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Page 5167, results 129151 - 129175

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The California condor, 1966-1976: A Look at its Past and Future
S.R. Wilbur
1978, North American Fauna No. 72
The California condor (Gymnogyps californianus) was studied on about 900 field days between 1966 and 1976. In addition, some 1,000 items of literature, specimen records from 56 museums, and 3,500 reports of condor sitings by cooperators were analyzed. Distribution does not appear to have changed significantly since the...
Wildlife and electric power transmission
D. H. Ellis, J.G. Goodwin Jr., J.R. Hunt
John L. Fletcher, R.G. Busnel, editor(s)
1978, Book chapter, Effects of Noise on Wildlife
Hundreds of thousands of miles of transmission lines have been introduced into our natural environment. These lines and their corridors can be damaging or beneficial to wildlife communities depending on how they are designed, where they are placed, and when they are constructed and maintained. With the current...
Status of the peregrine falcon in the Rocky Mountains and the southwestern United States, Baja California, and Mexico (south of Texas)
Ron Porter, G.R. Craig, D. H. Ellis, J.H. Enderson, W.G. Hunt
Philip P. Schaeffer, Sharyn M. Ehlers, editor(s)
1978, Book chapter, Proceedings of the National Audubon Society Symposium on the Current Status of Peregrine Falcon Populations in North America
About 31 pairs of peregrines still nest north of Mexico, from Idaho and Montana south through West Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. At least thirty-six additional pairs nest in Mexico. Although the nesting sites are occupied, the tissues of the peregrine?s prey species still contain high concentrations of pesticides....
A comparative study on the cryogenic preservation of semen from the sandhill crane and the domestic fowl
Thomas J. Sexton, G.F. Gee
P.F. Watson, editor(s)
1978, Book chapter, Artificial Breeding of Non-Domestic Animals
SYNOPSIS: Recent findings on the cryogenic preservation of semen from the crane, Grus canadensis pratensis and the domestic fowl, Gallus domesticus, are compared. Highest levels of post-thaw motility for crane semen (55%) were obtained when semen was diluted 1:1 with the Beltsville Poultry Semen Extender (BPSE) and held for 30...
Artificial insemination for breeding non-domestic birds
G.F. Gee, S.A. Temple
P.F. Watson, editor(s)
1978, Book chapter, Artificial Breeding of Non-Domestic Animals.
Captive breeding of non-domestic birds has increased dramatically in this century, and production of young often exceeds that of the same number of birds in their native habitat. However, when infertility is a problem, artificial insemination can be a useful method to improve production. Artificial insemination programs with non-domestic birds...
Diets, equipment, and techniques for maintaining crawfish in the laboratory
I.B. Tarshis
James W. Avault, editor(s)
1978, Book chapter, Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Meeting of the World Mariculture Society
One commercial and 4 laboratory prepared extruded, water-stable diets were fed 3 times a week in 1-g portions to juvenile male and female White River crawfish, Procambarus acutus acutus (Girard), for 10 weeks. The. binding material in the laboratory preparation was alginate (Kelgin), whereas that in the commercial preparation...
Spectrophotometric determination of tungsten in rocks by using zinc-dithiol
Philip Aruscavage, Esma Campbell
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 697-699
Tungsten is determined in 11 USGS standard rocks by a spectrophotometric procedure that measures the absorbance of the tungsten-dithiol complex. The results are compared with those obtained by other methods. After the samples are dissolved in HClO4 and HF, the tungsten-dithiol complex is extracted into isoamyl acetate and then back-extracted...
Phosphorus in hydrothermal waters of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
R. E. Stauffer, J. M. Thompson
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 755-763
Ninety-seven hot-spring and geyser samples (field acidified to pH<1.4 with HCl or HNO3) from Yellowstone National Park, Wyo., were analyzed for PO4-P using reduced molybdenum-blue and the selective arsenate reducing agent, metabisulfite-thiosulfate. The PO4-P concentrations ranged from below detection limit (~1-73 micrograms per liter). Twenty-five springs had PO4-P concentrations exceeding 6.8 μg/L;...
Significance of age relations above and below upper jurassic ophiolite in the Geysers-Clear Lake region, California
R. J. McLaughlin, E.A. Pessagno Jr.
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 715-726
In The Geysers-Clear Lake area of northern California, a fragmented Upper Jurassic ophiolite overlain depositionally by the Great Valley sequence is juxtaposed over deformed and metomorphosed rocks of the Franciscan assemblage along the Coast Range thrust. The basal strata of the Great Valley sequence consist of thick breccias of mafic...
