Effect of predator reduction on waterfowl nesting success
D. S. Balser, Herbert H. Dill, H.K. Nelson
1968, Journal of Wildlife Management (32) 669-682
A 6-year study to determine the effect of nest-predator removal on waterfowl nesting success was conducted at the Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge in northwestern Minnesota from 1959 through 1964. Predators were removed from the west side of the Refuge while the east side served as a control area. At the...
Hornblendes from granitic rocks of the central Sierra Nevada batholith, California
F. C. W. Dodge, J. J. Papike, R. E. Mays
1968, Journal of Petrology (9) 378-410
Twenty samples of hornblendes from rocks of 14 plutonic units in the central Sierra Nevada and Inyo Mountains, California, have been studied in detail. Optical, density, single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction, and major and minor element chemical data are reported.The compositions of the hornblendes show only limited correlation with the...
An aquifer test used to investigate a quality of water anomaly
Donald G. Jorgensen
1968, Groundwater (6) 18-20
An aquifer test and analyses of water samples, showed that the anomalous water quality of a municipal well was caused by leakage from a nearby abandoned well tapping another aquifer. ...
The Denver earthquakes
J. H. Healy, W.W. Rubey, D. T. Griggs, C.B. Raleigh
1968, Science (161) 1301-1310
Disposal of waste fluids by injection into a deep well has triggered earthquakes near Denver, Colorado....
Silurian-devonian reef complex near Nowshera, West Pakistan
Karl W. Stauffer
1968, GSA Bulletin (79) 1331-1350
The first Paleozoic reef belt on the Indo-Pakistan subcontinent has recently been recognized near the town of Nowshera (lat 34°00′ N., long 72°00′ E.) in northern West Pakistan. It consists of nine separate hills aligned in a 15-mile-long, east-west band rising out of the Peshawar alluvial plain. Each hill is...
Argon-40: Excess in submarine pillow basalts from Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
G. Brent Dalrymple, J.G. Moore
1968, Science (161) 1132-1135
Submarine pillow basalts from Kilauea Volcano contain excess radiogenic argon-40 and give anomalously high potassium-argon ages. Glassy rims of pillows show a systematic increase in radiogenic argon-40 with depth, and a pillow from a depth of 2590 meters shows a decrease in radiogenic argon-40 inward from the pillow rim. The...
Alga-like forms in Onverwacht Series, South Africa: Oldest recognized lifelike forms on earth
A.E.J. Engel, B. Nagy, L.A. Nagy, C.G. Engel, G.O.W. Kremp, C.M. Drew
1968, Science (161) 1005-1008
Spheroidal and cupshaped, carbonaceous alga-like bodies, as well as filamentous structures and amorphous carbonaceous matter occur in sedimentary rocks of the Onverwacht Series (Swaziland System) in South Africa. The Onverwacht sediments are older than 3.2 eons, and they are probably the oldest, little-altered sedimentary rocks on Earth....
Chronology of intrusion, volcanism, and ore deposition at Bingham, Utah
W. J. Moore, Marvin A. Lanphere, J. D. Obradovich
1968, Economic Geology (63) 612-621
Potassium-argon dates for major igneous rock types in the Bingham mining district, Utah, range from 39 to 32 m.y. and suggest that:(1) Plutonism, volcanism, and hydrothermal activity were sequential stages in a magmatic history of about 7 m.y. duration.(2) Latitic volcanic rocks, in part, postdate emplacement of the Last Chance...
Distribution of minor elements in ore and host rock, Illinois-Kentucky fluorite district and Upper Mississippi Valley zinc-lead district
Wayne E. Hall, Allen V. Heyl
1968, Economic Geology (63) 655-670
This paper presents data on the distribution of minor elements in ore and gangue minerals and in adjacent host rock from the Illinois-Kentucky fluorite district and Upper Mississippi Valley zinc-lead district. Comparisons are made of the minor-element abundances between districts and within the paragenetic sequence in individual districts.The ore of...
Big game inventory for 1967
U.S. Division Of Wildlife Research
1968, Wildlife Leaflet 481
No abstract available....
Fur catch in the United States, 1967
U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife
1968, Wildlife Leaflet 482
No abstract available....
A fossil assemblage from the wicomico formation in Berkeley County, South Carolina
D.J. Colquhoun, Stephen M. Herrick, H.G. Richards
1968, Geological Society of America Bulletin (79) 1211-1220
Both megafossils and fossil Foraminifera have been obtained from unconsolidated sediments of the Wicomico Formation, which underlies the Penholoway terrace, a coastal feature that formed when the shoreline of the Atlantic Ocean stood about 70 feet higher than at present. Some of the fossils are Tertiary species and are assumed to have been derived from rocks...
Minor epigenetic, diagenetic, and syngenetic sulfide, fluorite, and barite occurrences in the central United States
A. V. Heyl
1968, Economic Geology (63)-585
Metallic sulfides, fluorite, barite, and celestite are widespread in the sedimentary rocks of the central United States. Many occurrences are epigenetic concentrations either in known major mineral districts or in clusters of deposits that warrant further exploration for potential ore. Evaluation of trace-element composition, of fluid inclusions, of depositional temperature, and of isotopic composition of sulfur may help discriminate potentially economic deposits from even more...
Observations in deep-scattering layers off Cape Hatteras, U.S.A.
