Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

68937 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 1655, results 41351 - 41375

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
210Pb balance and implications for particle transport on the continental shelf, U.S. Middle Atlantic Bight
M.P. Bacon, Rebecca A. Belastock, Michael H. Bothner
1994, Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (41) 511-535
Supply of 210Pb to the continental shelf off the northeastern United States is dominated by the deposition from the atmosphere, the rate of which is reliably known from previously published work. Excess 210Pb inventories in the shelf sediments show accumulations that are nearly in balance with the supply, even in areas of...
American White Pelicans at the Molly Islands, in Yellowstone National Park: Twenty-two years of boom-and-bust breeding, 1966-87
Kenneth L. Diem, Bruce H. Pugesek
1994, Colonial Waterbirds (17) 130-145
Systematic monitoring of nesting and fledging of American White Pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) breeding on the Molly Islands In Yellowstone Lake was carried on for 20 years between 1966 and 1987. The mean number of pelicans fledged during those years was 214 (±196 SD). In five of those years the number...
Body size and condition, age, plumage quality, and foods of prenesting male cinnamon teal in relation to pair status
William L. Hohman, C. Davison Ankney
1994, Canadian Journal of Zoology (72) 2172-2176
Male-biased sex ratios in waterfowl may contribute to sexual selection and permit females to be the deciding sex in mate selection. Male characteristics potentially influencing female choice include male age, size, plumage quality, and body condition (i.e., relative body mass, fat content, or protein content). By examining characteristics of prenesting...
The scientific assessment and strategy team contributions assessing the 1993 flood on the Mississippi and Missouri River basins
Gary E. Freeman, S. K. Nanda, M. J. Mausback, Ronald E. Erickson, John A. Kelmelis, Byron D. Stone, William H. Kirby, James R. Reel
1994, Water International (19) 177-185
The Scientific Assessment and Strategy Team was formed to provide scientific advice and assistance to federal officials responsible for making decisions with respect to flood recovery in the Upper Mississippi River Basin (above Cairo, Illinois) as a result of the 1993 flooding. The team assembled data from a wide variety...
Separation of selenium species released from Se-exposed algae
John M. Besser, James N. Huckins, Randal C. Clark
1994, Chemosphere (29) 771-780
We have assessed a fractionation scheme for selenium species that separates Se-containing amino acids and other organoselenium compounds in aqueous samples. We investigated the retention of standard solutions of selenate (Se+6), selenite (Se+4), and selenomethionine (Se−2) by fractionation media (Sephadex A-25 ion-exchange resin, copper-treated Chelex-100 ligand-exchange resin, and activated charcoal)...
Physiological changes and tissue metal accumulation in rainbow trout exposed to foodborne and waterborne metals
Aida M. Farag, Connie J. Boese, Harold L. Bergman, D. F. Woodward
1994, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (13) 2021-2029
Sublethal physiological effects and metal residue accumulation in tissues were measured in adult and juvenile rainbow trout fed a metal-contaminated diet and/or exposed to waterborne metals for 21 d. The consumption of metal-contaminated invertebrates from the Clark Fork River, Montana, significantly affected scale loss and metal accumulation in gut tissue...
Effects of selective handling of pyritic, acid-forming materials on the chemistry of pore gas and ground water at a reclaimed surface coal mine in Clarion County, PA, USA
Charles A. Cravotta III,, Diana L. Dugas, Keith Brady, Thomas E. Kovalchuck
1994, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the International Land Reclamation and Mine Drainage Conference and the Third International Conference on the Abatement of Acidic Drainage, Pittsburgh, PA
A change from dragline to “selective handling” mining methods at a reclaimed surface coal mine in western Pennsylvania did not significantly affect concentrations of metals in ground water because oxidation of pyrite and dissolution of siderite were not abated. Throughout the mine, placement of pyritic material near the land surface...
Geochemical and geohydrological characteristics of bedrock and spol from two methods of mining at a reclaimed surface coal mine, Clarion County, PA, USA
Charles A. Cravotta III,, Keith Brady, Linda C. Gustafson-Minnich, Michael R. DiMatteo
1994, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the International Land Reclamation and Mine Drainage Conference and the Third International Conference on the Abatement of Acidic Drainage
Two methods of mining caused subtle differences in geochemical and geohydrological characteristics of spoil at a reclaimed surface coal mine in western Pennsylvania. A dragline was used in the southern area of the mine, and bulldozers and front-end loaders were used in the northern area. Mining methods used in the...
Laboratory simulation of hydrothermal petroleum formation from sediment in Escanaba Trough, offshore from northern California
Keith A. Kvenvolden, John B. Rapp, Frances D. Hostettler, Robert J. Rosenbauer
1994, Organic Geochemistry (22) 935-945
Petroleum associated with sulfide-rich sediment is present in Escanaba Trough at the southern end of the Gorda Ridge spreading axis offshore from northern California within the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of the U.S. This location and occurrence are important for evaluation of the mineral and energy resource potential of the...
Interstadial climatic cycles: A link between western North America and Greenland?
