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Page 145, results 3601 - 3625

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Habitat Suitability Index Models and Instream Flow Suitability Curves: Paddlefish
Wayne A. Hubert, Stanley H. Anderson, Peter D. Southall, Johnie H. Crance
1984, FWS/OBS 82/10.80
The original range of the paddlefish was the Mississippi River drainage and adjacent Gul f Coast dra i nage. It was once found in some of the Great Lakes (Carlson and Bonislawsky 1981). The paddlefish is generally an inhabitant of large rivers, but it occurs in reservoirs and natural lakes...
Habitat Suitability Index Models: Walleye
Thomas E. McMahon, James W. Terrell, Patrick C. Nelson
1984, FWS/OBS 82/10.56
The wall eye is native to freshwater ri vers and 1akes of Canada and the United States, with rare occurrences in brackish water (Scott and Crossman 1973). In the United States, its native range occurs primarily in drainages east of the Rocky Mountains and west of the Appalachians; however, it...
Reconnaissance geology of the Qufar Quadrangle, sheet 27/41 D, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
K.S. Kellogg
1984, Open-File Report 84-159
The Qufar quadrangle, south of the city of Ha' il in the northern Arabian Shield is underlain by late Proterozoic granitic and dioritic rocks and two volcano-sedimentary sequences. Phanerozoic rocks include a few outcrops of the Cambrian and Ordovician Saq Sandstone and small remnants of Miocene basalt flows and plugs. The...
Analyses of rock samples from the Circle Quadrangle, Alaska
H.L. Foster, R. M. O’Leary, C. M. McDougal, W. D. Menzie
1984, Open-File Report 84-479
Suspendedsediment and reservoir sedimentation data have been analyzed to determine sediment yields and transport characteristics of Tennessee streams Data from 31 reservoirs plus suspendedsediment data from TVA sampling efforts in the 1930?s and 1960?s, and U.S. Geological Survey efforts from 1975-82 have been used. Results of the analyses show that the measured suspended-sediment is...
Origin of Hawaiian tholeiite: A metasomatic model
Thomas L. Wright
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (89) 3233-3252
Two voluminous magma types generated in the mantle underlying the Pacific plate are mid‐ocean ridge tholeiite (MORB) erupted at the East Pacific Rise spreading center and Hawaiian tholeiite (HT) erupted above the Hawaiian hot spot or melting anomaly. MORB has low initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios and low amounts of all incompatible trace...
A workshop model simulating fate and effect of drilling muds and cuttings on benthic communities
Gregor T. Auble, Austin K. Andrews, David B. Hamilton, James E. Roelle, Thomas G. Shoemaker
1984, Report
Oil and gas exploration and production at marine sites has generated concern over potential environmental impacts resulting from the discharge of spent drilling muds and cuttings. This concern has led to a broad array of publicly and privately sponsored research. This report described a cooperative modeling effort designed...
Middle Cretaceous black shales at Site 530 in the southeastern Angola Basin
D.A. Stow, Walter E. Dean
1984, Initial Reports of the D.S.D.P. (75) 809-817
The middle Cretaceous black shale interval at Site 530 is 170 m thick and late Albian to Coniacian in age. The organic-carbon-rich sediments occur as 260 separate beds (average 4 cm, maximum 60 cm thick) and make up less than 10% of the recovered section. Associated lithologies are greenish, grayish,...
Species composition of fish communities in northern Wisconsin lakes: Relation to pH
J.G. Wiener, P.J. Rago, J.M. Eilers
G.R. Hendrey, editor(s)
1984, Book chapter, Early Biotic Responses to Advancing Lake Acidification. ACID-PRECIP.-SER. vol. 6
Fish communities in circumneutral Wisconsin lakes contained significantly more species than did those in acidic lakes (pH 5.1-6.0). Common, as well as rare, species occurred with lower frequency in acidic lakes than in circumneutral lakes. Certain taxa, such as minnows and darters, were either absent or rare in...
Mineral resources of the Atlantic Exclusive Economic Zone
William P. Dillon
1984, Conference Paper, Oceans Conference Record (IEEE)
Potential mineral resources of the Atlantic Exclusive Economic Zone (including the Gulf of Mexico and US Caribbean areas) include petroleum, sand and gravel, phosphorite, placer deposits of heavy mineral sands, ferromanganese nodules, and fresh water. Although major efforts have been made to search for petroleum, the oil and gas resources...
LASER MICROPROBE **4**0Ar/**3**9Ar DATING OF MINERAL GRAINS IN SITU.
J. F. Sutter, Jack B. Hartung
1984, Scanning Electron Microscopy 1525-1529
A laser-microprobe attached to a mass spectrometer for **4**0Ar/**3**9Ar age determination of single mineral grains in geological materials has been made operational at the US Geological Survey, Reston, VA. This microanalytical technique involves focusing a pulsed laser beam onto a sample contained in an ultra-high vacuum chamber attached to a...
KONOCTI BAY FAULT ZONE, LAKE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA: A REEVALUATION.