Upper Devonian radiolarians separated from chert of the Ford Lake Shale, Alaska
Brian K. Holdsworth, D. L. Jones, C. Allison
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 775-788
Leaching of black bedded chert from the Ford Lake Shale, Kandik Basin, Alaska, with dilute hydrofluoric acid resulted in the complete separation of moderately well preserved radiolarians. Preliminary study of an assemblage obtained from the lower half of the formation revealed six to eight forms apparently identical to specimens previously...
Age and composition of igneous rocks, Edna Mountain quadrangle, Humboldt County, Nevada
Ralph L. Erickson, Miles L. Silberman, S.P. Marsh
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 727-743
Six pulses of igneous activity ranging in age from Jurassic to Pliocene have been identified in the Edna Mountain quadrangle, Humboldt County, Nev. Porphyritic syenite am! quartz monzonite of Jurassic age (146-164 million years) at Buffalo Mountain are highly potassic through a wide range in SiO2 content from olivine-bearing syenite...
A reexamination of the Pennsylvanian trace fossil Olivellites
Ellis L. Yochelson, David E. Schindel
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 789-796
The original interpretation of Olivellites plummeri Fenton and Fenton as the trace of an infaunal gastropod, is reconsidered and rejected. The original slab bearing several examples of O. plummeri has been reexamined and reillustrated. The slab came from the type-locality of O. plummeri in Eastland County, Tex., and is a shallow...
Pressure gradients and boiling as mechanisms for localizing ore in porphyry systems
Charles G. Cunningham
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 745-754
Fluid inclusions in ore zones of porphyry systems indicate that extensive boiling of hydrothermal fluids accompanies deposition of ore and gangue minerals. The boiling commonly accompanied a change from a lithostatic to a hydrostatic environment during evolution of an epizonal stock. Pressure gradients near the margin of the stock can...
Application of four input-output models for nutrients in Lake Okeechobee, Florida
Ronald L. Miller
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 821-828
R. A. Vollenweider's (1975) nonconservative model described concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorus for 1969-70 in Lake Okeechobee, Fla., better than the models of F. Biffi in 1963, R. H. Rainey in 1967, and R. Piontelli and V. Tonolli in 1964. Vollenweider's model predicted concentrations of 1.4 milligrams per liter of...
Reconnaissance for microbial activity in the Magothy aquifer, Bay Park, New York, four years after artificial recharge
E.M. Godsy, G. G. Ehrlich
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 829-836
Tertiary-treated sewage effluent was injected into the Magothy aquifer at Bay Park, Long Island, N.Y., between 1968 and 1973. In 1977, the microbial flora in water samples from the injection well and from three nearby wells were surveyed. Differences in the composition of the microbial flora among the four wells...
Solubility of highly soluble salts in aqueous media - Part 1, NaCl, KCl, CaCl2, Na2SO4, and K2SO4 solubilities to 100°C
Robert W. Potter II, Michael A. Clynne
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 701-705
 A modified visual method for determining the solubility of highly soluble salts in aqueous media up to 100° C is presented. The solubilities of NaCl, KCl, CaCl2, Na2SO4, and K2SO4 were determined up to 100° C. The tabulated experimental data and the fitted equations describing the data indicate that the...
lowaphyllum (rugose coral) from the Upper Devonian of Arizona
William Albert Oliver Jr.
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 797-805
The rugose coral genus lowaphyllum is uncommon but widely distributed in rocks of Devonian age. It is here reported for the first time from western North America (Late Devonian). lowaphyllum is also known from the late Middle and Late Devonian of Eastern North America, but the lack of Early and...
Inventory of land use and land cover of the Puget Sound region using Landsat digital data
Leonard Gaydos, Willard L. Newland
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 807-814
Landsat multispectral scanner digital data from four bands were analyzed using computers to produce land use and land cover information of the Puget Sound region, Wash., for use by agencies in that area. The data were first geographically registered to map coordinates. This registration enabled samples of known land cover...
Conductive heat flows in research drill holes in thermal areas of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
Donald E. White
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 765-774
In convection systems with boiling springs, geysers, fumaroles, and other thermal features, the modes of heat flow become increasingly complex as a single liquid phase at depth rises into the near-surface environment where heat flows by convection of liquid and vapor and by conduction in high thermal gradients. This paper...
Iron-titanium oxide minerals and associated alteration phases in some uranium-bearing sandstones
Richard L. Reynolds, Martin B. Goldhaber
1978, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (6) 707-714
Detrital iron-titanium (Fe-Ti) oxide minerals of the ulvospinel-magnetite (titanomagnetite) and ilmenite-hematite (titanohematite) solid solution series are common in uranium-bearing sandstones. Alteration of Fe-Ti oxide minerals in oxidizing environments formed secondary products (primarily hematite) that are distinct from those produced under reducing conditions (iron disulfide minerals). Oxidation of sulfidized Fe-Ti oxide...