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40904 results.

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Page 1226, results 30626 - 30650

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Deglaciation of the northwestern White Mountains, New Hampshire
Woodrow B. Thompson, Brian K. Fowler, C. C. Dorion
1999, Geographie Physique et Quaternaire (53) 59-77
The mode of deglaciation in the northwestern White Mountains of New Hampshire has been controversial since the mid 1800's. Early workers believed that active ice deposited the Bethlehem Moraine complex in the Ammonoosuc River basin during recession of the last ice sheet. In the 1930's this deglaciation model was replaced...
Summer water clarity responses to phosphorus, Daphnia grazing, and internal mixing in Lake Mendota
R.C. Lathrop, S.R. Carpenter, Dale M. Robertson
1999, Limnology and Oceanography (44) 137-146
Linear models were developed for predicting mean Secchi disk depth readings as a measure of water clarity for the summer months in Lake Mendota, Wisconsin. The 20-yr (1976-1995) data set also included external phosphorus (P) loadings and in-lake April P concentrations as indices of lake nutrient status, and monthly (28...
NEOCHIM: An electrochemical method for environmental application
R. W. Leinz, D.B. Hoover, A. L. Meier
1999, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (64) 421-434
Ion migration and electroosmosis are the principal processes underlying electrokinetic remediation of hazardous wastes from soils. These processes are a response of charged species to an applied electrical current and they are accompanied by electrolysis of water at the electrodes through which the current is applied. Electrolysis results in the...
Nest-site selection in the acorn woodpecker
P.N. Hooge, M.T. Stanback, Walter D. Koenig
1999, The Auk (116) 45-54
Acorn Woodpeckers (Melanerpes formicivorus) at Hastings Reservation in central California prefer to nest in dead limbs in large, dead valley oaks (Quercus lobata) and California sycamores (Platanus racemosa) that are also frequently used as acorn storage trees. Based on 232 nest cavities used over an 18-year period, we tested whether...
Natural hydrocarbon background in benthic sediments of Prince William Sound, Alaska: Oil vs coal
J.W. Short, K.A. Kvenvolden, P.R. Carlson, F. D. Hostettler, R.J. Rosenbauer, B.A. Wright
1999, Environmental Science & Technology (33) 34-42
The source of the background hydrocarbons in benthic sediments of Prince William Sound (PWS), AK, where the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill (EVOS) occurred, has been ascribed to oil seeps in coastal areas of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA). We present evidence that coal is a more plausible source, including...
Evaluation of the atmosphere as a source of volatile organic compounds in shallow groundwater
Arthur L. Baehr, Paul E. Stackelberg, Ronald J. Baker
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 127-136
The atmosphere as a source of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in shallow groundwater was evaluated over an area in southern New Jersey. Chloroform, methyl tertbutyl ether (MTBE), 1,1,1‐trichloroethane, tetrachloroethylene (PCE), and carbon disulfide (not a VOC) were detected frequently at low‐level concentrations in a network of 78 shallow wells in...
Estimating effects of limiting factors with regression quantiles
Brian S. Cade, J. W. Terrell, Richard L. Schroeder
1999, Ecology (80) 311-323
In a recent Concepts paper in Ecology, Thomson et al. emphasized that assumptions of conventional correlation and regression analyses fundamentally conflict with the ecological concept of limiting factors, and they called for new statistical procedures to address this problem. The analytical issue is that unmeasured factors may be the active...
Foreshock occurrence rates before large earthquakes worldwide
P.A. Reasenberg
1999, Pure and Applied Geophysics (155) 355-379
Global rates of foreshock occurrence involving shallow M ??? 6 and M ??? 7 mainshocks and M ??? 5 foreshocks were measured, using earthquakes listed in the Harvard CMT catalog for the period 1978-1996. These rates are similar to rates ones measured in previous worldwide and regional studies when they...
Soil water retention and maximum capillary drive from saturation to oven dryness
Hubert J. Morel-Seytoux, John R. Nimmo
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 2031-2041
This paper provides an alternative method to describe the water retention curve over a range of water contents from saturation to oven dryness. It makes two modifications to the standard Brooks and Corey [1964] (B-C) description, one at each end of the suction range. One expression proposed by Rossi and Nimmo [1994] is used...
Evaluation of prediction intervals for expressing uncertainties in groundwater flow model predictions
Steen Christensen, Richard L. Cooley
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 2627-2639
We tested the accuracy of 95% individual prediction intervals for hydraulic heads, streamflow gains, and effective transmissivities computed by groundwater models of two Danish aquifers. To compute the intervals, we assumed that each predicted value can be written as the sum of a computed dependent variable and a random error....
Geostatistical applications in ground-water modeling in south-central Kansas
T.-S. Ma, M. Sophocleous, Y.-S. Yu
1999, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (4) 57-64
This paper emphasizes the supportive role of geostatistics in applying ground-water models. Field data of 1994 ground-water level, bedrock, and saltwater-freshwater interface elevations in south-central Kansas were collected and analyzed using the geostatistical approach. Ordinary kriging was adopted to estimate initial conditions for ground-water levels and topography of the Permian...
Late Pleistocene channel-levee development on Monterey submarine fan, central California
W. R. Normark
1999, Geo-Marine Letters (18) 179-188
Much of the modern upper (proximal) Monterey fan is a channel–levee complex, the Upper Turbidite Sequence (UTS), that was deeply eroded after the channel breached a volcanic ridge to reach a deeper base level. Ages of sediment samples collected with the ALVIN submersible from the deepest outcrop within the channel–levee...
