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Page 1315, results 32851 - 32875

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Hydrologic modification to improve habitat in riverine lakes: Management objectives, experimental approach, and initial conditions
Barry L. Johnson, John W. Barko, Yuri Gerasimov, William F. James, Alexander Litvinov, Teresa J. Naimo, James G. Wiener, Robert F. Gaugush, James T. Rogala, Sara J. Rogers
R.A. Schoettger, editor(s)
1996, Book chapter, Problems of Aquatic Toxicology, Biotesting, and Water Quality Management
The Finger Lakes habitat-rehabilitation project is intended to improve physical and chemical conditions for fish in six connected back water lakes in Navigation Pool 5 of the upper Missouri River. The primary management objective is to improve water temperature, dissolved oxygen concentration and current velocity during winter for bluegills, Lepomis...
The upper mantle structure of the central Rio Grande rift region from teleseismic P and S wave travel time delays and attenuation
P.D. Slack, P.M. Davis, W.S. Baldridge, K.H. Olsen, A. Glahn, U. Achauer, W. Spence
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 16003-16023
The lithosphere beneath a continental rift should be significantly modified due to extension. To image the lithosphere beneath the Rio Grande rift (RGR), we analyzed teleseismic travel time delays of both P and S wave arrivals and solved for the attenuation of P and S waves for four seismic experiments spanning the Rio Grande rift. Two tomographic inversions...
Paleomagnetism of Jurassic radiolarian chert above the Coast Range ophiolite at Stanley Mountain, California, and implications for its paleogeographic origins
J.T. Hagstrum, B.L. Murchey
1996, Geological Society of America Bulletin (108) 643-652
Upper Jurassic red tuffaceous chert above the Coast Range ophiolite at Stanley Mountain, California (lat 35°N, long 240°E), contains three components of remanent magnetization. The first component (A; removed by ≈100–≈200°C) has a direction near the present-day field for southern California and is...
A simulation-based approach for designing effective field-sampling programs to evaluate contamination risk of groundwater supplies
R. Nordqvist, C.I. Voss
1996, Hydrogeology Journal (4) 23-39
An approach to model discrimination and network design for evaluation of groundwater contamination risk is proposed and demonstrated by application to a site in a glaciofluvial aquifer in Sweden. The approach consists of first hypothesizing alternative conceptual models of hydrogeology at the site on the basis of both quantitative data...
Age dating of shallow groundwater with chlorofluorocarbons, tritium/helium: 3, and flow path analysis, southern New Jersey coastal plain
Zoltan Szabo, D.E. Rice, Niel Plummer, E. Busenberg, S. Drenkard, P. Schlosser
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 1023-1038
Groundwater age dating through the combination of transient tracer methods (chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and tritium/helium 3 (3H/3He)) and groundwater flow path analysis is useful for investigating groundwater travel times, flow patterns, and recharge rates, as demonstrated by this study of the homogeneous shallow, unconfined Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system in the southern New...
Vertical spatial coherence model for a transient signal forward-scattered from the sea surface
E.J. Yoerger, S.T. McDaniel
1996, IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering (21) 24-36
The treatment of acoustic energy forward scattered from the sea surface, which is modeled as a random communications scatter channel, is the basis for developing an expression for the time-dependent coherence function across a vertical receiving array. The derivation of this model uses linear filter theory applied to the Fresnel-corrected...
Integrating a geographic information system, a scientific visualization system, and a precipitation model
L.E. Hay, L.K. Knapp
1996, Water Resources Bulletin (32) 357-369
Investigating natural, potential, and human-induced impacts on hydrologic systems commonly requires complex modeling with overlapping data requirements, plus massive amounts of one- to four-dimensional data at multiple scales and formats. Given the complexity of most hydrologic studies, the requisite software infrastructure must incorporate many components including simulation modeling and spatial...
Experimental investigation and modeling of uranium (VI) transport under variable chemical conditions
M. Kohler, G.P. Curtis, D.B. Kent, J.A. Davis
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 3539-3551
The transport of adsorbing and complexing metal ions in porous media was investigated with a series of batch and column experiments and with reactive solute transport modeling. Pulses of solutions containing U(VI) were pumped through columns filled with quartz grains, and the breakthrough of U(VI) was studied as a function...
