{"pageNumber":"5937","pageRowStart":"148400","pageSize":"25","recordCount":165658,"records":[{"id":70038396,"text":"wdrCA6512 - 1965 - Water Resources Data for California, 1965; Part 1: Surface Water Records; Volume 2: Northern Great Basin and Central Valley","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-05-22T01:01:41","indexId":"wdrCA6512","displayToPublicDate":"2012-05-13T12:50:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":340,"text":"Water Data Report","code":"WDR","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":5}},"seriesNumber":"CA-65-1-2","title":"Water Resources Data for California, 1965; Part 1: Surface Water Records; Volume 2: Northern Great Basin and Central Valley","docAbstract":"The surface-water records for the 1965 water year for gaging stations, partial-record stations, and miscellaneous sites within California are given in this report. For convenience, also included are records for a few pertinent gaging stations in bordering States. The records were collected and computed by the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey, under the direction of Walter Hofmann, district chief, Menlo Park, Calif.","language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Geological Survey","publisherLocation":"Reston, VA","doi":"10.3133/wdrCA6512","usgsCitation":"U.S. Geological Survey, 1965, Water Resources Data for California, 1965; Part 1: Surface Water Records; Volume 2: Northern Great Basin and Central Valley: U.S. Geological Survey Water Data Report CA-65-1-2, xvii, 472 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/wdrCA6512.","productDescription":"xvii, 472 p.","startPage":"471","endPage":"943","temporalStart":"1964-10-01","temporalEnd":"1965-09-30","costCenters":[],"links":[{"id":256912,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/usgs_thumb.jpg"},{"id":256908,"rank":300,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/wdr/1965/ca-65/WDR-1965-vol2.pdf","linkFileType":{"id":1,"text":"pdf"}}],"country":"United States","state":"California","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"505bc48fe4b08c986b32b6f6"}
,{"id":70038395,"text":"wdrCA6511 - 1965 - Water Resources Data for California, 1965; Part 1: Surface Water Records; Volume 1: Colorado River Basin, Southern Great Basin, and Pacific Slope Basins excluding Central Valley","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-05-22T01:01:41","indexId":"wdrCA6511","displayToPublicDate":"2012-05-13T12:23:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":340,"text":"Water Data Report","code":"WDR","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":5}},"seriesNumber":"CA-65-1-1","title":"Water Resources Data for California, 1965; Part 1: Surface Water Records; Volume 1: Colorado River Basin, Southern Great Basin, and Pacific Slope Basins excluding Central Valley","docAbstract":"The surface-water records for the 1965 water year for gaging stations, partial-record stations, and miscellaneous sites within California are given in this report. For convenience, also included are records for a few pertinent gaging stations in bordering States. The records were collected and computed by the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey, under the direction of Walter Hofmann, district chief, Menlo Park, Calif.","language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Geological Survey","publisherLocation":"Reston, VA","doi":"10.3133/wdrCA6511","usgsCitation":"U.S. Geological Survey, 1965, Water Resources Data for California, 1965; Part 1: Surface Water Records; Volume 1: Colorado River Basin, Southern Great Basin, and Pacific Slope Basins excluding Central Valley: U.S. Geological Survey Water Data Report CA-65-1-1, xviii, 470 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/wdrCA6511.","productDescription":"xviii, 470 p.","costCenters":[],"links":[{"id":256914,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/usgs_thumb.jpg"},{"id":256907,"rank":300,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/wdr/1965/ca-65/WDR-1965-vol1.pdf","linkFileType":{"id":1,"text":"pdf"}}],"country":"United States","state":"California","otherGeospatial":"Colorado River Basin;Southern Great Basin;Pacific Slope Basins","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"505bc48ee4b08c986b32b6f0"}
,{"id":70006462,"text":"70006462 - 1965 - Changes in the bottom fauna of western Lake Erie from 1930 to 1961","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2025-05-01T15:49:58.493405","indexId":"70006462","displayToPublicDate":"2012-01-01T15:37:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":2620,"text":"Limnology and Oceanography","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Changes in the bottom fauna of western Lake Erie from 1930 to 1961","docAbstract":"<p><span>Samples were collected at 40 stations in western Lake Erie in 1961 to determine the species composition, distribution, and abundance of macrobenthonic organisms and to document changes since 1930, when a similar survey was made. The fauna in 1961 was composed principally of Oligochaeta, Tendipedidae (7 genera), Sphaeriidac (15 species), and Gastropoda (at least 8 species). Stations with a high density of Oligochaeta were near the principal sources of pollution (Maumee, Raisin, and Detroit rivers). Stations with fewer Oligochacta and a more diverse fauna were farthest from the river mouths. The population density of the burrowing mayfly,&nbsp;</span><i>Hexagenia</i><span>&nbsp;spp., was reduced from an average of 139/m</span><sup>2</sup><span>&nbsp;in 1930 to less than 1/m</span><sup>2</sup><span>&nbsp;in 1961. Organisms more abundant near the sources of pollution than in other areas were, in addition to Oligochaeta: the midge,&nbsp;</span><i>Procladius;</i><span>&nbsp;the fingernail clam,&nbsp;</span><i>Sphaerium transversum;</i><span>&nbsp;and the snail,&nbsp;</span><i>Valvata sincera</i><span>&nbsp;(sens. lat.). Organisms sensitive to pollution, such as amphipods, mayfly nymphs, caddisfly larvae, and naiad clams, were scarce and usually at the more lakeward stations. The most important changes in fauna during the 31-year period were: ninefold increase in Oligochacta; fourfold increase in Tendipedidae; twofold increase in Sphaeriidae; sixfold increase in Gastropoda; and a reduction of&nbsp;</span><i>Hexagenia</i><span>&nbsp;to less than 1% of former abundance. The area of pollution (as judged from the abundance of Oligochaeta) increased from 263 km</span><sup>2</sup><span>&nbsp;in 1930 to 1,020 km</span><sup>2</sup><span>&nbsp;in 1961.</span></p>","language":"English","publisher":"American Society of Limnology and Oceanography","doi":"10.4319/lo.1965.10.4.0551","usgsCitation":"Carr, J., and Hiltunen, J.K., 1965, Changes in the bottom fauna of western Lake Erie from 1930 to 1961: Limnology and Oceanography, v. 10, no. 4, p. 551-569, https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.1965.10.4.0551.","productDescription":"19 p.","startPage":"551","endPage":"569","costCenters":[{"id":324,"text":"Great Lakes Science Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":259809,"rank":1,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"country":"United States","state":"Michigan, Ohio","otherGeospatial":"western Lake Erie","geographicExtents":"{\n  \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\",\n  \"features\": [\n    {\n      \"type\": \"Feature\",\n      \"properties\": {},\n      \"geometry\": {\n        \"coordinates\": [\n          [\n            [\n              -83.5233245705458,\n              42.196187831073615\n            ],\n            [\n              -83.5233245705458,\n              41.395402942191254\n            ],\n            [\n              -82.65289175254695,\n              41.395402942191254\n            ],\n            [\n              -82.65289175254695,\n              42.196187831073615\n            ],\n            [\n              -83.5233245705458,\n              42.196187831073615\n            ]\n          ]\n        ],\n        \"type\": \"Polygon\"\n      }\n    }\n  ]\n}","volume":"10","issue":"4","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationDate":"2003-12-22","publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"5059f42fe4b0c8380cd4bbb6","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Carr, John F.","contributorId":67471,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Carr","given":"John F.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":354557,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Hiltunen, Jarl K.","contributorId":27820,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Hiltunen","given":"Jarl","email":"","middleInitial":"K.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":354556,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2}]}}
