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Featured researches published by Richard R. Rendigs.


Journal of Sedimentary Research | 1981

Geochemical evidence for modern sediment accumulation on the continental shelf off southern New England

Michael H. Bothner; E. C. Spiker; P. P. Johnson; Richard R. Rendigs; P. J. Aruscavage

ABSTRACT An area of fine-grained sediment approximately 170 km 74 km in size, located in water depths between 60 m and 150 m, south of Marthas Vineyard, Mass., is a site of modern sediment deposition. The 14C ages systematically increase with sediment depth from about 1,300 years B.P. at the surface to 8,000-10,000 years B.P. at the depth of maximum core penetration. The old age for the surface sediments probably results from a combination of deposition of old carbon and faunal mixing. In the finest sediments, the sedimentation rates were approximately 130 cm/1,000 yrs when deposition began and have decreased to about 25 cm/1,000 yrs. The decreasing sedimentation rate reflects a diminishing source of fine sediments, which presuma ly came from the Georges Bank and Nantucket Shoals area. Inventories of excess 210Pb in undisturbed cores average 70 dpm/cm2 (disintegrations per minute per square centimeter), more than two times higher than the flux of 210Pb from the atmosphere and from 226Ra decay in the overlying water. This additional influx of 210Pb either must be with new fine-grained sediment material or from solutions that are stripped of their 210Pb by particulates in the bottom nepheloid layer. Stable Pb concentrations in surface sediments are about 28 ppm, as much as two times higher than concentrations at depth. The high accumulation rates, 210Pb inventories, and trace-metal profiles imply that this area is a modern sink for fine-grained sediments and for pollutants associated with particulate matter in the water column. To our knowledge, this is the only site of present-day natural deposition on the Continental Shelf off the eastern United States, exclusive of the Gulf of Maine. Because the net currents on the outer half of this Continental Shelf flow from northeast to southwest, this fine-grained deposit may receive its sediments and possible contaminants from the Nantucket Shoals and Georges Bank regions.


Journal of Sedimentary Research | 1991

Modern sedimentary environments in Boston Harbor, Massachusetts

Harley J. Knebel; Richard R. Rendigs; Michael H. Bothner

ABSTRACT Analyses of sidescan-sonar records supplemented by available bathymetric, sedimentary, subbottom, and bottom-current data reveal the distributions of the following three categories of sedimentary environments within the glaciated, topographically complex Boston Harbor estuary in Massachusetts. 1) Environments of erosion appear on the sonographs either as patterns with isolated strong reflections or as uniform patterns of strong reflectivity. These patterns define outcrops of bedrock or till and coarse lag deposits that are being scoured and winnowed by tidal- and wave-induced currents. Erosional areas are located primarily along mainland and insular shores, within large channels that have strong tidal currents, atop submerged ridges and knolls, and across much of the harbor entrance. 2) Environments of deposition are depicted on the sidescan-sonar records as smooth, featureless surfaces that have low to moderate reflectivity. Depositional environments are found predominantly over shallow subtidal flats and in broad bathymetric lows where tidal currents are weak. Sediments within depositional areas are organic-rich sandy and clayey silts that are accumulating at rates ranging from 0.01 to 0.11 g/cm2/yr or 4000 to 46,100 metric tons/yr. The cumulative mass of modern mud in harbor depocenters is 24.3 million metric tons. 3) Environments of sediment reworking constitute areas affected by a combination of erosional and depositional processes. They are characterized on the sonographs by mosaics of light and dark patches produced by relatively subtle and gradational changes in reflectivity. Reworked sediments have diverse grain sizes that overlap and are transitional between those of the other two sedimentary environments, and they are indicative of highly variable bottom currents.


Circular | 1984

The Georges Bank monitoring program 1983; analysis of trace metals in bottom sediments

Michael H. Bothner; Richard R. Rendigs; Esma Campbell; M.W. Doughten; Philip J. Aruscavage; A.F. Dorrzapf; R.G. Johnson; C.M. Parmenter; M.J. Pickering; D.C. Brewster; F.W. Brown


SEPM Special Publication | 1992

Sedimentary Framework of Boston Harbor, Massachusetts

Harley J. Knebel; Richard R. Rendigs; Robert N. Oldale; Michael H. Bothner


Journal of Sedimentary Research | 1987

Effects of disaggregation on a fine-grained marine mud by two ultrasonic devices

Richard R. Rendigs; J. A. Commeau


Circular | 1984

The Georges Bank monitoring program, 1984; analysis of trace metals in bottom sediments during the second year of monitoring

Michael H. Bothner; Richard R. Rendigs; Esma Campbell; M.W. Doughten; C.M. Parmenter; M.J. Pickering; R.G. Johnson; J.R. Gillison


Open-File Report | 2004

An operation manual for a time-series, storm-activated suspended sediment sampler deployed in the coastal ocean: function, maintenance, and testing procedures

Richard R. Rendigs; Michael H. Bothner


Open-File Report | 1982

Studies of suspended matter along the North and Middle Atlantic outer continental shelf

Michael H. Bothner; C.M. Parmenter; Richard R. Rendigs; Bradford Butman; L.J. Poppe; John D. Milliman


Open-File Report | 1987

Analysis of trace metals in bottom sediments in support of deepwater biological processes studies on the U.S. South Atlantic continental slope and rise

Michael H. Bothner; Esma Campbell; G.P. DiLisio; C.M. Parmenter; Richard R. Rendigs; J.R. Gillison


Open-File Report | 1981

Sediment parameters for a fine-grained sediment deposit on the southeastern New England continental shelf

Richard R. Rendigs; Michael H. Bothner; Lawrence J. Poppe

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Michael H. Bothner

United States Geological Survey

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C.M. Parmenter

United States Geological Survey

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Harley J. Knebel

United States Geological Survey

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Bradford Butman

United States Geological Survey

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E. C. Spiker

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Ellyn T. Montgomery

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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J. A. Commeau

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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John D. Milliman

United States Geological Survey

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Michael A. Casso

United States Geological Survey

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P. J. Aruscavage

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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