Convergent radial dispersion: A note on evaluation of the Laplace transform solution
Allen F. Moench
1991, Water Resources Research (27) 3261-3264
A numerical inversion algorithm for Laplace transforms that is capable of handling rapid changes in the computed function is applied to the Laplace transform solution to the problem of convergent radial dispersion in a homogeneous aquifer. Prior attempts by the author to invert this solution were unsuccessful for highly advective...
Predicting bighorn lamb survival from weather patterns in Canyonlands National Park, Utah
C. L. Douglas
1991, Technical Report CPSU/UNLV 031/08
No abstract available at this time...
Hatchery efficacy trials with chloramine-T for control of bacterial kidney disease
G. L. Bullock, R. L. Herman, C. Waggy
1991, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (3) 48-50
Three hatchery trials were carried out to determine the efficacy of chloramine-T for the control of bacterial gill disease in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, ranging in weight from 2.5 to 54 g. In each trial, we used a single flow-through treatment of 8.5 mg chloramine-T/L. The single...
Effects of lead shot ingestion on selected cells of the mallard immune system
Tonie E. Rocke, M.D. Samuel
1991, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (27) 1-9
The immunologic effects of lead were measured in game-farm mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) that ingested lead shot while foraging naturally, mallards intubated with lead shot, and unexposed controls. Circulating white blood cells (WBC) declined significantly in male mallards exposed to lead by either natural ingestion or intubation, but not females. Spleen...
Differentiation of colloidal and dissolved silica: Analytical separation using spectrophotometry and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry
A. Lewis-Russ, J. Ranville, A.T. Kashuba
1991, Analytica Chimica Acta (249) 509-511
A method is described that differentiates between solutions containing silica-dominated colloids and solutions that are essentially free of colloids. Suspensions of tuff particles were treated to remove colloids by centrifugation, filtration or both. Agreement of silica concentrations determined by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry and by a spectrophotometric method...
Low-flow and flow-duration characteristics of Mississippi streams
P. A. Telis
1991, Water-Resources Investigations Report 90-4087
No abstract available....
On seismological moments and magnitudes
B. A. Bolt
1991, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 111-112
My approach to seismology over the years has always been from the point of view of applied mathematics, as exemplified broadly by the work of the late Sir Harold Jeffreys and Professor K. E. Bullen. Both stresses the development of mathematics in the context of physical systems and of modeling,...
Federal support for seismological research; past, present, and future.
D. R. Sarewitz
1991, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 115-116
Data from the past 20 years indicate a strong temporal correlation between major California earthquakes and icnreased federal funding for seismology. ...
Carcinogens and cancers in freshwater fishes
John J. Black, Paul C. Baumann
1991, Environmental Health Perspectives (90) 27-33
Epizootics of neoplasms in freshwater fish species are considered in relation to circumstantial and experimental evidence that suggest that some epizootics of neoplasia of hepatocellular, cholangiocellular, epidermal, and oral epithelial origin may be causally related to contaminant exposure. Although there is concern for the safety of consuming fish affected...
Science and the public welfare
F. Press
1991, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 93-93
Earthquakes & Volcanoes has achieved much in its 20-year history. It serves as a link with policy makers and the public. it offers a variety of information attractive to professionals: historical, culutral, and curent events, and news items not found or missed elsewhere. And the journal can anticipate an even mroe...
Survival and band recovery rates of sympatric grey ducks and mallards in New Zealand
Tom Caithness, Murray Williams, James D. Nichols
1991, Journal of Wildlife Management (55) 111-118
We used band recovery data from grey ducks (Anas superciliosa) and mallards. (A. platyrhynchos) banded sympatrically during 1957-74 to estimate annual survival and recovery rates. Young birds tended to have higher recovery rates and lower survival rates than adults for both species. Both species showed strong evidence of year-to-year variation...
Validation of estimating food intake in gray wolves by 22Na turnover
Glenn D. DelGiudice, Laurel S. Duquette, Ulysses S. Seal, L. David Mech
1991, Journal of Wildlife Management (55) 59-71
We studied 22sodium (22Na) turnover as a means of estimating food intake in 6 captive, adult gray wolves (Canis lupus) (2 F, 4 M) over a 31-day feeding period. Wolves were fed white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) meat only. Mean mass-specific exchangeable Na pool was 44.8 ± 0.7 mEq/kg; there was no...
Reducing volcanic risk
R. Decker, B. Decker
1991, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 129-130
The last two decades have brought major advances in research on how volcanoes work and how to monitor their changing habits. Geologic mapping as well as studies of earthquake patterns and surface deformation associated with underground movement of magma have given scientists a better view of the inner structure and...
Selenium and associated trace elements in soil, rock, water and streambed sediment of the proposed Sandstone Reservoir, south-central Wyoming
D. L. Naftz, C. S. Barclay
1991, Water-Resources Investigations Report 91-4000
No abstract available....
