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40904 results.

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Page 1259, results 31451 - 31475

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Consequences of cannibalism and competition for food in a smallmouth bass population: An individual-based modeling study
Q. Dong, D.L. DeAngelis
1998, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (127) 174-189
We used an individual-based modeling approach to study the consequences of cannibalism and competition for food in a freshwater fish population. We simulated the daily foraging, growth, and survival of the age-0 fish and older juvenile individuals of a sample population to reconstruct patterns of density dependence in the age-0...
Geographic, temporal, and age-specific variation in diets of Glaucous Gulls in western Alaska
Joel A. Schmutz, K.A. Hobson
1998, Condor (100) 119-130
We collected boluses and food remains of adult Glaucous Gulls (Larus hyperboreus) at or near nests and chicks, and digestive tracts from adults at three sites on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska that differed in proximity to marine and terrestrial foods. We observed both geographic and temporal variation in diet; gulls...
The tectonic significance of pre-Scandian 40Ar/39Ar phengite cooling ages in the Caledonides of western Norway
T.B. Andersen, H. N. Berry IV, D. R. Lux, A. Andresen
1998, Journal of the Geological Society (155) 297-309
Pre-Silurian continental-margin deposits in western Norway, non-conformably overlying allochthonous continental orthogneisses retain Ordovician 40Ar/39Ar cooling ages for phengites, implying either rapid cooling immediately after a Late Ordovician orogenic event, or less likely, a slow cooling following an Early Ordovician or older orogeny. The Dalsfjord Suite–Høyvik Group basement–cover pair are probably a...
Modeled responses of terrestrial ecosystems to elevated atmospheric CO2: A comparison of simulations by the biogeochemistry models of the Vegetation/Ecosystem Modeling and Analysis Project (VEMAP)
Y. Pan, J. M. Melillo, A. D. McGuire, D. W. Kicklighter, Louis F. Pitelka, K. Hibbard, L.L. Pierce, S. W. Running, D.S. Ojima, W.J. Parton, D. S. Schimel, J. Borchers, R. Neilson, H.H. Fisher, T.G.F. Kittel, N.A. Rossenbloom, S. Fox, A. Haxeltine, I. C. Prentice, S. Sitch, A. Janetos, R. McKeown, R. Nemani, T. Painter, B. Rizzo, T. Smith, F.I. Woodward
1998, Oecologia (114) 389-404
Although there is a great deal of information concerning responses to increases in atmospheric CO2 at the tissue and plant levels, there are substantially fewer studies that have investigated ecosystem-level responses in the context of integrated carbon, water, and nutrient cycles. Because our understanding of ecosystem responses to elevated CO2...
Using sediment 'fingerprints' to assess sediment-budget errors, north Halawa Valley, Oahu, Hawaii, 1991-92
B. R. Hill, E.H. DeCarlo, C. C. Fuller, M.F. Wong
1998, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (23) 493-508
Reliable estimates of sediment-budget errors are important for interpreting sediment-budget results. Sediment-budget errors are commonly considered equal to sediment-budget imbalances, which may underestimate actual sediment-budget errors if they include compensating positive and negative errors. We modified the sediment 'fingerprinting' approach to qualitatively evaluate compensating errors in an annual (1991) fine...
Sedimentary facies and environmental ichnology of a ?Permian playa-lake complex in western Argentina
G. Zhang, L.A. Buatois, M.G. Mangano, F.G. Acenolaza
1998, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (138) 221-243
A moderately diverse arthropod icnofauna occurs in ?Permian ephemeral lacustrine deposits of the Paganzo Basin that crop out at Bordo Atravesado, Cuesta de Miranda, western Argentina. Sedimentary successions are interpreted as having accumulated in a playa-lake complex. Deposits include three sedimentary facies: (A) laminated siltstone and mudstone: (B) current-rippled cross-laminated...
Analysis of transient storage subject to unsteady flow: Diel flow variation in an Antarctic stream
R.L. Runkel, Diane M. McKnight, E.D. Andrews
1998, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (17) 143-154
Transport of dissolved material in streams and small rivers may be characterized using tracer-dilution methods and solute transport models. Recent studies have quantified stream/substream interactions using models of transient storage. These studies are based on tracer-dilution data obtained during periods of steady flow. We present...
