Seasonal variations of carbon dioxide concentrations in stony, coarse-textured desert soils of southern Nevada, USA
Christina L. Terhune, Jennifer W. Harden
1991, Soil Science (151) 417-429
Knowledge of carbon dioxide concentration in desert soils is required in theoretical models of the development of pedogenic and ground-water calcium carbonate. Most studies have concentrated on medium- to fine-textured soils in temperate to humid environments. Very little data exist for CO2 concentrations in stony, coarse-textured deposits such as those making...
Centrifugal techniques for measuring saturated hydraulic conductivity
John R. Nimmo, Karen A. Mello
1991, Water Resources Research (27) 1263-1269
Centrifugal force is an alternative to large pressure gradients for the measurement of low values of saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ksat). With a head of water above a porous medium in a centrifuge bucket, both constant-head and falling-head measurements are practical at forces up to at least 1800 times normal gravity....
Agricultural research to improve water quality
C.A. Onstad, M. R. Burkart, G.D. Bubenzer
1991, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (46) 184-188
ime courses for ingest~on, retention and release via feces of microbial food was investigatedusing 2 b~valves w~th d~fferent feeding strategies, Potamocorbula amurensis and Macomabalthica. The results showed 2 pathways for the uptake of food material in these clams. The first isrepresented by an initlal label pulse in the feces....
Effects of color on cadmium and lead levels in avian contour feathers
Michael Gochfeld, Jorge Saliva, Fred Lesser, Tara Shukla, Dale Bertrand, Joanna Burger
1991, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (20) 523-526
The use of feathers has been proposed as a noninvasive tissue for biomonitoring metal levels in birds and their ecosystems. We examined cadmium and lead levels in black and white contour feathers from common (Sterna hirundo) and sooty (S. fuscata) terns, and black skimmers (Rynchops niger) to determine if there were significant differences...
Holocene Treeline Fluctuations in the Northern San Juan Mountains, Colorado, U.S.A., as Indicated by Radiocarbon-Dated Conifer Wood
Paul E. Carrara, Deborah A. Trimble, Meyer Rubin
1991, Arctic and Alpine Research (23) 223-246
An early to mid-Holocene warm period with greater than present-day monsoonal circulation is indicated by evidence in the northern San Juan Mountains of southwestern Colorado. Fifty radiocarbon ages of coniferous wood fragments, and several other radiocarbon ages of willow fragments, woody peat, and organic sediment associated with conifer remains, recovered...
Geology and geochemistry of three sedimentary-rock-hosted disseminated gold deposits in Guizhou Province, People's Republic of China
R. P. Ashley, C. G. Cunningham, N. H. Bostick, W.E. Dean, I.-M. Chou
1991, Ore Geology Reviews (6) 133-151
Five sedimentary-rock-hosted disseminated gold deposits have been discovered since 1980 in southwestern Guizhou Province (PRC). Submicron-sized gold is disseminated in silty carbonate and carbonaceous shale host rocks of Permian and Triassic age. Arsenic, antimony, mercury, and thallium accompany the gold. Associated hydrothermal alteration resulted in decarbonatization of limestone, silicification, and...
Ore microscopy of the Paoli silver-copper deposit, Oklahoma
C.A. Thomas, R.D. Hagni, P. Berendsen
1991, Ore Geology Reviews (6) 229-244
The Paoli silver-copper deposit is located in south-central Oklahoma, 56 km south-southeast from Norman, Oklahoma. It was mined for high-grade silver-copper near the beginning of this century, and intensive exploratory drilling during the early 1970's delineated unmined portions of the deposit. A collaborative study between the U.S.G.S., the Kansas Geological...
Rotenone persistence in freshwater ponds: Effects of temperature and sediment adsorption
V. K. Dawson, W.H. Gingerich, R. A. Davis, P.A. Gilderhus
1991, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (11) 226-231
The persistence of rotenone was compared between a cement-lined pond (0.04 hectare) and an earthen-bottom pond (0.02 hectare) treated with 5 μL Noxfish/L (250 μg rotenone/L) during spring, summer, and fall. Water temperatures on the days of treatment in each season were 8, 22, and 15°C, respectively. Both ponds were...
Torsional response of unique building
Mehmet Celebi, E. Safak, N. Youssef
1991, Journal of Structural Engineering (117) 1549-1566
Acceleration response records obtained during the October 1, 1987 Whittier‐Narrows earthquake (Ms=5.6)">(Ms=5.6) from the 32‐story, vertically...
Comment and reply on "High-latitude application of 87Sr/86Sr: Correlation of Nuwok beds on North Slope, Alaska, to standard Oligocene chronostratigraphy"
Louie Marincovich Jr., Charles L. Powell II
1991, Geology (19) 537-539
No abstract available....
Kinematic model of a continuous Heart Mountain allochthon: Discussion
Willis H. Nelson
1991, Geological Society of America Bulletin (103) 718-719
No abstract available....
Human disturbance of an avian scavenging guild
Susan K. Skagen, Richard L. Knight, Gordon H. Orians
1991, Ecological Applications (1) 215-225
In order to investigate the effects of human activities on relationships within foraging guilds, we examined inacanus dynamics of eagles, crows, and gulls scavenging on spawned salmon in the Pacific Northwest. We examined several hypotheses that postulate the asymmetric foraging relationships of the three guild members and that reveal the...
Tholeiitic and alkalic basalts of the oldest Pacific Ocean crust
P.A. Floyd, P. R. Castillo, C. M. Pringle
1991, Terra Nova (3) 257-264
Approximately 160 Ma old basaltic lavas obtained from ODP Site 801 in the Pigafetta Basin represent the first Jurassic oceanic crust recovered in the Pacific Ocean and the oldest in situ oceanic crust discovered anywhere. The basement consists of an upper alkali olivine basalt sequence and a lower tholeiitic sequence separated by...
