Flood characteristics for the Nisqually River and susceptibility of Sunshine Point and Longmire facilities to flooding in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington
L. M. Nelson
1987, Water-Resources Investigations Report 86-4179
Inundation from 25-, 50-, 100-, and 500-year floods at Sunshine Point and Longmire facilities and the Longmire visitors ' center and ranger station generally is not a serious hazard as long as the existing dikes and banks of the Nisqually River and Tahoma Creek remain intact and flood capacities of...
PYROLYSIS/GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY/MASS SPECTROMETRY OF A SERIES OF BURIED WOODS AND COALIFIED LOGS THAT INCREASE IN RANK FROM PEAT TO SUBBITUMINOUS COAL.
Patrick G. Hatcher, Harry E. Lerch, Rama K. Kotra, Vincent T. Verheyen
1987, Conference Paper, ACS Division of Fuel Chemistry, Preprints
To better understand the coalification process, we have conducted numerous studies of the chemical structural composition of xylem tissue from gymosperm wood and related woods that has been coalified to varying degrees. The studies presented here, examine the chemical nature of buried and coalified xylem tissue at the molecular level....
Sea-floor gouges caused by migrating gray whales off northern California
D.A. Cacchione, D.E. Drake, M.E. Field, G. B. Tate
1987, Continental Shelf Research (7) 553-560
Side-scan sonar records collected during March and April 1981 and 1982 off northern California contain elongate depressions whose sizes and shapes are similar to sea-floor gouges made by feeding gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) in the northern Bering Sea and in shallow embayments off British Columbia. The discovery of the whale...
Organochlorine contaminants and reproductive success of black skimmers in south Texas, 1984
Thomas W. Custer, Christine A. Mitchell
1987, Journal of Field Ornithology (58) 480-489
Ninety-four Black Skimmer (Rhynchops niger) nests on a dredged-material island colony near Laguna Vista, Texas, were fenced and monitored in 1984 from early incubation until 21 d after the last egg hatched. The daily probability of success was greater during the nestling (99.7%/d/nest) period than during the incubation (98.5%) or...
Relation of long- and short-term atmospheric sulfur concentrations to sulfate deposition in New York State
C.R. Barnes
1987, Northeastern Environmental Science (6) 89-98
Records from 1965-80 indicate an annual decrease of 1.9% in sulfur dioxide emissions upwind of New York, an annual decrease of 1.5% in atmospheric particulate sulfate concentration in New York, and an annual decrease of 2.0% in sulfate-deposition rate in New York. Sulfate-deposition rates in bulk sampling in New York...
The use of marine electromagnetic conductivity as a tool in hydrogeologic investigations
P.B. Duran
1987, Groundwater (25) 160-166
Field procedures for collecting marine electromagnetic (EM) conductivity data were developed by the U.S. Geological Survey as part of a hydrogeologic investigation of the Delaware River shipping channel. Eighty miles of marine EM data collected along the border between Pennsylvania and New Jersey were used...
Chemical structural studies of natural lignin by dipolar dephasing solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance
Patrick G. Hatcher
1987, Organic Geochemistry (11) 31-39
Two natural lignins, one from a gymnosperm wood the other from angiosperm wood, were examined by conventional solid-state and dipolar dephasing 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques. The results obtained from both techniques show that the structure of natural lignins is consistent with models of softwood and hardwood lignin. The dipolar...
Sedimentation across the central California oxygen minimum zone: an alternative coastal upwelling sequence
T. L. Vercoutere, H.T. Mullins, K. McDougall, J.B. Thompson
1987, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology (57) 709-722
Distribution, abundance, and diversity of terrigenous, authigenous, and biogenous material provide evidence of the effect of bottom currents and oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) on continental slope sedimentation offshore central California. Box core samples and bottom photographs collected across the oxygen minimum zone of...
Origin of the lethal gas burst from Lake Monoun, Cameroun
Haraldur Sigurdsson, J.D. Devine, F.M. Tchua, F.M. Presser, M.K.W. Pringle, William C. Evans
1987, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (31) 1-16
On 15 August, 1984, a lethal gas burst issued from a submerged 96-m-deep crater in Lake Monoun in Cameroun, western Africa, killing 37 people. The event was associated with a landslide from the eastern crater rim, which slumped into deep water. Waters below 50 m are anoxic, dominated by high...
Presence and potential significance of aromatic-ketone groups in aquatic humic substances
J.A. Leenheer, M. A. Wilson, Ronald L. Malcolm
1987, Organic Geochemistry (11) 273-280
Aquatic humic- and fulvic-acid standards of the International Humic Substances Society were characterized, with emphasis on carbonyl-group nature and content, by carbon-13 nuclear-magnetic-resonance spectroscopy, proton nuclear-magnetic-resonance spectroscopy, and infrared spectroscopy. After comparing spectral results of underivatized humic and fulvic acids with spectral results of chemically modified derivatives, that allow improved...
Sericite from the Silverton caldera, Colorado: correlation among structure, composition, origin, and particle thickness.
D. D. Eberl, J. Srodon, M. Lee, P.H. Nadeau, H. R. Northrop
1987, American Mineralogist (72) 914-934
The mineralogy and the origin of a suite of almost pure sericites, collected from fractures in hydrothermally altered volcanic rocks in the vicinity of the Silverton caldera in the western San Juan Mountains of Colorado, USA, are analysed.-J.A.Z....
Estimates of plasma, packed cell and total blood volume in tissues of the rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri)
W.H. Gingerich, R.A. Pityer, J.J. Rach
1987, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A: Physiology (87A) 251-256
1. Total blood volume and relative blood volumes in selected tissues were determined in non-anesthetized, confined rainbow trout by using 51Cr-labelled trout erythrocytes as a vascular space marker.2. Mean total blood volume was estimated to be 4.09 ± 0.55 ml/100 g, or about 75% of that estimated with the commonly...
