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Page 1983, results 49551 - 49575

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A historical perspective on the "fish tumors or other deformities" beneficial use impairment at Great Lakes Areas of Concern
S.D. Rafferty, V. S. Blazer, A.E. Pinkney, J.L. Grazio, E.C. Obert, L. Boughton
2009, Journal of Great Lakes Research (35) 496-506
The Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement defines Areas of Concern as geographic areas that fail to meet the general or specific objectives of the agreement where such failure has caused or is likely to cause impairment of beneficial use of the area's ability to support aquatic life. One of the...
Afraid to Start Because the Outcome is Uncertain?: Social Site Characterization as a Tool for Informing Public Engagement Efforts
S. Wade, S. Greenberg
2009, Conference Paper, Energy Procedia
This paper introduces the concept of social site characterization as a parallel effort to technical site characterization to be used in evaluating and planning carbon dioxides capture and storage (CCS) projects. Social site characterization, much like technical site characterization, relies on a series of iterative investigations into public attitudes towards...
Feldspar dissolution rates in the Topopah Spring Tuff, Yucca Mountain, Nevada
C.R. Bryan, K.B. Helean, B.D. Marshall, P.V. Brady
2009, Applied Geochemistry (24) 2133-2143
Two different field-based methods are used here to calculate feldspar dissolution rates in the Topopah Spring Tuff, the host rock for the proposed nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. The center of the tuff is a high silica rhyolite, consisting...
Response to critique by lucas et al. (2009) of paper by Fassett (2009) documenting Paleocene dinosaurs in the San Juan Basin
J.E. Fassett
2009, Palaeontologia Electronica (12)
In this issue of Palaeontologia Electronica Lucas, et al. (2009) question the validity f the Fassett (2009) paper that presented evidence for Paleocene dinosaurs in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico and Colorado. Their challenges focus primarily on the lithostratigraphy, palynology, and paleomagnetism of the dinosaur-bearing Ojo Alamo Sandstone,...
Audiomagnetotelluric investigation of Snake Valley, eastern Nevada and western Utah
Darcy McPhee, Keith Pari, Frank Baird
2009, Geology and Geologic Resources and Issues of Western Utah 287-298
Audiomagnetotelluric (AMT) data along four profiles in western Snake Valley and the corresponding two-dimensional (2-D) inverse models reveal subsurface structures that may be significant to ground-water investigations in the area. The AMT method is a valuable tool for estimating the electrical resistivity of the earth over depth ranges from...
Status and trends of prey fish populations in Lake Superior, 2008
Owen T. Gorman, Lori M. Evrard, Gary A. Cholwek, Jill M. Falck, Daniel L. Yule
2009, Conference Paper
The Great Lakes Science Center has conducted annual daytime bottom trawl surveys of the Lake Superior nearshore (15-80 m bathymetric depth zone) every spring since 1978 to provide a long-term index of relative abundance and biomass of the fish community. Between May 5 and June 14, 2008, 58 stations were...
Experimental study of near-field air entrainment by subsonic volcanic jets
Stephen A. Solovitz, Larry G. Mastin
2009, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (114) 1-9
The flow structure in the developing region of a turbulent jet has been examined using particle image velocimetry methods, considering the flow at steady state conditions. The velocity fields were integrated to determine the ratio of the entrained air speed to the jet speed, which was approximately 0.03 for a...
Gene and antigen markers of Shiga-toxin producing E. coli from Michigan and Indiana river water: Occurrence and relation to recreational water quality criteria
J.W. Duris, S.K. Haack, L.R. Fogarty
2009, Journal of Environmental Quality (38) 1878-1886
The relation of bacterial pathogen occurrence to fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) concentrations used for recreational water quality criteria (RWQC) is poorly understood. This study determined the occurrence of Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli (STEC) markers and their relation to FIB concentrations in Michigan and Indiana river water. Using 67 fecal coliform (FC) bacteria...
Using LiDAR and quickbird data to model plant production and quantify uncertainties associated with wetland detection and land cover generalizations
B.D. Cook, P.V. Bolstad, E. Naesset, R. Scott Anderson, S. Garrigues, J.T. Morisette, J. Nickeson, K.J. Davis
2009, Remote Sensing of Environment (113) 2366-2379
Spatiotemporal data from satellite remote sensing and surface meteorology networks have made it possible to continuously monitor global plant production, and to identify global trends associated with land cover/use and climate change. Gross primary production (GPP) and net primary production (NPP) are routinely derived from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer...