Transect across the West Antarctic rift system in the Ross Sea, Antarctica
H. Trey, A. K. Cooper, G. Pellis, Vedova B. Della, G. Cochrane, Giuliano Brancolini, J. Makris
1999, Tectonophysics (301) 61-74
In 1994, the ACRUP (Antarctic Crustal Profile) project recorded a 670-km-long geophysical transect across the southern Ross Sea to study the velocity and density structure of the crust and uppermost mantle of the West Antarctic rift system. Ray-trace modeling of P- and S-waves recorded on 47 ocean bottom seismograph (OBS)...
Age and paleoenvironment of the imperial formation near San Gorgonio Pass, Southern California
K. McDougall, R.Z. Poore, J. Matti
1999, Journal of Foraminiferal Research (29) 4-25
Microfossiliferous marine sediments of the Imperial Formation exposed in the Whitewater and Cabazon areas, near San Gorgonio Pass, southern California, are late Miocene in age and were deposited at intertidal to outer neritic depths, and possibly upper bathyal depths. A late Miocene age of 7.4 to >6.04 Ma is based...
40Ar/39Ar thermochronology of mesoproterozoic metamorphism in the Colorado Front Range
C.A. Shaw, L.W. Snee, J. Selverstone, J. C. Reed Jr.
1999, Journal of Geology (107) 49-67
A low-pressure metamorphic episode in the Colorado Front Range has been identified by the presence of staurolite, andalusite, cordierite, and garnet porphyroblasts overprinting earlier assemblages. The overprinting assemblages and reaction textures are most consistent with porphyroblast growth on a prograde metamorphic path with peak temperatures exceeding ~525??C. Twenty-eight 40Ar/39Ar dates...
Evaluating the use of “goodness‐of‐fit” measures in hydrologic and hydroclimatic model validation
David R. Legates, Gregory J. McCabe Jr.
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 233-241
Correlation and correlation‐based measures (e.g., the coefficient of determination) have been widely used to evaluate the “goodness‐of‐fit” of hydrologic and hydroclimatic models. These measures are oversensitive to extreme values (outliers) and are insensitive to additive and proportional differences between model predictions and observations. Because of these limitations, correlation‐based measures can...
Response of fall-staging brant and Canada geese to aircraft overflights in southwestern Alaska
David H. Ward, R.A. Stehn, W.P. Erickson, Dirk V. Derksen
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 373-381
Because much of the information concerning disturbance of waterfowl by aircraft is anecdotal, we examined behavioral responses of Pacific brant (Branta bernicla nigricans) and Canada geese (B. canadensis taverneri) to experimental overflights during fall staging at Izembek Lagoon, Alaska. These data were used to develop predictive models of brant and...
A procedure for classifying textural facies in gravel‐bed rivers
John M. Buffington, David R. Montgomery
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 1903-1914
Textural patches (i.e., grain‐size facies) are commonly observed in gravel‐bed channels and are of significance for both physical and biological processes at subreach scales. We present a general framework for classifying textural patches that allows modification for particular study goals, while maintaining a basic degree of standardization. Textures are classified...
Stochastic analysis of virus transport in aquifers
Linda L. Campbell Rehmann, Claire Welty, Ronald W. Harvey
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 1987-2006
A large-scale model of virus transport in aquifers is derived using spectral perturbation analysis. The effects of spatial variability in aquifer hydraulic conductivity and virus transport (attachment, detachment, and inactivation) parameters on large-scale virus transport are evaluated. A stochastic mean model of virus transport is developed by linking a simple...
Mining geology of the Pond Creek seam, Pikeville Formation, Middle Pennsylvanian, in part of the Eastern Kentucky Coal Field, USA
S.F. Greb, J.T. Popp
1999, International Journal of Coal Geology (41) 25-50
The Pond Creek seam is one of the leading producers of coal in the Eastern Kentucky Coal Field. The geologic factors that affect mining were investigated in several underground mines and categorized in terms of coal thickness, coal quality, and roof control. The limits of mining and thick coal are...
Sedimentary record of anthropogenic and biogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in San Francisco Bay, California
W. E. Pereira, Frances D. Hostettler, Samuel N. Luoma, A. VanGeen, Christopher C. Fuller, R. J. Anima
1999, Marine Chemistry (64) 99-113
Dated sediment cores collected from Richardson and San Pablo Bays in San Francisco Bay were used to reconstruct a history of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) contamination. The sedimentary record of PAHs in Richardson Bay shows that anthropogenic inputs have increased since the turn of the century, presumably as a result...
Subsurface gas offshore of northern California and its link to submarine geomorphology
J.W. Yun, D.L. Orange, M.E. Field
1999, Marine Geology (154) 357-368
The northern California continental margin contains evidence of abundant subsurface gas and numerous seafloor features that suggest a causative link between gas expulsion and geomorphology. Analyses of seismic reflection, sidescan sonar, and high-resolution multibeam bathymetric data show that the occurrence of subbottom gas and the migration processes beneath the shelf...
Late Pleistocene and Holocene meltwater events in the western Arctic Ocean
R.Z. Poore, L. Osterman, W.B. Curry, R. L. Phillips
1999, Geology (27) 759-762
Accelerator mass spectrometer 14C dated stable isotope data from Neogloboquadrina pachyerma in cores raised from the Mendeleyev Ridge and slope provide evidence for significant influx of meltwater to the western Arctic Ocean during the early part of marine oxygen isotope stage 1 (OIS 1) and during...