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Page 1284, results 32076 - 32100

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Färoe-Iceland Ridge Experiment: 1. Crustal structure of northeastern Iceland
Robert K. Staples, Robert S. White, Bryndis Brandsdottir, William Menke, Peter K.H. Maguire, John H. McBride
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 7849-7866
Results from the Färoe-Iceland Ridge Experiment (FIRE) constrain the crustal thickness as 19 km under the Northern Volcanic Zone of Iceland and 35 km under older Tertiary areas of northeastern Iceland. The Moho is defined by strong P wave and S wave reflections. Synthetic seismogram modeling of the Moho reflection...
Survival rates of adult lake trout in northwestern Lake Michigan, 1983-1993
Mary C. Fabrizio, Mark E. Holey, Patrick C. McKee, Michael L. Toneys
1997, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 413-428
The restoration of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush in Lake Michigan has been an elusive goal of resource management agencies in the Great Lakes region. In this study, we estimated annual survival rates of adult lake trout from an area in northwestern Lake Michigan known as the Clay Banks refuge. We...
Quantitative analysis of major elements in silicate minerals and glasses by micro-PIXE
J.L. Campbell, G.K. Czamanske, L. MacDonald, W.J. Teesdale
1997, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms (130) 608-616
The Guelph micro-PIXE facility has been modified to accommodate a second Si(Li) X-ray detector which records the spectrum due to light major elements (11 ??? Z ??? 20) with no deleterious effects from scattered 3 MeV protons. Spectra have been recorded from 30 well-characterized materials, including a broad range of...
Uplift of the Transantarctic Mountains and the bedrock beneath the East Antarctic ice sheet
Uri S. ten Brink, R.I. Hackney, S. Bannister, T.A. Stern, Y. Makovsky
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 27603-27621
In recent years the Transantarctic Mountains (TAM), the largest noncontractional mountain belt in the world, have become the focus of modelers who explained their uplift by a variety of isostatic and thermal mechanisms. A problem with these models is a lack of available data to compare with model predictions. We...
Prey patchiness and larval fish growth and survival: inferences from an individual-based model
Benjamin H. Letcher, James A. Rice
1997, Ecological Modelling (95) 29-43
We used an individual-based simulation model to evaluate how prey patchiness and fish swimming behavior affect larval fish survival and mortality source (predation or starvation). Simulations revealed that cohort survival increased linearly with greater average patch residence times and that patch residence times for individual fish with different fates (survived,...
Late quaternary regional geoarchaeology of Southeast Alaska Karst: A progress report
E. J. Dixon, T. H. Heaton, T. E. Fifield, Thomas D. Hamilton, D. E. Putnam, F. Grady
1997, Geoarchaeology - An International Journal (12) 689-712
Karst systems, sea caves, and rock shelters within the coastal temperate rain forest of Alaska's Alexander Archipelago preserve important records of regional archaeology, sea level history, glacial and climatic history, and vertebrate paleontology. Two 14C AMS dates on human bone discovered in a remote cave (49-PET-408) on Prince of Wales...
Tests of wildlife habitat models to evaluate oak-mast production
R.L. Schroeder, L.D. Vangilder
1997, Wildlife Society Bulletin (25) 639-646
We measured oak-mast production and forest structure and composition in the Ozark Mountains of Missouri and tested the accuracy of oak-mast prediction variables from 5 Habitat Suitability Index (HSI) species models. Acorn production was positively associated with several measures of abundance and canopy cover of oak trees, and with an...
Testing prediction methods: Earthquake clustering versus the Poisson model
A.J. Michael
1997, Geophysical Research Letters (24) 1891-1894
Testing earthquake prediction methods requires statistical techniques that compare observed success to random chance. One technique is to produce simulated earthquake catalogs and measure the relative success of predicting real and simulated earthquakes. The accuracy of these tests depends on the validity of the statistical model...
