Crane reproductive physiology and conservation
G.F. Gee
1983, Zoo Biology (2) 199-213
Some unique features of crane reproduction, management, and conservation are described. Because cranes are sexually monomorphic, sexing is difficult and must be accomplished using behavior, laparoscopy, cloacal examination, genetic techniques, or fecal steroid analysis. Although husbandry techniques for cranes are similar to those used with other nondomestic birds, a number...
Selective dissolution of siliceous microfossils observed in a box core from the north-east equatorial Pacific
D. Kadko, J. R. Blueford, L.H. Burckle, J. Barron
1983, Nature (302) 139-141
A box core taken at 11??50.3??? N and 137??28.2??? W in the Central Pacific manganese nodule province was studied to determine the pattern of diatom and radiolarian preservation with depth in the sediment, as well as to observe downcore variations in clay mineralogy. We observed marked deterioration of the siliceous...
Platinum-group elements in rocks from the voikar-syninsky ophiolite complex, Polar Urals, U.S.S.R.
N.J. Page, P. J. Aruscavage, J. Haffty
1983, Mineralium Deposita (18) 443-455
Analyses of platinum-group elements (PGE) in rocks collected from the Voikar-Syninsky ophiolite in the Polar Urals suggest that the distribution and geochemistry of PGE in this Paleozoic ophiolite are similar to those in Mesozoic ophiolites from elsewhere. Chondrite-normalized PGE patterns for chromitite, the tectonite unit, and ultramafic and mafic cumulate...
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...
Tectonics and metallogenic provinces
P. W. Guild
1983, Advances in Space Research (3) 9-16
Various theories have been advanced to explain the well-known uneven distribution of metals and ore-deposit types in space and time. Primordial differences in the mantle, preferential concentration of elements in the crust, the prevalence of ore-forming processes at certain times and (or) places, and combinations of one or several of...
Palaeomagnetism of lower cretaceous tuffs from Yukon-Kuskokwim delta region, western Alaska
B.R. Globerman, R. S. Coe, J. M. Hoare, J. Decker
1983, Nature (305) 516-520
During the past decade, the prescient arguments1-3 for the allochthoneity of large portions of southern Alaska have been corroborated by detailed geological and palaeomagnetic studies in south-central Alaska 4-9 the Alaska Peninsula10, Kodiak Island11,12 and the Prince William Sound area13 (Fig. 1). These investigations have demonstrated sizeable northward displacements for...
SPONTANEOUS COAL COMBUSTION; MECHANISMS AND PREDICTION.
James R. Herring, Fredrick J. Rich
1983, Conference Paper
Spontaneous ignition and combustion of coal is a major problem to the coal mining, shipping, and use industries; unintentional combustion causes loss of the resource as well as jeopardy to life and property. The hazard to life is especially acute in the case of underground coal mine fires that start...
Estimation of groundwater recharge parameters by time series analysis
Richard L. Naff, Allan L. Gutjahr
1983, Water Resources Research (19) 1531-1546
A model is proposed that relates water level fluctuations in a Dupuit aquifer to effective precipitaton at the top of the unsaturated zone. Effective precipitation, defined herein as that portion of precipitation which becomes recharge, is related to precipitation measured in a nearby gage by a two-parameter function. A second-order...
Hole-to-surface resistivity measurements
J.J. Daniels
1983, Geophysics (48) 87-97
Hole-to-surface resistivity measurements over a layered volcanic tuff sequence illustrate procedures for gathering, reducing, and interpreting hole-to-surface resistivity data. The magnitude and direction of the total surface electric field resulting from a buried current source is calculated from orthogonal potential difference measurements for a grid of closely spaced stations. A...
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...
Hydrologic and geomorphic studies of the Platte River basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1983, Professional Paper 1277
The channels of the Platte River and its major tributaries, the South Platte and North Platte Rivers in Colorado, Wyoming, and Nebraska, have undergone major changes in hydrologic regime and morphology since about 1860, when the water resources of the basin began to be developed for agricultural, municipal, and industrial...
Origins of rainbow smelt in Lake Ontario
Roger A. Bergstedt
1983, Journal of Great Lakes Research (9) 582-583
The first rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) to enter Lake Ontario were probably migrants from an anadromous strain introduced into New York's Finger Lakes. Since the upper Great Lakes were originally stocked with a landlocked strain from Green Lake, Maine, subsequent migration to Lake Ontario from Lake Erie makes Lake Ontario...
Squamous cell carcinoma in a free-ranging white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)
R. K. Stroud, Terry E. Amundson
1983, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (19) 162-164
No abstract available....