Effects of oil pollution on marine bird populations
John F. Piatt, Harry R. Carter, David N. Nettleship
Jan White, editor(s)
1991, Conference Paper, The effects of oil on wildlife: Research, rehabilitation, and general concerns; Proceedings from the oil symposium, Herndon, Virginia, October 16-18, 1990
Worldwide oil pollution has killed millions of marine birds in this century but it has been difficult to directly link these losses to population declines. Estimated bird losses from acute spills and chronic pollution are not precise because we usually do not know the proportion of birds killed at sea...
The interaction between biology and the management of aquatic macrophytes
S. A. Nichols
1991, Aquatic Botany (41) 225-252
‘Management’ refers to controlling nuisance aquatic species and to restoring or restructing aquatic plant communities. Producing stable, diverse, aquatic plant communities containing a high percentage of desirable species is a primary management goal.There are a variety of techniques including harvesting, herbicides, water-level fluctuation, sediment alteration, nutrient limitation, light alteration, and...
Tertiary fission-track ages from the Bagua syncline (northern Peru): Stratigraphic and tectonic implications
C. W. Naeser, J.-Y. Crochet, E. Jaillard, G. Laubacher, T. Mourier, B. Sige
1991, Journal of South American Earth Sciences (4) 61-71
The results of five zircon fission-track ages of volcanic tuffs intercalated within the continental deposits of the Bagua syncline (northern Peru) are reported. These 2500-meter-thick deposits overlie mid-Campanian to lower Maastrichtian fine-grained red beds (Fundo El Triunfo Formation). The disconformable fluvial conglomerates of the Rentema Formation are associated with a...
The Wasatch fault zone, utah-segmentation and history of Holocene earthquakes
M. N. Machette, S. F. Personius, A.R. Nelson, David P. Schwartz, W.R. Lund
1991, Journal of Structural Geology (13) 137-149
The Wasatch fault zone (WFZ) forms the eastern boundary of the Basin and Range province and is the longest continuous, active normal fault (343 km) in the United States. It underlies an urban corridor of 1.6 million people (80% of Utah's population) representing the largest earthquake risk in the interior...
Tritium concentrations in the active Pu'u O'o crater, Kilauea volcano, Hawaii: implications for cold fusion in the Earth's interior
J. E. Quick, T. K. Hinkley, G.M. Reimer, C. E. Hedge
1991, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (69) 132-137
The assertion that deuterium-deuterium fusion may occur at low temperature suggests a potential new source of geothermal heat. If a cold-fusion-like process occurs within the Earth, then a test for its existence would be a search for anomalous tritium in volcanic emissions. The Pu'u O'o crater is the first point...
An analytical method for hydrogeochemical surveys: Inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry after using enrichment coprecipitation with cobalt and ammonium pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate
D.M. Hopkins
1991, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (41) 349-361
Trace metals that are commonly associated with mineralization were concentrated and separated from natural water by coprecipitation with ammonium pyrollidine dithiocarbamate (APDC) and cobalt and determined by inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES). The method is useful in hydrogeochemical surveys because it permits preconcentration near the sample sites, and selected...
Surface features of central North America: a synoptic view from computer graphics
R.J. Pike
1991, GSA Today (1) 1-251
A digital shaded-relief image of the 48 contiguous United States shows the details of large- and small-scale landforms, including several linear trends. The features faithfully reflect tectonism, continental glaciation, fluvial activity, volcanism, and other surface-shaping events and processes. The new map not only depicts topography accurately and in its true...
Chloride cycling in two forested lake watersheds in the west-central Adirondack Mountains, New York, U.S.A.
N.E. Peters
1991, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (59) 201-215
The chemistry of precipitation, throughfall, soil water, ground water, and surface water was evaluated in two forested lake-watersheds over a 4-yr period to assess factors controlling C1- cycling. Results indicate that C1- cycling in these watersheds is more complex than the generally held view of the rapid transport of atmospherically...
Measuring the benefits of GIS use
Stephen R. Gillespie
1991, Conference Paper, GIS/LIS 1991 ACSM-ASPRS Fall Convention
The key to objectively measuring the benefits of GIS use is to realize that there are two different types of benefits and that different techniques must be used to measure each. Efficiency benefits occur when the same task previously done without the GIS can be done less expensively with the...
Revised age of deglaciation of Lake Emma based on new radiocarbon and macrofossil analyses
S. A. Elias, P. E. Carrara, L.J. Toolin, A.J.T. Jull
1991, Quaternary Research (36) 307-321
Previous radiocarbon ages of detrital moss fragments in basal organic sediments of Lake Emma indicated that extensive deglaciation of the San Juan Mountains occurred prior to 14,900 yr B.P. (Carrara et al., 1984). Paleoecological analyses of insect and plant macrofossils from these basal sediments cast doubt on the reliability of...
The use of mineralogic techniques as relative age indicators for weathering profiles on the Atlantic Coastal Plain, USA
D. R. Soller, J. P. Owens
1991, Geoderma (51) 111-131
Textural, geochemical, and mineralogic study of soils and weathering profiles has led to the practice of applying varioys weathering parameters as relative age indicators. In our studies examined the entire thickness of weathered sediment (i.e., the weathering profile) for evidence of weathering-induced changes in both sand- and clay-sized mineralogy, and...