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Page 4751, results 118751 - 118775

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Rainfall intensity-duration-frequency formulas.
Chiu-Lan Chen
1983, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (109) 1603-1621
A new general rainfall intensity-duration-frequency formula is presented, utilizing a method similar to, but more accurate than one previously developed. The previously developed formula was based on the average depth-duration ratio of about 40% and the mean depth-frequency ratio of 1.48. It is shown that this formula is only a...
The role of digital cartographic data in the geosciences
S.C. Guptill
1983, Computers & Geosciences (9) 23-26
The increasing demand of the Nation's natural resource developers for the manipulation, analysis, and display of large quantities of earth-science data has necessitated the use of computers and the building of geoscience information systems. These systems require, in digital form, the spatial data on map products. The basic cartographic data...
Geological setting of oil shales in the Permian phosphoria formation and some of the geochemistry of these rocks
E. K. Maughan
1983, Conference Paper, Preprints Symposia
Recent studies of the Meade Peak and the Retort Phosphatic Shale Members of the Phosphoria Formation have investigated the organic carbon content and some aspects of hydrocarbon generation from these rocks. Phosphorite has been mined from the Retort and Meade Peak members in southeastern Idaho, northern Utah, western Wyoming and...
LITHOLOGIC MAPPING USING LANDSAT THEMATIC MAPPER DATA.
M. H. Podwysocki, J.W. Salisbury, O. D. Jones, D.L. Mimms
1983, Conference Paper
The paper is in abstract form. It discusses the Landsat-4 Thematic Mapper (TM), with its new near infrared bands centered at 1. 65 mu m and 2. 20 mu m and spatial resolution of 30 m, which has been used to distinguish rocks containing minerals having ferric-iron absorption bands in...
Geochemistry of the Chattanooga shale, Dekalb County, central Tennessee.
J.S. Leventhal, Paul H. Briggs, J.W. Baker
1983, Southeastern Geology (24) 101-116
This Upper Devonian shale is of interest because of its unusual enrichment in trace elements, especially U; a new chemical analysis for major, minor and trace elements is presented. Stable isotopes of carbon (organic) show delta 13C approx -29per mille and for total sulphur show -21 to -27per mille delta...
Aspergillosis in a red-crowned crane
R. K. Stroud, R. M. Duncan
1983, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association (183) 1297-1298
An unusual form of pulmonary aspergillosis in a red-crowned crane (Grus japonensis) is described in this report. The major lesion is unique because it closely resembles a lesion referred to as an aspergilloma. An aspergilloma is a single large granulomatous lesion that resembles a tumor and is caused by fungi...
Carbonatite tuffs in the Laetolil Beds of Tanzania and the Kaiserstuhl in Germany
R. L. Hay, J. R. O’Neil
1983, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (82) 403-406
Carbonatite lava and tephra are now well known. The only modern eruptive carbonatites, from Oldoinyo Lengai, Tanzania, are of alkali carbonatite, whereas all of the pre-modern examples are of calcite or dolomite. Chemical and stable isotope analyses were made of separate phases of Pliocene carbonatite tuffs of the Laetolil Beds...
Maps for the nation: The current federal mapping establishment
Gary W. North
1983, Government Publications Review (10) 345-360
The U.S. Government annually produces an estimated 53,000 new maps and charts and distributes about 160 million copies. A large number of these maps are produced under the national mapping program, a decentralized Federal/State cooperative approach to mapping the country at standard scales. Circular A-16, issued by the Office of...
Geochemistry of diverse basalt types from Loihi Seamount, Hawaii: Petrogenetic implications
F.A. Frey, D.A. Clague
1983, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (66) 337-355
The wide variety of basalt types, tholeiitic to basanite, dredged from Loihi Seamount have minor and trace element abundances that are characteristic of subaerial Hawaiian basalts, thereby confirming that Loihi Seamount is a manifestation of the Hawaiian “hot spot”. Within the Loihi sample suite there are well-defined positive correlations among...
U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY LAND REMOTE SENSING ACTIVITIES.
Doyle G. Frederick
1983, Conference Paper
USGS uses all types of remotely sensed data, in combination with other sources of data, to support geologic analyses, hydrologic assessments, land cover mapping, image mapping, and applications research. Survey scientists use all types of remotely sensed data with ground verifications and digital topographic and cartographic data. A considerable amount...
Inclusion body disease of cranes: A serological follow-up to the 1978 die-off
D. E. Docherty, Renee I. Romaine
1983, Avian Diseases (27) 830-835
A herpesvirus was isolated from captive cranes involved in a 1978 die-off. Neutralizing antibody to this virus was detected in this captive population as early as 1975 and consistently thereafter through 1979. Exposure to the virus evidently occurred at least 2 1/2 years before the die-off, without causing any mortality...