,{"id":70039153,"text":"70039153 - 1965 - Use of flumes in measuring discharge at gaging stations","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2022-12-20T16:58:24.369976","indexId":"70039153","displayToPublicDate":"2012-01-01T14:12:46","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":6,"text":"USGS Unnumbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":391,"text":"Water Surface Techniques","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":6}},"chapter":"16","title":"Use of flumes in measuring discharge at gaging stations","docAbstract":"This report discusses the general principles underlying the design of various types of flumes for measuring open-channel flow. Four flumes are described in detail, and the recommended discharge ratings for each are presented.","largerWorkType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"largerWorkTitle":"Surface Water Techniques: Book 1: Hydraulic measurement and computation","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":6,"text":"USGS Unnumbered Series"},"language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Geological Survey","doi":"10.3133/70039153","usgsCitation":"Kilpatrick, F.A., 1965, Use of flumes in measuring discharge at gaging stations: Water Surface Techniques, vii, 27 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/70039153.","productDescription":"vii, 27 p.","costCenters":[{"id":579,"text":"Surface Water Branch","active":false,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":261317,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/unnumbered/70039153/report-thumb.jpg"},{"id":261316,"rank":1,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/unnumbered/70039153/report.pdf"}],"noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"5059f1fde4b0c8380cd4af46","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Kilpatrick, F. A.","contributorId":22319,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Kilpatrick","given":"F.","email":"","middleInitial":"A.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":465697,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":70006987,"text":"70006987 - 1965 - Infectious pancreatic necrosis: its detection and identification","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-07-14T01:01:39","indexId":"70006987","displayToPublicDate":"2012-01-01T13:52:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":3196,"text":"Progressive Fish-Culturist","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Infectious pancreatic necrosis: its detection and identification","docAbstract":"Ultimate control of infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) in hatcheries depends largely upon learning where the virus occurs. To detect the presence of virus either susceptible fish or susceptible fish cell cultures may be used as test systems. In modern virology, it is generally agreed that cell cultures are more convenient, are usually a much more sensitive test system, and allow more rapid determinations.","largerWorkType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"largerWorkTitle":"Progressive Fish-Culturist","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"language":"English","publisher":"Taylor & Francis","publisherLocation":"Philadelphia, PA","doi":"10.1577/1548-8640(1965)27[112:IPN]2.0.CO;2","collaboration":"None","usgsCitation":"Wolf, K., 1965, Infectious pancreatic necrosis: its detection and identification: Progressive Fish-Culturist, v. 27, no. 2, p. 112-112, https://doi.org/10.1577/1548-8640(1965)27[112:IPN]2.0.CO;2.","productDescription":"1 p.","startPage":"112","endPage":"112","numberOfPages":"1","costCenters":[{"id":365,"text":"Leetown Science Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":258891,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"},{"id":258866,"rank":9999,"type":{"id":10,"text":"Digital Object Identifier"},"url":"https://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548-8640(1965)27[112:IPN]2.0.CO;2","linkFileType":{"id":5,"text":"html"}}],"volume":"27","issue":"2","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"505a3adfe4b0c8380cd62041","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Wolf, K.","contributorId":16344,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Wolf","given":"K.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":355620,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":70039474,"text":"70039474 - 1965 - What is water?","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-08-08T01:02:14","indexId":"70039474","displayToPublicDate":"2012-01-01T11:16:04","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":6,"text":"USGS Unnumbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":362,"text":"General Information Product","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":6}},"title":"What is water?","docAbstract":"If a schoolboy asked this question, you would answer it easily enough. \"Why, water is a liquid found in and around the earth. Water is the sea, lakes, streams, springs and what comes gushing out of the tap when we turn it on.\" If he still looks a little unsatisfied, you would explain that our bodies are three-fourths water, and that water covers threefourths of the earth's surface. But you would have to admit to yourself that these facts, interesting as they are, do not quite answer the boy's question: \"What is water?\"","language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Government Printing Office","publisherLocation":"Washington, D.C.","doi":"10.3133/70039474","usgsCitation":"Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, 1965, What is water?: General Information Product, 4 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/70039474.","productDescription":"4 p.","costCenters":[],"links":[{"id":261606,"rank":800,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/70039474/report.pdf"},{"id":261607,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/70039474/report-thumb.jpg"}],"noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"505bd040e4b08c986b32ed56","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey","contributorId":128075,"corporation":true,"usgs":false,"organization":"Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey","id":535321,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":70040600,"text":"bGW54 - 1965 - Maximum known discharges of New York streams","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-11-02T13:13:44","indexId":"bGW54","displayToPublicDate":"2012-01-01T00:00:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":4,"text":"Other Government Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":242,"text":"Bulletin","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":4}},"seriesNumber":"GW-54","title":"Maximum known discharges of New York streams","language":"English","publisher":"New York State Water Resources Commission","publisherLocation":"Albany, NY","usgsCitation":"Robinson, F., 1965, Maximum known discharges of New York streams: Bulletin GW-54, 40 p.","productDescription":"40 p.","costCenters":[],"links":[{"id":262952,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"country":"United States","state":"New York","geographicExtents":"{ \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\", \"features\": [ { \"type\": \"Feature\", \"properties\": {}, \"geometry\": { \"type\": \"Polygon\", \"coordinates\": [ [ [ -79.760000,40.480000 ], [ -79.760000,45.020000 ], [ -71.860000,45.020000 ], [ -71.860000,40.480000 ], [ -79.760000,40.480000 ] ] ] } } ] }","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"5094ebe3e4b0e5cfc2acdce5","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Robinson, F.L.","contributorId":56720,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Robinson","given":"F.L.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":468659,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":70046322,"text":"wdrNM641 - 1965 - Water resources data for New Mexico, water year 1964; Part I. Surface water records","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2013-07-08T10:51:33","indexId":"wdrNM641","displayToPublicDate":"2012-01-01T00:00:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":340,"text":"Water Data Report","code":"WDR","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":5}},"seriesNumber":"NM-64-1","title":"Water resources data for New Mexico, water year 1964; Part I. Surface water records","docAbstract":"The surface-water records for the 1964 water year for gaging stations, partialrecord stations, and miscellaneous sites within the State of New Mexico are given in this report. For convenience there are also included records for a few pertinent gaging stations in bordering States. The records were collected and computed by the Water Resources Division of the U. S. Geological Survey, under the direction of W. L. Heckler, district engineer, Surface Water Branch. This report is the fourth in a series presenting, annually, basic data on surfacewater records by States. Through September 30, 1960, the records of discharge and stage of streams and contents and stage of lakes or reservoirs were published in an annual series of U. S. Geological Survey water-supply papers entitled \"Surface Water Supply of the United States.