Groundwater flow and solute movement to drain laterals, western San Joaquin Valley, California: 2. Quantitative hydrologic assessment
John L. Fio, S. J. Deverel
1991, Water Resources Research (27) 2247-2257
Groundwater flow modeling was used to quantitatively assess the hydrologic processes affecting ground water and solute movement to drain laterals. Modeling results were used to calculate the depth distribution of groundwater flowing into drain laterals at 1.8 m (drain lateral 1) and 2.7 m (drain lateral 2) below land surface....
Geophysical studies of the West Antarctic rift system
John C. Behrendt, W.E. LeMasurier, A. K. Cooper, Franz Tessensohn, A. Trehu, D. Damaske
1991, Tectonics (10) 1257-1273
The West Antarctic rift system extends over a 3000 × 750 km, largely ice covered area from the Ross Sea to the base of the Antarctic Peninsula, comparable in area to the Basin and Range and the East African rift system. A spectacular rift shoulder scarp along which peaks reach...
Methods for control of tick vectors of Lyme Borreliosis
T.G.T. Jaenson, D. Fish, H. S. Ginsberg, J.S. Gray, T.N. Mather, J. Piesman
1991, Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases (Suppl. 77) 151-157
During the IVth International Conference on Lyme Borreliosis in Stockholm, 1990, a workshop on control of Lyme disease vectors briefly reviewed: basic ecological principles for tick control; biocontrol of ticks; chemical control, including the use of repellents and use of permethrin-treated rodent nest material; tick control by habitat modification; and...
Dispersal of wolves (Canis lupus) in northeastern Minnesota, 1969-1989
E.M. Gese, L.D. Mech
1991, Canadian Journal of Zoology (69) 2946-2955
We examined the dispersal patterns of radio-collared wolves (Canis lupus) from 21 packs in the Superior National Forest, Minnesota, from 1969 to 1989. A total of 316 wolves (542 wolf-years) were captured, radio-collared, and followed during 21 years of radio-tracking; 75 were identified as dispersers. Both sexes dispersed...
Bats, cyanide, and gold mining
Donald R. Clark Jr.
1991, BATS Magazine (9) 17-18
Although the boom days of prospectors and gold nuggets are long gone, modern technology enables gold to continue to be extracted from ore. Unfortunately, the extraction method has often been disastrous for bats and other wildlife, an issue I first became aware of in early 1989. Phone calls from Drs....
Conservation of the yellow-shouldered blackbird Agelaius xanthomus, an endagered West Indian species
J. W. Wiley, W. Post, A. Cruz
1991, Biological Conservation (55) 119-138
The yellow-shouldered blackbird Agelaius xanthomus, endemic to Puerto Rico and Mona Island, is endangered, mainly because of brood parasitism by the shiny cowbird Molothrus bonariensis, which reached Puerto Rico at least 30 years ago. The yellow-shouldered blackbird populations have since declined, about 770–1200 remaining (470–900 on Mona Island) by 1982–1986 compared to...
Conservation genetics of the endangered Isle Royale gray wolf
R.K. Wayne, N. Lehman, D. Girman, P.J.P. Gogan, D.A. Gilbert, K. Hansen, R. O. Peterson, U.S. Seal, Andrew Eisenhawer, L.D. Mech, R.J. Krumenaker
1991, Conservation Biology (5) 41-51
The small group of wolves on Isle Royale has been studied for over three decades as a model of the relationship between large carnivores and their prey. During the last ten years the population declined from 50 individuals to as few as 12 individuals. The causes of this decline may...
Social organization in deer: Implications for localized management
W.F. Porter, N.E. Mathews, H.B. Underwood, R.W. Sage Jr., D.F. Behrend
1991, Environmental Management (15) 809-814
Populations of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) inhabiting many state and national parks and suburban areas have grown to the point that they conflict with human activities. Conflicts range from destruction of vegetation through browsing to public perception that diseases carried by deer pose threats to human health. Traditional modes of...