Shallow velocity structure of Stromboli Volcano, Italy, derived from small-aperture array measurements of Strombolian tremor
B. Chouet, G. De Luca, G. Milana, P. Dawson, M. Martini, R. Scarpa
1998, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (88) 653-666
The properties of the tremor wave field at Stromboli are analyzed using data from small-aperture arrays of short-period seismometers deployed on the north flank of the volcano. The seismometers are configured in two semi-circular arrays with radii of 60 and 150 m and...
Estimation of density of mongooses with capture-recapture and distance sampling
J.L. Corn, M.J. Conroy
1998, Journal of Mammalogy (79) 1009-1015
We captured mongooses (Herpestes javanicus) in live traps arranged in trapping webs in Antigua, West Indies, and used capture-recapture and distance sampling to estimate density. Distance estimation and program DISTANCE were used to provide estimates of density from the trapping-web data. Mean density based on trapping webs was 9.5 mongooses/ha...
Modeling and management of water in the Klamath River Basin: overcoming politics and conflicts
Marshall Flug, John F. Scott
Steven R. Abt, Jayne Young-Pezeshk, Chester C. Watson, editor(s)
1998, Conference Paper, Water resources engineering 98: Proceedings of the International Water Resources Engineering Conference
The network flow model MODSIM, which was designed as a water quantity mass balance model for evaluating and selecting water management alternatives, has been applied to the Klamath River basin. A background of conflicting issues in the basin is presented. The complexity of water quantity model development, while satisfying the...
Does the Sverdrup critical depth model explain bloom dynamics in estuaries?
L.V. Lucas, J. E. Cloern, Jeffrey R. Koseff, Stephen G. Monismith, J.K. Thompson
1998, Journal of Marine Research (56) 375-415
In this paper we use numerical models of coupled biological-hydrodynamic processes to search for general principles of bloom regulation in estuarine waters. We address three questions: what are the dynamics of stratification in coastal systems as influenced by variable freshwater input and tidal stirring? How does phytoplankton growth respond to...
Use of fault striations and dislocation models to infer tectonic shear stress during the 1995 Hyogo-Ken Nanbu (Kobe) earthquake
P. Spudich, Mariagiovanna Guatteri, K. Otsuki, J. Minagawa
1998, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (88) 413-427
Dislocation models of the 1995 Hyogo-ken Nanbu (Kobe) earthquake derived by Yoshida et al. (1996) show substantial changes in direction of slip with time at specific points on the Nojima and Rokko fault systems, as do striations we observed on exposures of the Nojima fault surface on Awaji Island. Spudich...
The Chesapeake Bay bolide: Modern consequences of an ancient cataclysm
C. Wylie Poag
1998, Report
During the late Eocene, the formerly quiescent geological regime of the Virginia Coastal Plain was dramatically transformed when a bolide struck in the vicinity of the Delmarva Peninsula, and produced the following principal consequences:The bolide carved a roughly circular crater twice the size of the state of Rhode Island (~6400...
Parallel iterative solution for h and p approximations of the shallow water equations
E. J. Barragy, R. A. Walters
1998, Advances in Water Resources (21) 327-337
A p finite element scheme and parallel iterative solver are introduced for a modified form of the shallow water equations. The governing equations are the three-dimensional shallow water equations. After a harmonic decomposition in time and rearrangement, the resulting equations are a complex Helmholz problem for surface elevation, and a complex momentum...
Water-resources optimization model for Santa Barbara, California
Tracy Nishikawa
1998, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (124) 252-263
A simulation-optimization model has been developed for the optimal management of the city of Santa Barbara's water resources during a drought. The model, which links groundwater simulation with linear programming, has a planning horizon of 5 years. The objective is to minimize the cost of water supply subject to: water...
Rheological equations in asymptotic regimes of granular flow
Chiu-Lan Chen, C. #NAME? Ling
1998, Journal of Engineering Mechanics (124) 301-310
This paper assesses the validity of the generalized viscoplastic fluid (GVF) model in light of the established constitutive relations in two asymptotic flow regimes, namely, the macroviscous and grain-inertia regimes. A comprehensive review of the literature on constitutive relations in both regimes reveals that except for some material constants, such...