\" Since 1951 there have been 20 volumes in the series; each volume covered an area whose boundaries coincided with those of certain natural drainage areas. The records in New Mexico were contained in Parts 7, 8, and 9 of that series. Beginning with the 1961 water year, streamflow records and related data will be released by the Geological Survey in annual reports on a State-boundary basis. Distribution of these basic-data reports will be limited and primarily for local needs. The records later will be published in Geological Survey water-supply papers at 5-year intervals. These 5-year water-supply papers will show daily discharge and will be compiled on the same geographical areas previously used for the annual series; however, some of the 14 parts of conterminous United States will be further subdivided.","language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Geological Survey","publisherLocation":"Santa Fe, NM","doi":"10.3133/wdrNM641","collaboration":"Prepared in cooperation with the State of New Mexico and with other agencies","usgsCitation":"Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, 1965, Water resources data for New Mexico, water year 1964; Part I. Surface water records: U.S. Geological Survey Water Data Report NM-64-1, 270 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/wdrNM641.","productDescription":"270 p.","costCenters":[],"links":[{"id":273451,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/usgs_thumb.jpg"},{"id":274520,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/wdr/1964/nm-64/report.pdf"}],"country":"United States","state":"New Mexico","geographicExtents":"{ \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\", \"features\": [ { \"type\": \"Feature\", \"properties\": {}, \"geometry\": { \"type\": \"Polygon\", \"coordinates\": [ [ [ -109.052,31.3322 ], [ -109.052,37.0003 ], [ -103.002,37.0003 ], [ -103.002,31.3322 ], [ -109.052,31.3322 ] ] ] } } ] }","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"51dbdf78e4b0f81004b77df7","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey","contributorId":128075,"corporation":true,"usgs":false,"organization":"Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey","id":535532,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":5222212,"text":"5222212 - 1965 - Bird mortality after spraying for Dutch elm disease with DDT","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2026-02-11T15:40:53.548067","indexId":"5222212","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":3338,"text":"Science","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Bird mortality after spraying for Dutch elm disease with DDT","docAbstract":"In Hanover, New Hampshire, where elms were sprayed with DDT, 151 dead birds were found; 10 dead birds were found in Norwich, Vermont, where no DDT was used. Chemical analyses of dead birds, observation of symptoms of DDT poisoning, and a population decline after spraying all indicate severe mortality among certain species in Hanover.","language":"English","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","doi":"10.1126/science.148.3666.90","usgsCitation":"Wurster, C., Wurster, D., and Strickland, W., 1965, Bird mortality after spraying for Dutch elm disease with DDT: Science, v. 148, no. 3666, p. 90-91, https://doi.org/10.1126/science.148.3666.90.","productDescription":"2 p.","startPage":"90","endPage":"91","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":201630,"rank":1,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"country":"United States","state":"New Hampshire, Vermont","geographicExtents":"{\n  \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\",\n  \"features\": [\n    {\n      \"type\": \"Feature\",\n      \"properties\": {},\n      \"geometry\": {\n        \"coordinates\": [\n          [\n            [\n              -72.35380155519162,\n              43.73721347582017\n            ],\n            [\n              -72.35380155519162,\n              43.66161342664324\n            ],\n            [\n              -72.23052948781509,\n              43.66161342664324\n            ],\n            [\n              -72.23052948781509,\n              43.73721347582017\n            ],\n            [\n              -72.35380155519162,\n              43.73721347582017\n            ]\n          ]\n        ],\n        \"type\": \"Polygon\"\n      }\n    }\n  ]\n}","volume":"148","issue":"3666","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e48c8e4b07f02db541505","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Wurster, C.F.","contributorId":17324,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Wurster","given":"C.F.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335823,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Wurster, D.H.","contributorId":27961,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Wurster","given":"D.H.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335824,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2},{"text":"Strickland, W.N.","contributorId":106216,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Strickland","given":"W.N.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335825,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":3}]}}
,{"id":5221295,"text":"5221295 - 1965 - Bird mortality following DDT spray for Dutch elm disease","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2016-12-22T12:54:18","indexId":"5221295","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":1465,"text":"Ecology","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Bird mortality following DDT spray for Dutch elm disease","docAbstract":"Avian populations in Hanover, N. H., a town that has sprayed its elms with DDT for many years in an attempt to control Dutch elm disease, were compared with those in Norwich, Vt., a town 1 mile (1.6 km) west of Hanover that has never sprayed. Hanover applied 109 lb DDT/acre (2.1 kg/hectare) in April 1963, then used Methoxychlor in April 1964. Population surveys were taken regularly during spring and early summer of these years, dead birds were collected in both towns, and 106 birds were analyzed for DDT, DDE, and DDD. Severe mortality of both resident and migrant birds occurred in Hanover during spring 1963, and the evidence implicates DDT as its cause. Robin loss was estimated at 70% of the resident population, or 350 to 400 individuals, but mortality among other species of widely varied feeding habits was also substantial. Feeding habits suggest that some birds acquired the toxicant by eating living insects carrying DDT, presenting the paradox of survival of the intended DDT victims, and death, instead, of insectivorous birds. Organ and whole bird analyses are presented and criteria for establishing cause of death are discussed. Most of the DDT had been converted to DDE and DDD, and residues were found in all organs analyzed. Robin mortality was reduced, but not eliminated following Methoxychlor application in 1964; these losses were believed caused by residual DDT in the soil. There was no evidence DDT poisoning among other species in 1964, though the dead birds collected were not analyzed. ","largerWorkType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"largerWorkTitle":"Ecology","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"language":"English","doi":"10.2307/1934880","usgsCitation":"Wurster, D., Wurster, C., and Strickland, W., 1965, Bird mortality following DDT spray for Dutch elm disease: Ecology, v. 46, no. 4, p. 488-499, https://doi.org/10.2307/1934880.","productDescription":"488-499","startPage":"488","endPage":"499","numberOfPages":"12","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":194004,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"volume":"46","issue":"4","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4a2fe4b07f02db615fb5","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Wurster, D.H.","contributorId":27961,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Wurster","given":"D.H.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333512,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Wurster, C.F.","contributorId":17324,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Wurster","given":"C.F.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333511,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2},{"text":"Strickland, W.N.","contributorId":106216,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Strickland","given":"W.N.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333513,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":3}]}}
,{"id":5222141,"text":"5222141 - 1965 - Body condition and response to pesticides in woodcocks","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2017-04-19T14:39:28","indexId":"5222141","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":2508,"text":"Journal of Wildlife Management","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Body condition and response to pesticides in woodcocks","docAbstract":"<p>Response of woodcocks (<i>Philohela minor</i>) to heptachlor dosage was closely related to the physical condition of the birds, as reflected by body weight and by body weight in relation to capture weight: in a series of tests with underweight birds, nearly all woodcocks died at dosage levels well below those at which nearly all the birds in a normal-weight series lived. Heptachlor residues in tissues were determined and their loss with time was estimated. Dieldrin proved more toxic than heptachlor to birds of similar weight. Birds in good weight survived massive doses of DDT; some succumbed to smaller spaced serial doses, but only when these were accompanied by starvation rations. When birds were placed in foil-lined boxes after doses of heptachlor added to butter oil or corn oil, it became evident that they passed quantities of oil in about 3 hours, thus very likely ridding themselves of a large part of the heptachlor dose. It was concluded that other methods than dosage with encapsulated chemicals would be needed for appraisal of field effects of toxicants on woodcocks.