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Page 1756, results 43876 - 43900

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Selection of prey by walleyes in the Ohio waters of the central basin of Lake Erie, 1985-1987
David R. Wolfert, Michael T. Bur
1992, Resource Publication 182
Walleyes (Stizostedion vitreum vitreum) were collected at five locations in the central basin of Lake Erie in 1985-87. The contents of the fishes' stomachs were examined to identify the species of prey. The seasonal availability of potential prey was determined from sampling with trawl tows. Food electivity indexes...
Surficial substrates and bathymetry of five historical lake trout spawning reefs in near-shore waters of the Great Lakes
Thomas A. Edsall, Charles L. Brown, Gregory W. Kennedy, John R. P. French III
1992, Technical Report 58
The reestablishment of self-sustaining stocks of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in the lower four Great Lakes has been substantially impeded because planted fish do not produce enough progeny that survive and reproduce. The causes for this failure are unknown, but many historical spawning sites of lake trout have been...
Commissioned Review. Carbon: freshwater plants
Jon E. Keeley, D.R. Sandquist
1992, Plant, Cell & Environment (15) 1021-1035
δ13C values for freshwater aquatic plant matter varies from −11 to −50‰ and is not a clear indicator of photosynthetic pathway as in terrestrial plants. Several factors affect δ13C of aquatic plant matter. These include: (1) The δ13C signature of the source carbon has been observed to range from +1‰...
Geochemistry of waters in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes region, Alaska
T. E. C. Keith, J. M. Thompson, R. A. Hutchinson, L. D. White
1992, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (49) 209-231
Meteoric waters from cold springs and streams outside of the 1912 eruptive deposits filling the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (VTTS) and in the upper parts of the two major rivers draining the 1912 deposits have similar chemical trends. Thermal springs issue in the mid-valley area along a 300-m lateral...
Interference fringes on GLORIA side-scan sonar images from the Bering Sea and their implications
Q.J. Huggett, A. K. Cooper, M. L. Somers, A.R. Stubbs
1992, Marine Geophysical Research (14) 47-63
GLORIA side-scan sonographs from the Bering Sea Basin show a complex pattern of interference fringes sub-parallel to the ship's track. Surveys along the same trackline made in 1986 and 1987 show nearly identical patterns. It is concluded from this that the interference patterns are caused by features in the shallow...
Measurement of filtration rates by infaunal bivalves in a recirculating flume
B.E. Cole, J.K. Thompson, J. E. Cloern
1992, Marine Biology (113) 219-225
A flume system and protocol for measuring the filtration rate of infaunal bivalves is described. Assemblages of multi-sized clams, at natural densities and in normal filter-feeding positions, removed phytoplankton suspended in a unidirectional flow of water. The free-stream velocity and friction velocity of the flow, and bottom roughness height were...
Leaching of uranium from glass and ceramic foodware and decorative items
Edward R. Landa, Terry B. Councell
1992, Health Physics (63) 343-348
Beginning as early as the first century A. D. and continuing until at least the 1970s, uranium was used as a coloring agent in glass and in ceramic glazes. The leaching of uranium from such items is of interest as some were designed for food storage or serving. Thirty-three glass...
A spatial model to aggregate point-source and nonpoint-source water-quality data for large areas
D.A. White, R. A. Smith, C. V. Price, R. B. Alexander, K. W. Robinson
1992, Computers & Geosciences (18) 1055-1073
More objective and consistent methods are needed to assess water quality for large areas. A spatial model, one that capitalizes on the topologic relationships among spatial entities, to aggregate pollution sources from upstream drainage areas is described that can be implemented on land surfaces having heterogeneous water-pollution effects. An infrastructure...
Effects of uranium mining discharges on water quality in the Puerco River basin, Arizona and New Mexico
P. C. Van Metre, J. R. Gray
1992, Hydrological Sciences Journal (37) 463-480
From 1967 until 1986, uranium mine dewatering increased dissolved gross alpha, gross beta, uranium and radium activities and dissolved selenium and molybdenum concentrations in the Puerco River as indicated by time trends, areal patterns involving distance from the mines and stream discharge. Additionally, increased dissolved uranium concentrations were identified in...
The dynamic relationship between ground water and the Columbia River: Using deuterium and oxygen-18 as tracers
K. A. McCarthy, W. D. McFarland, J.M. Wilkinson, L. D. White
1992, Journal of Hydrology (135) 1-12
Deuterium and oxygen-18 were used as natural tracers to investigate the hydraulic relationship between the Columbia River and the Blue Lake gravel aquifer near Portland, Oregon. A time series of stable-isotope data collected from surface and ground waters during a March 1990 aquifer test confirms that the river and aquifer...
Late Cenozoic lacustrine and climatic environments at Tule Lake, northern Great Basin, USA
Bradbury J. Platt
1992, Climate Dynamics (6) 275-285
Cores of lake sediment to a depth of 334 m in the town of Tulelake, Siskiyou County, northern California, document the late Cenozoic paleolimnologic and paleoclimatic history of the northwestern edge of the Great Basin. The cores have been dated by radiometric, tephrochronologic and paleomagnetic analyses. Lacustrine diatoms are abundant...
