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Page 1346, results 33626 - 33650

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Temporal variability of shoreline positions and coastal wetlands along lower Green Bay, Oconto and Brown counties, Wisconsin
Gerald L. Shideler
1994, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2254
The positions of shorelines and the areal extent of adjacent coastal wetland tracts in the Great Lakes region have exhibited substantial temporal variability during both prehistoric and historical times. Shoreline migration has resulted in environmental problems such as flooding and the coastal erosion of lakefront property, as well as the...
Map showing depth to bedrock of the Tacoma and part of the Centralia 30' x 60' quadrangles, Washington
Jane M. Buchanan-Banks, Donley S. Collins
1994, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2265
The heavily populated Puget Sound region in the State of Washington has experienced moderate to large earthquakes in the recent past (Nuttli, 1952; Mullineaux and others, 1967). Maps showing thickness of unconsolidated sedimentary deposits are useful aids in delineating areas where damage to engineered structures can result from increased shaking...
Two- and three-dimensional pathline analysis of contributing areas to public-supply wells of Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Paul M. Barlow
1994, Groundwater (32) 399-410
Steady-state two- and three-dimensional ground-water-flow models coupled with particle tracking (fluid-particle pathline analysis) have been evaluated to determine their relative effectiveness in delineating contributing areas and particle traveltimes to public-supply wells in two contrasting stratified-drift aquifers of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Several contributing areas delineated by the three-dimensional pathline analysis do...
Permeability-porosity relationships in sedimentary rocks
Philip H. Nelson
1994, Log Analyst (35) 38-62
In many consolidated sandstone and carbonate formations, plots of core data show that the logarithm of permeability (k) is often linearly proportional to porosity (??). The slope, intercept, and degree of scatter of these log(k)-?? trends vary from formation to formation, and these variations are attributed to differences in initial...
Bathymetry of the west-central slope of the island of Hawaii
William W. Chadwick, James G. Moore, Christopher G. Fox
1994, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2269
This map shows the topography of a small part of the subaerial western part of the Island of Hawaii as well as modern multibeam bathymetry of the west submarine flank, which covers a total area of about 8,500 km2 ( see index map). The map area includes part of the...
Effect of subatmospheric pressure on the performance of an automated packed-column nitrogen desorption system
Barnaby J. Watten, W. J. Ridge, Vincent A. Mudrak
1994, Aquacultural Engineering (13) 41-58
A portable vacuum degasser was developed to satisfy seasonal hatchery pretreatment needs. Dissolved-gas pressures in water exiting a packed column were regulated automatically with a unique feedback control loop incorporating a gasometer, pressure transducer, electronic (PID) controller and an electrically actuated pump discharge valve. The flow capacity of the system...
Static stress changes and the triggering of earthquakes
Geoffrey King, Ross S. Stein, Jian Lin
1994, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (84) 935-953
To understand whether the 1992 M = 7.4 Landers earthquake changed the proximity to failure on the San Andreas fault system, we examine the general problem of how one earthquake might trigger another. The tendency of rocks to fail in a brittle manner is thought to be a function of...
Seismic character of gas hydrates on the Southeastern U.S. continental margin
Myung W. Lee, D. R. Hutchinson, Warren F. Agena, William P. Dillon, J. J. Miller, B.A. Swift
1994, Marine Geophysical Research (16) 163-184
Gas hydrates are stable at relatively low temperature and high pressure conditions; thus large amounts of hydrates can exist in sediments within the upper several hundred meters below the sea floor. The existence of gas hydrates has been recognized and mapped mostly on the basis of high amplitude Bottom Simulating...
Development of historic and synthesized unregulated streamflow for the James River in North Dakota and South Dakota, 1983-91
Douglas G. Emerson, Colin A. Niehus
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4018
Operation of the Garrison Diversion Unit may have some affect on the hydrology of the James River in North Dakota and South Dakota. The Garrison Diversion Unit Monthly Operations Model was developed to analyze a wide range of streamflow conditions that could occur in the James River Basin. The purpose...
Flock sizes and sex ratios of canvasbacks in Chesapeake Bay and North Carolina
G. Michael Haramis, Eric L. Derleth, William A. Link
1994, Journal of Wildlife Management (58) 123-131
Knowledge of the distribution, size, and sex ratios of flocks of wintering canvasbacks (Aythya valisineria) is fundamental to understanding the species' winter ecology and providing guidelines for management. Consequently, in winter 1986-87, we conducted 4 monthly aerial photographic surveys to investigate temporal changes in distribution, size, and sex ratios of...
Genetic links among fluid cycling, vein formation, regional deformation, and plutonism in the Juneau gold belt, southeastern Alaska
Lance D. Miller, Richard J. Goldfarb, George E. Gehrels, Lawrence W. Snee
1994, Geology (22) 203-206
Gold-bearing quartz vein systems in the Juneau gold belt formed within a 160-km- long by 5- to 8-km-wide zone along the western margin of the Coast Mountains, Alaska. Vein systems are spatially associated with shear zones adjacent to terrane-bounding, mid-Cretaceous thrust faults. Analysis of vein orientations and sense of shear...