Variability in perceived satisfaction of reservoir management objectives
W.J. Owen, T.K. Gates, M. Flug
1997, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (123) 147-153
Fuzzy set theory provides a useful model to address imprecision in interpreting linguistically described objectives for reservoir management. Fuzzy membership functions can be used to represent degrees of objective satisfaction for different values of management variables. However, lack of background information, differing experiences and qualifications, and complex interactions of influencing...
Crustal structure along the west flank of the Cascades, western Washington
K.C. Miller, Gordon R. Keller, J.M. Gridley, James H. Luetgert, Walter D. Mooney, H. Thybo
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 17857-17873
Knowledge of the crustal structure of the Washington Cascades and adjacent Puget Lowland is important to both earthquake hazards studies and geologic studies of the evolution of this tectonically active region. We present a model for crustal velocity structure derived from analysis of seismic refraction/wide-angle reflection data collected in 1991...
Stable isotope evidence for an atmospheric origin of desert nitrate deposits in northern Chile and southern California, U.S.A.
J.K. Böhlke, G. E. Ericksen, K. Revesz
1997, Chemical Geology (136) 135-152
Natural surficial accumulations of nitrate-rich salts in the Atacama Desert, northern Chile, and in the Death Valley region of the Mojave Desert, southern California, are well known, but despite many geologic and geochemical studies, the origins of the nitrates have remained controversial. N...
Invading species in the Eel River, California: Successes, failures, and relationships with resident species
L. R. Brown, P.B. Moyle
1997, Environmental Biology of Fishes (49) 271-291
We examined invasions of non-native fishes into the Eel River, California. At least 16 species of fish have been introduced into the drainage which originally supported 12-14 fish species. Our study was prompted by the unauthorized introduction in 1979 of Sacramento squawfish, Ptychocheilus grandis, a large predatory cyprinid. From 1986...
A test of the double-shearing model of flow for granular materials
J.C. Savage, D.A. Lockner
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 12287-12294
The double-shearing model of flow attributes plastic deformation in granular materials to cooperative slip on conjugate Coulomb shears (surfaces upon which the Coulomb yield condition is satisfied). The strict formulation of the double-shearing model then requires that the slip lines in the material coincide with the Coulomb shears. Three different...
Evidence for radionuclide transport by sea ice
D.A. Meese, E. Reimnitz, W. B. Tucker III, A. J. Gow, J. Bischof, D. Darby
1997, Conference Paper, Science of the Total Environment
Ice and ice-borne sediments were collected across the Arctic Basin during the Arctic Ocean Section, 1994 (AOS-94), a recent US/Canada trans- Arctic expedition. Sediments were analysed for 137Cs, clay mineralogy and carbon. Concentrations of 137Cs ranged from 5 to 73 Bq kg-1 in the ice- borne sediments. Concentrations of ice...
Daily air temperature interpolated at high spatial resolution over a large mountainous region
R. Dodson, D. Marks
1997, Climate Research (8) 1-20
Two methods are investigated for interpolating daily minimum and maximum air temperatures (Tmin and Tmax) at a 1 km spatial resolution over a large mountainous region (830000 km2) in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. The methods were selected because of their ability to (1) account for the effect of elevation on temperature and...
Transgressive systems tract development and incised-valley fills within a quaternary estuary-shelf system: Virginia inner shelf, USA
A.M. Foyle, G.F. Oertel
1997, Marine Geology (137) 227-249
High-frequency Quaternary glacioeustasy resulted in the incision of six moderate- to high-relief fluvial erosion surfaces beneath the Virginia inner shelf and coastal zone along the updip edges of the Atlantic continental margin. Fluvial valleys up to 5 km wide, with up to 37 m of relief and thalweg depths of...
Formation of ferric iron crusts in Quaternary sediments of Lake Baikal, Russia, and implications for paleoclimate
R.G. Deike, L. Granina, E. Callender, J. J. McGee
1997, Marine Geology (139) 21-46
Phosphate-bearing, ferric iron and siliceous crusts ranging in age from Recent to approximately 65,000 yr B.P. are observed in sediments of Lake Baikal. In younger sediments the crusts are at the base of a spectrum of secondary iron and manganese oxides that accumulate near the sediment/water interface in the zone...