</p>","language":"English","publisher":"Wiley","doi":"10.2307/3798643","usgsCitation":"Stickel, W.H., Dodge, W.E., Sheldon, W.G., DeWitt, J.B., and Stickel, L.F., 1965, Body condition and response to pesticides in woodcocks: Journal of Wildlife Management, v. 29, no. 1, p. 147-155, https://doi.org/10.2307/3798643.","productDescription":"9 p.","startPage":"147","endPage":"155","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":487019,"rank":1,"type":{"id":40,"text":"Open Access Publisher Index Page"},"url":"https://doi.org/10.2307/3798643","text":"Publisher Index Page"},{"id":195903,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"volume":"29","issue":"1","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4a1be4b07f02db60752e","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Stickel, William H.","contributorId":178252,"corporation":false,"usgs":false,"family":"Stickel","given":"William","email":"","middleInitial":"H.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335620,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Dodge, Wendell E.","contributorId":15582,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Dodge","given":"Wendell","email":"","middleInitial":"E.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335624,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2},{"text":"Sheldon, William G.","contributorId":35411,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Sheldon","given":"William","email":"","middleInitial":"G.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335621,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":3},{"text":"DeWitt, James B.","contributorId":58745,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"DeWitt","given":"James","email":"","middleInitial":"B.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335623,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":4},{"text":"Stickel, Lucille F.","contributorId":76598,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Stickel","given":"Lucille","email":"","middleInitial":"F.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":335622,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":5}]}}
,{"id":5220024,"text":"5220024 - 1965 - Natal plumage characters in rails","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2017-06-07T12:51:58","indexId":"5220024","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":3544,"text":"The Auk","onlineIssn":"1938-4254","printIssn":"0004-8038","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Natal plumage characters in rails","docAbstract":"<p><span id=\"_mce_caret\" data-mce-bogus=\"true\"><strong>﻿</strong><span id=\"_mce_caret\" data-mce-bogus=\"true\">﻿The downy young of the Clapper Rail (<i>Rallus longirostris</i>), King Rail (<i>Rallus elegans</i>), and Virginia Rail (<i>Rallus limicola</i>) are described as totally black in all literature examined by us. Wetherbee (Bird-Banding, 32: 141-159, 1961) noted that some neonates of Virginia Rail from Storrs, Connecticut, had patches of white down below the wings. \"Neonatal\" pertains to the developmental condition or characters at hatching distinct from the much abused term \"natal\" which in ornithology pertains to the condition or characters from hatching to acquisition of teleoptile plumage. The presence of similar patches of white down was observed by us in the Clapper Rails at Chincoteague, Virginia (Figure 1). An examination of many hundreds of specimens from the ranges of most of the subspecies of Clapper Rails, including the strongly contrasting <i>R. longirostris saturatus</i> from Louisiana, revealed the almost invariable presence of at least 1 and sometimes as many as 30 white neossoptiles in the anterior abdominal regions of the ventral pterylae. Conversely, no King Rail neonate examined by us has shown a white neossoptile. </span></span><br data-mce-bogus=\"1\"></p>","language":"English","publisher":"American Ornithological Society","doi":"10.2307/4083128","usgsCitation":"Wetherbee, D., and Meanley, B., 1965, Natal plumage characters in rails: The Auk, v. 82, no. 3, p. 500-501, https://doi.org/10.2307/4083128.","productDescription":"2 p.","startPage":"500","endPage":"501","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":194156,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"volume":"82","issue":"3","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4b32e4b07f02db6b491d","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Wetherbee, D.K.","contributorId":61521,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Wetherbee","given":"D.K.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331220,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Meanley, B.","contributorId":43867,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Meanley","given":"B.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331219,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2}]}}
,{"id":5220413,"text":"5220413 - 1965 - The roosting behavior of the red-winged blackbird in the southern United States","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-02-02T00:14:38","indexId":"5220413","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":3783,"text":"The Wilson Bulletin","printIssn":"0043-5643","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"The roosting behavior of the red-winged blackbird in the southern United States","docAbstract":"This report concerns the roosting behavior of the Red-winged blackbird and associated species ; and is based on observations made over a 14-year period mainly in the Southern United States....Th e greatest concentrations of Red-winged Blackbirds in the southern states occur in the Coastal Plain Province in or near major grain growing regions.....Roosts are formed during every month of the year. The largest roosts are usually found in winter; the smallest during the breeding season. Composition of roosts may vary from place to place and from season to season.....The general locality in which roosts are found is probably influenced by food supply. The precise location is determined by the character of the habitat. Wetland situations are preferred by Red-winged Blackbirds. Most of the roosts in the Coastal Plain Province are located in marshes and swamps. Rice fields are important in the southern rice producing area. Coniferous stands and bamboo are frequently used in the Piedmont Province.....Blackbirds move out of roosts each morning at about dawn or shortly after, and return in the evening usually before sunset. Some birds may travel 35 miles or more from the starting point in the course of a day?s feeding activity. On cloudy days blackbirds move into the roost earlier than on sunny days. At a Maryland roost subadult male Redwinged Blackbirds were the first to arrive at the roost. Females and then juveniles followed. Adult males were sporadic in their time of arrival. Stratification in a roost flight was observed where birds were flying downstream to a river marsh roost. Bobolinks flew at the greatest elevations; next in order of height were Starlings, Common Grackles, Brown-headed Cowbirds, and Red-winged Blackbirds. The exodus of a large roosting population is usually of shorter duration that the movement into the roost..... In virtually all roosts some segments of the population are segregated. Stratification by species and by sexes of some species has been noted in roosts. Blackbirds may roost on partly submerged vegetation in a marsh, on the ground in grassy fields, in branches of trees, or in various other sites. In deciduous thickets with high bird densities they may roost at elevations of 1 foot to 30 feet or more. In one Arkansas roost Red-winged Blackbirds were roosting along branches at an average of about three birds per foot.","largerWorkType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"largerWorkTitle":"Wilson Bulletin","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"language":"English","usgsCitation":"Meanley, B., 1965, The roosting behavior of the red-winged blackbird in the southern United States: The Wilson Bulletin, v. 77, no. 3, p. 217-228.","productDescription":"217-228","startPage":"217","endPage":"228","numberOfPages":"12","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":193384,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"},{"id":15776,"rank":300,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Wilson/v077n03/p0217-p0228.pdf","linkFileType":{"id":1,"text":"pdf"}}],"volume":"77","issue":"3","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4a6fe4b07f02db640d8e","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Meanley, B.","contributorId":43867,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Meanley","given":"B.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331783,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":5221296,"text":"5221296 - 1965 - Care of captive woodcocks","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2017-04-19T14:37:22","indexId":"5221296","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":2508,"text":"Journal of Wildlife Management","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Care of captive woodcocks","docAbstract":"<p>Numbers of American woodcocks (<i>Philohela minor</i>) were held in cages for experimental work lasting several months. Injuries caused by birds attempting to flush were greatly reduced by clipping feathers from one wing, by making cage walls opaque, and by using high cages or false ceilings of fabric. Size of cage was found not to be important, to judge from weight changes, so long as ample food was unmistakably available. Birds were kept in both large and small cages without social conflicts. Cages on the ground proved too unsanitary for long-term use; small steel cages with removable floors were practical but did not solve the sanitation problem. Living earthworms (<i>Lumbricus terrestris</i>) were provided daily in amounts roughly equal to weights of birds. Birds gained on this food when worms were offered in suitable ways. The feeding tray recommended is a large roasting pan with a snap-on metal rim that retards loss of worms. Trays contained moist peat in which birds probed for worms. Two efforts to keep woodcocks on a diet of red worms (<i>Eisenia foetide</i>) were unsuccessful; use of this worm was considered responsible. Woodcocks were handled and transported for short periods with least injury to them when they were rolled individually in soft bags.