Effects of urban flood-detention reservoirs on peak discharges in Gwinnett County, Georgia
G. W. Hess, E. J. Inman
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4004
The effects of flood-detention reservoirs on peak discharges along downstream reaches in six urban drainage basins in Gwinnett County, Georgia, were studied during 1986-93 using the U.S. Geological Survey's Distributed Routing Rainfall-Runoff Model (DR3M). Short-term rainfall-runoff data were collected at selected stations in six urban drainage basins in Gwinnett County....
Potential flood hazards and hydraulic characteristics of distributary-flow areas in Maricopa County, Arizona
H. W. Hjalmarson
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4169
Flood hazards of distributary-flow areas in Maricopa County, Arizona, can be distinguished on the basis of morphological features. Five distributary-flow areas represent the range of flood-hazard degree in the study area. Descriptive factors, including the presence of desert varnish and the absence of saguaro cactus, are more useful than traditional...
Simulation of rainfall-runoff for basins in the Rolla, Missouri, area
Robert R. Holmes Jr., J. W. East
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4019
Important rainfall-runoff characteristics for basins in the Rolla, Missouri, area were determined to be overland flow, interception storage, interception losses, evaporation, and infiltration. Using these characteristics, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Stormwater Management Model (SWMM) was configured for basins in the study area. The data network for the model calibration...
Water resources of Hot Springs County, Wyoming
Maria Plafcan, Kathy Muller Ogle
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4141
The wells and springs inventoried in Hot Springs County most commonly had been completed in or issued from the Quaternary alluvium, Quaternary terrace deposits, Fort Union and Mesaverde Formations, Cody Shale, and the Frontier and Chugwater Formations. The largest discharges measured were from the Quaternary terrace deposits (400 gallons per...
Accuracy, reproducibility, and interpretation of fatty acid methyl ester profiles of model bacterial communities
Haack S. Kidd, H. Garchow, D.A. Odelson, L.J. Forney, M.J. Klug
1994, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (60) 2483-2493
We determined the accuracy and reproducibility of whole-community fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis with two model bacterial communities differing in composition by using the Microbial ID, Inc. (MIDI), system. The biomass, taxonomic structure, and expected MIDI-FAME profiles under a variety of environmental conditions were known for these model communities...
Stream-aquifer interactions in the Straight River area, Becker and Hubbard counties, Minnesota
J. R. Stark, David S. Armstrong, Daniel R. Zwilling
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4009
The Straight River, in north-central Minnesota, is a trout stream having cold, clear water. The 75-square-mile Straight River watershed contributes flow to the stream. The watershed is underlain by highly transmissive surficial and confined-drift aquifers. Ground-water discharge from these aquifers sustains flow in the Straight River, and the cold water...
Geomorphic response to channel modifications of Skuna River at the State Highway 9 crossing at Bruce, Calhoun County, Mississippi
K.V. Wilson Jr., D.P. Turnipseed
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4000
Skuna River at State Highway 9 at Bruce, Calhoun County, Mississippi, has geomorphically responded to channel modifications by lowering of the channel bed through degradation, which heightened and steepened channel banks and induced widening. Skuna River Canal (Skuna River) has typically degraded about 16.5 feet and widened about 150 feet...
Historical and potential scour around bridge piers and abutments of selected stream crossings in Indiana
D. S. Mueller, R. L. Miller, J.T. Wilson
1994, Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4066
Historical scour data were collected by means of geophysical techniques and used to evaluate the scour-computation procedures recommended by the U.S. Federal Highway Administration and 12 other pub- lished pier-scour equations. Geophysical data were collected at 10 bridges in Indiana. For this evaluation it was assumed that the historical scour...
Revised Ages for Laminated Sediment and a Holocene-Marker Diatom from the Northern California Continental Slope
E. Hemphill-Haley, J.V. Gardner
1994, Quaternary Research (41) 131-135
Conventional and accelerator mass spectrometry 14C ages indicate that laminated sediment in three cores from the northern California continental slope near 38??N and 39??N were deposited between 42,000 and 25,000 yr B.P. This revises and refines our previous estimates that laminated sediment accumulated during the late Pleistocene to early Holocene...
Macrophage aggregates as indicators of environmental stress
V. S. Blazer, D.E. Facey, J.W. Fournie, L.A. Courtney, J.K. Summers
J.S. Stolen, T.C. Fletcher, D. P. Anderson, J.T. Zelikoff, L.E. Twerdok, S.L. Kaattari, C.C. Bayne, editor(s)
1994, Book chapter, Modulators of Fish Immune Responses: Volume 1, Models for Environmental Toxicology, Biomarkers, Immunostimulators
No abstract available at this time...