The Martian surface
M. H. Carr
1987, Reviews of Geophysics (25) 285-292
The past four years have been particularly fruitful for Martian research as the enormous volumes of data collected during the Viking mission became readily available to the general science community, and as reformatting of the remote sensing data into cartographic products made the data more useable. The 1:5,000,000‐scale map series...
Overview of geomagnetism and paleomagnetism, 1983–1986
Richard J. Blakely
1987, Reviews of Geophysics (25) 895-899
Michael Fuller, author of a similar overview four years ago, concluded that “...the next quadrennium promises to be a most interesting one, with plenty to keep us busy.” The 11 review papers that follow support his prediction; research in geomagnetism and paleomagnetism indeed has flourished over the last four years....
Geology of the Mount St. Helens area: Record of discontinuous volcanic and plutonic activity in the Cascade Arc of southern Washington
Russell C. Evarts, Roger P. Ashley, J.G. Smith
1987, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (92) 10155-10169
The Quaternary edifice of Mount St. Helens volcano was built upon a deeply eroded terrane of gently folded and altered volcanic and plutonic rocks that represent the core of the Tertiary Cascade magmatic arc. These rocks constitute an east dipping homoclinal sequence, several kilometers thick, of subaerially erupted mafic to...
Remote sensing of the Fram Strait marginal ice zone
R.A. Shuchman, B.A. Burns, O.M. Johannessen, E.G. Josberger, W. J. Campbell, T.O. Manley, N. Lannelongue
1987, Science (236) 429-431
Sequential remote sensing images of the Fram Strait marginal ice zone played a key role in elucidating the complex interactions of the atmosphere, ocean, and sea ice. Analysis of a subset of these images covering a 1-week period provided quantitative data on the mesoscale ice morphology, including ice edge positions,...
Comparative efficacy of 16 anesthetic chemicals on rainbow trout
P.A. Gilderhus, L. L. Marking
1987, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (7) 288-292
Presently there are no legally registered fish anesthetics that allow for the release of fish or use of the fish for food soon after they have been anesthetized. MS-222 (tricaine), the only anesthetic registered for use on fish in the United States, cannot be used within 21 d of harvesting...
Arabian Shield ophiolites and Late Proterozoic microplate accretion
John S. Pallister, J. S. Stacey, L. B. Fischer, Wayne R. Premo
1987, Geology (15) 20-323
Fragments of Late Proterozoic ocean crust and mantle (ophiolites) occur within six major fault zones that mark sutures between crustal blocks (microplates) that were accreted between about 630 and 715 Ma to form the Arabian Shield. We report new U-Pb zircon ages for ophiolitic gabbro, diorite, and plagiogranite that range...
Transponders as permanent identification markers for domestic ferrets, black-footed ferrets, and other wildlife
Kathleen A. Fagerstone, Brad E. Johns
1987, Journal of Wildlife Management (51) 294-297
A 0.05-g transponder implanted subcutaneously was tested to see if it provided a reliable identification method. In laboratory tests 20 domestic ferrets (Mustela putorius furo) received transponders and were monitored for a minimum of 6 months. None showed signs of inflammation, and necropsies conducted at the end of...
A transect across the Mesozoic accretionary margin of central California
Carl M. Wentworth, Mark D. Zoback, Andrew Griscom, Robert C. Jachens, Walter D. Mooney
1987, Geophysical Journal International (89) 105-110
No abstract available....
Crustal structure beneath exposed accreted terranes of Southern Alaska
Gary S. Fuis, E. L. Ambos, Walter D. Mooney, R.A. Page, Michael A. Fisher, Thomas M. Brocher, J.J. Taber
1987, Geophysical Journal International (89) 73-78
The crustal structure beneath the exposed terranes of southern Alaska has been explored using coincident seismic refraction and reflection profiling. A wide-angle reflector at 8-9 km depth, at the base of an inferred low-velocity zone, underlies the Peninsular and Chugach terranes, appears to truncate their boundary, and may represent...
Spatial relations between sympatric coyotes and red foxes in North Dakota
Alan B. Sargeant, Stephen H. Allen, James O. Hastings
1987, Journal of Wildlife Management (51) 285-293
Spatial relations between coyotes (Canis latrans) and red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) on a 360-km2 area in North Dakota were studied during 1977-78. Coyote families occupied large (mean = 61.2 km2), relatively exclusive territories that encompassed about one-half of the study area. Fox families occupied much smaller (mean = 11.9 km2),...
Use of topological information in hydrograph estimation
M.R. Karlinger, D.P. Guertin, B.M. Troutman
1987, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (23) 271-279
Discharge hydrographs computed from the theory of linear flow through topologically random channel networks are compared to actual discharge hydrographs for basins in semiarid regions of central Wyoming. The basins drained by the channel networks range in size from 0.69 to 10.8 square miles. Topological information consisting of stream-network magnitude...
Migration of mid-ocean-ridge volcanic segments
Hans Schouten, H.J.B. Dick, Kim D. Klitgord
1987, Nature (326) 835-839
The propagation of small-offset volcanic spreading-centre segments along mid-ocean ridge crests may reflect absolute motion of the plate boundary relative to the underlying mesospheric frame. Such a relationship could be caused by a purely vertical flow of the mantle under spreading centres and would have value in constraining past plate...
