NORTHEASTERN GEOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Volume 21, Numbers 1-2, March/June 1999
DREDGING HARBORS: WHAT TO DO WITH TOXIC WASTE
DREDGING HARBORS: WHAT TO DO WITH TOXIC WASTE: A SYMPOSIUM
Gerald M. Friedman...................................................................................................................... 1
PREPARING A DREDGED MATERIAL MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR THE PORT OF NEW YORK/
NEW JERSEY
Leonard J. Houston......................................................................................................................................... 12
TOXIC CHEMICALS IN NEW YORK HARBOR
Simon Litten.................................................................................................................................................... 18
CONTAMINATED WATERS IN THE NEW YORK BIGHT
Gerald M. Friedman, Mossbah M. Kolkas, Blanca Y. Ching, and Tarik Zarrouk............................................. 35
THE IMPACT OF ORGANIC-RICH WASTE RELEASED INTO NEW YORK BIGHT SEDIMENT
Aleksandra Moch and Gerald M. Friedman..................................................................................................... 49
THE IMPACT OF TOXIC WASTE DUMPING ON THE SUBMARINE ENVIRONMENT; A CASE
STUDY FROM THE NEW YORK BIGHT
Mohamed K. Ahmed and Gerald M. Friedman............................................................................................... 102
MOLECULAR ORGANIC GEOCHEMISTRY OF NEW YORK BIGHT SEDIMENTS: SOURCES
OF BIOGENIC ORGANIC MATTER AND POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS
Michael A. Kruge.......................................................................................................................................... 121
A TOXICS SOURCE REDUCTION PROGRAM FOR THE NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY
HARBOR ESTUARY (ABSTRACT)
Selli Ausubel.................................................................................................................................................. 129
CLEANING UP NEW YORK HARBOR DREDGED SEDIMENTS BY REDUCING
CONTAMINANT INPUTS (ABSTRACT)
Dennis J. Suskowski...................................................................................................................................... 129
PREDICTING THE FATE OF CONTAMINANTS IN THE NEW YORK BIGHT (ABSTRACT)
Brad Butman, William Schwab, and Marilyn Buchholtz-ten Brink................................................................. 129
A SYSTEM-BASED RESEARCH EFFORT FOR NY ESTUARY SEDIMENT
CONTAMINATION REDUCTION (ABSTRACT)
Roelof Versteeg............................................................................................................................................. 129
TREATMENT OF CONTAMINATED SEDIMENTS IN NEW YORK/ NEW JERSEY
HARBOR (ABSTRACT)
Eric A. Stem, Kerwin R. Donate, Keith W. Jones, and Nicholas L. Clesceri................................................... 129
ACOUSTIC TECHNIQUES FOR THE MAPPING OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF
CONTAMINATED SEDIMENTS
David D. Caulfield and John C. Filkins.......................................................................................................... 130
BOOK REVIEWS........................................................................................................................................ 136
_________________________________
NORTHEASTERN GEOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES '
Volume 27, Number 3, September 1999
JOHN T. GALEY MEMORIAL ADDRESS: THE EAST COAST PETROLEUM PROVINCE:
SCIENCE AND SOCIETY
Robert R. Jordan......................................................................................................................................................... .139
SOIL AND SOIL-SOLUTION CHEMISTRY OF OUTER ISLAND, BRANFORD, CONNECTICUT
Catherine A. Carlson and Dwight K. Gledhill............................................................................................................. 142
HYDROSTRATIGRAPHY OF THE CRETACEOUS-AGE POTOMAC, RARITAN, MAGOTHY,
AND MERCHANTVILLE FORMATIONS AND HOLOCENE-AGE DELAWARE RIVER
ALLUVIUM, GLOUCESTER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
John W. Jengo.............................................................................................................................................................. l48
SCRATCH CIRCLES: A NEW SPECIMEN FROM A LAKE-MARGIN DEPOSIT OF THE
PASSAIC FORMATION (UPPER TRIASSIC), DOUGLASSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA
Robert Metz.................................................................................................................................................................. 179
SPIRAL COPROLITES FROM THE UPPER CRETACEOUS WENONAH-MT. LAUREL
AND NAVESINK FORMATIONS IN THE NORTHERN COASTAL PLAIN OF NEW JERSEY
Martin A. Becker, Jessica Meier, and William Slattery................................................................................................ 181
SEDIMENTATION, VOLCANISM, STRATIGRAPHY, AND TECTONISM AT THE
TRIASSIC-JURASSIC BOUNDARY IN THE DEERFIELD BASIN, MASSACHUSETTS
John F. Hubert and James A. Dutcher......................................................................................................................188
FORUMS ON THE HISTORY OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
INTRODUCTION: HISTORY OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Samuel T. Pees.........................................................................................................................................................................202
A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE OF PETROLEUM EXPLORATION PHILOSOPHY (ABSTRACT)
Edward A. Beaumont.................................................................................................................................................................202
EARLY HISTORY OF THE PETROLEUM INDUSTRY IN THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN
BASIN (ABSTRACT)
Donald C. Haney......................................................................................................................................................................203
A HISTORIC REVIEW OF PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND PRODUCTION IDEAS, CONCEPTS,
AND TECHNOLOGIES (ABSTRACT)
Donald L. Zieglar....................................................................................................................................................................203
HONORS AND AWARDS SESSION.......................................................................................................................................204
ANNOUNCEMENTS..................................................................................................................................................................215
BOOK REVIEWS.........................................................................................................................................................................217