</p>","language":"English","publisher":"Wiley","doi":"10.2307/3798645","usgsCitation":"Stickel, W.H., Sheldon, W.G., and Stickel, L.F., 1965, Care of captive woodcocks: Journal of Wildlife Management, v. 29, no. 1, p. 161-172, https://doi.org/10.2307/3798645.","productDescription":"12 p.","startPage":"161","endPage":"172","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":487041,"rank":1,"type":{"id":40,"text":"Open Access Publisher Index Page"},"url":"https://doi.org/10.2307/3798645","text":"Publisher Index Page"},{"id":194005,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"volume":"29","issue":"1","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e49f4e4b07f02db5efdef","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Stickel, William H.","contributorId":178252,"corporation":false,"usgs":false,"family":"Stickel","given":"William","email":"","middleInitial":"H.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333514,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Sheldon, William G.","contributorId":35411,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Sheldon","given":"William","email":"","middleInitial":"G.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333515,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2},{"text":"Stickel, Lucille F.","contributorId":76598,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Stickel","given":"Lucille","email":"","middleInitial":"F.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333516,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":3}]}}
,{"id":5221297,"text":"5221297 - 1965 - Effects of heptachlor-contaminated earthworms on woodcocks","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2020-05-13T19:29:21.658207","indexId":"5221297","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":2508,"text":"Journal of Wildlife Management","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Effects of heptachlor-contaminated earthworms on woodcocks","docAbstract":"<p><span>The effects on woodcocks (<i>Philohela minor</i>) of eating heptachlor-contaminated earthworms were studied experimentally in a series of feeding trials in Louisiana in the winter of 1960-61. Six of 12 woodcocks fed worms which had been contaminated at an average of 2.86 ppm of heptachlor epoxide died within 35 days; 4 more had died by the fifty-third day, when the other 2 were killed for analysis. Worms from areas in Louisiana treated with 2 pounds of heptachlor per acre often contain more than 3 ppm of heptachlor epoxide. Eleven of 12 woodcocks fed worms contaminated at an average of 0.65 ppm survived the full 60 days of the experiment; one died on the forty-fifth day, apparently from other causes. All 11 untreated birds survived. Survivors were kept on one-quarter rations of untreated worms for 11 days. Two woodcocks, untreated previously, died during this starvation period. Five previously treated died; two were observed in spasms at death, and these contained 5.9 and 7.2 ppm heptachlor epoxide in their tissues, suggesting that the previous contaminated diet may have influenced mortality, even though the difference between two of nine dying and five of nine dying is not statistically significant. Surviving starved birds given an unrestricted supply of treated or untreated worms for 5 days survived and gained weight. Residues accumulated in their tissues in this time approached levels in birds that died of heptachlor poisoning. Residues in tissues of birds with different histories suggested residue loss at a rate of approximately 2.8 percent per day. Toxicant absorption was estimated to be in the approximate range of 16-20 percent. Residues in birds fed worms containing 0.65 ppm heptachlor epoxide were in the same general magnitude as those in field-caught birds, suggesting a similar average contamination of food supply. Weights and weight changes did not differ significantly between untreated birds and those receiving the lower level of toxicant. Among birds on one-quarter rations, the percentage of weight that could be lost without danger seemed to be near 20 percent. Woodcocks ate 18-208 grams of worms per day (average, 121 grams), representing 11-143 percent (average, 77 percent) of their body weights; birds ate contaminated and uncontaminated food in essentially equivalent amounts. Symptoms of heptachlor poisoning differed considerably between birds.</span></p>","largerWorkTitle":"","language":"English","publisher":"Wiley","doi":"10.2307/3798642","collaboration":"","usgsCitation":"Stickel, W.H., Hayne, D.W., and Stickel, L., 1965, Effects of heptachlor-contaminated earthworms on woodcocks: Journal of Wildlife Management, v. 29, no. 1, p. 132-146, https://doi.org/10.2307/3798642.","productDescription":"15 p.","startPage":"132","endPage":"146","numberOfPages":"15","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":194091,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"volume":"29","issue":"1","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e49bde4b07f02db5d06b3","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Stickel, W. H.","contributorId":23239,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Stickel","given":"W.","email":"","middleInitial":"H.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333517,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Hayne, D. W.","contributorId":31075,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Hayne","given":"D.","email":"","middleInitial":"W.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333518,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2},{"text":"Stickel, L.F.","contributorId":41095,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Stickel","given":"L.F.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":333519,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":3}]}}
,{"id":5224763,"text":"5224763 - 1965 - Rodent repellents, correlation between chemical structure and rodent repellency of benzoic acid derivatives","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2025-01-02T17:28:11.391454","indexId":"5224763","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:34","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":2149,"text":"Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Rodent repellents, correlation between chemical structure and rodent repellency of benzoic acid derivatives","docAbstract":"Sixty-five benzoic acid derivatives were either prepared or obtained from commercial concerns, tested for rat repellency, and their indices of repellency computed.  The data from these tests were considered analytically for any correlation between chemical structure and rat repellency.  The results suggest a qualitative relationship which is useful in deciding probability of repellency in other compounds.","language":"English","publisher":"ACS Publications","doi":"10.1021/jf60138a003","usgsCitation":"Fearn, J., and DeWitt, J., 1965, Rodent repellents, correlation between chemical structure and rodent repellency of benzoic acid derivatives: Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, v. 13, no. 2, p. 116-117, https://doi.org/10.1021/jf60138a003.","productDescription":"2 p.","startPage":"116","endPage":"117","numberOfPages":"2","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":198051,"rank":1,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"volume":"13","issue":"2","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationDate":"2002-05-01","publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4ad7e4b07f02db684629","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Fearn, J.E.","contributorId":95171,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Fearn","given":"J.E.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":342613,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"DeWitt, J.B.","contributorId":89080,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"DeWitt","given":"J.B.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":342612,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2}]}}