Basanite-nephelinite suite from early Kilauea: Carbonated melts of phlogopite-garnet peridotite at Hawaii's leading magmatic edge
T. W. Sisson, Jun-Ichi Kimura, M.L. Coombs
2009, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (158) 803-829
A basanite-nephelinite glass suite from early submarine Kilauea defines a continuous compositional array marked by increasing concentrations of incompatible components with decreasing SiO2, MgO, and Al2O3. Like peripheral and post-shield strongly alkalic Hawaiian localities (Clague et al. in J Volcanol Geotherm Res 151:279-307, 2006; Dixon et al. in J Pet...
Global irrigated area map (GIAM), derived from remote sensing, for the end of the last millennium
P.S. Thenkabail, C.M. Biradar, P. Noojipady, V. Dheeravath, Y. Li, M. Velpuri, M. Gumma, O.R.P. Gangalakunta, H. Turral, X. Cai, J. Vithanage, M.A. Schull, R. Dutta
2009, International Journal of Remote Sensing (30) 3679-3733
A Global Irrigated Area Map (GIAM) has been produced for the end of the last millennium using multiple satellite sensor, secondary, Google Earth and groundtruth data. The data included: (a) Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) 3-band and Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) 10 km monthly time-series for 1997-1999, (b)...
Making fired bricks with spent equilibrium catalyst-a technical feasibility study
M.-L. Chou, L.-M. Chen, Y.-C. Lai, S.-F. Chou
2009, Journal of Solid Waste Technology and Management (35) 200-208
Fluid catalytic cracking in an oil refinery uses a catalyst, such as an alumino-silicate zeolite, in the conversion of heavy hydrocarbons to light hydrocarbons. A small fraction of the catalyst is continually replaced with fresh catalyst to maintain activity. In North America, more than 400 tons of spent alumino-silicate equilibrium...
Phenotypic plasticity in age at first reproduction of female northern sea otters (Enhydra lutris kenyoni)
Vanessa R. von Biela, V.A. Gill, James L. Bodkin, Jennifer M. Burns
2009, Journal of Mammalogy (90) 1224-1231
Life-history theory predicts that within a species, reproduction and survival rates will differ among populations that differ in resource availability or predation rates through phenotypic plasticity. When populations are near carrying capacity (K) or when they are declining due to reduced prey resources, the average age at 1st reproduction (average...
Timing of breeding and reproductive performance in murres and kittiwakes reflect mismatched seasonal prey dynamics
M.T. Shultz, John F. Piatt, A.M.A. Harding, Arthur B. Kettle, Thomas I. van Pelt
2009, Marine Ecology Progress Series (393) 247-258
Seabirds are thought to time breeding to match the seasonal peak of food availability with peak chick energetic demands, but warming ocean temperatures have altered the timing of spring events, creating the potential for mismatches. The resilience of seabird populations to climate change depends on their ability to anticipate changes...
Propagation of the myxozoan parasite Myxobolus cerebralis by different geographic and genetic populations of Tubifex tubifex: An Oregon perspective
S.L. Hallett, H.V. Lorz, S.D. Atkinson, C. Rasmussen, L. Xue, J. L. Bartholomew
2009, Journal of Invertebrate Pathology (102) 57-68
Tubifex tubifex are obligate invertebrate hosts in the life cycle of Myxobolus cerebralis, the myxozoan parasite that causes whirling disease in salmonid fishes. This exotic parasite is established to varying degrees across Oregon's Columbia River system (Pacific Northwest, USA) and characteristics of local T. tubifex populations likely play a role...
REE partitioning between apatite and melt in a peralkaline volcanic suite, Kenya Rift Valley
R. Macdonald, B. Baginski, H. E. Belkin, P. Dzierzanowski, L. Jezak
2009, Mineralogical Magazine (72) 1147-1161
Electron microprobe analyses are presented for fluorapatite phenocrysts from a benmoreite-peralkaline rhyolite volcanic suite from the Kenya Rift Valley. The rocks have previously been well characterized petrographically and their crystallization conditions are reasonably well known. The REE contents in the M site increase towards the rhyolites, with a maximum britholite...
Morphological variability of the planktonic foraminifer Neogloboquadrina pachyderma from ACEX cores: Implications for late pleistocene circulation in the Arctic Ocean
F. Eynaud, T. M. Cronin, S.A. Smith, S. Zaragosi, J. Mavel, Y. Mary, V. Mas, C. Pujol
2009, Micropaleontology (55) 101-116
Planktonic foraminifera populations were studied throughout the top 25 meters of the IODP ACEX 302 Hole 4C from the central Arctic Ocean at a resolution varying from 5cm (at the top of the record) to 10cm. Planktonic foraminifera occur in high absolute abundances only in the uppermost fifty centimetres and...
