Relationship of roof rat population indices with damage to sugarcane
Lynn W. Lefebvre, Richard M. Engeman, David G. Decker, Nicholas R. Holler
1989, Wildlife Society Bulletin (17) 41-45
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) cause substantial damage to sugarcane in South Florida (Samol 1972; Lefebvre et al. 1978, 1985). Accurate estimates of roof rat populations in sugarcane fields would be useful for determining when to to treat a field to control roof rats and for assessing the efficacy of...
Supplemented graphic correlation; a powerful tool for paleontologists and nonpaleontologists
Lucy E. Edwards
1989, Palaios (4) 127-143
No abstract available. ...
Snow cover of the Upper Colorado River Basin from satellite passive microwave and visual imagery
E.G. Josberger, E. Beauvillain
1989, Nordic Hydrology (20) 73-84
A comparison of passive microwave images from the Nimbus-7 Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR) and visual images from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) of the Upper Colorado River Basin shows that passive microwave satellite imagery can be used to determine the extent of the snow cover. Eight cloud-free DMSP...
Estimates of the suspended sediment reference concentration (Ca) and resuspension coefficient (γ0) from near-bottom observations on the California shelf
D.E. Drake, D.A. Cacchione
1989, Continental Shelf Research (9) 51-64
Near-bottom current and suspended sediment measurements above a sandy clayey silt bed on the California continental shelf are used to estimate the near-bed suspended sediment reference concentration, Ca, and the bed shear stress, τ0. A proposed model contends that Ca should be proportional to the normalized excess shear stress acting on the sediment...
Heat flow and hydrothermal circulation in the Cascade Range, north-central Oregon
S. E. Ingebritsen, D. R. Sherrod, Robert H. Mariner
1989, Science (243) 1458-1462
In north-central Oregon a large area of near-zero near-surface conductive heat flow occurs in young volcanic rocks of the Cascade Range. Recent advective heat flux measurements and a heat-budget analysis suggest that ground-water circulation sweeps sufficient heat out of areas where rocks younger than 6 Ma (million years ago) are...
Ordovician graptolites from the northern Sierra de Cobachi, Sonora, Mexico
John F. Riva, Keith B. Ketner
1989, Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh (80) 71-90
Two Ordovician graptolite assemblages are recognised and described for the first time in the allochthonous siliceous assemblage or succession forming the Guayacan Group of central Sonora in northwestern Mexico. A Middle Ordovician assemblage referable to the Nemagraptus gracilis-Climacograptus wilsoni zonal interval occurs in the upper siliceous shale of unit 1 of...
Stratabound Co-Cu deposits and mafic volcaniclastic rocks in the Blackbird mining district, Lemhi County, Idaho
J. Thomas Nash, G.A. Hahn
1989, Book chapter, Geological Association of Canada Special Paper
No abstract available....
Earthquake hazard after a mainshock in California
Paul A. Reasenberg, Lucille M. Jones
1989, Science (243) 1173-1176
After a strong earthquake, the possibility of the occurrence of either significant aftershocks or an even stronger mainshock is a continuing hazard that threatens the resumption of critical services and reoccupation of essential but partially damaged structures. A stochastic parametric model allows determination of probabilities for aftershocks and larger mainshocks...
Disturbance-mediated accelerated succession in two Michigan forest types
Marc D. Abrams, Michael L. Scott
1989, Forest Science (35) 42-49
In northern lower Michigan, logging accelerated sugar maple (Acer saccharum) dominance in a northern white cedar (Thuja occidentals) community, and clear-cutting and burning quickly converted certain sites dominated by mature jack pine (Pinus banksiana) to early-succesional hardwoods, including Prunus, Populus, and Quercus. In both forest types the succeeding hardwoods...
Observations of spawning razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus) utilizing riverine habitat in the Lower Colorado River, Arizona-Nevada
Gordon Mueller
1989, Southwestern Naturalist (34) 147-149
No abstract available....
Analysis of antimycin A by reversed-phase liquid chromatography/nuclear magnetic-resonance spectrometry
Steven T. K. Ha, Charles L. Wilkins, Sharon L. Abidi
1989, Analytical Chemistry (61) 404-408
A mixture of closely related streptomyces fermentation products, antimycin A, Is separated, and the components are identified by using reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography with directly linked 400-MHz proton nuclear magnetic resonance detection. Analyses of mixtures of three amino acids, alanine, glycine, and valine, are used to determine optimal measurement conditions....
Geologic analyses of Shuttle Imaging Radar (SIR-B) data of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
Lisa R. Gaddis, Peter J. Mouginis-Mark, Robert B. Singer, Verne Kaupp
1989, GSA Bulletin (101) 317-332
Analyses of imaging radar data of volcanic terranes on Earth and Venus have emphasized the need for a clearer understanding of how these data can be most effectively used to accomplish important volcanological goals, including the interpretation of eruptive styles and the characterization of the geologic history of volcanic centers....
Assessment of smolt condition for travel time analysis. Annual report 1988
D.W. Rondorf, J.W. Beeman, J.C. Faler, M.E. Free, E.J. Wagner
1989, Report
Estimates of migration rates and travel times of juvenile salmonids within index reaches of the Columbia River basin are collected through the Smolt Monitoring Program for use by the Fish Passage Center. With increased reliance upon travel time estimates in 1988 by the Fish Passage Center, this study was implemented...