Roosevelt elk density in old-growth forests of Olympic National Park
D.B. Houston, Bruce B. Moorhead, R.W. Olson
1987, Northwest Science (61) 220-225
We explored the feasibility of censusing Roosevelt elk from a helicopter in the dense old growth forests of Olympic National Park. WA. Mean observed densities ranged from 8.0-11.6 elk/km2, with coefficients of variation averaging 19.9 percent. A provisional sightability factor of 74 percent suggested that actual mean densities ranged from...
Energetics of canvasbacks staging on an upper Mississippi River pool during fall migration
John Y. Takekawa
1987, Thesis
No abstract available at this time...
Recent changes in Lake Michigan's fish community and their probable causes, with emphasis on the role of the alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus)
Gary W. Eck, LaRue Wells
1987, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (44) 53-60
Deepwater ciscoes (Coregonus spp.) or "chubs" of Lake Michigan far surpassed those of Lake Huron in yield, population density, and resilience following severe depletion in the 1960s and 1970s, when the bloater (C. hoyi) composed more than 90% of the stocks. The population decline of bloaters in recent decades was mainly attributed...
Acid rain stimulation of Lake Michigan phytoplankton growth
Bruce A. Manny, G.L. Fahnenstiel, W.S. Gardner
1987, Journal of Great Lakes Research (13) 218-223
Three laboratory experiments demonstrated that additions of rainwater to epilimnetic lake water collected in southeastern Lake Michigan stimulated chlorophyll a production more than did additions of reagent-grade water during incubations of 12 to 20 d. Chlorophyll a production did not begin until 3–5 d after the rain and lake water were mixed. The stimulation...
Seasonal bathythermal distribution of juvenile lake trout in Lake Ontario
Joseph H. Elrod, Clifford P. Schneider
1987, Journal of Great Lakes Research (13) 121-134
Bathythermal distributions of hatchery-reared lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) of three genetic strains (Lake Superior; Clearwater Lake, Manitoba; and Seneca Lake, New York) were described from catches with bottom trawls in Lake Ontario during April-May, June, July-August, and October, 1978–1984. This work was part of a program to evaluate post-stocking performance...
Horizontal ichthyoplankton tow-net system with unobstructed net opening
Robert T. Nester
1987, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (7) 148-150
The larval fish sampler described here consists of a modified bridle, frame, and net system with an obstruction-free net opening and is small enough for use on boats 10 m or less in length. The tow net features a square net frame attached to a 0.5-m-diameter cylinder-on-cone plankton net...
Effects of freezing in and out of water on length and weight of Lake Michigan bloaters
Richard E. Sayers
1987, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (7) 299-301
The purpose of this study was to determine if freezing significantly alters the length or weight of bloaters Coregonus hoyi. Bloaters were collected from southern Lake Michigan and were frozen for periods of 2-200 d. Freezing in water caused a significant decrease in length and a significant increase in weight....
Lake Superior revisited 1984
Wayne R. MacCallum, James H. Selgeby
1987, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (44) 23-36
The Lake Superior fish community has changed substantially since the early 1960s, when control of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) became effective. Self-reproducing stocks of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) have been reestablished in many inshore areas, although they have not yet reached pre-sea lamprey abundance; offshore lake trout are probably...
A model of the productivity of the mallard duck
Douglas H. Johnson, Donald W. Sparling, Lewis M. Cowardin
1987, Ecological Modelling (38) 257-275
This paper describes a stochastic computer model that simulates recruitment of the mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) under different habitat conditions and management scenarios. The model incorporates several environmental phenomena and biological relations that affect mallard recruitment. Major events include arrival of mallards in the spring, daily survival of hens, initiation of...
Implications of the northwestwardly younger age of the volcanic rocks of west-central California: Alternative Interpretation
Richard G. Stanley
1987, GSA Bulletin (98) 612-614
Fox and others (1985) have made an important contribution to our understanding of iihe evolution of the Mendocino triple junction and the San Andreas transform. They have summarized a large amount of data on the ages and distribution of volcanic centers along the central California coast; their summary clearly shows...
Benthic foraminifers on the continental shelf and upper slope, Russian River area, northern California ( USA).
P. J. Quinterno, J.V. Gardner
1987, Journal of Foraminiferal Research (17) 132-152
We analyzed benthic foraminifers from 71 surface samples collected from the sea floor of the continental margin. One hundred and six different taxa were identified, and Q-mode factor analysis was used to identify assemblages. Six foraminiferal assemblage factors explain 94% of the variation in the data matrix. The Inner Shelf...
GEOGRAPHIC ESTIMATION OF RUNOFF-MODEL PARAMETERS.
Arthur R. Schmidt, Linda S. Weiss, Kevin A. Oberg
1987, Conference Paper
The U. S. Geological Survey is developing techniques to estimate and evaluate unit-hydrograph and loss-rate parameter values for rainfall-runoff models using Geographic Information System (GIS) procedures. The data base includes basin, soil, and climatological characteristics that will be stored in a GIS, and unit-hydrograph and loss-rate parameters obtained from calibration...
Use of no-till winter wheat by nesting ducks in North Dakota
Harold F. Duebbert, H.A. Kantrud
1987, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (42) 50-53
Nesting of dabbling ducks (Anatinae) was studied in fields of no-till winter wheat (Triticum aestivum) in the prairie pothole region of North Dakota during 1984 and 1985. Total area of 59 fields searched in 1984 was 1,135 ha and total area of 70 fields searched in 1985 was 1,175 ha....