The cumulative effect of consecutive winters' snow depth on moose and deer populations: a defence
R.E. McRoberts, L.D. Mech, R. O. Peterson
1995, Journal of Animal Ecology (64) 131-135
1. L. D. Mech et al. presented evidence that moose Alces alces and deer Odocoileus virginianus population parameters re influenced by a cumulative effect of three winters' snow depth. They postulated that snow depth affects adult ungulates cumulatively from winter to winter and results in measurable offspring effects after the...
Mineral resources, environmental issues, and land use
Carroll Ann Hodges
1995, Science (268) 1305-1312
Contrary to predictions from the 1950s through the mid-1980s, persistent shortages of nonfuel minerals have not occurred, despite prodigious consumption, and world reserves have increased. Global availability of raw materials is relevant to policy decisions regarding mineral development and land use. Justification for environmental protection may exceed...
Biological consequences of relocating grizzly bears in the Yellowstone ecosystem
Bonnie M. Blanchard, Richard R. Knight
1995, Journal of Wildlife Management (59) 560-565
Relocating grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) from human/bear conflict situations has been a standard management procedure. Using data from Yellowstone National Park, we present components of situations that may affect the outcome of a relocation. Survival rates of transported bears were lower (lx = 0.83) (P = 0.001) than those not...
Further evidence for a low U/Pb source in the moon: U-Th-Pb, Sm-Nd, and Ar-Ar, isotopic systematics of lunar meteorite Yamato-793169
Noriko Torigoye-Kita, Keiji Misawa, G. Brent Dalrymple, Mitsunobu Tatsumoto
1995, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (59) 2621-2632
The coarse-grained lunar meteorites, Yamato-793169 and Asuka-881757, represent a new type of low-Ti mare basalt. This paper reports the results of a U-Th-Pb, Sm-Nd, and Ar-Ar isotopic study of Yamato-793169 performed as part of a consortium studies of lunar basaltic meteorites. The isotopic study was carried out on a small...
Criteria for incipient motion of spherical sediment particles
Chi-Hai Ling
1995, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (121) 472-478
Initiation of bed-load transport of uniform spherical sediment particles on a horizontal bed in an open-channel flow is studied. On the basis of micromechanical and fluid dynamical considerations, two separate criteria for the initiation of motion are derived: one for rolling and one for lifting. Fluid forces such as drag,...
Geomagnetism applications
Wallace H. Campbell
1995, Circular 1109
The social uses of geomagnetism include the physics of the space environment, satellite damage, pipeline corrosion, electric power-grid failure, communication interference, global positioning disruption, mineral-resource detection, interpretation of the Earth's formation and structure, navigation, weather, and magnetoreception in organisms. The need for continuing observations of the geomagnetic field, together with...
Continuous-record network for collection of streamflow data in Massachusetts, 1994
T.B. Shepard
1995, Fact Sheet 139-95
Relation of precipitation quality to storm type, and deposition of dissolved chemical constituents from precipitation in Massachusetts, 1983-85
F. B. Gay, Charles S. Melching
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4224
Precipitation samples were collected for 83 storms at a rural inland site in Princeton, Mass., and 73 storms at a rural coastal site in Truro, Mass., to examine the quality of precipitation from storms and relate quality to three storm types (oceanic cyclone, continental cyclone, and cold front). At the...
Use of fathometers and electrical-conductivity probes to monitor riverbed scour at bridge piers
Donald C. Hayes, F.E. Drummond
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4164
Two methods, a fathometer system and an electrical- conductivity probe system, were developed to monitor scour at bridge piers. The scour-monitoring systems consisted of a sensor (fathometer or electrical- conductivity probe), power supply, data logger, relay, and system program. The fathometer system was installed and tested at a bridge over...
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1979 wetland classification: A review
L.M. Cowardin, F.C. Golet
1995, Vegetatio (118) 139-152
In 1979 the US Fish and Wildlife Service published and adopted a classification of wetlands and deepwater habitats of the United States. The system was designed for use in a national inventory of wetlands. It was intended to be ecologically based, to furnish the mapping units needed for the inventory,...
Observations of the surge-type Black Rapids Glacier, Alaska, during a quiescent period, 1970-92
Thomas A. Heinrichs, L.R. Mayo, D.C. Trabant, R.S. March
1995, Open-File Report 94-512
This report presents 23 years (1970 to 1992) of observations of Black Rapids Glacier, Alaska. Black Rapids Glacier is a surge-type glacier which most recently surged in 1936-37, and is currently in its quiescent phase. This glacier is of special interest because it is a potential hazard to the trans-Alaska...
GPRMODV2; one-dimensional full waveform forward modeling of dispersive ground penetrating radar data, version 2.0
Michael H. Powers, G.R. Olhoeft
1995, Open-File Report 95-58
Water, energy, and biogeochemical budget research at Sleepers River Research Watershed, Vermont
James B. Shanley, E.T. Sundquist, Carol Kendall
1995, Open-File Report 94-475
The U.S. Geological Survey has selected the Sleepers River Research Watershed (Sleepers River) near Danville, Vt., as one of five sites for the investigation of Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets (WEBB). Sleepers River was chosen because it is a well-designed outdoor laboratory with a long history of hydrologic data collection...