Fred M. Phillips, Andrew R. Campbell, George I. Smith, James L. Bischoff
1994, Geology (22) 1115-1118
During the interval 33.6 to 26.1 ka, Searles Lake in southeastern California went through six major cycles of expansion and contraction. A comparison of U/Th ages for these events with the chronologies for quasi-cyclic interstadial episodes in the ice core from Summit, Greenland, suggests that the episodes of low water...
Analysis of ERS 1 synthetic aperture radar data of frozen lakes in northern Montana and implications for climate studies
Dorothy K. Hall, Daniel B. Fagre, Fritz Klasner, Gregg Linebaugh, Glen E. Liston
1994, Journal of Geophysical Research (99) 1
Lakes that freeze each winter are good indicators of regional climate change if key parameters, such as freeze-up and breakup date and maximum ice thickness, are measured over a decade-scale time frame. Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite data have proven to be especially useful for measurement of climatologically significant parameters...
Predation by odonate nymphs on larval razorback suckers (Xyrauchen texanus) under laboratory conditions
Michael J. Horn, Paul C. Marsh, Gordon Mueller, Tom Burke
1994, Southwestern Naturalist (39) 371-374
High larval mortality has plagued efforts to raise razorback suckers (Xyrauchen texanus) in a Lake Mohave, Arizona-Nevada backwater. Observations indicate odonate nymph densities may be high enough to impact larval survival. In laboratory tests conducted in aquaria, damselfly (Coenagrionidae: Enallagma sp.) and dragonfly (Libellulidae: Tramea sp.) nymphs consumed 81% and...
Influence of diurnal variations in stream temperature on streamflow loss and groundwater recharge
Jim Constantz, Carole L. Thomas, Gary W. Zellweger
1994, Water Resources Research (30) 3253-3264
We demonstrate that for losing reaches with significant diurnal variations in stream temperature, the effect of stream temperature on streambed seepage is a major factor contributing to reduced afternoon streamflows. An explanation is based on the effect of stream temperature on the hydraulic conductivity of the streambed, which can be...
Variability and prediction of freshwater and nitrate fluxes for the Louisiana-Texas shelf: Mississippi and Atchafalaya River source functions
A. Bratkovich, S.P. Dinnel, D. A. Goolsby
1994, Estuaries (17) 766-778
Time histories of riverine water discharge, nitrate concentration, and nitrate, flux have been analyzed for the Mississippi and Atchafalaya rivers. Results indicate that water discharge variability is dominated by the annual cycle and shorter-time-scale episodic events presumably associated with snowmelt runoff and spring or summer rains. Interannual variability in water...
Effects of land disposal of municipal sewage sludge on fate of nitrates in soil, streambed sediment, and water quality
James A. Tindall, Kenneth J. Lull, Neville G. Gaggiani
1994, Journal of Hydrology (163) 147-185
This study was undertaken to determine the effects of sewage-sludge disposal at the Lowry sewage-sludge-disposal area, near Denver, Colorado, on ground- and surface-water quality, to determine the fate of nitrates from sludge leachate, and to determine the source areas of leachate and the potential for additional leaching from the disposal...
A special issue on volcanic centers as targets for mineral exploration; preface
Wolfgang E. Elston, Geoffrey S. Plumlee, editor(s)
1994, Economic Geology (89) 1661
NEPTUNE or Pluto? Since the days of Hutton and Werner, every generation of economic geologists has addressed this question in a new light. Most papers in this special issue deal with the thin and leaky roof of Pluto's underworld. It allows hot emanations from Hades to leak out, only to...
Neutralization-resistant variants of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus have altered virulence and tissue tropism
C.H. Kim, J. R. Winton, J.C. Leong
1994, Journal of Virology (68) 8447-8453
Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) is a rhabdovirus that causes an acute disease in salmon and trout. In this study, a correlation between changes in tissue tropism and specific changes in the virus genome appeared to be made by examining four IHNV neutralization-resistant variants (RB-1, RB-2, RB-3, and RB-4) that...
Determination of atrazine in rainfall and surface water by enzyme immunoassay
Andrea Dankwardt, Susanne Wust, Wolfram Elling, E. Michael Thurman, Bertold Hock
1994, Environmental Science and Pollution Research (1) 196-204
Rainwater and surface water from four sites in Germany (Bavaria and Lower Saxony) were analyzed for atrazine by enzyme immunoassay from June 1990 until October 1992. The limit of quantification of the immunoassay was 0.02 μg/L with a middle of the test at 0.2 μg/L. About 60 % of the...
Chemical characterization of sediments and pore water from the upper Clark Fork River and Milltown Reservoir, Montana
W. G. Brumbaugh, C.G. Ingersoll, N.E. Kemble, T.W. May, J.L. Zajicek
1994, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (13) 1971-1983
The upper Clark Fork River basin in western Montana is widely contaminated by metals from past mining, milling, and smelting activities As part of a comprehensive ecological risk assessment for the upper Clark Fork River, we measured physical and chemical characteristics of surficial sediment samples that were collected from depositional...