Waterbird mortality from botulism type E in Lake Michigan: An update
Christopher J. Brand, Ruth M. Duncan, Scott P. Garrow, Dan Olson, Leonard E. Schumann
1983, The Wilson Bulletin (95) 269-275
Three outbreaks of botulism type E occurring in waterbirds on Lake Michigan since autumn 1976 are discussed. Natural ingestion of food containing type E toxin by Ring-billed Gulls (Larus delawarensis) and the presence of type E toxin in blood from moribund gulls were demonstrated. Concurrent presence of type C and...
Outbreak of avian cholera on the wintering grounds of the Mississippi Valley Canada goose flock
R. M. Windingstad, R. M. Duncan, D. Thornburg
1983, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (19) 95-97
Avian cholera is reported for the first time in Canada geese, Branta canadensis, of the Mississippi Valley population. The disease was detected in weekly surveillance transects and was responsible to the loss of about 850 geese during the winter of 1978–1979 at localized areas in southern Illinois. Necropsies performed on 480...
Use of Kings Bay, Crystal River, Florida by the West Indian manatee (Trichechus manatus)
H. I. Kochman, G. B. Rathbun, J. A. Powell
J.M. Packard, editor(s)
1983, Report, Proposed Research/Management Plan for Crystal River Manatees
No abstract available at this time...
Earthquakes; July-August 1982
W. J. Person
1983, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (15) 39-41
During this reporting period, there were three major (7.0-7.9) earthquakes all in unpopulated areas. The quakes occurred north of Macquarie Island on July 7, in the Santa Cruz Islands on August 5, and south of Panama on August 19. In the United Stats, a number of earthquakes occurred, but no...
Earthquakes; September-October 1982
W. J. Person
1983, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (15) 73-76
Seismically speaking the months of September and October were very quiet. There were no major (magnitude 7.0-7.9) earthquakes. Guatemala was struck by a moderate earthquake on September 29 causing fatalities and considerable damage. In the United States, a number of earthquakes occurred, but only slight damage was reported. ...
Species decline: A perspective on extinction, recovery, and propagation
J. W. Carpenter
1983, Zoo Biology (2) 165-178
This keynote address was presented at the Conference on the Conservation of Endangered Species in Zoological Parks and Aquariums on April 18, 1982 at the National Aquarium in Baltimore. It outlines 1) future trends in the world's environment, resources, and population; 2) factors affecting species decline; 3) reasons for preserving life forms;...
Faulting arrested by control of ground-water withdrawal in Houston, Texas
T. Holzer, R.K. Gabrysch, E.R. Verbeek
1983, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (15) 204-209
More than 86 historically active faults with an aggregate length of 150 miles have been identified within and adjacent to the Houston, Texas, metropolitan area. Although scarps of these faults grow gradually and without causing damaging earthquakes, historical fault offset has cost millions of dollars in damage to houses and...
Process and rate of dedolomitization: Mass transfer and C14 dating in a regional carbonate aquifer
W. Back, B.B. Hanshaw, Niel Plummer, P.H. Rahn, C.T. Rightmire, M. Rubin
1983, Geological Society of America Bulletin (94) 1415-1429
Regional dedolomitization is the major process that controls the chemical character of water in the Mississippian Pahasapa Limestone (Madison equivalent) surrounding the Black Hills, South Dakota and Wyoming. The process of dedolomitization consists of dolomite dissolution and concurrent precipitation of calcite; it is...
Determination of elements in National Bureau of Standards' geological reference materials SRM 278 obsidian and SRM 688 basalt by inductively coupled argon plasma-atomic emission spectrometry
J.G. Crock, F.E. Lichte, Paul H. Briggs
1983, Geostandards Newsletter (7) 335-340
Two new geologic reference materials, issued by the National Bureau of Standards as standard reference materials, have been analyzed by a precise, accurate, and rapid method of analysis for their element content. The described procedure uses a multi‐acid, low temperature digestion in a closed teflon vessel, followed by the simultaneous...
Petrology and comparative thermal and mechanical histories of clasts in breccia 62236
Gordon L. Nord Jr., M.-V. Wandless
1983, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (88) A645-A657
Lunar breccia 62236 contains large lithic fragments of troctolite, norite, and anorthosite. The mafic phases, olivine, inverted pigeonite, and augite, fill interstitial areas between larger plagioclases and appear to be cumulate phases with extensive adcumulus growth. Pyroxene compositional homogeneity indicates that cation exchange during cooling was limited to an area...
Land-use planning: One geologist's viewpoint
E-An Zen
1983, Environmental Conservation (10) 97-104
Planning for the best use of land and its resources should take fully into consideration the long-term consequences of each type of use in order to stretch out most beneficially the well-being of society in the future, and to protect the integrity of the land and its...
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...