GSA Bookstore

Table of Contents - Special Paper 229:

Sedimentologic Consequences of Convulsive Geologic Events


Sedimentologic relevance of convulsive geologic events, H. Edward Clifton

Nearshore responses to great storms, Robert A. Morton

Origin, behavior, and sedimentology of prehistoric catastrophic lahars at Mount St. Helens, Washington , Kevin M. Scott

The Mount Mazama climactic eruption (- 6900 yr B.P.) and resulting convulsive sedimentation on the Crater Lake caldera floor, continent, and ocean basin, C. Hans Nelson, Paul R. Carlson, and Charles R. Bacon

Sonar images of the path of recent failure events on the continental margin off Nice, France, Alberto Malinverno, William B. F. Ryan, Gerard Auffret, and Guy Pautot

The 1929 "Grand Banks" earthquake, slump, and turbidity current, David J. W. Piper, Alexander N. Shor, and John E. Hughes Clarke

Basin plains; Giant sedimentation events, Orrin H. Pilkey

Large-scale bedforms in boulder gravel produced by giant waves in Hawaii, George W. Moore and James G. Moore

Sedimentological consequences of two floods of extreme magnitude in the late Wisconsinan Wabash Valley, Gordon S. Fraser and Ned K. Bleuer

Deposits of a middle Tertiary convulsive geologic event, San Emigdio Range, southern California, Peter G. DeCelles

Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary sediment, Kenneth J. Hsü

Index