Geoelectrical measurement and modeling of biogeochemical breakthrough behavior during microbial activity
L.D. Slater, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, D. Ntarlagiannis, M. O'Brien, N. Yee
2009, Geophysical Research Letters (36)
We recorded bulk electrical conductivity (σb) along a soil column during microbially-mediated selenite oxyanion reduction. Effluent fluid electrical conductivity and early time σb were modeled according to classic advective-dispersive transport of the nutrient medium. However, σb along the column exhibited strongly bimodal breakthrough which cannot be explained by changes in the electrical conductivity of...
Nutrient availability and phytoplankton nutrient limitation across a gradient of atmospheric nitrogen deposition
J.J. Elser, M. Kyle, L. Steuer, K. R. Nydick, Jill Baron
2009, Ecology (90) 3062-3073
Atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition to lakes and watersheds has been increasing steadily due to various anthropogenic activities. Because such anthropogenic N is widely distributed, even lakes relatively removed from direct human disturbance are potentially impacted. However, the effects of increased atmospheric N deposition on lakes are not well documented, We...
Sedimentation processes in a coral reef embayment: Hanalei Bay, Kauai
C. D. Storlazzi, M.E. Field, Michael H. Bothner, M.K. Presto, A.E. Draut
2009, Marine Geology (264) 140-151
Oceanographic measurements and sediment samples were collected during the summer of 2006 as part of a multi-year study of coastal circulation and the fate of terrigenous sediment on coral reefs in Hanalei Bay, Kauai. The goal of this study was to better understand sediment dynamics in a coral reef-lined embayment...
Concentration-discharge relationships reflect chemostatic characteristics of US catchments
S.E. Godsey, J.W. Kirchner, D. W. Clow
2009, Hydrological Processes (23) 1844-1864
Concentration-discharge relationships have been widely used as clues to the hydrochemical processes that control runoff chemistry. Here we examine concentration-discharge relationships for solutes produced primarily by mineral weathering in 59 geochemically diverse US catchments. We show that these catchments exhibit nearly chemostatic behaviour; their stream concentrations of weathering products such...
New evidence for a magmatic influence on the origin of Valles Marineris, Mars
J. M. Dohm, J.-P. Williams, R. C. Anderson, J. Ruiz, P.C. McGuire, G. Komatsu, A.F. Davila, J.C. Ferris, D. Schulze-Makuch, V.R. Baker, W. V. Boynton, A.G. Fairen, T.M. Hare, H. Miyamoto, K. L. Tanaka, S.J. Wheelock
2009, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (185) 12-27
In this paper, we show that the complex geological evolution of Valles Marineris, Mars, has been highly influenced by the manifestation of magmatism (e.g., possible plume activity). This is based on a diversity of evidence, reported here, for the central part, Melas Chasma, and nearby regions, including uplift, loss of...
Deformation band clusters on Mars and implications for subsurface fluid flow
Chris Okubo, Richard A. Schultz, Marjorie A. Chan, Goro Komatsu, the HiRISE TEam
2009, Geological Society of America Bulletin (121) 474-482
High-resolution imagery reveals unprecedented lines of evidence for the presence of deformation band clusters in layered sedimentary deposits in the equatorial region of Mars. Deformation bands are a class of geologic structural discontinuity that is a precursor to faults in clastic rocks and soils. Clusters of deformation bands, consisting of...
Palaeoseismology of the Vilariça segment of the Manteigas-Bragança fault in northeastern Portugal
Thomas Rockwell, Joao Fonseca, Chris Madden, Tim Dawson, Lewis A. Owen, Susana Vilanova, Paula Figueiredo
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 237-258
The Manteigas-Bragança fault is a major, 250-km-long, NNE-striking, sinistral strike-slip structure in northern Portugal. This fault has no historical seismicity for large earthquakes, although it may have generated moderate (M5+) earthquakes in 1751 and 1858. Evidence of continued left horizontal displacement is shown by the presence of Cenozoic pull-apart basins...
Using GIS to assess priorities of infrastructure and health needs of colonias along the United States-Mexico border
J.W. Parcher, D.G. Humberson
2009, Journal of Latin American Geography (8) 129-148
Colonias, which are unincorporated border setdements in the United. States, have emerged in rural areas without the governance and services normally provided by local government. Colonia residents live in poverty and lack adequate health care, potable water, and sanitation systems. These conditions create substantial health risks for themselves and surrounding...