,{"id":5220477,"text":"5220477 - 1965 - Sarcocystis in a yellowthroat and a rusty blackbird","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2018-03-26T15:52:34","indexId":"5220477","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:33","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":1140,"text":"Bulletin of the Wildlife Disease Association","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Sarcocystis in a yellowthroat and a rusty blackbird","docAbstract":"<p>No abstract available.</p>","language":"English","publisher":"Wildlife Disease Association","doi":"10.7589/0090-3558-1.3.36","usgsCitation":"Locke, L.N., and Knisley, J., 1965, Sarcocystis in a yellowthroat and a rusty blackbird: Bulletin of the Wildlife Disease Association, v. 1, no. 3, p. 36-36, https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-1.3.36.","productDescription":"1 p.","startPage":"36","endPage":"36","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":193848,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"country":"United States","state":"Maryland ","city":"Laurel, Upper Marlboro","geographicExtents":"{\n  \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\",\n  \"features\": [\n    {\n      \"type\": \"Feature\",\n      \"properties\": {\n        \"stroke\": \"#555555\",\n        \"stroke-width\": 2,\n        \"stroke-opacity\": 1,\n        \"fill\": \"#555555\",\n        \"fill-opacity\": 0.3\n      },\n      \"geometry\": {\n        \"type\": \"Polygon\",\n        \"coordinates\": [\n          [\n            [\n              -76.8878173828125,\n              39.010380737701965\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.76593780517578,\n              39.010380737701965\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.76593780517578,\n              39.09436422031014\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.8878173828125,\n              39.09436422031014\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.8878173828125,\n              39.010380737701965\n            ]\n          ]\n        ]\n      }\n    },\n    {\n      \"type\": \"Feature\",\n      \"properties\": {\n        \"stroke\": \"#555555\",\n        \"stroke-width\": 2,\n        \"stroke-opacity\": 1,\n        \"fill\": \"#555555\",\n        \"fill-opacity\": 0.3\n      },\n      \"geometry\": {\n        \"type\": \"Polygon\",\n        \"coordinates\": [\n          [\n            [\n              -76.81365966796874,\n              38.77817551784403\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.69761657714844,\n              38.77817551784403\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.69761657714844,\n              38.84826438869913\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.81365966796874,\n              38.84826438869913\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.81365966796874,\n              38.77817551784403\n            ]\n          ]\n        ]\n      }\n    }\n  ]\n}","volume":"1","issue":"3","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4a0ee4b07f02db5fdca5","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Locke, L. N.","contributorId":73539,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Locke","given":"L.","email":"","middleInitial":"N.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331885,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Knisley, J.O.","contributorId":33006,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Knisley","given":"J.O.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331884,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2}]}}
,{"id":5220481,"text":"5220481 - 1965 - Occurrence of the fluke, Procyotrema marsupiformis Harkema and Miller, 1959, in a Maryland raccoon","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2025-05-01T14:54:42.072146","indexId":"5220481","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:33","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":2414,"text":"Journal of Parasitology","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Occurrence of the fluke, Procyotrema marsupiformis Harkema and Miller, 1959, in a Maryland raccoon","docAbstract":"<p>No abstract available.</p>","language":"English","publisher":"American Society of Parasitologists","doi":"10.2307/3275952","usgsCitation":"Locke, L.N., and Brown, E.E., 1965, Occurrence of the fluke, Procyotrema marsupiformis Harkema and Miller, 1959, in a Maryland raccoon: Journal of Parasitology, v. 51, no. 3, https://doi.org/10.2307/3275952.","productDescription":"1 p.","startPage":"355","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":487908,"rank":2,"type":{"id":40,"text":"Open Access Publisher Index Page"},"url":"https://doi.org/10.2307/3275952","text":"Publisher Index Page"},{"id":194011,"rank":1,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"country":"United States","state":"Maryland","city":"Laurel","otherGeospatial":"Petuxent Wildlife Research Center","geographicExtents":"{\n  \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\",\n  \"features\": [\n    {\n      \"type\": \"Feature\",\n      \"properties\": {\n        \"stroke\": \"#555555\",\n        \"stroke-width\": 2,\n        \"stroke-opacity\": 1,\n        \"fill\": \"#555555\",\n        \"fill-opacity\": 0.3\n      },\n      \"geometry\": {\n        \"type\": \"Polygon\",\n        \"coordinates\": [\n          [\n            [\n              -76.81812286376953,\n              39.08796899387221\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.82327270507812,\n              39.08423817730926\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.83631896972655,\n              39.058650119748236\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.87751770019531,\n              39.04398611520078\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.88644409179688,\n              39.038652995045695\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.88507080078125,\n              39.02185103533526\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.86172485351562,\n              38.99997583555929\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.71134948730469,\n              39.01091428117347\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.71134948730469,\n              39.09489712966929\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.80782318115234,\n              39.089301380536796\n            ],\n            [\n              -76.81812286376953,\n              39.08796899387221\n            ]\n          ]\n        ]\n      }\n    }\n  ]\n}","volume":"51","issue":"3","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4afbe4b07f02db69637b","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Locke, L. N.","contributorId":73539,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Locke","given":"L.","email":"","middleInitial":"N.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331895,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Brown, E. E.","contributorId":52287,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Brown","given":"E.","email":"","middleInitial":"E.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331894,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2}]}}
,{"id":5220485,"text":"5220485 - 1965 - Additional records of aspergillosis among passerine birds in Maryland and the Washington, DC metropolitan area","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2018-03-26T15:47:09","indexId":"5220485","displayToPublicDate":"2010-06-16T12:17:33","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":2,"text":"Article"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":10,"text":"Journal Article"},"seriesTitle":{"id":1228,"text":"Chesapeake Science","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":10}},"title":"Additional records of aspergillosis among passerine birds in Maryland and the Washington, DC metropolitan area","docAbstract":"<p><span>Two cases of aspergillosis involving four adult cowbirds (</span><i class=\"EmphasisTypeItalic \">Molothrus ater</i><span>) collected during the nesting season are reported. Aspergillosis was found in house sparrows (</span><i class=\"EmphasisTypeItalic \">Passer domesticus</i><span>) on two occasions.</span></p>","language":"English","publisher":"Springer","doi":"10.2307/1351331","usgsCitation":"Locke, L.N., 1965, Additional records of aspergillosis among passerine birds in Maryland and the Washington, DC metropolitan area: Chesapeake Science, v. 6, no. 2, p. 120-121, https://doi.org/10.2307/1351331.","productDescription":"2 p.","startPage":"120","endPage":"121","numberOfPages":"2","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":194140,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"country":"United States","state":"Maryland","otherGeospatial":"Washington, D.C.","geographicExtents":"{\n  \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\",\n  \"features\": [\n    {\n      \"type\": \"Feature\",\n      \"properties\": {},\n      \"geometry\": {\n        \"type\": \"Polygon\",\n        \"coordinates\": [\n          [\n            [\n              -78.189697265625,\n              38.556757147352215\n            ],\n            [\n              -75.76171875,\n              38.556757147352215\n            ],\n            [\n              -75.76171875,\n              39.690280594818034\n            ],\n            [\n              -78.189697265625,\n              39.690280594818034\n            ],\n            [\n              -78.189697265625,\n              38.556757147352215\n            ]\n          ]\n        ]\n      }\n    }\n  ]\n}","volume":"6","issue":"2","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4b05e4b07f02db699b0d","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Locke, L. N.","contributorId":73539,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Locke","given":"L.","email":"","middleInitial":"N.