, border, a system that began to form about 7,000 years ago. A project to define the origin of this low-lying and vulnerable delta, and most specifically to measure effects of sea level, land motion, and paleoclimate changes-and the more recent anthropogenic influences - has recently been initiated by Daniel Stanley of the Smithsonian Institution. |
Publisher |
U. S. Geological Survey |
Contributors |
Sound Waves |
Date |
1999 |
Type |
Text |
Format |
application/pdf |
Digitization Specifications |
pdf file copied from USGS website (http://soundwaves.usgs.gov/1999/05/index.html). Uploaded into CONTENTdm version 3.7. |
Identifier |
http://soundwaves.usgs.gov/1999/05/index.html |
Source |
Rio Grande Delta in Texas-Sea-Level, Climate, Neotectonic and Anthropogenic Effects: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific, Sound Waves Monthly Newsletter 1999-05, 1 p. |
Language |
eng |
Rights Management |
Public Domain, Courtesy of the USGS |
Holding Institution |
University of Utah |
ARK |
ark:/87278/s6dj5dk7 |
Setname |
wwdl_er |
ID |
1145818 |
Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6dj5dk7 |