Eggshell modifications in captive American kestrels resulting from Aroclor 1248 in the diet
T. Peter Lowe, Rey C. Stendell
1991, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (20) 519-522
American kestrels (Falco sparverius) were fed diets containing 3 μg/g Aroclor® 1 1248 or control diets from mid-January until July. Eggs were removed from first clutches 2 to 4 days after laying ceased and shell thickness and shell dimensions were measured. Contents of the third egg of each clutch, the carcasses...
Estimates of movement and site fidelity using mark-resight data of wintering Canada geese
J.B. Hestbeck, J.D. Nichols, R.A. Malecki
1991, Ecology (72) 523-533
Population ecologists have devoted disproportionate attention to the estimation and study of birth and death rates and far less effort to rates of movement. Movement and fidelity to wintering areas have important ecological and evolutionary implications for avian populations. Previous inferences about movement among and fidelity to wintering areas have...
Use of Wetland Habitats by Selected Nongame Water Birds in Maine
J.P. Gibbs, J. R. Longcore, D.G. McAuley, J.K. Ringelman
1991, Fish and Wildlife Research No. 9
We examined the use of 87 palustrine and lacustrine wetlands by nongame water birds in central and eastern Maine using 3,527 h of observation (1,501 visits) made during April-August, 1977-85. Wetlands used by 15 species of water birds were distinguished from those not used, according to 20 habitat features. The...
Past and potential contributions of captive breeding to population recovery of the Whooping Crane
D. H. Ellis, G.F. Gee, D.G. Smith
1991, Book chapter, Acta XX Congressus Internationalis Ornithologici, Volume 4
A captive Whooping Crane colony was established at the Patuxent Wildlifa Research Center in Maryland in 1966. This colony first produced eggs in 1975 and has produced 252 eggs through 1990. From 1976 to 1984, 73 eggs were sent Io Grays Lake, Idaho, the site of the first Whooplng Crane...
Infrared spectroscopic examination of the interaction of urea with the naturally occurring zeolite clinoptilolite
D.M. Byler, W.V. Gerasimowicz, V.M. Stockette, D. D. Eberl
1991, Microchemical Journal (44) 130-139
Infrared spectroscopy has shown for the first time that the naturally occurring zeolite clinoptilolite can absorb urea, (NH2)2CO, under ambient conditions from either aqueous or ethanolic solutions. The two strongest NH stretching bands at 3441 and 3344 cm−1 in pure, solid urea shift to higher frequency (about 3504 and 3401 cm−1)...
Sedimentary facies and depositional environments of early Mesozoic Newark Supergroup basins, eastern North America
J. P. Smoot
1991, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (84) 369-423
The early Mesozoic Newark Supergroup consists of continental sedimentary rocks and basalt flows that occupy a NE-trending belt of elongate basins exposed in eastern North America. The basins were filled over a period of 30–40 m.y. spanning the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic, prior to the opening of the north...
Middle to late Cenozoic magmatism of the southeastern Colorado Plateau and central Rio Grande rift (New Mexico and Arizona, U.S.A.): A model for continental rifting
W.S. Baldridge, F.V. Perry, D. T. Vaniman, L.D. Nealey, B. D. Leavy, A.W. Laughlin, P. Kyle, Y. Bartov, G. Steinitz, E.S. Gladney
1991, Tectonophysics (197) 327-354
The region of the present Rio Grande rift and southeastern Colorado Plateau underwent lithospheric extension during middle to late Cenozoic deformation affecting the entire southwestern U.S. Lithospheric mantle was disrupted, and in many regions displaced or replaced by asthenospheric mantle at depths from which basaltic magmas were derived and erupted...
Generation of trondhjemite from partial melting of dacite under granulite facies conditions: An example from the New Jersey Highlands, USA
J.H. Puffer, R.A. Volkert
1991, Precambrian Research (51) 115-125
New field and geochemical data place the Losee Metamorphic Suite (a tonalite/trondhjemite complex) of northern New Jersey into the context of a major Proterozoic continental are represented by a discontinuous belt of northern Appalachian metadacite. Samples of Losee rock range from extremely leucocratic trondhjemite locally associated with amphibolite, to banded...