Source of anomalous magnetization in an area of hydrocarbon potential: Petrologic evidence from the Jurassic Preuss Sandstone, Wyoming-Idaho thrust belt
Neil S. Fishman, Richard L. Reynolds, Mark R. Hudson, Vito F. Nuccio
1989, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (73) 182-194
The Jurassic Preuss Sandstone, which crops out in the central part of the Wyoming-Idaho thrust belt on trend with a hydrocarbon-producing region to the south, has been previously identified as the source of anomalous magnetization in the area. Elsewhere, anomalous magnetization in sedimentary rocks near hydrocarbon accumulations has been attributed to hydrocarbon-engendered magnetic minerals, but magnetization of the Preuss is controlled by detrital magnetite. Evidence...
Uranium-series dated authigenic carbonates and Acheulian sites in southern Egypt
Barney J. Szabo, W.P. McHugh, G. G. Schaber, C.V. Haynes Jr., C. S. Breed
1989, Science (243) 1053-1056
Field investigations in southern Egypt have yielded Acheulian artifacts in situ in authigenic carbonate deposits (CaCO3-cemented alluvium) along the edges of now-aggraded paleovalleys (Wadi Arid and Wadi Safsaf). Uranium-series dating of 25 carbonate samples from various localities as far apart as 70 kilometers indicates that widespread carbonate deposition occurred about...
Organic matter at sites 642, 643, and 644, ODP Leg 104
T.J. McDonald, M.C. Kennicutt II, J.M. Brooks, Keith A. Kvenvolden
1989, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results (104) 309-317
Sedimentary extractable organic matter was analyzed at three ODP Leg 104 sites in the Norwegian Sea. Organic carbon content ranged from less than 0.1% to a maximum of 1.8%. Extractable organic matter content and unresolved complex mixture concentrations were low and randomly distributed. Low levels of aliphatic (branched and normal)...
Organic geochemistry on Leg 104
Keith A. Kvenvolden, T.J. McDonald
1989, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results (104) 291-307
The Leg 104 organic geochemistry program consisted of monitoring (a) hydrocarbon gases, (b) organic and inorganic carbon, and (c) parameters resulting from Rock-Eval pyrolysis at three sites on the Vdring Plateau. The results amplify some of those obtained earlier on Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Leg 38. In a regional...
Spatial, seasonal and diel distribution of fishes in a California reservoir dominated by native fishes
Bruce C. Vondracek, Donald M. Baltz, Larry R. Brown, Peter B. Moyle
1989, Fisheries Research (7) 31-53
During 21 months of sampling with various techniques, we captured 24 species of fish in Britton Reservoir. Nine species comprised over 96% of the number of fish captured and approximately 88% of the biomass. Five native non-game species accounted for over 77% of the catches.The native non-game fishes have maintained...
Relation of ground-water flow in bedrock aquifers and the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers, Minneapolis and St. Paul area, Minnesota
M. E. Schoenberg
1989, Open-File Report 89-268
No abstract available....
Irrigation-induced contamination--How real a problem
Jonathan P. Deason
1989, Journal on Irrigation Drainage Engineering (115)
The U.S. Department of the Interior has embarked on a series of reconnaissance‐level investigations throughout the western states to identify, evaluate, and respond to irrigation‐induced water quality problems. A series of water, sediment, and biological samples are being analyzed for 17 inorganic constituents and a number of pesticides. 19 studies...
Design considerations for monitoring land birds in Channel Islands National Park
M. K. Sogge, Charles van Riper III, C.A. Drost
1989, Book, 1989 Transactions of the Western Section of the Wildlife Society
No abstract available....
Geochemical evidence for invasion of Kilauea's plumbing system by Mauna Loa magma
J.M. Rhodes, K.P. Wenz, C.A. Neal, J. W. Sparks, J. P. Lockwood
1989, Nature (337) 257-260
From the beginning of the study of Hawaiian volcanism there has been controversy over possible relationships between the neighbouring active volcanoes Mauna Loa and Kilauea1–5. Seismic activity, thought to reflect upward migration of magma, reveals that the magmatic plumbing systems apparently converge at depth to form a broad funnel within...
Geochemical expression of early diagenesis in middle Eocene-lower Oligocene pelagic sediments in the southern Labrador Sea, Site 647, ODP Leg 105
M.A. Arthur, Walter E. Dean, J.C. Zachos, M. Kaminski, S. Hagerty Rieg, K. Elmstrom
1989, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results (105) 111-135
Geochemical analyses of the middle Eocene through lower Oligocene lithologic Unit IIIC (260-518 meters below sea floor [mbsf]) indicate a relatively constant geochemical composition of the detrital fraction throughout this depositional interval at Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 647 in the southern Labrador Sea. The main variability occurs in redox-sensitive...
Geochemical and paleoenvironmental variations across the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary at Braggs, Alabama
J.C. Zachos, Michael A. Arthur, Walter E. Dean
1989, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (69) 245-266
The Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary in southern Alabama occurs in a sequence of interbedded shallow-marine limestones and marls deposited during a Late Maastrichtian regression and subsequent Danian transgression. The presence of a diverse assemblage of Cretaceous and Paleocene benthic micro- and macrofossils has allowed detailed examination of paleoenvironmental changes in this...
Changes in redox conditions in deep‐sea sediments of the subarctic North Pacific Ocean: Possible evidence for the presence of North Pacific Deep Water
Walter E. Dean, J. V. Gardner, Eileen Hemphill-Haley
1989, Paleoceanography (4) 639-653
Cores of upper Quaternary and Holocene sediment from the subarctic North Pacific north of about 48°N contain one or more layers of oxidized brown sediment interbedded within predominantly reduced green sediment. The brown layers are enriched in several trace elements, especially Mn, Mo, Ni, and Co, relative to the green...