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165990 results.

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Page 1905, results 47601 - 47625

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Mineral resource of the month: diamond
Donald W. Olson
2009, Earth (54) 28-29
The article presents information on diamond, which is regarded as the world's most popular gemstone. It states that there is strength in the covalent bonding between its carbon atoms, resulting to the strength of its physical properties. The presence of colors in diamonds may be attributed to the impurities that...
Demographics of an experimentally released population of elk in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Jennifer L. Murrow, Joseph D. Clark, E. Kim Delozier
2009, Journal of Wildlife Management (73) 1261-1268
We assessed the potential for reestablishing elk (Cervus elaphus) in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP), USA, by estimating vital rates of experimentally released animals from 2001 to 2006. Annual survival rates for calves ranged from 0.333 to 1.0 and averaged 0.592. Annual survival for subadult and adult elk (i.e.,...
Mineral resource of the month: thorium
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2009, Earth (54) 27-27
This article provides information on thorium. Thorium is a natural radioactive element that can be found with other minerals. It can be used to generate power, produce light and transmit energy. Thorium has a potential to be used as a nuclear fuel. This element was discovered by Swedish chemist and...
Carbon sequestration and its role in the global carbon cycle
Brian J. McPherson, Eric T. Sundquist
2009, Book
For carbon sequestration the issues of monitoring, risk assessment, and verification of carbon content and storage efficacy are perhaps the most uncertain. Yet these issues are also the most critical challenges facing the broader context of carbon sequestration as a means for addressing climate change. In response to these challenges,...
Mineral resource of the month: pumice and pumicite
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2009, Earth (54) 29-29
The article offers information on pumice, an important commodity for the construction, horticulture and abrasives industries. The commodity is described as an extremely light, highly porous extrusive volcanic rock which was formed due to the rapid cooling of air-pocketed lava. It is noted that the characteristics of pumice make it...
Bauxite and alumina
E.L. Bray
2009, Mining Engineering (61) 35-36
The article provides information on bauxite and alumina mining. U.S. states like Alabama, Arkansas and Georgia produced small amounts of bauxite and bauxitic clays for nonmetallurgical uses. Total metallurgical-grade bauxite imports in 2008 is cited. The leading suppliers of bauxite to the U.S. are Jamaica, Guinea and Brazil. The estimated...
Preliminary results of the North American Soil Geochemical Landscapes Project, northeast United States and Maritime Provinces of Canada
Eric C. Grunsky, David B. Smith, Peter W.B. Friske, Laurel G. Woodruff
2009, Conference Paper, 24th International Applied Geochemistry Symposium
The results of a soil geochemical survey of the Canadian Maritime provinces and the northeast states of the United States are described. The data presented are for the <2-mm fraction of the surface layer (0-5 cm depth) and C horizons of the soil. Elemental determinations were made by ICP-MS following...
Mineral resource of the month: iodine
Desiree E. Polyak
2009, Earth (54) 29-29
The article focuses on iodine, its benefits and adverse effects, and its production and consumption. It states that iodine is essential to humans for it produces thyroid hormones to nourish thyroid glands but excessive intake could cause goiter, hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism. U.S. laws require salt iodization to help prevent diseases....
Standard methods for sampling North American freshwater fishes
Scott A. Bonar, Wayne A. Hubert, David W. Willis
2009, Book
This important reference book provides standard sampling methods recommended by the American Fisheries Society for assessing and monitoring freshwater fish populations in North America. Methods apply to ponds, reservoirs, natural lakes, and streams and rivers containing cold and warmwater fishes. Range-wide and eco-regional averages for indices of abundance, population structure,...
Water-resources data for the United States: water year 2009
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2009, Water Data Report 2009
Water resources data are published annually for use by engineers, scientists, managers, educators, and the general public. These archival products supplement direct access to current and historical water data provided by NWISWeb. Beginning with Water Year 2006, annual water data reports are available as individual electronic Site Data Sheets for...
Mineral resource of the month: bromine
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2009, Earth (54) 29-29
The article offers information on bromine, a natural element considered as a dissolved species in seawater, saltwater lakes and underground brines linked with petroleum deposits. Bromine belongs to the halogen group of elements and is characterized with brownish-red color and beach-like odor. It is commonly used in flame retardants, agriculture...
Disaster response and the international charter program
Timothy Stryker, Brenda Jones
2009, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (2009) 1342-1344
In a meeting held in Vienna, Austria in 1999, a small group of space agencies conceived and approved a program to provide emergency response satellite data to those affected by disasters anywhere in the world. The purpose of this group, which came to be known as the “International Charter -...
Past climate variability and change in the Arctic and at high latitudes
Richard B. Alley, Julie Brigham-Grette, Gifford H. Miller, Leonid Polyak, U.S. Climate Change Science Program, Subcommittee on Global Change Research, Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2009, Synthesis and Assessment Product 1.2
Paleoclimate records play a key role in our understanding of Earth's past and present climate system and in our confidence in predicting future climate changes. Paleoclimate data help to elucidate past and present active mechanisms of climate change by placing the short instrumental record into a longer term context and...
Linking ecosystem processes to sustainable wetland management
Ned H. Euliss Jr., Loren M. Smith, Douglas A. Wilcox, Bryant A. Browne
2009, National Wetlands Newsletter (31) 1-5
The sustainability of ecosystems has become an explicitly stated goal of many natural resource agencies. Examples of sustainable ecosystem management, however, are uncommon because management goals often focus on specific deliverables rather than the processes that sustain ecosystems....
