Well records, depth-to-water measurements, chemical analyses of ground water, drillers' logs, and electric-log information in Hempstead, Lafayette, Little River, Miller, and Nevada Counties, Arkansas
J. W. Stephens
1970, Open-File Report 70-312
No abstract available....
Faults that are historically active or that show evidence of geologically young surface displacements, San Francisco Bay region, a progress report, October 1970
Robert D. Brown Jr.
1970, Open-File Report 70-42
No abstract available....
Records of precipitation, water levels, and ground-water recharge to the Edwards and associated limestones, San Antonio area, Texas, 1969
Paul Rettman
1970, Edwards Underground Water District Bulletin 24
No abstract available....
Ground-water resources in Harney Valley, Harney County
A.R. Leonard
1970, Report
No abstract available....
Low-flow characteristics of Iowa streams through 1966
A.J. Heinitz
1970, Iowa Natural Resources Council Bulletin 10
No abstract available....
Ground-water levels, 1967-1968
W.S. Bartholomew, Robert DeBow
1970, Report
No abstract available....
Ground-water discharge from the Edwards and associated limestones, San Antonio area, Texas, 1969
Celso Puente
1970, Edwards Underground Water District Bulletin 23
No abstract available....
Geology and ground-water resources of Cerro Gordo County, Iowa
H.G. Hershey, K.D. Wahl, W. L. Steinhilber
1970, Water Supply Bulletin 9
The basic geologic framework underlying Cerro Gordo County consists of an igneous or metamorphic Precambrian basement complex overlain by, in ascending order, consolidated sedimentary rocks of Precambrian, Cambrian, Ordovician, Devonian, Mississippian, and Cretaceous age, and unconsolidated sand, gravel, and clay of Quaternary age. Structurally the county is in the northern...
Remote Sensor Application Studies Progress Report, July L, 1968 to June 30, 1969. Controlled Field Experiments
L. C. Rowan, Terry W. Offield, R. D. Watson, P. J. Cannon, H.J. Grolier, H. A. Pohn, Kenneth Watson
1970, Report
Field Sites have been selected for controlled experiments to analyze physical and chemical parameters affecting the response of electromagnetic radiation to geological materials. Considerations in the selection of the sites are the availability of good exposures of nearly monomineralic rocks, level of geologic understanding, and ease of access. Seven sites,...
Major Land Resource Areas (MLRA)
Adapted from U.S. Soil Conservation Service
1970, Report
This is a polygon coverage of the Land Resource Regions and Major Land Resource Areas of the conterminous United States. Land resource regions are geographic areas that are characterized by a particular pattern of soils, climate, water resources and land uses. (USDA, Soil Conservation Service, 1981). Major land...
Foraminiferal zonation and carbonate facies of Carboniferous (Mississippian and Pennsylvanian) Lisburne group, central and eastern Brooks range, Arctic Alaska
Augustus K. Armstrong, Bernard L. Mamet, J. Thomas Dutro
1970, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (54) 687-698
The Lisburne Group carbonate rocks of the central and eastern Brooks Range contain foraminiferal assemblages assigned to zones of late Tournaisian (Osage) to early Moscovian (Atoka) age. Representatives of both Eurasiatic and American cratonic microfaunas permit correlation with the original Carboniferous type sections in western Europe as well as with...
Thermal features at Volcanoes in the cascade range, as observed by aerial infrared surveys
R.M. Moxham
1970, Bulletin Volcanologique (34) 77-106
There have been no substantial changes in the thermal patterns at the summit of Mount Rainier in the period September 1964–September 1966, within the detection limits of the infrared instrumentation. Some differences in radiance are attributed to differences in snow cover. The highest apparent temperature is at a snow-free area...
Comparative toxicity of 29 nitrosalicylanilides and related compounds to eight species of fish
L. L. Marking, W. A. Willford
1970, Investigations in Fish Control 37
Abstract not submitted to date...
A method for rating chemicals for potency against fish and other organisms
L. L. Marking
1970, Investigations in Fish Control 36
Abstract not submitted to date...
