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Page 1282, results 32026 - 32050

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Unusual carbon and oxygen isotropic ratios of ostracodal calcite from last interglacial (Sangamon episode) lacustrine sediment in Raymond Basin, Illinois, USA
B. Brandon Curry, T.F. Anderson, K.C. Lohmann
1997, Journal of Paleolimnology (17) 421-435
The stable isotopic records of ostracode valves deposited during the last interglaciation in Raymond Basin, Illinois, have ??13C and ??18O values as high as +16.5??? and +9.2??? respectively, the highest values yet reported from continental ostracodal calcite. Located in south-central Illinois, Raymond, Pittsburgh, Bald Knob, and Hopwood Farm basins collectively...
Modelling heterogeneity in the recoveries of marked animal populations with covariates of individual animals, groups of animals or recovery time
R.M. Dorazio
1997, Environmental and Ecological Statistics (4) 235-246
A general framework is developed for modelling rates of survival and recovery of marked animal populations in terms of auxiliary information collected at the time of marking. The framework may be used to estimate differences in survival or recovery among individual animals, groups of animals, and recovery times. Analyses of...
Analysis of environmental data with censored observations
S. Liu, J.-C. Lu, D.W. Kolpin, W.Q. Meeker
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 3358-3362
The potential threats to humans and to terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems from environmental contamination could depend on the sum of the concentrations of different chemicals. However, direct summation of environmental data is not generally feasible because it is common for some chemical concentrations to be recorded as being below the...
Nowcast model for hazardous material spill prevention and response, San Francisco Bay, California
Ralph T. Cheng, Wayne L. Wilmot, Jerry A. Galt
1997, Conference Paper, Oceans Conference Record (IEEE)
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) installed the Physical Oceanographic Real-time System (PORTS) in San Francisco Bay, California, to provide real-time observations of tides, tidal currents, and meteorological conditions to, among other purposes, guide hazardous material spill prevention and response. Integrated with nowcast modeling techniques and dissemination of real-time...
Use of remote-sensing techniques to survey the physical habitat of large rivers
Thomas A. Edsall, Thomas E. Behrendt, Gary Cholwek, Jeffery W. Frey, Gregory W. Kennedy, Stephen B. Smith
Thomas A. Edsall, Thomas E. Behrendt, Gary Cholwek, Jeffrey W. Frey, Gregory W. Kennedy, Stephen B. Smith, editor(s)
1997, Report
Remote-sensing techniques that can be used to quantitatively characterize the physical habitat in large rivers in the United States where traditional survey approaches typically used in small- and medium-sized streams and rivers would be ineffective or impossible to apply. The state-of-the-art remote-sensing technologies that we discuss here include side-scan...
A geologic history of the north-central Appalachians, part 2: The Appalachian basin from the Silurian through the Carboniferous
R. T. Faill
1997, American Journal of Science (297) 729-761
The north-central Appalachians occupy a critical position within the 3000+ km-long Appalachian orogen, lying southwest of the boundary between the central and northern Appalachians (CNAB). The one-billion-year-long history of tectonic activity in the north-central Appalachians includes the assembly and breakup of a late Proterozoic supercontinent, the creation and evolution of...
Subsidence of ash-flow calderas: Relation to caldera size and magma-chamber geometry
P. W. Lipman
1997, Bulletin of Volcanology (59) 198-218
Diverse subsidence geometries and collapse processes for ash-flow calderas are inferred to reflect varying sizes, roof geometries, and depths of the source magma chambers, in combination with prior volcanic and regional tectonic influences. Based largely on a review of features at eroded pre-Quaternary calderas, a continuum of geometries and subsidence...
Testing alternative conceptual models of seawater intrusion in a coastal aquifer using computer simulation, southern California, USA
Tracy Nishikawa
1997, Hydrogeology Journal (5) 60-74
Two alternative conceptual models of the physical processes controlling seawater intrusion in a coastal basin in California, USA, were tested to identify a likely principal pathway for seawater intrusion. The conceptual models were tested by using a two-dimensional, finite-element groundwater flow and transport model. This pathway was identified by the...
The intermediate disturbance hypothesis does not explain fire and diversity pattern in fynbos
D.W. Schwilk, Jon E. Keeley, W. Bond
1997, Plant Ecology (132) 77-84
The intermediate disturbance hypothesis is a widely accepted generalization regarding patterns of species diversity, but may not hold true where fire is the disturbance. In the Mediterranean-climate shrublands of South Africa, called fynbos, fire is the most importance disturbance and a controlling factor in community dynamics. The intermediate disturbance hypothesis...
222Rn transport in a fractured crystalline rock aquifer: Results from numerical simulations
P. F. Folger, E. Poeter, R. B. Wanty, W. Day, D. Frishman
1997, Journal of Hydrology (195) 45-77
Dissolved 222Rn concentrations in ground water from a small wellfield underlain by fractured Middle Proterozoic Pikes Peak Granite southwest of Denver, Colorado range from 124 to 840 kBq m-3 (3360-22700 pCi L-1). Numerical simulations of flow and transport between two wells show that differences in equivalent hydraulic aperture of transmissive...
Using δ87Sr values to identify sources of salinity to a freshwater aquifer, Greater Aneth Oil Field, Utah, USA
D. L. Naftz, Z. E. Peterman, L.E. Spangler
1997, Chemical Geology (141) 195-209
Salinity increases in water from the freshwater Navajo aquifer in the Aneth area have been documented in recent years. Previous studies during the 1980s in the Aneth area suggested that brines associated with oil production and their subsequent re-injection were the probable source of salinity in the Navajo aquifer. Differences...