An updated Bouguer anomaly map of south-central West Africa
David A. Hastings
1983, Geophysics (48) 1120-1128
A new Bouguer gravity anomaly map compiled for western Africa adds data for Ghana, Guinea, and Liberia.The new data add detail to a key part of the Eburnean shield and assist in the development of a model of rifting at the time of the Eburnean orogeny, 2000 million years ago....
Selective concentration of cesium in analcime during hydrothermal alteration, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
T. E. C. Keith, J. M. Thompson, R. E. Mays
1983, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (47) 795-804
Chemical and mineralogical studies of fresh and hydrothermally altered rhyolitic material in Upper and Lower Geyser Basins, Yellowstone National Park, show that all the altered rocks are enriched in Cs and that Cs is selectively concentrated in analcime. The Cs content of unaltered rhyolite lava flows, including those from which...
Stability of streams and lakes on Mars
M. H. Carr
1983, Icarus (56) 476-495
Under present climatic conditions streams and lakes on Mars will freeze. Freezing is slow and would have a negligible effect in impeding flow of the large floods that are believed to have eroded the outflow channels. Valley networks are more difficult...
Effective flow-through vacuum degasser for fish hatcheries
J. T. Fuss
1983, Aquacultural Engineering (2) 301-307
Since the fry of certain species of fish cannot tolerate even slight amounts of supersaturation, their water supplies must be degassed. Gas content can be reduced to subsaturated, sublethal levels by passing it through the vacuum degasser described here. The system includes a low-cost, flow-through unit easily capable of degassing...
An isolated population of small Canada geese on Kaliktagik Island, Alaska
Scott A. Hatch, Martha A. Hatch
1983, Wildfowl (34) 130-136
Recently we discovered that a small form of the Canada Goose Branta canadensis breeds on Kaliktagik Island, one of the Semidi Islands, about 80 km south of the Alaska Peninsula near longitude 157°W (Figure 1). The unexpected occurrence of geese on this oceanic island and the possibility that they are...
Human interactions with ground-water
A. Zaporozec
1983, GeoJournal (7) 427-433
Ground-Water could be considered as an immense reservoir, from which only a certain amount of water can be withdrawn without affecting the quantity and quality of water. This amount is determined by the characteristics of the environment in which ground-water occurs and by the interactions of ground-water with precipitation, surface...
The role of remotely sensed and other special data for predictive modeling: the Umatilla, Oregon example
Thomas R. Loveland, Gary E. Johnson
1983, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (49) 1183-1192
Landsat data and 1:24 000-scale aerial photographs were initially used to map the expansion of irrigation from 1973 to 1979 and to identify crops under irrigation in 1979. The crop data were then used with historical water requirement figures and digital topographic and hydrographic data to estimate water and power...
Statistical evaluation of oil and gas prospects in the outer continental shelf of the U.S. Gulf Coast
J.C. Davis, J.W. Harbaugh
1983, Journal of the International Association for Mathematical Geology (15) 217
Areas of the U.S. Gulf Coast, both onshore and offshore, are among the petroliferous regions of the United States. In offshore Louisiana and Texas, most oil and gas is associated with structurally controlled traps on the crest or flanks of domes created by the diapiric movement of salt. These structures...
Cenozoic structural history of selected areas in the eastern Great Basin, Nevada-Utah
R. Ernest Anderson
1983, Open-File Report 83-504
The Confusion Range structural trough (CRST) of west-central Utah predates the Oligocene rocks that are exposed along it. The northern part of the axial region of the CRST is complicated by structures that include reverse faults and associated folds, a large-amplitude mushroom fold, and belts of sharply flexed to overturned...
Hydrothermal alteration of graywacke and basalt by 4 m NaCl
R.J. Rosenbauer, J. L. Bischoff, A. S. Radtke
1983, Economic Geology (78) 1701-1710
Separate experiments at 350 degrees C and 500 bars at a rock/fluid ratio of 1/10. Illite, dolomite, and quartz amounting to 67 percent of the original graywacke, were converted to albite and smectite. The rock gained Na and released Ca, K, heavy metals, and CO 2 to solution. In sharp contrast, the...
Automated determination of bromide in waters by ion chromatography with an amperometric detector
G. S. Pyen, D. E. Erdmann
1983, Analytica Chimica Acta (149) 355-358
An automated ion chromatograph, including a program controller, an automatic sampler, an integrator, and an amperometric detector, was used to develop a procedure for the determination of bromide in rain water and many ground waters. Approximately 10 min is required to obtain a chromatogram. The detection limit for bromide is...