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Page 4658, results 116426 - 116450

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Catches of larval rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) and alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) in plankton nets of different mesh sizes
Robert O’Gorman
1984, Journal of Great Lakes Research (10) 73-77
Four 0.5-m plankton nets (one each of 0.355-, 0.450-, 0.560-, and 0.750-mm mesh) were used to collect larvae of the alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) in northwestern Lake Huron and the St. Marys River. The number of larvae collected varied inversely with mesh size and the average...
Chromatographic investigations of the configurational and geometrical isomerism of allylic N-terpenyl-N-hydroxyethyl-nitrosamines
S. L. Abidi
1984, Journal of Chromatography (288) 277-292
A preparative adsorption column chromatographic method is reported for the separation of cis and trans geometrical isomers of two types of N-nitrosamines derived from allylic terpenyl ethanolamines (experimental fish toxicants). Column eluates were monitored by gas chromatography in which a Carbowax 20M stationary phase was used. Further separation of E and Z configurational isomers was achieved by reversed-phase...
Observations on burrowing rates and comments on host specificity in the endangered mussel Lampsilis higginsi
J.R. Sylvester, L. E. Holland, T.K. Kamer
1984, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (2) 555-559
In preliminary laboratory studies, the endangered mussel Lampsitis higginsi was unable to burrow into rocky substrates, but did burrow into substrates comprised of silt, clay, sand, and/or pebble-gravel. Burrowing times were shortest in silt and longest in pebble-gravel. As judged by longevity of glochidial infection, walleye (Stizostedion vitreum) and largemouth...
Swainson's hawk nesting ecology in North Dakota
D.S. Gilmer, R. E. Stewart
1984, Condor (86) 12-18
Swainson's Hawks (Buteo swainsoni) were studied at 270 occupied nest sites in south-central North Dakota on a 1,259-km2 intensive study block and on a surrounding study area (16,519 km2) during three breeding seasons. On the intensive study block the number of occupied nests ranged from 46 in 1977 to 100...
Distribution of Eurasian watermilfoil, Myriophyllum spicatum, in the St. Clair-Detroit River system in 1978
Donald W. Schloesser, Bruce A. Manny
1984, Journal of Great Lakes Research (10) 322-326
Submersed macrophytes were surveyed at 595 stations located throughout the St. Clair-Detroit River system between Lakes Huron and Erie, 23 August to 13 October 1978. Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum), first recorded in the system in 1974, became the fourth most common submersed macrophyte in the system by 1978. However, it...
Denitrification in San Francisco Bay intertidal sediments
Ronald S. Oremland, Cindy Umberger, Charles W. Culbertson, Richard L. Smith
1984, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (47) 1106-1112
The acetylene block technique was employed to study denitrification in intertidal estuarine sediments. Addition of nitrate to sediment slurries stimulated denitrification. During the dry season, sediment-slurry denitrification rates displayed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, and ambient NO3− + NO2− concentrations (≤26 μM) were below the apparent Km (50 μM) for nitrate. During the rainy season, when ambient...
Age-related mortality in a wintering population of Dunlin
B.E. Kus, P. Ashman, Gary W. Page, L. Stenzel
1984, The Auk (101) 69-73
Despite considerable evidence that juvenile shorebirds experience significantly higher annual mortality rates than adults, identification and quantification of the sources of mortality have received little attention. We found that the proportion of juvenile Dunlins (Calidris alpina) in the kills of a Merlin (Falco columbarius) one winter at...
Book review: Geomagnetism of baked clays and recent sediments
Edward A. Mankinen
1984, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (65) 787-787
This book is an outgrowth of the symposium entitled “Time Scales of Geomagnetic Secular Variations,” which was held at the 4th Assembly of the International Association of Geomagnetism and Aeronomy (Edinburgh, U.K., August 1981). The volume includes many of the papers presented, which described paleomagnetic results from both archeologic materials...
Elk and deer diets in old-growth forests in western Washington
David M. Leslie Jr., Edward E. Starkey, Martin Vavra
1984, Journal of Wildlife Management (48) 762-775
Dietary quality and overlap of sympatric Roosevelt elk (Cervus elaphus roosevelti) and Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) were investigated in old-growth forests of the Hoh Valley, Olympic National Park, Washington. Diets of both cervids were comprised mainly of common old-growth flora, particularly in winter. High dietary overlap suggested competitive...