Polychlorinated biphenyl residues and egg mortality in double-crested cormorants from the Great Lakes
D. E. Tillitt, G.T. Ankley, J. P. Giesy, J.P. Ludwig, H. Kurita-Matsuba, D. V. Weseloh, P.S. Ross, C.A. Bishop, L. Sileo, K. L. Stromborg, J. Larson, T.J. Kubiak
1992, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (11) 1281-1288
We evaluated the overall potency of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-containing extracts from double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritis) eggs with an in vitro bioassay system, the H4IIE rat hepatoma cell bioassay. Results from the H4IIE bioassay were strongly correlated with the hatching success of eggs in the colonies, whereas conventional methods of PCB...
Leaks in pipe networks
Ranko S. Pudar, James A. Liggett
1992, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (118) 1031-1046
Leak detection in water‐distribution systems can be accomplished by solving an inverse problem using measurements of pressure and/or flow. The problem is formulated with equivalent orifice areas of possible leaks as the unknowns. Minimization of the difference between measured and calculated heads produces a solution for the areas. The quality...
Analytical interferences of mercuric chloride preservative in environmental water samples: Determination of organic compounds isolated by continuous liquid-liquid extraction or closed-loop stripping
W.T. Foreman, S.D. Zaugg, L.M. Falres, M.G. Werner, T.J. Leiker, P.F. Rogerson
1992, Environmental Science & Technology (26) 1307-1312
Analytical interferences were observed during the determination of organic compounds in groundwater samples preserved with mercuric chloride. The nature of the interference was different depending on the analytical isolation technique employed. (1) Water samples extracted with dichloromethane by continuous liquid-liquid extraction (CLLE) and analyzed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry revealed a...
Reduction of uranium by Desulfovibrio desulfuricans
Derek R. Lovley, Elizabeth J.P. Phillips
1992, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (58) 850-856
The possibility that sulfate-reducing microorganisms contribute to U(VI) reduction in sedimentary environments was investigated. U(VI) was reduced to U(IV) when washed cells of sulfate-grown Desulfovibrio desulfuricans were suspended in a bicarbonate buffer with lactate or H2 as the electron donor. There was no U(VI) reduction in the absence of an...
Determining baselines and variability of elements in plants and soils near the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska
J.G. Crock, R. C. Severson, L. P. Gough
1992, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (63) 253-271
Recent investigations on the Kenai Peninsula had two major objectives: (1) to establish elemental baseline concentrations ranges for native vegetation and soils; and, (2) to determine the sampling density required for preparing stable regional geochemical maps for various elements in native plants and soils. These objectives were accomplished using an...
Habitat use by larval fishes in backwater lake of the upper Mississippi River
M. R. Dewey, Cecil A. Jennings
1992, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (7) 363-372
Light traps were used to sample larval fishes in Lawrence Lake (Pool 8, upper Mississippi River) from late May through mid-August 1990. Catches differed considerably between vegetated sites and an adjacent open-water area and were highly variable among vegetated stations. Sunfishes (Lepomis spp.) dominated the vegetated sites. Brook...
Use of weather types to disaggregate general circulation model predictions
L.E. Hay, G. J. McCabe Jr., D.M. Wolock, M. A. Ayers
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research (97) 2781-2790
General circulation models (GCMs) simulate climatic conditions with a grid cell resolution on the order of 100,000 km2. This resolution is inadequate to assess the effects of climatic change on water resources at a regional scale. A method has been developed that uses weather-type analysis as...
Depressions and other lake-floor morphologic features in deep water, southern Lake Michigan
Steven M. Colman, D.S. Foster, D.W. Harrison
1992, Journal of Great Lakes Research (18) 267-279
The most common features are subcircular depressions, commonly compound, that are irregularly distributed across the lake floor. The depressions are most common in the southern basin of the lake where lacustrine sediments are more than a few meters thick, corresponding to water depths greater than about 90 m. We have...
Modeling of ancient climate from deuterium content of water in volcanic glass
I. Friedman, J. Gleason, R. Wilcox, A. Warden
1992, Quaternary International (13-14) 201-203
The explosive nature of the eruptions that produced rhyolitic tephras resulted in the ash being distributed over large areas. This ash, within a few thousand years after deposition, incorporated relatively large amounts of environmental water (up to 3.5%) into the glass structure. This hydration water is shown to retain its...
Species dominance and equitability: patterns in Cenozoic foraminifera of eastern North America
T. G. Gibson, E.E. Hill
1992, Journal of Foraminiferal Research (22) 34-51
Species dominance in benthonic foraminifera, represented by percent of the assemblage composed of the single most abundant species, shows little change in observed range of values from shallow into deep-marine waters in 1005 samples from the Gulf of Mexico, Atlantic, and Arctic margins of North America. This finding contrasts with...
Ground-water models cannot be validated
Leonard F. Konikow, J.D. Bredehoeft
1992, Advances in Water Resources (15) 75-83
Ground-water models are embodiments of scientific hypotheses. As such, the models cannot be proven or validated, but only tested and invalidated. However, model testing and the evaluation of predictive errors lead to improved models and a better understanding of the problem at hand....