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Page 5925, results 148101 - 148125

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Use of type curves developed from electric analog studies of unconfined flow to determine the vertical permeability of an aquifer at Piketon, Ohio
S.E. Norris, Richard E. Fidler
1966, Groundwater (4) 43-48
A type‐curve method for determining anisotropy of unconfined aquifers, developed from electric analog simulation, is applied to drawdowns observed near, a well pumping from a glacial outwash aquifer at Piketon, Ohio. The coefficient of vertical permeability, P z'averaged 365 gpd per square foot. Computed drawdown for the pumped well, based on this value, differed by only a small amount from the observed drawdown. The coefficient...
Cohenite in meteorites: A proposed origin
R. Brett
1966, Science (153) 60-62
Cohenite [(Fe, Ni)3C] is found almost exclusively in meteorites containing from 6 to 8 percent nickel (by weight). On the basis of iron-nickel-carbon phase diagrams at 1 atmosphere and of kinetic data, the occurrence of cohenite within this narrow composition range as a low-pressure metastable phase and the nonoccurrence of...
Some effects of sublethal concentrations of sodium arsenite on bluegills and the aquatic environment
P.A. Gilderhus
1966, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (95) 289-296
Bluegills were exposed to sodium arsenite at various concentrations and treatment frequencies in outdoor pools. The effects of the treatments on the fish and invertebrates in the pools were assessed. Applications totaling 4.0 ppm or more of NaAsO2 during the experiment were reflected in reduced survival and growth of the fish,...
Magnetotelluric soundings in the southwestern United States
Donald Plouff
1966, Geophysics (31) 1145-1152
Twelve magnetotelluric soundings were made along a 460-mile traverse in the southwestern United States. Spectral analysis of digitized graphic records was used to determine apparent resistivities and phase differences for periods in the range 10-1,000 sec. The geoelectric section to depths of the order of 300 km was found to...
Contamination of the freshwater ecosystem by pesticides
Oliver B. Cope
1966, Journal of Applied Ecology (3) 33-44
A large part of our disquieting present-day pesticide problem is intimately tied to the freshwater ecosystem. Economic poisons are used in so many types of terrain to control so many kinds of organisms that almost all lakes and streams are likely to be contaminated. In addition to accidental contamination...
Water resources of Branch County, Michigan
P.R. Giroux, L.E. Stoimenoff, J. O. Nowlin, E.L. Skinner
1966, Report
Branch County has abundant water resources throughout most of its area. Almost all the water used is supplied by wells that obtain water from glacial drift deposits and locally from fractures and sandy beds in the Coldwater Shale. Glacial drift in buried bedrock valleys may yield large quantities of water...
Geomagnetic polarity epochs: A new polarity event and the age of the Brunhes-Matuyama boundary
Richard R. Doell, G. B. Dalrymple
1966, Science (152) 1060-1061
Recent paleomagnetic-radiometric data from six rhyolite domes in the Valles Caldera, New Mexico, indicate that the last change in polarity of the earth's magnetic field from reversed to normal (the Brunhes-Matuyama boundary) occurred at about 0.7 million years ago. A previously undiscovered geomagnetic polarity event, herein named the "Jaramillo normal...
Preliminary investigation of the source of lead and strontium in deep geothermal brines underlying the Salton Sea geothermal area
B. R. Doe, C. E. Hedge, D. E. White
1966, Economic Geology (61) 462-483
A radiogenic tracer study has been made of lead and strontium in deep geothermal brines, salt from brine, and the upper Quaternary rhyolite domes near the Salton Sea in the Imperial Valley, California. The data on the brines and rhyolite glasses are compared to those from Quaternary Colorado River and Tertiary sediments of the area. The brines sampled contain '-'100 ppm Pb, sufficient for consideration as a...
Stratified deposits of the oxides and carbonates of manganese
D. F. Hewett
1966, Economic Geology (61) 431-461
Compared with the stratified deposits of iron minerals, those of manganese minerals have received little attention until recent years. Before 1930, students of the stratified deposits of manganese minerals have generally concluded that the contained manganese was derived from the decomposition of the rocks that formed the borders of the basins. Only in a few places have geologists recognized that if these...
Dechlorination of DDT by Aerobacter aerogenes
Gary Wedemeyer
1966, Science (152) 647-647
Dechlorination of DDT to DDD in higher animals requires the presence of molecular oxygen, but in microorganisms the presence of oxygen hinders dechlorination. In cell-free preparations of Aerobacter aerogenes, the use of selected metabolic inhibitors indicated that reduced Fe(II) cytochrome oxidase was responsible for DDT dechlorination. This finding may possibly...
Proportion of recovered duck bands that are reported
R. K. Martinson
1966, Journal of Wildlife Management (30) 264-268
Band-reporting rates (the proportion of duck bands recovered by hunters that are actually reported to the Bird Banding Laboratory) appear to have decreased between the late 1950's and early 1960's. About one-half the banded ducks bagged during the 1958-59 and 1959-60 hunting seasons were reported-a rate similar to those recorded...