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":331899,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":70044066,"text":"70044066 - 1965 - A final report on computed magneto-telluric curves for hypothetical models of crustal structure","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2013-02-26T10:14:47","indexId":"70044066","displayToPublicDate":"2010-01-01T00:00:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":6,"text":"USGS Unnumbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":356,"text":"Crustal Studies Technical Letters","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":6}},"seriesNumber":"32","title":"A final report on computed magneto-telluric curves for hypothetical models of crustal structure","docAbstract":"Several mathematical models were investigated to determine the capa-bilities of the magneto-telluric method for determining the resistivity structure of the earth's crust. The model parameters were based on the crust model proposed by Keller (1963). The mathematical technique used was developed by Cagniard (1953). The investigations indicate that a three-layer model approximation of the crust and mantle is the most detailed model warranted in inter-preting the information provided by the magneto-telluric method about the lower crust. Only the thickness of the lower crust can be determined, and not the resistivity.","language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Geological Survey","publisherLocation":"Reston, VA","doi":"10.3133/70044066","collaboration":"In cooperation with the <a href=\"http://www.darpa.mil/\" target=\"_blank\">Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency</a>","usgsCitation":"Pritchard, J., 1965, A final report on computed magneto-telluric curves for hypothetical models of crustal structure: Crustal Studies Technical Letters 32, ii, 15 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/70044066.","productDescription":"ii, 15 p.","onlineOnly":"Y","additionalOnlineFiles":"N","costCenters":[{"id":237,"text":"Earthquake Science Center","active":true,"usgs":true},{"id":379,"text":"Menlo Park Science Center","active":false,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":268320,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/usgs_thumb.jpg"},{"id":268319,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/misc/tl/0032/tl0032.pdf"},{"id":268318,"type":{"id":15,"text":"Index Page"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/misc/tl/0032/"}],"noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"53cd49d2e4b0b290850ef665","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Pritchard, J.I.","contributorId":55304,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Pritchard","given":"J.I.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":474753,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":5230142,"text":"5230142 - 1965 - Pesticide-wildlife studies by states, provinces, and universities. An annotated list of investigations through 1964","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-02-02T00:15:21","indexId":"5230142","displayToPublicDate":"2009-06-09T10:33:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":1,"text":"Federal Government Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":14,"text":"Circular","active":false,"publicationSubtype":{"id":1}},"seriesNumber":"No. 224","title":"Pesticide-wildlife studies by states, provinces, and universities. An annotated list of investigations through 1964","language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service","usgsCitation":"George, J., 1965, Pesticide-wildlife studies by states, provinces, and universities. An annotated list of investigations through 1964: Circular No. 224, 30.","productDescription":"30","costCenters":[{"id":531,"text":"Patuxent Wildlife Research Center","active":true,"usgs":true}],"links":[{"id":200857,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg"}],"noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4ae0e4b07f02db688344","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"George, J.L.","contributorId":64749,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"George","given":"J.L.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":343592,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":38845,"text":"pp542B - 1965 - Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Whittier, Alaska","interactions":[{"subject":{"id":38845,"text":"pp542B - 1965 - Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Whittier, Alaska","indexId":"pp542B","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"chapter":"B","title":"Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Whittier, Alaska"},"predicate":"IS_PART_OF","object":{"id":70048211,"text":"pp542 - 1969 - The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities","indexId":"pp542","publicationYear":"1969","noYear":false,"title":"The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities"},"id":1}],"isPartOf":{"id":70048211,"text":"pp542 - 1969 - The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities","indexId":"pp542","publicationYear":"1969","noYear":false,"title":"The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities"},"lastModifiedDate":"2022-04-28T20:06:42.908474","indexId":"pp542B","displayToPublicDate":"1994-01-01T07:00:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":331,"text":"Professional Paper","code":"PP","onlineIssn":"2330-7102","printIssn":"1044-9612","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":5}},"seriesNumber":"542","chapter":"B","title":"Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Whittier, Alaska","docAbstract":"<p>Whittier, Alaska, lying at the western end of Passage Canal, is an ocean terminal of The Alaska Railroad. The earthquake that shook south-central Alaska at 5:36 p.m. (Alaska Standard Time) on March 27, 1964, took the lives of 13 persons and caused more than $5 million worth of damage to Government and private property at Whittier.</p>\n</br>\n<p>Seismic motion lasted only 2½-3 minutes, but when it stopped the Whittier waterfront was in shambles land the port facilities were inoperable. Damage was caused by (1) a 5.3-foot subsidence of the landmass, sufficient to put some of the developed land under water during high tides, (2) seismic shock, (3) fracturing of fill and unconsolidated sediments, (4) compaction of fill and unconsolidated deposits, (5) submarine landslides which generated waves that destroyed part of The Alaska Railroad roadbed and other property, (6) at least two, but probably three, waves generated by landslides, which completely wrecked the buildings of two lumber companies, the stub pier, the small-boat harbor, the car-barge slip dock, and several homes, and (7) fire that destroyed the fuel-storage tanks at the Whittier waterfront.</p>\n</br>\n<p>Many buildings and other facilities were totally wrecked, others were damaged to lesser degrees. For example, the 14-story reinforced concrete Hodge Building, which rests upon at least 44 feet of sandy gravel, was moderately damaged by seismic shock, but the six-story reinforced-concrete Buckner Building, which rests upon bedrock, was only slightly damaged.</p>","largerWorkType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"largerWorkTitle":"The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities (Professional Paper 542)","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Government Printing Office","publisherLocation":"Washington, DC","doi":"10.3133/pp542B","usgsCitation":"Kachadoorian, R., 1965, Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Whittier, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 542, Report: vi, 21 p.; 3 Plates: 40 x 20.5 inches or smaller, https://doi.org/10.3133/pp542B.","productDescription":"Report: vi, 21 p.; 3 Plates: 40 x 20.5 inches or smaller","numberOfPages":"29","additionalOnlineFiles":"Y","costCenters":[{"id":380,"text":"Menlo ParkCalif. 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,{"id":38844,"text":"pp542A - 1965 - Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Anchorage, Alaska","interactions":[{"subject":{"id":38844,"text":"pp542A - 1965 - Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Anchorage, Alaska","indexId":"pp542A","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"chapter":"A","title":"Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Anchorage, Alaska"},"predicate":"IS_PART_OF","object":{"id":70048211,"text":"pp542 - 1969 - The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities","indexId":"pp542","publicationYear":"1969","noYear":false,"title":"The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities"},"id":1}],"isPartOf":{"id":70048211,"text":"pp542 - 1969 - The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities","indexId":"pp542","publicationYear":"1969","noYear":false,"title":"The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities"},"lastModifiedDate":"2022-04-28T19:13:46.811205","indexId":"pp542A","displayToPublicDate":"1994-01-01T07:00:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":331,"text":"Professional Paper","code":"PP","onlineIssn":"2330-7102","printIssn":"1044-9612","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":5}},"seriesNumber":"542","chapter":"A","title":"Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Anchorage, Alaska","docAbstract":"<p>Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city, is about 80 miles west-northwest of the epicenter of the March 27 earthquake. Because of its size, Anchorage bore the brunt of property damage from the quake; it sustained greater losses than all the rest of Alaska combined. Damage was caused by direct seismic vibration, by ground cracks, and by landslides. Direct seismic vibration affected chiefly multistory buildings and buildings having large floor areas, probably because of the long period and large amplitude of the seismic waves reaching Anchorage. Most small buildings were spared. Ground cracks caused capricious damage throughout the Anchorage Lowland. Cracking was most prevalent near the heads or within landslides but was also widespread elsewhere. Landslides themselves caused the most devastating damage.