Forecasting damaging earthquakes in the central and eastern United States
S.P. Nishenko, G. A. Bollinger
1990, Science (249) 1412-1416
Analysis of seismograph network data, earthquake catalogs from 1727 to 1982, and paleoseismic data for the central and eastern United States indicate that the Poisson probability of a damaging earthquake (magnitude ≥ 6.0) occurring during the next 30 years is at a moderate to high level (0.4 to 0.6). When...
Overview of the effects and influence of the activity of Mount St. Helens in the 1980s
Donald W. Peterson
1990, Geoscience Canada (17) 163-166
The cataclysmic eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980, made an enormous impact on the science of volcanology. The eruption was in daylight in clear weather, which provided an unprecedented opportunity to investigate relations among observations, products, and effects of a large explosive eruption. The May 18 events...
New explorations at the Stoneham, Colorado, barite locality
P.J. Modreski, B. Lees, D. Wilson
1990, Rocks & Minerals (65) 203-222
No abstract available. ...
In situ retention-transport response to nitrate loading and storm discharge in a third-order stream
Frank J. Triska, Vance C. Kennedy, Ronald J. Avanzino, Gary W. Zellweger, Kenneth E. Bencala
1990, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (9) 229-239
Nitrate retention was assayed in a 264-m reach of a third-order stream, Little Lost Man Creek, Humboldt County, California, USA. Nitrate budgets (24-48 hours) were calculated under background conditions, and during four other intervals of modified nitrate concentration caused by nutrient amendment or storm-enhanced discharge. Under background, low-flow conditions, the...
Visual counts as an index of White-Tailed Prairie Dog density
George E. Menkens Jr., Dean E. Biggins, Stanley H. Anderson
1990, Wildlife Society Bulletin (18) 290-296
Black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes) are depended on prairie dogs (Cynomys spp.) for food and shelter and were historically restricted to prairie dog towns (Anderson et al. 1986). Because ferrets and prairie dogs are closely associated, successful ferret management and conservation depends on successful prairie dog management. A critical...
Effects of a coal-fired power plant on the rock lichen Rhizoplaca melanophthalma: chlorophyll degradation and electrolyte leakage
Jayne Belnap, Kimball T. Harper
1990, The Bryologist (93) 309-312
Chlorophyll degradation and electrolyte leakage were measured for the umbilicate desert lichen Rhizoplaca melanophthalma (Ram.) Leuck. & Poelt in the vicinity of a coal-fired power plant near Page, Arizona. Patterns of lichen damage indicated by chlorophyll degradation were similar to those indicated by electrolyte leakage. Regression analyses of chlorophyll degradation...
Guidelines for the collection, treatment, and analysis of water samples: U.S. Geological Survey Western Region field manual
Marc A. Sylvester, Lester R. Kister, W. B. Garrett
1990, Report
No abstract available....
Soil-vegetation correlations in the Connecticut River floodplain of Western Massachusetts
Peter Veneman, Ralph W. Tiner
1990, Report
As part of a national study analyzing the relation between hydric soils and wetland vegetation, the vegetation associated with a series of known soils was sampled along the Connecticut River floodplain in Massachusetts. Weighted average and index average (presence/absence) values were calculated for vegetation using wetland ecological index values...
Site response across downtown Santa Cruz, California
Edward Cranswick, Kenneth King, David Carver, David M. Worley, Robert Williams, Paul A. Spudich, Robert Banfill
1990, Geophysical Research Letters (17) 1793-1796
Some buildings in Santa Cruz, California, particularly those in the downtown section which is built on a flood plain, were severely damaged by the 17 October 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake. During an aftershock study conducted in the fortnight following the mainshock, an array of seismographs was deployed across downtown to...
Factors influencing mercury concentrations in walleyes in northern Wisconsin lakes
J.G. Wiener, R.E. Martini, T.B. Sheffy, G.E. Glass
1990, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (119) 862-870
We examined relations between mercury concentrations in walleyes Stizostedion vitreum and the characteristics ofclear‐water Wisconsin lakes, which spanned a broad range of pH values (5.0–8.1) and acid‐neutralizing capacities (–9 to 1,017 μeq/L). Total concentrations of mercury in axial muscle tissue of walleyes (total length, 25–56 cm) varied from 0.12...
Variations in suspended sediment and associated trace element concentrations in selected riverine cross sections
Arthur J. Horowitz, Frank A. Rinella, Paul J. Lamothe, Timothy L. Miller, Thomas K. Edwards, Richard L. Roche, David A. Rickert
1990, Environmental Science and Technology (24) 1313-1320
Detailed sampling and subsequent analyses of riverine suspended sediment obtained from six rivers in the United States indicate substantial differences in suspended sediment concentrations and possibly in some associated trace elements, depending on whether depth- and width-integrated, point, or pumping samples are used. In addition, the data from time-series, depth-integrated...
The Yucca Mountain project: Another perspective
Isaac J. Winograd
1990, Environmental Science and Technology (24) 1291-1293
No abstract available....