J. Michael Thompson
1984, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
The Konocti Bay Fault Zone (KBFZ), initially regarded by some as a promising liquid-dominated hydrothermal system, has been a disappointment as a geothermal prospect. Five exploratory wells have been drilled in the vicinity of the KBFZ, but none of them are producing thermal fluids; in fact, three have been abandoned....
Hydrothermal minerology of research drill hole Y-3, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
Keith E. Bargar, Melvin H. Beeson
1984, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
The approximate paragenetic sequence of hydrothermal minerals in the Y-3 U. S. Geological Survey research diamond-drill hole in Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, is: hydrothermal chalcedony, hematite, pyrite, quartz, clay minerals (smectite and mixed-layer illite-smectite), calcite, chlorite, fluorite, pyrite, quartz, zeolite minerals (analcime, dachiardite, laumontite, stilbite, and yugawaralite),...
Determination of rare-earth elements, yttrium and scandium in manganese nodules by inductively-coupled argon-plastma emission spectrometry
Terry L. Fries, Paul J Lamothe, J. J. Pesek
1984, Analytica Chimica Acta (159) 329-336
A sequential-scanning, inductively-coupled argon plasma emission spectrometer is used for the determination of the rare-earth elements, plus yttrium and scandium, in manganese nodules. Wavelength selection is optimized to minimize spectral interferences from manganese nodule components. Samples are decomposed with mixed acids in a sealed polycarbonate vessel, and elements are quantified...
Laboratory studies of volcanic jets
S. W. Kieffer, B. Sturtevant
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (89) 8253-8268
The study of the fluid dynamics of violent volcanic eruptions by laboratory experiment is described, and the important fluid-dynamic processes that can be examined in laboratory models are discussed in detail. In preliminary experiments, pure gases are erupted from small reservoirs. The gases used are Freon 12 and Freon 22,...
The group separation of the rare-earth elements and yttrium from geologic materials by cation-exchange chromatography
J.G. Crock, F.E. Lichte, T.R. Wildeman
1984, Chemical Geology (45) 149-163
Demand is increasing for the determination of the rare-earth elements (REE) and yttrium in geologic materials. Due to their low natural abundance in many materials and the interferences that occur in many methods of determination, a separation procedure utilizing gradient strong-acid cation-exchange chromatography is often used to preconcentrate and isolate...
Deformation, geochemistry, and origin of massive sulfide deposits, Gossan lead district, Virginia
J. E. Gair, J. F. Slack
1984, Economic Geology (79) 1483-1520
The Gossan Lead district is a 28-km-long, northeast-trending belt of discontinuous massive sulfide deposits in the Blue Ridge province of southwestern Virginia. The deposits, hosted by the Ashe Formation of late Proterozoic age, consist of strata-bound lenses and layers of massive pyrrhotite, minor chalcopyrite, sphalerite, and pyrite, and rare arsenopyrite...
Determination of carrier yields for neutron activation analysis using energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry
R. G. Johnson, G.A. Wandless
1984, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry Articles (81) 21-28
A new method is described for determining carrier yield in the radiochemical neutron activation analysis of rare-earth elements in silicate rocks by group separation. The method involves the determination of the rare-earth elements present in the carrier by means of energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence analysis, eliminating the need to re-irradiate samples...
Nivation landforms in the western Great Basin and their paleoclimatic significance
J. C. Dohrenwend
1984, Quaternary Research (22) 275-288
More than 10,000 nivation landforms occur in the higher mountain ranges of the western Great Basin. They range from small, subtle hollows with head scarps a few meters high and a few tens of meters long to broad, clearly defined terraces as much as 220 m wide bounded by bold,...
Post-fire recovery of California coastal sage scrub
Jon E. Keeley, Sterling C. Keeley
1984, American Midland Naturalist (111) 105-117
Postfire regeneration of the shrub and herb vegetation on eight coastal slopes of California coastal sage scrub was studied in the first two growing seasons after fire. All shrub species resprouted with the exception of the suffrutescent Lotus scoparius, though it is not known if this species was alive prior...
Seismicity at Old Faithful Geyser: an isolated source of geothermal noise and possible analogue of volcanic seismicity
S. W. Kieffer
1984, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (22) 59-95
Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone National Park, U.S.A., is a relatively isolated source of seismic noise and exhibits seismic behavior similar to that observed at many volcanoes, including "bubblequakes" that resemble B-type "earthquakes", harmonic tremor before and during eruptions, and periods of seismic quiet prior to eruptions. Although Old Faithful...
Straczekite, a new calcium barium potassium vanadate mineral from Wilson Springs, Arkansas
H. T. Evans Jr., G. Nord, J. Marinenko, C. Milton
1984, Mineralogical Magazine (48) 289-293
Straczekite occurs as a rare secondary mineral in fibrous seams, along with other V minerals (A.M. 64-713), in ore from the vanadium mine in Wilson Springs (formerly Potash Sulfur Springs), Garland County, Arkansas. It forms soft, thin laths of dark greenish black crystals up to 0.5 mm in length. Indexed...