John D. Milliman, Frank T. Manheim
1968, Deep-Sea Research and Oceanographic Abstracts (15) 505-507
No abstract available....
Ground-water flow related to streamflow and water quality
Wayne A. Van Voast, R.P. Novitzki
1968, Water Resources Research (4) 769-775
A ground-water flow system in southwestern Minnesota illustrates water movement between geologic units and between the land surface and the subsurface. The flow patterns indicate numerous zones of ground-water recharge and discharge controlled by topography, varying thicknesses of geologic units, variation in permeabilities, and the configuration of the basement rock...
The non-colloidal origin of 'colloform' textures in sphalerite ores
E. Roedder
1968, Economic Geology (63) 451-471
"Colloform" ores have generally been considered to have been deposited as colloidal sulfide gels, and even transported as colloidal "sols." However, studies of doubly polished plates of "colloform" sphalerite-wurtzite assemblages from various deposits reveal crystal growth features that cannot have been formed by crystallization from gels, and indicate that most, and perhaps all, grew directly as minute...
Temperature, salinity, and origin of the ore-forming fluids at Pine Point, Northwest Territories, Canada, from fluid inclusion studies
E. Roedder
1968, Economic Geology (63) 439-450
Although the Pine Point ore is relatively poor in useable fluid inclusions, some sphalerite crystals from replacements, vugs, and from " colloform" crusts were found to contain primary or pseudosecondary liquid-gas inclusions adequate for study. Most (132 of 133) of these had low freezing temperatures, indicating exceedingly saline brines. The 112 inclusions suitable for filling-temperature determination homogenized at +51° to...
Analog simulation of ground-water development of the Saginaw Formation, Lansing metropolitan area, Michigan
K.E. Vanlier, M.L. Wheeler
1968, Report
This report was prepared as a part of the study of the water resources of Clinton, Eaton and Ingham Counties being made for the Tri-County Planning Commission by the Water Resources Division of the U. S. Geological Survey. The report describes one phase of the investigation, that is, the projections...
Middle Pennsylvanian plant fossils: Problematic occurrence in the Bronx
E-an Zen, S.H. Mamay
1968, Science (161) 157-158
A possible glacial boulder of undeformed and unmetamorphosed siltstone containing Middle Pennsylvanian plant fossils was recovered from the Bronx. The rock cannot be explained by known geologic relations and suggests the possibility of undetected outliers of Pennsylvanian rocks in the Hudson valley....
Article navigation zonal distribution of variations in structural state of alkali feldspar within the Rader Creek pluton, Boulder Batholith, Montana
Robert I. Tilling
1968, Journal of Petrology (9) 331-357
The granodioritic Rader Creek pluton of the composite Boulder batholith contains microperthitic alkali feldspar of bulk composition Or65 to Or86 with a structurally variable potassic phase. Complete cell parameters, 2V measurements, and bulk composition are given for 11 feldspar samples. The 131 and 131 reflections for these and 58 additional samples show...
Mazama ash in the Northeastern Pacific
C.H. Nelson, L.D. Kulm, P.R. Carlson, J. R. Duncan
1968, Science (161) 47-49
Volcanic glass in marine sediments off Oregon and Washington correlates with continental deposits of Mount Mazama ash by stratigraphic position, refractive index, and radiocarbon dating. Ash deposited in the abyssal regions by turbidity currents is used for tracing of the dispersal routes of postglacial sediments and for evaluation of marine...
Sensitive resettable odometer aids roadside census of red-winged blackbirds
D.T. Harke, A.R. Stickley Jr.
1968, Journal of Wildlife Management (32) 635-636
A sensitive resettable odometer reading to 0.01 mile facilitated censusing breeding male redwinged blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus) from a vehicle. Territorial males along roadsides were 'marked' with recorded mileage readings rather than with landmarks of the types employed by Hewitt for censuses based on the Lincoln index principle. Sensitive odometers that...
The formation of columnar joints in the upper part of Kilauean lava lakes, Hawaii
Dallas L. Peck, Takeshi Minakami
1968, Geological Society of America Bulletin (79) 1151-1166
Cracks were observed forming at the surface of Makaopuhi lava lake during the March 1965 Kilauea eruption, and were studied by repeated mapping and observations of this lake; the 1963 Alae lava lake was similarly studied. Cracks open within a minute after molten lava is exposed at the surface, and form either random or oriented orthogonal networks which outline...
A further contribution to the petrology of Haleakala volcano, Hawaii
G. A. Macdonald, H. A. Powers
1968, Geological Society of America Bulletin (79) 877-888
Sixteen new chemical analyses of the later rocks of Haleakala Volcano, on the island of Maui, Hawaii, add to the differentiation picture for that volcano. The early rocks of the volcano are tholeiitic. These are followed by dominant hawaiites with less abundant alkalic olivine basalts, picrite-basalts of ankaramite type, and a few mugearites. Still later rocks, separated from...
Structure of the New England herring gull population
John A. Kadlec, William H. Drury
1968, Ecology (49) 644-676
Measurements of the rates of population increase, reproduction, and mortality together with an observed age ratio, were used to analyze the population of the Herring Gull in New England. Data from sporadic censuses prior to this study, aerial censuses by the authors, and National Audubon Society Christmas Bird Count indicated...