Sr isotope evidence for a lacustrine origin for the upper Miocene to Pliocene Bouse Formation, lower Colorado River trough, and implications for timing of Colorado Plateau uplift
J.E. Spencer, P. J. Patchett
1997, Geological Society of America Bulletin (109) 767-778
The upper Miocene to Pliocene Bouse Formation in the lower Colorado River trough, which consists largely of siltstone with basal tufa and marl, has been interpreted as estuarine on the basis of paleontology. This interpretation requires abrupt marine inundation that has been linked...
Debris-flow initiation experiments using diverse hydrologic triggers
Mark E. Reid, Richard G. LaHusen, Richard M. Iverson
1997, Conference Paper, International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation: Mechanics, Prediction, and Assessment, Proceedings
Controlled debris-flow initiation experiments focused on three hydrologic conditions that can trigger slope failure: localized ground-water inflow; prolonged moderate-intensity rainfall; and high-intensity rainfall. Detailed monitoring of slope hydrology and deformation provided exceptionally complete data on conditions preceding and accompanying slope failure and debris-flow mobilization. Ground-water inflow and high-intensity sprinkling led...
Hazard evaluation of inorganics, singly and in mixtures, to Flannelmouth Sucker Catostomus latipinnis in the San Juan River, New Mexico
S. J. Hamilton, K.J. Buhl
1997, Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (38) 296-308
Larval flannelmouth sucker (Catostomus latipinnis) were exposed to arsenate, boron, copper, molybdenum, selenate, selenite, uranium, vanadium, and zinc singly, and to five mixtures of five to nine inorganics. The exposures were conducted in reconstituted water representative of the San Juan River near Shiprock, New Mexico. The mixtures simulated environmental ratios...
Effects of climate change on freshwater ecosystems of the south-eastern United States and the Gulf Coast of Mexico
P. J. Mulholland, G.R. Best, C.C. Coutant, G.M. Hornberger, J.L. Meyer, P.J. Robinson, J.R. Stenberg, R.E. Turner, F. Vera-Herrera, R.G. Wetzel
1997, Hydrological Processes (11) 949-970
The south-eastern United States and Gulf Coast of Mexico is physiographically diverse, although dominated by a broad coastal plain. Much of the region has a humid, warm temperate climate with little seasonality in precipitation but strong seasonality in runoff owing to high rates of summer evapotranspiration. The climate of southern...
Holocene vegetation and historic grazing impacts at Capitol Reef National Park reconstructed using packrat middens
K.L. Cole, N. Henderson, D.S. Shafer
1997, Great Basin Naturalist (57) 315-326
Mid- to late-Holocene vegetation change from a remote high-desert site was reconstructed using plant macrofossils and pollen from 9 packrat middens ranging from 0 to 5400 yr in age. Presettlement middens consistently contained abundant macrofossils of plant species palatable to large herbivores that are now absent or reduced, such as...
Using mark-recapture methods to estimate fish abundance in small mountain lakes
Robert E. Gresswell, W.J. Liss, G.A. Lomnicky, E. Deimling, Robert L. Hoffman, T. Tyler
1997, Northwest Science (71) 39-44
The majority of lacustrine fish populations in the western USA are located far from the nearest road. Although mark-recapture techniques are widely accepted for estimating population abundance, these techniques have been broadly ignored for fisheries surveys in remote mountain lakes because of restricted access and associated logistical constraints. In this study, mark recapture...
Water quality variability in San Francisco Bay, Some gGeneral lessons from 1996 sampling: 1996 annual report, San Francisco estuary regional monitoring program for trace substances
J. E. Cloern, B.E. Cole, J.L. Edmunds, J.I. Baylosis
1997, Report
This report describes the results from the 1996 Regional Monitoring Program for Trace Substances (RMP). It is the fourth Annual Report from the RMP which began in 1993 and attempts to synthesize the most obvious data patterns from the last four years. This report includes data from Base Program monitoring...