Microrelief of the continental margin south of Cape Lookout, North Carolina
E. Uchupi, R.A. Tagg
1966, Geological Society of America Bulletin (77) 427-430
On the basis of recorded microrelief data, the continental margin between Cape Lookout, North Carolina, and the Bahama Islands may be divided into the following domains: (1) smooth - lacking any microrelief; (2) undulating - containing sand swells; (3) rough - characterized by numerous low, conical hills; and (4) blocky - broken by rectangular depressions. ...
Packer testing in water wells near Sarasota, Florida
Horace Sutcliffe Jr., B.F. Joyner
1966, Groundwater (4) 23-27
During February and March 1964, the U. S. Geological Survey ran caliper, conductance, and temperature logs on several wells in the Sarasota area. The Florida Geological Survey had previously run gamma ray and electric logs on the same wells. Two flowing wells were selected for packer testing. The two wells are about the same depth, penetrate essentially the same geologic horizons, and are about...
Nitrogen compounds in natural water—A review
J. H. Feth
1966, Water Resources Research (2) 41-58
Nitrogen compounds in natural water are significant in public health, agriculture, industry, and geochemistry. The many sources of nitrogen compounds and the deep involvement of nitrogen in the life processes of organisms makes the study of such compounds difficult. The sources include natural aerosols, precipitation, fixation by micro‐organisms in soil...
Hot brines and recent iron deposits in deeps of the Red Sea
A.R. Miller, C.D. Densmore, E.T. Degens, J.C. Hathaway, F.T. Manheim, P.F. McFarlin, R. Pocklington, A. Jokela
1966, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (30) 341-359 & IN1
Sedimentary iron and heavy-metal deposits of undetermined size have been found in the middle of the Red Sea some 2000 meters below the surface of the sea (Fig. 1). This discovery has been made from the Research Vessel Atlantis II, which is still at sea engaged in a series of oceanographic...
Oxygen and carbon isotopic composition of limestones and dolomites, Bikini and Eniwetok atolls
M. Grant Gross, Joshua I. Tracey Jr.
1966, Science (151) 1082-1084
Aragonitic, unconsolidated sediments from the borings on the Eniwetok and Bikini atolls are isotopically identical with unaltered skeletal fragments, whereas the recrystallized limestones exhibit isotopic variations resulting from alteration in meteoric waters during periods of emergence. Dolomites and associated calcites are enriched in O18, perhaps because of interaction with hypersaline...
Rhizoconcretions in vitric ash-fall tuff, Nye County, Nevada
S. J. Luft
1966, Geological Society of America Bulletin (77) 313-318
Small, vertically elongate concretionlike structures, here called rhizoconcretions, are found in scattered localities in and near the southern part of the Belted Range of Nye County, Nevada. The rhizoconcretions occur within a stratigraphically restricted zone in bedded vitric ash-fall tuff of late Tertiary age. The rhizoconcretions differ in mineralogy from their host rock in that they are cemented by a binder of undetermined composition, possibly a zeolite, whereas the host tuffs are...
Gravity slide origin of rift zones of some Hawaiian volcanoes
James G. Moore
1966, Bulletin Volcanologique (29) 719-720
The east-trending east rift zone of Kilauea volcano on the island of Hawaii is 50 km long and up to 3 km wide. It consists of three elements arranged roughly in three belts from north to south: 1) eruptive fissures, cracks, faults, and narrow grabens, 2) cinder cones (produced by...
Weather and pheasant populations in southwestern North Dakota
R. K. Martinson, C.R. Grondahl
1966, Journal of Wildlife Management (30) 74-81
High productivity and survival of ring-necked pheasants (Phasianus colchicus) were correlated with high rainfall and cool temperatures in May and June during an 8-year period in southwestern North Dakota. These findings differed markedly from those of several earlier studies in the less arid midwestern United States where cool, wet weather...
Fall food habits of wood ducks from Lake Marion, South Carolina
Frank B. McGilvrey
1966, Journal of Wildlife Management (30) 193-195
A total of 108 stomachs of wood ducks (Aix sponsa) collected from hunters on the upper end of Lake Marion, South Carolina, between November 29 and December 6, 1961, were examined for information on food habits. Six plants made up over 98 percent of the total volume. Five were tree...
Soviet books and publications on hydrology (continental) and hydrogeology: titles and some notes on obtaining Soviet monographs
Frank T. Manheim
1966, Report, Water Resources Division Bulletin
A common method of publication for Soviet scientists, which partly supplants periodicals, is the publication of a collection of articles on a general area of research, frequently by members of a given institution. An extensive sampling of world geologic literature for 1961 (Hawkes, 1966) showed that 33 percent of Soviet...