Selected meteorological data for an arid site near Beatty, Nye County, Nevada, calendar years 1990 and 1991
James L. Wood, Brian J. Andraski
1995, Open-File Report 94-489
Selected meteorological data were collected at a study site adjacent to a low-level radioactive-waste burial facility near Beatty, Nevada, for calendar years 1990 and 1991. Data were collected in support of ongoing studies to estimate the potential for downward movement of radionuclides into the unsaturated sediments beneath waste-burial trenches at...
Lead isotopes from the Upper Mississippi Valley district: A regional perspective
Timothy M. Millen, Robert E. Zartman, Allen Van Heyl
1995, Bulletin 2094-B
New lead isotopic data on galena from within and peripheral to the Upper Mississippi Valley lead-zinc district make it possible, by extending coverage to outlying locations, to trace the pathway traversed by the mineralizing fluids beyond the boundary of the main district. All but one of the samples exhibit elevated...
Characterization of the Cottonwood Grove and Ridgely faults near Reelfoot Lake, Tennessee, from high-resolution seismic reflection data
William J. Stephenson, Kaye M. Shedlock, Jack K. Odum
1995, Professional Paper 1538-I
In the winter of 1811-12, three of the largest historic earthquakes in the United States occurred near New Madrid, Missouri. Seismicity continues to the present day throughout a tightly clustered pattern of epicenters centered on the bootheel of Missouri, including parts of northeastern Arkansas, northwestern Tennessee, western Kentucky, and southern...
Chemical evolution of groundwater near a sinkhole lake, northern Florida: 1. Flow patterns, age of groundwater, and influence of lakewater leakage
Brian G. Katz, Terrie M. Lee, Niel Plummer, Eurybiades Busenberg
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 1549-1564
Leakage from sinkhole lakes significantly influences recharge to the Upper Floridan aquifer in poorly confined sediments in northern Florida. Environmental isotopes (oxygen 18, deuterium, and tritium), chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs: CFC-11, CCl3F; CFC-12, CCl2F2; and CFC-113, C2Cl3F3), and solute tracers were used to investigate groundwater flow patterns near Lake Barco, a seepage...
Use of a square-array direct-current resistivity method to detect fractures in crystalline bedrock in New Hampshire
J.W. Lane Jr., F.P. Haeni, W.M. Watson
1995, Groundwater (33) 476-485
Azimuthal square-array direct-current (dc) resistivity soundings were used to detect fractures in bedrock in the Mirror Lake watershed in Grafton County, New Hampshire. Soundings were conducted at a site where crystalline bedrock underlies approximately 7 m (meters) of glacial drift. Measured apparent resistivities changed with the orientation of the array....
Chemical and isotopic methods for quantifying ground-water recharge in a regional, semiarid environment
Warren W. Wood, Ward E. Sanford
1995, Groundwater (33) 458-468
The High Plains aquifer underlying the semiarid Southern High Plains of Texas and New Mexico, USA was used to illustrate solute and isotopic methods for evaluating recharge fluxes, runoff, and spatial and temporal distribution of recharge. The chloride mass-balance method can provide, under certain conditions, a time-integrated technique for evaluation...
Measurements of aquifer-storage change and specific yield using gravity surveys
D. R. Pool, J.H. Eychaner
1995, Groundwater (33) 425-432
Pinal Creek is an intermittent stream that drains a 200-square-mile alluvial basin in central Arizona. Large changes in water levels and aquifer storage occur in an alluvial aquifer near the stream in response to periodic recharge and ground-water withdrawals. Outflow components of the ground-water budget and hydraulic properties of the...
Geochemistry and petrology of Oligocene and Miocene ash-flow tuffs of the southeastern Great Basin, Nevada
Edward A. du Bray
1995, Professional Paper 1559
The White River Narrows area of Southeast Nevada contains 18 regionally distributed middle Tertiary dacite to rhyolite ash-flow tuffs. Geochemical data provide an excellent opportunity to study stratigraphic and petrologic relations of these tuffs. Chemical data for each of the tuffs are distinctive and provide a significant addition to other...
Water-quality assessment of the Trinity River Basin, Texas—Data collection, 1992–95
Larry F. Land
1995, Fact Sheet 090-95
Assessment activities in the Trinity River Basin study unit of the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program began in October 1991 with 2 years dedicated to planning, analyzing existing information, and designing data-collection networks. In October 1993, a 3-year intensive data-collection program was initiated. Guidelines were provided by the NAWQA Program...
Echo-sounding method aids earthquake hazard studies
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1995, Fact Sheet 132-95
Dramatic examples of catastrophic damage from an earthquake occurred in 1989, when the M 7.1 Lorna Prieta rocked the San Francisco Bay area, and in 1994, when the M 6.6 Northridge earthquake jolted southern California. The surprising amount and distribution of damage to private property and infrastructure emphasizes the importance...
National Water-Quality Assessment Program— Pesticides in the Trinity River Basin study unit, Texas, 1968-91
R.L. Ulery
1995, Fact Sheet 088-95
The Trinity River Basin National Water Quality Assessment (NAWQA) study-unit staff began assessment activities in 1991, and in 1992, undertook a retrospective review of existing data on pesticides. The main purpose of this review was to aid in the design of a pesticide-sampling network for the study unit. The review...
Improving electrofishing catch consistency by standardizing power
Randy W. Burkhardt, Steve Gutreuter
1995, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (15) 375-381
The electrical output of electrofishing equipment is commonly standardized by using either constant voltage or constant amperage, However, simplified circuit and wave theories of electricity suggest that standardization of power (wattage) available for transfer from water to fish may be critical for effective standardization of electrofishing. Electrofishing with standardized power...