The initial cooling of pahoehoe flow lobes
L. Keszthelyi, R. Denlinger
1996, Bulletin of Volcanology (58) 5-18
In this paper we describe a new thermal model for the initial cooling of pahoehoe lava flows. The accurate modeling of this initial cooling is important for understanding the formation of the distinctive surface textures on pahoehoe lava flows as well as being the first step in modeling such key...
Failure in laboratory fault models in triaxial tests
J.C. Savage, D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 22215-22224
A model of a fault in the Earth is a sand-filled saw cut in a granite cylinder subjected to a triaxial test. The saw cut is inclined at an angle α to the cylinder axis, and the sand filling is intended to represent gouge. The triaxial test subjects the granite...
Integrating a geographic information system, a scientific visualization system and an orographic precipitation model
L. Hay, L. Knapp
1996, IAHS-AISH Publication 123-131
Investigating natural, potential, and man-induced impacts on hydrological systems commonly requires complex modelling with overlapping data requirements, and massive amounts of one- to four-dimensional data at multiple scales and formats. Given the complexity of most hydrological studies, the requisite software infrastructure must incorporate many components including simulation modelling, spatial analysis...
Potential climatic impacts of vegetation change: A regional modeling study
J.H. Copeland, R.A. Pielke, T.G.F. Kittel
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (101) 7409-7418
The human species has been modifying the landscape long before the development of modern agrarian techniques. Much of the land area of the conterminous United States is currently used for agricultural production. In certain regions this change in vegetative cover from its natural state may have led to local climatic...
The enigma of the New Madrid earthquakes of 1811-1812
A. C. Johnston, E.S. Schweig
1996, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences (24) 339-384
Continental North America's greatest earthquake sequence struck on the western frontier of the United States. The frontier was not then California but the valley of the continent's greatest river, the Mississippi, and the sequence was the New Madrid earthquakes of the winter of 1811–1812. Their described impacts on the land...
Genetic characteristics of fluid inclusions in sphalerite from the Silesian-Cracow ores, Poland
A. Kozlowski, D. L. Leach, J.G. Viets
1996, Prace - Panstwowego Instytutu Geologicznego (154) 72-84
Fluid inclusion studies in sphalerite from early-stage Zn-Pb mineralization in the Silesian-Cracow region (southern Poland), yielded homogenization temperatures (Th) from 80 to 158??C. Vertical thermal gradient of the parent fluids was 6 to 10??C, and the ore crystallization temperature ranges varied from <10??C at deep levels to 25??C at shallow...
Mobility of 2,2',5,5'-tetrachlorobiphenyl in model systems containing bottom sediments and water from the lower Fox River, Wisconsin
J. F. Elder, R.V. James, J. J. Steuer
1996, Journal of Great Lakes Research (22) 697-706
Sediment-water partitioning and diffusive transport of 2,2’,5,5’-tetrachlorobiphenyl, PCB congener IUPAC #52 (TCB52) were examined in laboratory experiments with sediments from two sites in the lower Fox River, Wisconsin. Native water was pumped at controlled flow rates through cells containing sediments amended...
Geochemistry of autochthonous and hypautochthonous siderite-dolomite coal-balls (Foord Seam, Bolsovian, Upper Carboniferous), Nova Scotia, Canada
E.L. Zodrow, P.C. Lyons, M.A. Millay
1996, International Journal of Coal Geology (29) 199-216
The 11–13 m thick Foord Seam in the fault-bounded Stellarton Basin, Nova Scotia, is the thickest seam from the Euramerican floral province known to contain coal-balls. In addition to the first discovery of autochthonous coal-balls in the Foord Seam, Nova Scotia,...