</p><p>Triggering of landslides by the earthquake was related to the physical-engineering properties of the Bootlegger Cove Clay, a glacial estuarine-marine deposit that underlies much of the Anchorage area. The Bootlegger Cove Clay contains zones of low shear strength, high water content, and high sensitivity that failed under the vibratory stress of the earthquake. Shear strength in sensitive zones ranged from less than 0.2 tsf to about 0.5 tsf; sensitivity ranged from about 10 to more than 40. Sensitive zones generally are centered about 10 to 20 feet above sea level, between zones of stiff insensitive clay. Many physical tests by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers were directed toward analyzing the causes of failure in the Bootlegger Cove Clay and finding possible remedies. Strengths and sensitivities were measured directly in the field by means of vane shear apparatus. A4tterberg limits, natural water contents, triaxial shear, sensitivity, dynamic modulus, consolidation strength, and other properties were measured in the laboratory. Pulsating-load tests simulated earthquake loading.</p><p>Most of the destructive landslides in the Anchorage area moved primarily by translation rather than by rotation. Thus, all the highly damaging slides were of a single structural dynamic family despite wide variations in size, appearance, and complexity. They slid on nearly horizontal slip surfaces after loss of strength in the Bootlegger Core Clay. Same failures are attributed to spontaneous liquefaction of sand layers. All translatory slides surmounted flat-topped bluffs bounded marginally by steep slopes facing lower ground. Destructive translatory slides occurred in the downtown area (Fourth Avenue slide and L Street slide), at Government Hill, and at Turnagain Heights. Less destructive slides occurred in many other places-mostly uninhabited or undeveloped areas.</p><p>In most translatory slides, damage was greatest in graben areas at the head and in pressure-ridge areas at the toe. Many buildings inside the perimeters of slide blocks were little damaged despite horizontal translations of several feet. The large Turnagain Heights slide, however, was characterized by a complete disintegration and drastic lowering of the prequake land surface. Extensive damage back from the slide, moreover, was caused by countless tension cracks.</p><p>An approximation of the depth of failure in the Bootlegger Cove Clay in the various slides may be obtained by using a geometric relationship herein called the \"graben rule.\" Because the cross-sectional area of the graben at the head of the slide approximated the cross-sectional area of the space voided behind the slide block as the block moved outward, the depth of failure was equal to the area of the graben divided by the lateral displacement. This approximation supplements and accords with test data obtained from borings. The graben rule should apply to any translatory slide in which flowage of material from the zone of failure has not been excessive.</p><p>Geologic evidence indicates that landslides similar to those triggered by the March 27 earthquake have occurred in the Anchorage area at various times in the past.</p>","largerWorkType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"largerWorkTitle":"The Alaska earthquake, March 27, 1964: Effects on communities (Professional Paper 542)","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Government Printing Office","publisherLocation":"Washington, DC","doi":"10.3133/pp542A","usgsCitation":"Hansen, W.R., 1965, Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Anchorage, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 542, Report: iv, 68 p.; 2 Plates: 50.44 x 26.21 inches and 35.05 x 10.13 inches, https://doi.org/10.3133/pp542A.","productDescription":"Report: iv, 68 p.; 2 Plates: 50.44 x 26.21 inches and 35.05 x 10.13 inches","numberOfPages":"77","additionalOnlineFiles":"Y","costCenters":[{"id":380,"text":"Menlo ParkCalif. 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,{"id":38883,"text":"pp504C - 1965 - Geology and petrogenesis of the Island Park caldera of rhyolite and basalt, eastern Idaho","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2012-02-02T00:10:37","indexId":"pp504C","displayToPublicDate":"1994-01-01T00:00:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":331,"text":"Professional Paper","code":"PP","onlineIssn":"2330-7102","printIssn":"1044-9612","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":5}},"seriesNumber":"504","chapter":"C","title":"Geology and petrogenesis of the Island Park caldera of rhyolite and basalt, eastern Idaho","largerWorkType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"largerWorkTitle":"Shorter contributions to general geology, 1964","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"language":"ENGLISH","doi":"10.3133/pp504C","usgsCitation":"Hamilton, W., 1965, Geology and petrogenesis of the Island Park caldera of rhyolite and basalt, eastern Idaho: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 504, p. C1-C37, https://doi.org/10.3133/pp504C.","productDescription":"p. C1-C37","costCenters":[],"links":[{"id":104485,"rank":700,"type":{"id":15,"text":"Index Page"},"url":"https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/Prodesc/proddesc_4521.htm","linkFileType":{"id":5,"text":"html"},"description":"4521"},{"id":126259,"rank":0,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0504c/report-thumb.jpg"},{"id":65883,"rank":400,"type":{"id":17,"text":"Plate"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0504c/plate-1.pdf","linkFileType":{"id":1,"text":"pdf"}},{"id":65884,"rank":300,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0504c/report.pdf","linkFileType":{"id":1,"text":"pdf"}}],"noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4ad6e4b07f02db68431f","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Hamilton, Warren","contributorId":14819,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Hamilton","given":"Warren","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":220600,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1}]}}
,{"id":38952,"text":"pp403H - 1965 - Hydrology of Guam","interactions":[],"lastModifiedDate":"2025-04-15T16:40:33.264634","indexId":"pp403H","displayToPublicDate":"1994-01-01T00:00:00","publicationYear":"1965","noYear":false,"publicationType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"publicationSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"seriesTitle":{"id":331,"text":"Professional Paper","code":"PP","onlineIssn":"2330-7102","printIssn":"1044-9612","active":true,"publicationSubtype":{"id":5}},"seriesNumber":"403","chapter":"H","title":"Hydrology of Guam","docAbstract":"<p>No abstract available.</p>","largerWorkType":{"id":18,"text":"Report"},"largerWorkTitle":"Geology and hydrology of Guam, Mariana Islands (Professional Paper 403)","largerWorkSubtype":{"id":5,"text":"USGS Numbered Series"},"language":"English","publisher":"U.S. Geological Survey","doi":"10.3133/pp403H","usgsCitation":"Ward, P., Hoffard, S., and Davis, D., 1965, Hydrology of Guam: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 403, 128 p., https://doi.org/10.3133/pp403H.","productDescription":"128 p.","costCenters":[],"links":[{"id":484600,"rank":4,"type":{"id":36,"text":"NGMDB Index Page"},"url":"https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/Prodesc/proddesc_44673.htm","linkFileType":{"id":5,"text":"html"}},{"id":66013,"rank":2,"type":{"id":11,"text":"Document"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0403h/report.pdf","linkFileType":{"id":1,"text":"pdf"}},{"id":66012,"rank":3,"type":{"id":17,"text":"Plate"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0403h/plate-1.pdf","linkFileType":{"id":1,"text":"pdf"}},{"id":121996,"rank":1,"type":{"id":24,"text":"Thumbnail"},"url":"https://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0403h/report-thumb.jpg"}],"otherGeospatial":"Guam","geographicExtents":"{\n  \"type\": \"FeatureCollection\",\n  \"features\": [\n    {\n      \"type\": \"Feature\",\n      \"properties\": {},\n      \"geometry\": {\n        \"type\": \"Polygon\",\n        \"coordinates\": [\n          [\n            [\n              144.6075439453125,\n              13.213208268446683\n            ],\n            [\n              145.0689697265625,\n              13.213208268446683\n            ],\n            [\n              145.0689697265625,\n              13.7153719325982\n            ],\n            [\n              144.6075439453125,\n              13.7153719325982\n            ],\n            [\n              144.6075439453125,\n              13.213208268446683\n            ]\n          ]\n        ]\n      }\n    }\n  ]\n}","noUsgsAuthors":false,"publicationStatus":"PW","scienceBaseUri":"4f4e4a17e4b07f02db60496c","contributors":{"authors":[{"text":"Ward, P.E.","contributorId":40267,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Ward","given":"P.E.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":220718,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":1},{"text":"Hoffard, S.H.","contributorId":13269,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Hoffard","given":"S.H.","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":220717,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":2},{"text":"Davis, D.A.","contributorId":88013,"corporation":false,"usgs":true,"family":"Davis","given":"D.A.","email":"","affiliations":[],"preferred":false,"id":220719,"contributorType":{"id":1,"text":"Authors"},"rank":3}]}}
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