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Page 5154, results 128826 - 128850

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Monitoring of subsurface injection of wastes, Florida
John Vecchioli
1979, Groundwater (17) 244-249
Injection of waste liquids into Florida's subsurface is physically feasible in many places but should be accompanied by monitoring of the waste-receiving aquifer system in addition to the injection facility. Monitoring of the interaction of factors including hydrogeologic conditions, well construction, waste volumes and characteristics, and potable-water sources is desirable...
Spectra of altered rocks in the visible and near infrared
G.R. Hunt, Roger P. Ashley
1979, Economic Geology (74) 1613-1629
Visible and near-infrared (0.35 to 2.5 mu m) bidirectional reflection spectra were recorded for a suite of well-characterized hydrothermally altered rock samples. The spectra typically display well-defined bands caused by both electronic and vibrational processes in the individual mineral constituents.Electronic transitions in the iron-bearing constituent minerals produce diagnostic minima near...
The Moon: Sources of the crustal magnetic anomalies
L. L. Hood, P.J. Coleman Jr., D.E. Wilhelms
1979, Science (204) 53-57
Previously unmapped Apollo 16 subsatellite magnetometer data collected at low altitudes over the lunar near side are presented. Medium-amplitude magnetic anomalies exist over the Fra Mauro and Cayley Formations (primary and secondary basin ejecta emplaced 3.8 to 4.0 billion years ago) but are nearly absent over the...
Origins and early years of the U.S. Geological Survey
1979, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (11) 40-46
The U.S. Geological Survey was established on March 3, 1879, in the closing hours of the final session of the 45th Congress. The bill appropriating the money for sundry civil expenses of the Government during fiscal year 1880 was signed by President Rutherford B. Hayes. Included in the bill was...
Endolith microborings and their preservation in Holocene-Pleistocene (Bahama-Florida) ooids
Paul M. Harris, Robert B. Halley, Karen J. Lukas
1979, Geology (7) 216-220
Holocene ooids from Joulters Ooid Shoal (Bahamas) are bored in various ways by blue-green algae that groove along the grain surface, reside just beneath the grain surface, and tunnel extensively a few tens of microns within the grain. The microborings, morphologically distinctive, are documented with scanning electron micrographs of open...
Weights of lesser snow geese taken on their winter range
Edward L. Flickinger, E.G. Bolen
1979, Journal of Wildlife Management (43) 531-533
Geese are assumed to accumulate fat on the winter range (Bent 1962, Williams 1967) to sustain them through the long northward migration and early part of the nesting season. However, there are no weights given in the literature of lesser snow geese (Anser c. caerulescens) on their winter ranges to...
Habitat evaluation
1979, Water Spectrum (11) 26-34
Ours has been a nation of rapid growth and development; our abundant water and other natural resources were quickly utilized to meet the needs of our expansion. Resources perceived to be “important” to the national interest were often exploited at the expense of others. Fish and wildlife, because of their...
The composite dynamic method as evidence for age-specific waterfowl mortality
Kenneth P. Burnham, David R. Anderson
1979, Journal of Wildlife Management (43) 356-366
For the past 25 years estimation of mortality rates for waterfowl has been based almost entirely on the composite dynamic life table. We examined the specific assumptions for this method and derived a valid goodness of fit test. We performed this test on 45 data sets representing a...
Use of prairie pothole habitat by breeding mallards
T.J. Dwyer, Gary L. Krapu, D.M. Janke
1979, Journal of Wildlife Management (43) 526-531
Detailed information on the use by mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) of prairie pothole habitat during the nesting season is necessary to interpret habitat needs of the species during the breeding period. Many data have been collected and published relating pair counts to habitat use and water conditions (e.g., Evans and Black...
Alcoholic fermentation in swamp and upland populations of Nyssa sylvatica: Temporal changes in adaptive strategy
Jon E. Keeley, E. H. Franz
1979, American Naturalist (113) 587-592
Both the upland and swamp varieties of Nyssa sylvatica respond initially to flooding with an acceleration of ethanol production. Under continued flooding the roots of the upland variety sylvatica have decreased rates of ethanol production, very likely a result of the progressively worsening necrosis of the root system. Few of...
Age determination of mallards
Gary L. Krapu, Douglas H. Johnson, C.W. Dane
1979, Journal of Wildlife Management (43) 384-393
A technique for distinguishing adult from yearling wild mallards (Anas platyrhynchos), from late winter through the nesting season, was developed by applying discriminant analysis procedures to selected wing feather characters of 126 yearlings and 76 adults (2-year-olds) hand-reared from wild eggs during 1974, 1975, and 1977. Average values for feather...