Fold patterns, lateral ramps and seismicity in central Pennsylvania
H. A. Pohn, J.L. Coleman Jr.
1991, Tectonophysics (186) 133-149
The Susquehanna lateral ramp crosses the entire length of Pennsylvania in a NNE direction and extends into southern New York State. Its presence was first suspected because of a dramatic change in fold wavelength across the Susquehanna River, seen on both side-looking airborne radar (SLAR *) data and the geologic...
40Ar/39Ar systematics and argon diffusion in amber: Implications for ancient earth atmospheres
G. P. Landis, L.W. Snee
1991, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (97) 63-67
Argon isotope data indicate retained argon in bulk amber (matrix gas) is radiogenic [40Ar/39Ar ≃32o] than the much more abundant surface absorbed argon [40Ar/39Ar ≃295.5]. Neutron-induced 39Ar is retained in amber during heating experiments to 150° -250°C, with no evidence of recoiled 39Ar found after irradiation. A maximum permissible volume diffusion coefficient...
Tectonic development of passive continental margins of the southern and central Red Sea with a comparison to Wilkes Land, Antarctica
R. G. Bohannon, S.L. Eittreim
1991, Tectonophysics (198) 129-154
The continental margins of the southern and central Red Sea and most of Wilkes Land, Antarctica have bulk crustal configurations and detailed structures that are best explained by a prolonged history of magmatic expansion that followed a brief, but intense period of mechanical extension. Extension on the Red Sea margins...
Age and petrology of the Tertiary As Sarat volcanic field, southwestern Saudi Arabia
Edward A. du Bray, Douglas B. Stoeser, Edwin D. McKee
1991, Tectonophysics (198) 155-180
Harrat As Sarat forms the second smallest and southernmost of the basalt fields of western Saudi Arabia and is part of a voluminous Red Sea rift-related continental alkali basalt province. The rocks of the As Sarat were emplaced during the first stage of Red Sea rifting and represent the northernmost...
Remote estimation of the diffuse attenuation coefficient in a moderately turbid estuary
R. P. Stumpf, J.R. Pennock
1991, Remote Sensing of Environment (38) 183-191
Solutions of the radiative transfer equation are used to derive relationships of water reflectance to the diffuse attenuation coefficient (K) in moderately turbid water (K > 0.5 m−1). Data sets collected from the NOAA AVHRR and in situ observations from five different dates confirm the appropriateness of these relationships, in particular the...
Effects of wetlands creation on groundwater flow
B.R. Hensel, M.V. Miller
1991, Journal of Hydrology (126) 293-314
Changes in groundwater flow were observed near four Experimental Wetland Areas (EWAs) constructed along a reach of the Des Plaines River in northeastern Illinois. These changes were observed during monthly monitoring of groundwater elevation in nested piezometers and shallow observation wells before and after the wetlands were filled with water....
The record of Pliocene sea-level change at Enewetak Atoll
Bruce R. Wardlaw, T. M. Quinn
1991, Quaternary Science Reviews (10) 247-258
Detailed seismic stratigraphy, lithostratigraphy, and chemostratigraphy indicate that atoll-wide subaerial exposure surfaces (major disconformities) developed during major sea-level lowstands form prominent seismic reflectors and are coincident with biostratigraphic breaks in the Plio-Pleistocene on Enewetak Atoll. Sea-level models based on the stratigraphic position and age of major disconformities suggest a maximum...
Steady- and non-steady-state carbonate-silicate controls on atmospheric CO2
E.T. Sundquist
1991, Quaternary Science Reviews (10) 283-296
Two contrasting hypotheses have recently been proposed for the past long-term relation between atmospheric CO2 and the carbonate-silicate geochemical cycle. One approach (Berner, 1990) suggests that CO2 levels have varied in a manner that has maintained chemical weathering and carbonate sedimentation at a steady state with respect to tectonically controlled decarbonation reactions....
Pliocene-climate history of the western United States derived from lacustrine ostracodes
R. M. Forester
1991, Quaternary Science Reviews (10) 133-146
Pliocene sediments from several sites in western North America contain ostracodes indicating deposition in lacustrine and wetland settings. The ostracodes offer a means of reconstructing the aquatic paleoenvironment. Because water temperature, chemistry, and lake volume are coupled to climate, reconstruction of these parameters provides a direct insight into Pliocene climate....