A resume of field applications of antimycin A to control fish
R. E. Lennon, B.L. Berger
1970, Investigations in Fish Control 40
Abstract not submitted to date...
Toxicity of 33NCS (3'-chloro-3' nitrosalicylanilide) to freshwater fish and sea lampreys
L. L. Marking, E.L. King, C.R. Walker, J.H. Howell
1970, Investigations in Fish Control 38
Abstract not submitted to date...
Correction of bias in belt transect studies of immotile objects
David R. Anderson, R.S. Pospahala
1970, Journal of Wildlife Management (34) 141-146
Unless a correction is made, population estimates derived from a sample of belt transects will be biased if a fraction of, the individuals on the sample transects are not counted. An approach, useful for correcting this bias when sampling immotile populations using transects of a fixed width, is presented....
An outbreak of fowl cholera in Everglades National Park
R.W. Klukas, L. N. Locke
1970, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (6) 77-79
No abstract available. ...
Concentrations of trace elements in Great Lakes fishes
Henry F. Lucas Jr., David N. Edgington, Peter J. Colby
1970, Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (27) 677-684
The concentration of 15 trace elements was determined by activation analysis of samples of whole fish and fish livers from three of the Great Lakes: Michigan, Superior, and Erie. The average concentrations of 7 elements in 19 whole fish from 3 species were as follows: uranium, 3ppb (parts per billion);...
Effects of alewife predation on zooplankton populations in Lake Michigan
LaRue Wells
1970, Limnology and Oceanography (15) 556-565
The zooplankton populations in southeastern Lake Michigan underwent striking, size-related changes between 1954 and 1966. Forms that decline sharply were the largest cladocerans (Leptodora kindtii, Daphnia galeata, and D. retrocurva), the largest calanoid copepods (Limnocalanus macrurus, Epischura lacustris, and Diaptomus sicilis), and the largest cyclopoid copepod (Mesocyclops edax). Two of...
Waterfowl in relation to land use and water levels on the Spring Run Area
Gary L. Krapu, D.R. Parsons, M.W. Weller
1970, Iowa State Journal of Science (44) 437-452
Low water levels during critical phases of the breeding cycle appear to have caused population declines of waterfowl and other marsh birds on the Spring Run Game Management Area. Pair-counts indicated a decline from 70 pairs of waterfowl in 1965 to 2 pairs in 1968. Nest success of upland nesting...
Resource crises in Lake Erie
Wilbur L. Hartman
1970, Explorer (12) 6-11
Despite the tremendous value of the Great Lakes, a malaise is seriously destroying their worth. Accelerated enrichment, unabated pollution, over-exploitation, and accidental and intentional introduction of exotic species, have all been guided--more often misguided--by man. Of all five Great Lakes, Lake Erie stands out as the one most...
The effect of temperature on the rate of development and survival of alewife eggs and larvae
Thomas A. Edsall
1970, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (99) 376-380
Eggs from Lake Michigan alewives (Alosa pseudoharengus) were incubated at 79 different temperatures from 42.1 to 87.0 F. Hatching occurred at 44.4-84.9 F and was optimum (38% hatched) at about 64 F. Incubation time varied from 15 days at 45 F to 3.7 days at 70 F and 2.1 days...
Temperature tolerance of young-of-the-year cisco, Coregonus artedii
Thomas A. Edsall, Peter J. Colby
1970, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (99) 526-531
Young-of-the-year ciscoes (Coregonus artedii) acclimated to 2, 5, 10, 20 and 25 C and tested for tolerance to high and low temperatures provide the first detailed description of the thermal tolerance of coregonids in North America. The upper ultimate lethal temperature of the young ciscoes was 26 C (6 C...
Temperature tolerance of bloater (Coregonus hoyi)
Thomas A. Edsall, Donald V. Rottiers, Edward H. Brown
1970, Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (27) 2047-2052
Juvenile and young adult bloaters (Coregonus hoyi) were tested for tolerance to high temperatures. The ultimate upper lethal temperature of juvenile bloaters (26.75 C) appeared to be slightly higher than that of young adult bloaters, but was similar to that of juvenile ciscoes,Coregonus artedii (26.0 C), the only other North American coregonine for...