Source: https://www.avo.alaska.edu/volcanoes/volcbib.php?volcname=Espenberg
Timestamp: 2019-04-23 07:58:10+00:00

Document:
Espenberg bibliography: all known references that deal with Espenberg.
Till, A.B., Dumoulin, J.A., Werdon, M.B., and Bleick, H.A., 2011, Bedrock geologic map of the Seward Peninsula, Alaska, and accompanying conodont data: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Map 3131, 2 sheets, scale 1:500,000, 1 pamphlet, 75 p., and database, available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/sim/3131 .
Beget, J.E., and Kargel, J.S., 2008, Volcanoes and permafrost in Bering Land Bridge National Preserve, arctic Alaska: Alaska Park Science, National Park Service, v. 7, n. 1, p. 33-37.
Kuzmina, S., Elias, S., Matheus, P., Storer, J.E., and Sher, A., 2008, Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the Last Glacial Maximum, inferred from insect fossils from a tephra buried soil at Tempest Lake, Seward Peninsula, Alaska: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, v. 267, n. 3, p. 245-255.
Hofle, Claudia, Edwards, M.E., Hopkins, D.M., Mann, D.H., and Ping, Chien-Lu, 2000, The full-glacial environment of the Northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska, reconstructed from the 21,500-year-old Kitluk paleosol: Quaternary Research, v. 53, n. 2., p. 143-153, doi:10.1006/qres.1999.2097 .
Beget, J. E., Layer, P. W., and Flowers, B., 1997, Tephrochronology and geochronology of the largest maars on earth, northern Alaska [abs.]: in IAVCEI General Assembly, Abstracts, p. 21.
Beget, J. E., Hopkins, D. M., and Charron, S. D., 1996, The largest known maars on earth, Seward Peninsula, northwest Alaska: Arctic, v. 49, n. 1, Calgary, AB, Canada, Arctic Institute of North America, p. 62-69.
Charron, S. D., 1995, Surficial mapping of the Cape Espenberg-Devil Mountain region and lake-core analyses from North Killeak Lake, Bering Land Bridge National Preserve, Western Alaska: University of Massachusetts unpublished M.S. thesis, 210 p.
Till, A. B., and Dumoulin, J. A., 1994, Geology of the Seward Peninsula and Saint Lawrence Island: in Plafker, George and Berg, H. C., (eds.), The Geology of Alaska, Geological Society of America The Geology of North America series v. G-1, p. 141-152.
Beget, J. E., 1993, Calderas produced by hydromagmatic eruptions through permafrost in Northwest Alaska [abs.]: in Kargel, J. S., Moore, Jeffrey, and Parker, Timothy, (eds.), Workshop on the Martian northern plains; Sedimentological, periglacial, and paleoclimatic evolution, Lunar and Planetary Institute Technical Report 93-04, Fairbanks, AK, Aug. 12-14, 1993, Part 1, p. 3.
Beget, J. E., and Mann, D., 1992, "Caldera" formation by unusually large phreatomagmatic eruptions through permafrost in arctic Alaska [abs.]: Eos, v. 73, n. 43, p. 636.
Hopkins, D. M., 1988, The Espenberg Maars: a record of explosive volcanic activity in the Devil Mountain-Cape Espenberg area, Seward Peninsula, Alaska: in Schaaf, J. M., (ed.), The Bering Sea Land Bridge National Preserve: an archeological survey, National Park Service, Alaska Regional Office Resources Management Report AR 0014, v. 1, p. 262-321.
Turner, D. L., Swanson, S. E., and Wescott, Eugene, 1981, Continental rifting-a new tectonic model for geothermal exploration of the central Seward Peninsula, Alaska: Geothermal Resources Council, Transactions, v. 5, p. 213-216.

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