Variable porosity in siliceous skeletons: Determination and importance
D.C. Hurd, C. Wenkam, H.S. Pankratz, J. Fugate
1979, Science (203) 1340-1343
Gas adsorption data were used to obtain the specific surface area and specific pore volume for a variety of biogenically precipitated silica samples. The results suggest that this material is finely divided and porous. This interpretation was corroborated by the use of transmission electron microscopy at magnifications...
Altitude-age relationships of the lunar maria
Baerbel K. Lucchitta, J. M. Boyce
1979, Conference Paper
Altitudes and relative ages of mare surface units were compared to test if a systematic correlation in height of lava eruption surfaces and age might reflect a corresponding increase in depth of the magma chamber with time; in addition the altitudes were studied to shed light on the time and...
The beginnings of seismology in North America
1979, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (11) 47-49
The study of earthquakes advanced somewhat more slowly in North America than it did in Europe and Japan. J.D. Whitney, professor of geology at Harvard University and former State Geologist of California, studied the Owens Valley, Calif., earthquake of 1872 and reported on it that same year....
Comparison of Miocene provincial foraminiferal stages to coccolith zones in the California Continental Borderland
James K. Crouch, David Bukry
1979, Geology (7) 211-215
Biostratigraphic ages determined by planktic coccoliths and benthic foraminifera for the same core samples from the California Continental Borderland suggest that a significant overlap exists among provincial Miocene stages of California and that some of the benthic foraminifera commonly used to recognize these stages are time-transgressive. For example, samples assigned...
Strain-softening instability model for the San Fernando earthquake
W.D. Stuart
1979, Science (203) 907-910
Changes in the ground elevation observed before and immediately after the 1971 San Fernando, California, earthquake are consistent with a theoretical model in which fault zone rocks are strain-softening after peak stress. The model implies that the slip rate of the fault increased to about 0.1 meter per year near...
Structure of the atmosphere of Venus up to 110 kilometers: Preliminary results from the four Pioneer Venus entry probes
A. Seiff, D.B. Kirk, S.C. Sommer, R.E. Young, R.C. Blanchard, D.W. Juergens, J.E. Lepetich, P.F. Intrieri, J.T. Findlay, J.S. Derr
1979, Science (203) 787-790
The four Pioneer Venus entry probes transmitted data of good quality on the structure of the atmosphere below the clouds. Contrast of the structure below an altitude of 50 kilometers at four widely separated locations was found to be no more than a few degrees Kelvin, with...
Pioneer Venus radar mapper experiment
G.H. Pettengill, P.G. Ford, W.E. Brown, W.M. Kaula, C.H. Keller, H. Masursky, G.E. McGill
1979, Science (203) 806-808
Altimetry and radar scattering data for Venus, obtained from 10 of the first 13 orbits of the Pioneer Venus orbiter, have disclosed what appears to be a rift valley having vertical relief of up to 7 kilometers, as well as a neighboring, gently rolling plain. Planetary oblateness appears unlikely to...
Biogenic and thermogenic gas in gas-charged sediment of Norton Sound, Alaska
Keith A. Kvenvolden, C.H. Nelson, D.R. Thor, Matthew C. Larsen, G.D. Redden, J. B. Rapp, D. J. Des Marais
1979, Conference Paper, Proceedings of Eleventh Annual Offshore Technology Conference
Chemical and isotopic compositions of sediment gas from Norton Sound have been determined for near-surface, gas-charged sediments at two sites identified in acoustic profiles and bottom observations. At one site air-driven vibracorer penetrated sediment saturated with methane. The isotopic value suggests that the methane originated from active biological processes operating...
Results of a reconnaissance microearthquake survey of Bucaramanga, Colombia
W.D. Pennington, Walter D. Mooney, Rene van Hissenhoven, H. Meyer, J.E. Ramirez, Robert P. Meyer
1979, Geophysical Research Letters (6) 65-68
Six University of Wisconsin portable, continuously‐recording seismographs were operated for 3½ days in late 1976 in the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia in a 200‐km‐diameter array around Bucaramanga, where there are also three permanent stations of the Instituto Geofísico de Los Andes Colombianos. Twenty‐seven microearthquakes were recorded. Most can be well...
Modern biogenic gas-generated craters (sea-floor “pockmarks”) on the Bering Shelf, Alaska
Nelson C. Hans, D.R. Thor, Mark W. Sandstrom, Keith A. Kvenvolden
1979, GSA Bulletin (90) 1144-1152
As many as 1,340 small craters per square kilometre cover the sea floor of Norton Sound in the northeastern Bering Sea. The craters are circular pits, 1 to 10 m in diameter and less than 1 m deep, observed on sonographs over 20,000 km2 of northern Norton Sound sea floor. Craters...