Pharmacokinetic modeling in aquatic animals. 1. Models and concepts
Mace G. Barron, Guy R. Stehly, W. L. Hayton
1990, Aquatic Toxicology (17) 187-212
While clinical and toxicological applications of pharmacokinetics have continued to evolve both conceptually and experimentally, pharmacokinetics modeling in aquatic animals has not progressed accordingly. In this paper we present methods and concepts of pharmacokinetic modeling in aquatic animals using multicompartmental, clearance-based, non-compartmental and physiologically-based pharmacokinetic models....
Selenium and other elements in juvenile striped bass from the San Joaquin Valley and San Francisco Estuary, California
Michael K. Saiki, Donald U. Palawski
1990, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (19) 717-730
Concentrations of selenium and other trace elements were determined in 55 whole body samples of juvenile anadromous striped bass (Morone saxatilis) from the San Joaquin Valley and San Francisco Estuary, California. The fish (≤1 yr old—the predominant life stage in the San Joaquin Valley) were collected in September–December...
Climatic influences on species: Evidence from the fossil record
T. M. Cronin, C.E. Schneider
1990, Trends in Ecology and Evolution (5) 275-279
The detailed Neogene and Quaternary paleoclimatic reconstructions now available provide a means to test how species respond to environmental change. Paleontologic studies of marine organisms show that climatic change causes evolution (via cladogenesis and anagenesis), ecophenotypic variation, migration, morphologic stasis and extinction. Evolution during climatic change is a rare event...
Solute transport with multisegment, equilibrium-controlled reactions: A feed forward simulation method
Jacob Rubin
1990, Water Resources Research (26) 2029-2055
The feed forward method (FF method) is one of the ways of formulating operational equations which simulate transport of solutes influenced by equilibrium-controlled reaction networks. The FF method provides increased solution efficiency by adapting its formulations to some of the network's fundamental features. In this study the FF method is...
Use of tree-ring chemistry to document historical ground-water contamination events
Don A. Vroblesky, Thomas M. Yanosky
1990, Groundwater (28) 677-684
The annual growth rings of tulip trees (Liriodendron tulipifera L.) appear to preserve a chemical record of ground-water contamination at a landfill in Maryland. Zones of elevated iron and chlorine concentrations in growth rings from trees immediately downgradient from the landfill are closely correlated temporally with activities in the landfill...
Dark materials in Valles Marineris: Indications of the style of volcanism and magmatism on Mars
Paul E. Geissler, Robert B. Singer, Baerbel K. Lucchitta
1990, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (95) 14.399-14.413
Rifting on the equatorial canyon system of Valles Marineris provides a unique view of the interior of the Martian crust to depths reaching 7 km, exposing several in situ bedrock units which testify to past volcanic and magmatic processes on Mars. A thick, regionally extensive deposit observed in Coprates and...
The use of interactive videodisc in natural resources training
M.M. Banowetz, R.C. Solomon, W.L. Mangus
1990, Book, Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Conference
No abstract available....
Fire - Southern Oscillation relations in the southwestern United States
T.W. Swetnam, Julio L. Betancourt
1990, Science (249) 1017-1020
Fire scar and tree growth chronologies (1700 to 1905) and fire statistics (since 1905) from Arizona and New Mexico show that small areas burn after wet springs associated with the low phase of the Southern Oscillation (SO), whereas large areas burn after dry springs associated with the high phase of...
Sterilizing effects of cobalt-60 and cesium-137 radiation on male sea lampreys
L.H. Hanson
1990, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (10) 352-361
Male spawning-run sea lampreys Petromyzon marinus were exposed to various doses of cobalt-60 or cesium-137 radiation in an attempt to sterilize them for use in a program for controlling sea lampreys through the release of sterile males. Males captured and irradiated during the early part of the upstream migration were...
Flume experiments on the alignment of transverse, oblique, and longitudinal dunes in directionally varying flows
David M. Rubin, Hiroshi Ikeda
1990, Sedimentology (37) 673-684
For more than a century geologists have wondered why some bedforms are orientated roughly transverse to flow, whereas others are parallel or oblique to flow. This problem of bedform alignment was studied experimentally using subaqueous dunes on a 3–6-m-diameter sand-covered turntable on the floor of a 4-m-wide flume.In each experiment,...
Human impacts on bear habitat use
David J. Mattson
1990, Bears: Their Biology and Management (8) 33-56
: Human effects on bear habitat use are mediated through food biomass changes, bear tolerance of humans and their impacts, and human tolerance of bears. Large-scale changes in bear food biomass have been caused by conversion of wildlands and waterways to intensive human use, and by the introduction of exotic...
The October 17, 1989, Loma Prieta, California, Earthquake and its aftershocks: Geometry of the sequence from high-resolution locations
Lynn D. Dietz, William L. Ellsworth
1990, Geophysical Research Letters (17) 1417-1420
Hypocenters of the Loma Prieta sequence form a dipping zone that rises from the mainshock hypocenter and is parallel to the mainshock nodal plane. Most aftershocks cluster around the perimeter of the zone, surrounding a relatively aseismic center which approximates the region of mainshock rupture. At its southeastern end, the...
Regional water quality
Janet Hren, Carolyn J. Oblinger Childress, J. Michael Norris, Thomas H. Chaney, Donna N. Myers
1990, Environmental Science and Technology (24) 1122-1127
No abstract available....