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Page 1340, results 33476 - 33500

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ecological tracers reveal resource convergence among prey fish species in a large lake ecosystem
Gord Paterson, Scott A. Rush, Michael T. Arts, Ken G. Drouillard, G. Doug Haffner, Tim B. Johnson, Brian F. Lantry, Craig E. Hebert, Daryl J. McGoldrick, Sean M. Backus, Aaron T. Fisk
2014, Freshwater Biology (59) 2150-2161
1. We measured stable isotopes of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) and fatty acid profiles in Lake Ontario alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax), slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus) and round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) collected from 1982 to 2008 to investigate how temporal variability in these ecological tracers can relate...
Continuous uplift near the seaward edge of the Prince William Sound megathrust: Middleton Island, Alaska
James C. Savage, George Plafker, Jerry L. Svarc, Michael Lisowski
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (119) 6067-6079
Middleton Island, located at the seaward edge of the continental shelf 50 km from the base of the inner wall of the Aleutian Trench, affords an opportunity to make land-based measurements of uplift near the toe of the Prince William Sound megathrust, site of the 1964, M = 9.2, Alaska earthquake. Leveling surveys...
Arroyo channel head evolution in a flash-flood-dominated discontinuous ephemeral stream system
Stephen B. DeLong, Joel P. L. Johnson, Kelin X. Whipple
2014, Geological Society of America Bulletin (126) 1683-1701
We study whether arroyo channel head retreat in dryland discontinuous ephemeral streams is driven by surface runoff, seepage erosion, mass wasting, or some combination of these hydrogeomorphic processes. We monitored precipitation, overland flow, soil moisture, and headcut migration over several seasonal cycles at two adjacent rangeland channel heads in southern...
Slip rates and spatially variable creep on faults of the northern San Andreas system inferred through Bayesian inversion of Global Positioning System data
Jessica R. Murray, Sarah E. Minson, Jerry L. Svarc
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (119) 6023-6047
Fault creep, depending on its rate and spatial extent, is thought to reduce earthquake hazard by releasing tectonic strain aseismically. We use Bayesian inversion and a newly expanded GPS data set to infer the deep slip rates below assigned locking depths on the San Andreas, Maacama, and Bartlett Springs Faults...
Using passive integrated transponder (PIT) systems for terrestrial detection of blue-spotted salamanders (Ambystoma laterale) in situ
Kevin J. Ryan, Joseph D. Zydlewski, Aram J.K. Calhoun
2014, Herpetological Conservation and Biology (9) 97-105
Pure-diploid Blue-spotted Salamanders (Ambystoma laterale) are the smallest members of the family Ambystomatidae which makes tracking with radio-transmitters difficult because of small battery capacity. Passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags provide another tracking approach for small fossorial animals such as salamanders. We evaluated the use of portable PIT tag readers (PIT...
Engineering uses of physics-based ground motion simulations
Jack W. Baker, Nicolas Luco, Norman A. Abrahamson, Robert W. Graves, Phillip J. Maechling, Kim Olsen
2014, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 10th National Conference in Earthquake Engineering
This paper summarizes validation methodologies focused on enabling ground motion simulations to be used with confidence in engineering applications such as seismic hazard analysis and dynmaic analysis of structural and geotechnical systems. Numberical simullation of ground motion from large erthquakes, utilizing physics-based models of earthquake rupture and wave propagation, is...
Mineral Resource of the Month: Niobium
John F. Papp
2014, Earth (July 2014)
Niobium, also called columbium, is a transition metal with a very high melting point. It is in greatest demand in industrialized countries, like the United States, because of its defense-related uses in the aerospace, energy and transportation industries. Niobium is used mostly to make high-strength, low-alloy (HSLA) steel and stainless...
Diatomite in 2013
Robert D. Crangle Jr.
2014, Mining Engineering (66) 35-35
No abstract available....
Peat in 2013
Lori E. Apodaca
2014, Mining Engineering (66) 35-35
No abstract available....
Comparative responses to endocrine disrupting compounds in early life stages of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
Tara A. Duffy, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Stephen D. McCormick
2014, Aquatic Toxicology (152) 1-10
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) are endangered anadromous fish that may be exposed to feminizing endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) during early development, potentially altering physiological capacities, survival and fitness. To assess differential life stage sensitivity to common EDCs, we carried out short-term (four day) exposures using three doses each of 17α-ethinylestradiol...
Prolactin and teleost ionocytes: new insights into cellular and molecular targets of prolactin in vertebrate epithelia
Jason P. Breves, Stephen D. McCormick, Rolf O. Karlstrom
2014, General and Comparative Endocrinology (203) 21-28
The peptide hormone prolactin is a functionally versatile hormone produced by the vertebrate pituitary. Comparative studies over the last six decades have revealed that a conserved function for prolactin across vertebrates is the regulation of ion and water transport in a variety of tissues including those responsible for whole-organism ion homeostasis. In teleost fishes,...
A test of the compensatory mortality hypothesis in mountain lions: a management experiment in West-Central Montana
Hugh S. Robinson, Richard Desimone, Cynthia Hartway, Justin A. Gude, Michael J. Thompson, Michael S. Mitchell, Mark Hebblewhite
2014, Journal of Wildlife Management (78) 791-807
Mountain lions (Puma concolor) are widely hunted for recreation, population control, and to reduce conflict with humans, but much is still unknown regarding the effects of harvest on mountain lion population dynamics. Whether human hunting mortality on mountain lions is additive or compensatory is debated. Our primary objective was to...
Gemstones in 2013
Donald W. Olson
2014, Mining Engineering (66) 50-51
No abstract available....
Standardization of vitrinite reflectance measurements in shale petroleum systems: How accurate are my Ro data?
Paul C. Hackley
2014, Conference Paper
Vitrinite reflectance generally is considered the most robust thermal maturity parameter available for application to hydrocarbon exploration and petroleum system evaluation. However, until 2011 there was no standardized methodology available to provide guidelines for vitrinite reflectance measurements in shale. Efforts to correct this deficiency resulted in publication of ASTM D7708-11:...
Scale criticality in estimating ecosystem carbon dynamics
Shuqing Zhao, Shuguang Liu
2014, Global Change Biology (20) 2240-2251
Scaling is central to ecology and Earth system sciences. However, the importance of scale (i.e. resolution and extent) for understanding carbon dynamics across scales is poorly understood and quantified. We simulated carbon dynamics under a wide range of combinations of resolution (nine spatial resolutions of 250 m, 500 m, 1 km, 2 km, 5 km,...
Borates, 2013
Robert Crangle Jr.
2014, Mining Engineering (66) 35-35
No abstract available....
U.S. Geological Survey's ShakeCast: A cloud-based future
David J. Wald, Kuo-Wan Lin, Loren Turner, Nebi Bekiri
2014, Conference Paper
When an earthquake occurs, the U. S. Geological Survey (USGS) ShakeMap portrays the extent of potentially damaging shaking. In turn, the ShakeCast system, a freely-available, post-earthquake situational awareness application, automatically retrieves earthquake shaking data from ShakeMap, compares intensity measures against users’ facilities, sends notifications of potential damage to responsible parties,...