Kinetic and mineralogic controls on the evolution of groundwater chemistry and 87Sr/86Sr in a sandy silicate aquifer, northern Wisconsin, USA
T.D. Bullen, D. P. Krabbenhoft, C. Kendall
1996, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (60) 1807-1821
Substantial flowpath-related variability of 87Sr/86Sr is observed in groundwaters collected from the Trout Lake watershed of northern Wisconsin. In the extensive shallow aquifer composed of sandy glacial outwash, groundwater is recharged either by seepage from lakes or by precipitation that infiltrates the inter-lake uplands. 87Sr/86Sr of groundwater derived mainly as...
Identification of groundwater parameters at Columbus, Mississippi, using a 3D inverse flow and transport model
H.C. Barlebo, D. Rosbjerg, M. C. Hill
1996, IAHS-AISH Publication (237) 189-208
An extensive amount of data including hydraulic heads, hydraulic conductivities and concentrations of several solutes from controlled injections have been collected during the MADE 1 and MADE 2 experiments at a heterogeneous site near Columbus, Mississippi. In this paper the use of three-dimensional inverse groundwater models including simultaneous estimation of...
Observations and analysis of self-similar branching topology in glacier networks
D.B. Bahr, S.D. Peckham
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 25511-25521
Glaciers, like rivers, have a branching structure which can be characterized by topological trees or networks. Probability distributions of various topological quantities in the networks are shown to satisfy the criterion for self-similarity, a symmetry structure which might be used to simplify future models of glacier dynamics. Two analytical methods...
Diagenesis, compaction, and fluid chemistry modeling of a sandstone near a pressure seal: Lower Tuscaloosa Formation, Gulf Coast
Suzanne Weedman, Susan L. Brantley, R. Shiraki, Simon R. Poulson
1996, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (80) 1045-1063
Petrographic, isotopic, and fluid-inclusion evidence from normally and overpressured sand-stones of the lower Tuscaloosa Formation (Upper Cretaceous) in the Gulf Coast documents quartz-overgrowth precipitation at 90°C or less, calcite cement precipitation at approximately 100° and 135°C, and prismatic quartz cement precipitation at about 125°C. Textural evidence suggests that carbonate cement...
Climate change and northern prairie wetlands: Simulations of long-term dynamics
Karen A. Poiani, W. Carter Johnson, George A. Swanson, Thomas C. Winter
1996, Limnology and Oceanography (41) 871-881
A mathematical model (WETSIM 2.0) was used to simulate wetland hydrology and vegetation dynamics over a 32-yr period (1961–1992) in a North Dakota prairie wetland. A hydrology component of the model calculated changes in water storage based on precipitation, evapotranspiration, snowpack, surface runoff, and subsurface inflow. A spatially explicit vegetation...
Reactive solute transport in acidic streams
R. E. Broshears
1996, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (90) 195-204
Spatial and temporal profiles of Ph and concentrations of toxic metals in streams affected by acid mine drainage are the result of the interplay of physical and biogeochemical processes. This paper describes a reactive solute transport model that provides a physically and thermodynamically quantitative interpretation of these profiles. The model...
Evidence for multiple mechanisms of crustal contamination of magma from compositionally zoned plutons and associated ultramafic intrusions of the Alaska Range
P.W. Reiners, B.K. Nelson, S.W. Nelson
1996, Journal of Petrology (37) 261-292
Models of continental crustal magmagenesis commonly invoke the interaction of mafic mantle-derived magma and continental crust to explain geochemical and petrologic characteristics of crustal volcanic and plutonic rocks. This interaction and the specific mechanisms of crustal contamination associated with it are poorly understood. An excellent opportunity to study the...
Depositional controls on coal distribution and quality in the Eocene Brunner Coal Measures, Buller Coalfield, South Island, New Zealand
R. M. Flores, R. Sykes
1996, International Journal of Coal Geology (29) 291-336
The Buller Coalfield on the West Coast of the South Island, New Zealand, contains the Eocene Brunner Coal Measures. The coal measures unconformably overlie Paleozoic-Cretaceous basement rocks and are conformably overlain by, and laterally interfinger with, the Eocene marine Kaiata Formation. This study examines the lithofacies frameworks of the coal...