Extent of reaction in open systems with multiple heterogeneous reactions
John C. Friedly
1991, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (37) 687-693
The familiar batch concept of extent of reaction is reexamined for systems of reactions occurring in open systems. Because species concentrations change as a result of transport processes as well as reactions in open systems, the extent of reaction has been less useful in practice in...
Large-scale natural gradient tracer test in sand and gravel, Cape Cod, Massachusetts: 1. Experimental design and observed tracer movement
Denis R. LeBlanc, Stephen P. Garabedian, Kathryn M. Hess, Lynn W. Gelhar, Richard D. Quadri, Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, Warren W. Wood
1991, Water Resources Research (27) 895-910
A large-scale natural gradient tracer experiment was conducted on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to examine the transport and dispersion of solutes in a sand and gravel aquifer. The nonreactive tracer, bromide, and the reactive tracers, lithium and molybdate, were injected as a pulse in July 1985 and monitored in three dimensions...
Large-scale natural gradient tracer test in sand and gravel, Cape Cod, Massachusetts: 2. Analysis of spatial moments for a nonreactive tracer
Stephen P. Garabedian, Dennis R. LeBlanc, Lynn W. Gelhar, Michael A. Celia
1991, Water Resources Research (27) 911-924
A large-scale natural gradient tracer test was conducted to examine the transport of reactive and nonreactive tracers in a sand and gravel aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. As part of this test the transport of bromide, a nonreactive tracer, was monitored for about 280 m and quantified using spatial moments....
Neotectonic effects on sinuosity and channel migration, Belle Fourche River, Western South Dakota
Basil Gomez, Donna C. Marron
1991, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (16) 227-235
Short-term instability in the behaviour of a small, meandering alluvial channel is identified from the relation between sinuosity and either floodplain slope or channel slope within 17 reaches along an 81-kilometre section of the Belle Fourche River in western South Dakota. In reaches 1 to 4 and 11 to 17...
Sampling design for groundwater solute transport: Tests of methods and analysis of Cape Cod tracer test data
Debra S. Knopman, Clifford I. Voss, Stephen P. Garabedian
1991, Water Resources Research (27) 925-949
Tests of a one-dimensional sampling design methodology on measurements of bromide concentration collected during the natural gradient tracer test conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, demonstrate its efficacy for field studies of solute transport in groundwater and the utility of one-dimensional analysis. The methodology was applied...
Prospects for eruption prediction in near real-time
B. Voight, Reinold R. Cornelius
1991, Nature (350) 695-698
The 'materials science' method for eruption prediction1–3 arises from the application of a general law governing the failure of materials: Ω⊙−α Ω¨ − A = 0, where A and α are empirical constants, and Ω is an observable quantity such as ground deformation, seismicity or gas emission. This law leads to the idea of the...
Magellan: Radar performance and data products
G.H. Pettengill, P.G. Ford, W.T.K. Johnson, R.K. Raney, Laurence A. Soderblom
1991, Science (252) 260-265
The Magellan Venus orbiter carries only one scientific instrument: a 12.6-centimeter wavelength radar system shared among three data-taking modes. The synthetic-aperture mode images radar echoes from the Venus surface at a resolution of between 120 and 300 meters, depending on spacecraft altitude. In the altimetric mode, relative height measurement accuracies...
Venus volcanism: Initial analysis from Magellan data
J.W. Head, D.B. Campbell, C. Elachi, J. E. Guest, D.P. Mckenzie, R.S. Saunders, Gerald G. Schaber, Gerald Schubert
1991, Science (252) 276-288
Magellan images confirm that volcanism is widespread and has been fundamentally important in the formation and evolution of the crust of Venus. High-resolution imaging data reveal evidence for intrusion (dike formation and cryptodomes) and extrusion (a wide range of lava flows). Also observed are thousands of small shield volcanoes, larger...
Mantle phase changes and deep-earthquake faulting in subducting lithosphere
Stephen H. Kirby, W.B. Durham, L.A. Stern
1991, Science (252) 216-225
Inclined zones of earthquakes are the primary expression of lithosphere subduction. A distinct deep population of subduction-zone earthquakes occurs at depths of 350 to 690 kilometers. At those depths ordinary brittle fracture and frictional sliding, the faulting processes of shallow earthquakes, are not expected. A fresh understanding of these deep...
Basin and range crustal and upper mantle structure, northwest to central Nevada
Rufus D. Catchings, Walter D. Mooney
1991, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (96) 6247-6267
We present an interpretation of the crustal and uppermost mantle structure of the Basin and Range of northwestern Nevada based on seismic refraction/wide‐angle reflection, near‐vertical reflection, and gravity data. In comparison to most previous estimates, we find that the crust is somewhat thicker (32–36 km versus 22–30...
Strain measurements and the potential for a great subduction earthquake off the coast of Washington
J.C. Savage, M. Lisowski
1991, Science (252) 101-103
Geodetic measurements of deformation in northwestern Washington indicate that strain is accumulating at a rate close to that predicted by a model of the Cascadia subduction zone in which the plate interface underlying the continental slope and outer continental shelf is currently locked but the remainder of the interface slips...
Microbial reduction of uranium
Derek R. Lovley, Elizabeth J.P. Phillips, Y.A. Gorby, E. R. Landa
1991, Nature (350) 413-416
Reduction of the soluble, oxidized form of uranium, U(VI), to insoluble U(IV) is an important mechanism for the immobilization of uranium in aquatic sediments and for the formation of some uranium ores1–10. U(VI) reduction has generally been regarded as an abiological reaction in which sulphide, molecular hydrogen or organic compounds...