Ferromanganese micronodules from the surficial sediments of Georges Bank
L.J. Poppe, J.A. Commeau, F.T. Manheim, P. J. Aruscavage
1984, Journal of Marine Research (42) 463-472
Ferromanganese micronodules have been found on Georges Bank, off the U.S. northeast coast, distributed throughout the surficial sediments within an area about 125 km long and at least 12 km wide. These coarse, sand-sized concretions have precipitated from metal-rich interstitial waters and contain many of the textural and structural features...
Florida: A Jurassic transform plate boundary
Kim D. Klitgord, Peter Popenoe, Hans Schouten
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (89) 7753-7772
Magnetic, gravity, seismic, and deep drill hole data integrated with plate tectonic reconstructions substantiate the existence of a transform plate boundary across southern Florida during the Jurassic. On the basis of this integrated suite of data the pre-Cretaceous Florida-Bahamas region can be divided into the pre-Jurassic North American plate, Jurassic...
Social organization of sea otters in Prince William Sound, Alaska
David L. Garshelis, Ancel M. Johnson, Judith A. Garshelis
1984, Canadian Journal of Zoology (62) 2648-2658
Sea otters in Prince William Sound. Alaska, were spatially segregated into predominantly (97%) male areas at the front of the expanding population and breeding areas with fewer (up to 33%) males. From 1975 to 1984 we captured and marked 267 otters with tags and (or) radio transmitters and investigated their...
Animals as indicators of ecosystem responses to air emissions
James R. Newman, R. Kent Schreiber
1984, Environmental Management (8) 309-324
With existing and proposed air-quality regulations, ecological disasters resulting from air emissions such as those observed at Copperhill, Tennessee, and Sudbury, Ontario, are unlikely. Current air-quality standards, however, may not protect ecosystems from subacute and chronic exposure to air emissions. The encouragement of the use of coal for energy production...
SOME APPLICATIONS OF SEISMIC SOURCE MECHANISM STUDIES TO ASSESSING UNDERGROUND HAZARD.
Art McGarr
Gay N.C.Wainwright E.H., editor(s)
1984, Conference Paper
Various measures of the seismic source mechanism of mine tremors, such as magnitude, moment, stress drop, apparent stress, and seismic efficiency, can be related directly to several aspects of the problem of determining the underground hazard arising from strong ground motion of large seismic events. First, the relation between the...
Paleomagnetic constraints on the interpretation of early Cenozoic Pacific Northwest paleogeography
Ray E. Wells
1984, Pacific Section S.E.P.M. (42) 231-237
Widespread Cenozoic clockwise tectonic rotation in the Pacific Northwest is an established fact; however, the geologic reconstructions based on these rotations are the subject of continuing debate. Three basic mechanisms have been proposed to explain the rotations: (1) simple shear rotation of marginal terranes caught in the dextral shear couple...
Geomagnetic paleointensities from excursion sequences in lavas on Oahu, Hawaii
Robert S. Coe, Sherman Gromme, Edward A. Mankinen
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (89) 1059-1069
Paleomagnetic data demonstrating three late Tertiary excursions in the direction of the geomagnetic field recorded in sequences of basaltic lavas on the island of Oahu, Hawaii were published by R. R. Doell and G. B. Dalrymple in 1973. We have determined geomagnetic paleointensities by the Thelliers' method for 14 lavas...
Implications of paleomagnetism for the tectonic history of the Eastern Klamath and related terranes in California and Oregon
Edward A. Mankinen, William P. Irwin, C. Sherman Gromme
T. H. Nilsen, editor(s)
1984, Pacific Section S.E.P.M. (42) 221-229
Paleomagnetic study of Permian to Jurassic volcanic and sedimentary strata of the Eastern Klamath terrane has shown the remanent magnetism of these rocks to be prefolding and primary. The Permian and Triassic rocks are both indicated to have rotated 100° clockwise, while the Jurassic strata have rotated 60° clockwise. The...
ASPECTS OF ARCTIC SEA ICE OBSERVABLE BY SEQUENTIAL PASSIVE MICROWAVE OBSERVATIONS FROM THE NIMBUS-5 SATELLITE.
William J. Campbell, Per Gloersen, H. Jay Zwally
Dyer IraChryssostomidis Chryssostomos, editor(s)
1984, Conference Paper
Observations made from 1972 to 1976 with the Electrically Scanning Microwave Radiometer on board the Nimbus-5 satellite provide sequential synoptic information of the Arctic sea ice cover. This four-year data set was used to construct a fairly continuous series of three-day average 19-GHz passive microwave images which has become a...