Introduction to paleoenvironments of Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho, and its catchment
Joseph G. Rosenbaum, Darrell S. Kaufman
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (450) v-xiii
In 1996 a group led by the late Kerry Kelts (University of Minnesota) and Robert Thompson (U.S. Geological Survey) acquired three piston cores (BL96-1, -2, and -3) from Bear Lake. The coring arose from their recognition of Bear Lake as a potential repository of long records of paleoenvironmental change. They...
Technological advances in suspended‐sediment surrogate monitoring
John R. Gray, Jeffrey W. Gartner
2009, Water Resources Research (45)
Surrogate technologies to continuously monitor suspended sediment show promise toward supplanting traditional data collection methods requiring routine collection and analysis of water samples. Commercially available instruments operating on bulk optic (turbidity), laser optic, pressure difference, and acoustic backscatter principles are evaluated based on cost, reliability, robustness, accuracy, sample volume, susceptibility...
Sustainable wetland management and support of ecosystem services
Loren M. Smith, Ned H. Euliss Jr., Douglas A. Wilcox, Mark M. Brinson
2009, National Wetlands Newsletter (31) 4-7, 21
This article is a follow-up on a previous piece in the National Wetlands Newsletter in which we outlined problems associated with a static, local approach to wetland management versus an alternative that proposes a temporal and geomorphic approach (Euliss et al. 2009). We extend that concept by drawing on companion...
The Restoration Rapid Assessment Tool: An Access/Visual Basic application
Ron Hiebert, D.L. Larson, K. Thomas, N. Tancreto, D. Haines, A. Richey, T. Dow, L. Drees
2009, Report
Managers of parks and natural areas are increasingly faced with difficult decisions concerning restoration of disturbed lands. Financial and workforce resources often limit these restoration efforts, and rarely can a manager afford to address all concerns within the region of interest. With limited resources, managers and scientists have to decide...
Investigating hydraulic connections and the origin of water in a mine tunnel using stable isotopes and hydrographs
Katherine Walton-Day, Eileen Poeter
2009, Applied Geochemistry (24) 2266-2282
Turquoise Lake is a water-supply reservoir located north of the historic Sugarloaf Mining district near Leadville, Colorado, USA. Elevated water levels in the reservoir may increase flow of low-quality water from abandoned mine tunnels in the Sugarloaf District and degrade water quality downstream. The objective of this study was to...
Is the track of the Yellowstone hotspot driven by a deep mantle plume? - Review of volcanism, faulting, and uplift in light of new data
Kenneth L. Pierce, Lisa A. Morgan
2009, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (188) 1-25
Geophysical imaging of a tilted mantle plume extending at least 500 km beneath the Yellowstone caldera provides compelling support for a plume origin of the entire Yellowstone hotspot track back to its inception at 17 Ma with eruptions of flood basalts and rhyolite. The widespread volcanism, combined with a large volume of...
Historical range, current distribution, and conservation status of the Swift Fox, Vulpes velox, in North America
Marsha A. Sovada, Robert O. Woodward, Lawrence D. Igl
2009, Canadian Field-Naturalist (123) 346-367
The Swift Fox (Vulpes velox) was once common in the shortgrass and mixed-grass prairies of the Great Plains of North America. The species' abundance declined and its distribution retracted following European settlement of the plains. By the late 1800s, the species had been largely extirpated from the northern portion of...
Interactions between non-native armored suckermouth catfish (Loricariidae: Pterygoplichthys) and native Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris) in artesian springs
Leo G. Nico, William F. Loftus, James P. Reid
2009, Aquatic Invasions (4) 511-519
Non-native suckermouth armored catfishes (Loricariidae) of the genus Pterygoplichthys are now common throughout much of peninsular Florida. In this paper, we present preliminary observations on interactions between a Pterygoplichthys species, tentatively identified as P. disjunctivus (Weber, 1991), and endangered native Florida manatees, Trichechus manatus latirostris (Harlan, 1824), in artesian spring...
Streamflow of 2008--Water year summary
Jian Xiaodong, David M. Wolock, Harry F. Lins, Steve Brady
2009, Fact Sheet 2009-3003
The maps and graphs appearing in this summary describe streamflow conditions for water-year 2008 (October 1, 2007 to September 30, 2008) in the context of the 79-year period 1930-2008, unless otherwise noted. The illustrations are based on observed data from the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) National Streamflow Information Program. The...
Estuarine water quality in parks of the Northeast Coastal and Barrier Network: Development and early implementation of vital signs estuarine nutrient-enrichment monitoring, 2003-06
Blaine S. Kopp, Martha Nielsen, Dejan Glisic, Hilary A. Neckles
2009, Natural Resource Technical Report (266)
This report documents results of pilot tests of a protocol for monitoring estuarine nutrient enrichment for the Vital Signs Monitoring Program of the National Park Service Northeast Coastal and Barrier Network. Data collected from four parks during protocol development in 2003-06 are presented: Gateway National Recreation Area, Colonial National Historic...
Role of invasive Melilotus officinalis in two native plant communities
Laura C. Van Riper, Diane L. Larson
2009, Plant Ecology (200) 129-139
This study examines the impact of the exotic nitrogen-fixing legume Melilotus officinalis (L.) Lam. on native and exotic species cover in two Great Plains ecosystems in Badlands National Park, South Dakota. Melilotus is still widely planted and its effects on native ecosystems are not well studied. Melilotus could have direct...