Large-area mapping of biodiversity
J. M. Scott, M.D. Jennings
1998, Conference Paper, Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
The age of discovery, description, and classification of biodiversity is entering a new phase. In responding to the conservation imperative, we can now supplement the essential work of systematics with spatially explicit information on species and assemblages of species. This is possible because of recent conceptual, technical, and organizational progress...
Trace element abundances of high-MgO glasses from Kilauea, Mauna Loa and Haleakala volcanoes, Hawaii
T.P. Wagner, David A. Clague, E.H. Hauri, T.L. Grove
1998, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (131) 13-21
We performed an ion-microprobe study of eleven high-MgO (6.7-14.8 wt%) tholeiite glasses from the Hawaiian volcanoes Kilauea, Mauna Loa and Haleakala. We determined the rare earth (RE), high field strength, and other selected trace element abundances of these glasses, and used the data to establish their relationship to typical Hawaiian...
Similar rates of decrease of persistent, hydrophobic and particle-reactive contaminants in riverine systems
Peter C. Van Metre, Jennifer T. Wilson, Edward Callender, Christopher C. Fuller
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 3312-3317
Although it is well-known that concentrations of anthropogenic radionuclides and organochlorine compounds in aquatic systems have decreased since their widespread release has stopped in the United States, the magnitude and variability of rates of decrease are not well-known. Paleolimnological studies of reservoirs provide a tool for evaluating these long-term trends...
High-resolution Monte Carlo simulation of flow and conservative transport in heterogeneous porous media: 1. Methodology and flow results
R.L. Naff, D.F. Haley, E.A. Sudicky
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 663-677
In this, the first of two papers concerned with the use of numerical simulation to examine flow and transport parameters in heterogeneous porous media via Monte Carlo methods, various aspects of the modelling effort are examined. In particular, the need to save on core memory causes one to use only...
Coseismic temporal changes of slip direction: The effect of absolute stress on dynamic rupture
Mariagiovanna Guatteri, P. Spudich
1998, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (88) 777-789
We investigate the dynamics of rupture at low-stress level. We show that one main difference between the dynamics of high- and low-stress events is the amount of coseismic temporal rake rotation occurring at given points on the fault. Curved striations on exposed fault surfaces and earthquake dislocation models derived from...
Field study and simulation of diurnal temperature effects on infiltration and variably saturated flow beneath an ephemeral stream
Anne Dudek Ronan, David E. Prudic, Carl E. Thodal, Jim Constantz
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 2137-2153
Two experiments were performed to investigate flow beneath an ephemeral stream and to estimate streambed infiltration rates. Discharge and stream-area measurements were used to determine infiltration rates. Stream and subsurface temperatures were used to interpret subsurface flow through variably saturated sediments beneath the stream. Spatial variations in subsurface temperatures suggest...
Sediment delivery to the Gulf of Alaska: Source mechanisms along a glaciated transform margin
M.R. Dobson, D. O'Leary, M. Veart
1998, Geological Society Special Publication (129) 43-66
Sediment delivery to the Gulf of Alaska occurs via four areally extensive deepwater fans, sourced from grounded tidewater glaciers. During periods of climatic cooling, glaciers cross a narrow shelf and discharge sediment down the continental slope. Because the coastal terrain is dominated by fjords and a narrow, high-relief Pacific watershed,...
Gill net saturation by lake trout in Michigan waters of Lake Superior
Michael J. Hansen, Richard G. Schorfhaar, James H. Selgeby
1998, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (18) 847-853
We conducted experimental fishing for lake trout Salvelinus namaycush in Michigan waters of Lake Superior to determine the importance of soak time on catch per effort (CPE) in numbers per kilometer of standard gill net. We modeled CPE as a nonlinear function of the number of nights between setting and lifting (soak...
Use of sublethal endpoints in sediment toxicity tests with the amphipod Hyalella azteca
Chris G. Ingersoll, Eric L. Brunson, F. James Dwyer, Douglas K. Hardesty, Nile E. Kemble
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 1508-1523
Short-term sediment toxicity tests that only measure effects on survival can be used to identify high levels of contamination but may not be able to identify marginally contaminated sediments. The objective of the present study was to develop a method for determining the potential sublethal effects of contaminants associated with...