Fall and winter foods of northern pintails in the Sacramento Valley, California
Michael R. Miller
1987, Journal of Wildlife Management (51) 405-415
Food habits of northern pintails (Anas acuta) were investigated on 3 national wildlife refuges in the western portion of the Sacramento Valley, California, from August to March 1979-82. Pintails consumed >97% (aggregate % dry wt) plant food during diurnal foraging on national wildlife refuge rice, summer- irrigated, and summer-dry habitats...
Habitat selection and management of the Hawaiian crow
Jon G. Giffen, J. Michael Scott, Stephen Mountainspring
1987, Journal of Wildlife Management (51) 485-494
The abundance and range of the Hawaiian crow, or alala, (Corvus hawaiiensis) have decreased drastically since the 1890's. Fewer than 10 breeding pairs remained in the wild in 1985. A sample of 82 nests during 1970-82 were used to determine habitat associations. Two hundred firty-nine alala observations were used to...
Velocity control as a tool for optimal plume containment in the Equus Beds aquifer, Kansas
M. Heidari, J. Sadeghipour, O. Drici
1987, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (23) 325-335
A ground-water-management model was developed to investigate the best management options for the containment of an oil-field-brine plume in the Equus Beds aquifer in south-central Kansas. The main purpose of the management model was to find the optimal locations and minimum rates of pumpage of a set...
Sedimentation in Lake Onalaska, navigation pool 7, Upper Mississippi River, since impoundment
C. E. Korschgen, G. A. Jackson, L.F. Muessig, D.C. Southworth
1987, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (23) 221-226
Sediment accumulation was evaluated in Lake Onalaska, a 2800-ha backwater impoundment on the Upper Mississippi River. Computer programs were used to process bathometric charts and generate an extensive data set on water depth for the lake. Comparison of 1983 survey data with pre-impoundment (before 1937) data showed...
Water-quality trends in the nation's rivers
Richard A. Smith, Richard B. Alexander, M. G. Wolman
1987, Science (235) 1607-1615
Water-quality records from two nationwide sampling networks now permit nationally consistent analysis of long-term water-quality trends at more than 300 locations on major U.S. rivers. Observed trends in 24 measures of water quality for the period from 1974 to 1981 provide new insight into changes in stream quality that occurred...
Cumulative impacts assessment: an application to Chesapeake Bay
1987, Book, Cumulative impacts assessment: an application to Chesapeake Bay
No abstract available....
Late Eocene impact microspherules: Stratigraphy, age and geochemistry
G. Keller, Steven L. D’Hondt, C. J. Orth, J. S. Gilmore, P. Q. Oliver, Eugene Merle Shoemaker, E. Molina
1987, Meteoritics (22) 25-60
Recent discoveries of microtektite and related crystal bearing microspherule layers in deep-sea sediments of the west equatorial Pacific DSDP Sites 292, 315A and 462, off-shore New Jersey in Site 612 and in southern Spain have confirmed the presence of at least three microspherule layers in Late Eocene sediments. Moreover, these...
Community models for wildlife impact assessment: a review of concepts and approaches
Richard L. Schroeder
1987, Report, Biological Report
The first two sections of this paper are concerned with defining and bounding communities, and describing those attributes of the community that are quantifiable and suitable for wildlife impact assessment purposes. Prior to the development or use of a community model, it is important to have a clear understanding...
Monodisperse ferrous phosphate colloids in an anoxic groundwater plume
Philip M. Gschwend, Matthew D. Reynolds
1987, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (1) 309-327
Groundwater samples collected near a secondary-sewage infiltration site on Cape Cod, Massachusetts were examined for colloidal materials (10–1000 nm). In two wells the water contained a population of monodisperse 100-nm particles, detected using laser-light scattering and autocorrelation data processing. SEM and SEM-EDAX analysis of these colloidal materials collected on ultrafilters...
Quarterly Wildlife Mortality Report April 1987- June 1987
K. A. Converse, R. Windingstad, J. Christian Franson, T. Roffe
1987, Wildlife Disease Newsletter (23)
No abstract available....
Eocene siliceous and calcareous phytoplankton, Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 95
David Bukry
1987, Initial Reports of the D.S.D.P. (95) 395-415
Eocene siliceous and calcareous phytoplankton, with emphasis on silicoflagellates, were studied in 62 samples from DSDP Sites 612 and 613 on the continental slope and rise off New Jersey. The mid-latitude assemblages correlate well with assemblages from California, Peru, and offshore of southern Brazil, but are distinctly different from high-latitude...
North Atlantic Quaternary silicoflagellates, Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 94
David Bukry
1987, Initial Reports of the D.S.D.P. (94) 779-783
Quaternary silicoflagellates from Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) Mid-Atlantic Leg 94 are generally sparse and dissolution-thinned. Mesocena quadrangula, a low-latitude biostratigraphic guide species, occurs at all four sites studied (606, 607, 609, and 611), allowing identification of low-latitude zones—Dictyocha aculeata Zone, Mesocena quadrangula Zone, and Dictyocha stapedia stapedia Zone. A...
Alaskan Cretaceous-Tertiary floras and Arctic origins
Robert A. Spicer, Jack A. Wolfe, Douglas J. Nichols
1987, Paleobiology (13) 73-83
Cretaceous floras in Alaska, when compared to those at mid-latitudes, generally indicate later appearances in Alaska of major clades and major leaf morphologies. Compared to mid-latitude floras, Alaskan Late Cretaceous floras contain few major clades. The Alaskan clades diversified but at a low taxonomic level. Migrational pathways into high latitudes were probably along streams. Similar patterns characterized the Alaskan Tertiary, although some...