A physically-based method for predicting peak discharge of floods caused by failure of natural and constructed earthen dams
J. S. Walder, J. E. O’Connor, J. E. Costa
Leavesley G.H., editor(s)
1997, Destructive water: water-caused natural disasters, their abatement and control. Proc. international conference, California, 1996 217-224
We analyse a simple, physically-based model of breach formation in natural and constructed earthen dams to elucidate the principal factors controlling the flood hydrograph at the breach. Formation of the breach, which is assumed trapezoidal in cross-section, is parameterized by the mean rate of downcutting, k, the value of which...
Surfactant-enhanced remediation of a trichloroethene-contaminated aquifer. 1. Transport of triton X-100
J. A. Smith, D. Sahoo, H.M. Mclellan, T.E. Imbrigiotta
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 3565-3572
Transport of a nonionic surfactant (Triton X-100) at aqueous concentrations less than 400 mg/L through a trichloroethene-contaminated sand-and-gravel aquifer at Picatinny Arsenal, NJ, has been studied through a series of laboratory and field experiments. In the laboratory, batch and column experiments were conducted to quantify the rate and amount of...
Continents as lithological icebergs: The importance of buoyant lithospheric roots
D.H. Abbott, R. Drury, Walter D. Mooney
1997, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (149) 15-27
An understanding of the formation of new continental crust provides an important guide to locating the oldest terrestrial rocks and minerals. We evaluated the crustal thicknesses of the thinnest stable continental crust and of an unsubductable oceanic plateau and used the...
Fate and transport of metam spill in Sacramento River
P.-F. Wang, T. Mill, J.L. Martin, T.A. Wool
1997, Journal of Environmental Engineering (123) 704-712
A mass balance model was developed and applied to the Sacramento River in northern California during the July 1991 Sacramento River metam-sodium spill. The transport and reactions of metam-sodium, a soil fumigant, and the volatile and toxic methyl isothiocyanate (MITC) were simulated during the two-and-a-half days of movement along a...
Modeling changes in growth and diet on polychlorinated biphenyl bioaccumulation in Coregonus hoyi
L.A. Eby, C.A. Stow, R.J. Hesselberg, J.F. Kitchell
1997, Ecological Applications (7) 981-990
Restrictions on the release of PCBs into the environment began in the early 1970s, resulting in reduced PCB concentrations in Lake Michigan bloaters (Coregonus hoyi). However, since 1980, PCB concentrations in bloater have declined only slightly. The bloater population also increased 40-fold during 1970 through 1984, resulting in a diet...
Multispectral thermal infrared mapping of sulfur dioxide plumes: A case study from the East Rift Zone of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
V.J. Realmuto, A. J. Sutton, T. Elias
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 15057-15072
The synoptic perspective and rapid mode of data acquisition provided by remote sensing are well suited for the study of volcanic SO2 plumes. In this paper we describe a plume-mapping procedure that is based on image data acquired with NASA's airborne thermal infrared multispectral scanner (TIMS) and apply the procedure to...
Molar heat capacity and entropy of calcium metal
B. S. Hemingway, R. A. Robie, M.W. Chase
1997, Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics (29) 211-220
The heat capacity of calcium has been measured at 85 mean temperatures betweenT≈ 8 K andT≈ 369 K using an adiabatically-shielded calorimeter in an intermittent heating mode. AtT= 298.15 K, the recommended values for the molar heat capacity, molar entropy, and molar enthalpy increment referred toT= 0 are (25.77 ±...
Constant-concentration boundary condition: Lessons from the HYDROCOIN variable-density groundwater benchmark problem
Leonard F. Konikow, W. E. Sanford, P.J. Campbell
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 2253-2261
In a solute-transport model, if a constant-concentration boundary condition is applied at a node in an active flow field, a solute flux can occur by both advective and dispersive processes. The potential for advective release is demonstrated by reexamining the Hydrologic Code Intercomparison (HYDROCOIN) project case 5 problem, which represents...
Foreland crustal structure of the New York recess, northeastern United States
G.C. Herman, D.H. Monteverde, R.W. Schlische, D.M. Pitcher
1997, Geological Society of America Bulletin (109) 955-977
A new structural model for the northeast part of the Central Appalachian foreland and fold-and-thrust belt is based on detailed field mapping, geophysical data, and balanced cross-section analysis. The model demonstrates that the region contains a multiply deformed, parautochthonous fold-and-thrust system of Paleozoic age. Our interpretations differ from previous ones...
Supercritical fluid carbon dioxide extraction and liquid chromatographic separation with electrochemical detection of methylmercury from biological samples
N.S. Simon
1997, International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry (68) 313-330
Using the coupled methods presented in this paper, methylmercury can be accurately and rapidly extracted from biological samples by modified supercritical fluid carbon dioxide and quantitated using liquid chromatography with reductive electrochemical detection. Supercritical fluid carbon dioxide modified with methanol effectively extracts underivatized methylmercury from certified reference materials Dorm-1 (dogfish...
Patterns and age distribution of ground-water flow to streams
E. Modica, T. E. Reilly, D.W. Pollock
1997, Groundwater (35) 523-537
Simulations of ground-water flow in a generic aquifer system were made to characterize the topology of ground-water flow in the stream subsystem and to evaluate its relation to deeper ground-water flow. The flow models are patterned after hydraulic characteristics of aquifers of the Atlantic Coastal Plain and are based on...
An interactive program for computer-aided map design, display, and query: EMAPKGS2
G.W. Pouch
1997, Computers & Geosciences (23) 259-266
EMAPKGS2 is a user-friendly, PC-based electronic mapping tool for use in hydrogeologic exploration and appraisal. EMAPKGS2 allows the analyst to construct maps interactively from data stored in a relational database, perform point-oriented spatial queries such as locating all wells within a specified radius, perform geographic overlays, and export the data...