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Page 1869, results 46701 - 46725

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Biogeography of marine podocopid Ostracodes in Micronesia
L.S. Weissleader, N.L. Gilinsky, R. M. Ross, T. M. Cronin
1989, Journal of Biogeography (16) 103-114
Shallow-water podocopic marine Ostracoda from Micronesian lagoons in the Marianas, Caroline, Marshall and Gilbert Islands in the western Pacific were analysed to establish their diversity and zoogeography within Micronesia and the taxonomic affinities with ostracodes from other tropical regions. Sixty-four bottom lagoonal sediment samples from twelve islands and atolls yielded...
Sublethal effects of phenanthrene, nicotine, and pinane on Daphnia pulex
Jacqueline F. Savino, Lila L. Tanabe
1989, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (42) 778-784
Chronic studies of Daphnia Pulex exposed to different concentrations of phenanthrene, nicotine, and pinane produced consistent sublethal effects among replicates and concentrations. The LOEC's for growth and fecundity with each chemical tested were 3 to 30% of the 48-hr EC50's. Growth decreased as concentration increased for each chemical tested, and...
Assessing the validity of the channel model of fracture aperture under field conditions
Allen M. Shapiro, James R. Nicholas
1989, Water Resources Research (25) 817-828
In recent investigations of fluid and solute movement in discrete fractures, spatial heterogeneity of the fracture aperture has been conceptualized as a series of noninterconnecting constant aperture flow paths, or channels. Two methods of estimating the distribution of the aperture sizes are presented using information from a single-hole pumping test...
Effect of climate change on watershed runoff
D.M. Wolock, M. A. Ayers, L.E. Hay, G. J. McCabe Jr.
1989, Conference Paper
This paper examines forecasts of changes in watershed runoff in the Delaware River basin that result from a range of predicted effects of increased atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) on future precipitation, temperature, and stomatal resistance of plants. A deterministic hydrologic model, TOPMODEL, was driven with stochastic inputs of temperature and...
Bone characteristics and metal concentrations in white suckers (Catostomus commersoni) from one neutral and three acidified lakes in Maine
Steven J. Hamilton, Terry A. Haines
1989, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (46) 440-446
The bone characteristics of white suckers, Catostomus commersoni, from four lakes in Maine were studied in relation to lake water quality and metal concentrations in fish. Green Lake had a neutral pH, high buffering capacity, and low aluminum concentrations, whereas the other three lakes had low pH, low buffering capacity,...
Climate variability in an estuary: Effects of riverflow on San Francisco Bay
David H. Peterson, Daniel R. Cayan, John F. Festa, Frederic H. Nichols, Roy A. Walters, James V. Slack, Stephen E. Hager, Laurence E. Schemel
David H. Peterson, editor(s)
1989, Book chapter, Aspects of climate variability in the Pacific and the Western Americas
A simple conceptual model of estuarine variability in the context of climate forcing has been formulated using up to 65 years of estimated mean-monthly delta flow, the cumulative freshwater flow to San Francisco Bay from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River, and salinity observations near the mouth, head, mid-estuary, and coastal...
Arsenic in ground-water under oxidizing conditions, south-west United States
F. N. Robertson
1989, Environmental Geochemistry and Health (11) 171-185
Concentrations of dissolved arsenic in ground-water in alluvial basins of Arizona commonly exceed 50 μg L−1 and reach values as large as 1,300 μg L−1. Arsenic speciation analyses show that arsenic occurs in the fully oxidized state of plus 5 (As+5), most likely in the form of...
Bias in groundwater samples caused by wellbore flow
Thomas E. Reilly, O. Lehn Franke, Gordon D. Bennett
1989, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (115) 270-276
Design of physical installations and sampling procedures for ground-water monitoring networks, particularly for detection and analysis of possible contaminants, is a topic of great scientific and practical interest at the present time. Recent practice in the design of monitoring networks associated with known contaminant sources sometimes includes an array of...
Groundwater chemistry and water-rock interactions at Stripa
D. Kirk Nordstrom, J.W. Ball, R.J. Donahoe, D. Whittemore
1989, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (53) 1727-1740
Groundwaters from near surface to a depth of 1232 m in the Stripa granite have been sampled and analyzed for major and trace constituents. The groundwater composition consists of two general types: a typical recharge water of Ca-HCO3 type (<300 m depth)...
Simulated water-quality changes in detention basins
Phillip J. Zarriello
1989, Conference Paper
A study has begun to simulate movement of stormflow through detention basins at four locations in the Irondequoit Creek watershed and determine the effect on peak flow and water quality. Two types of basins were simulated for each site - a temporary-storage basin, which impounds water during high flows, and...
Horizontal anisotropy of the principal ground-water flow zone in the Salinas alluvial fan, Puerto Rico
V. Quinones-Aponte
1989, Ground Water (27) 491-500
Well drawdown data from an anisotropic aquifer in the Salinas alluvial fan were collected and analyzed with a computer program called TENSOR2D. The program uses ordinary and weighted least-squares optimization procedures to solve the system of simultaneous equations needed to define the theoretical transmissivity ellipse. Prediction of drawdown data was...
A reinterpretation of the δDH2O of inclusion fluids in contemporaneous quartz and sphalerite, Creede mining district, Colorodo: a generic problem for shallow orebodies?
Nora K. Foley, Philip M. Bethke, Robert O. Rye
1989, Economic Geology (84) 1966-1977
Water extracted from fluid inclusions in quartz from shallow epithermal ore deposits often has a hydrogen isotope composition (δD) different from that of water extracted from inclusions in associated minerals. This difference is usually attributed to the involvement of primary fluids from multiple sources. Isotopic and homogenization and freezing temperature...
Urban watershed data for the United States
Janice M. Fulford
1989, Conference Paper
The contents of an urban watershed data base compiled for a national urban flood-frequency study by the U.S. Geological Survey are described. The data base includes information for 269 urbanized watersheds in 56 metropolitan areas in 31 states in the continental United States and Hawaii....
Implementation of a hydrodynamic model for the upper Potomac Estuary
Raymond W. Schaffranek, Robert A. Baltzer
1989, Conference Paper
A vertically integrated, two-dimensional hydrodynamic/transport model has been implemented for the upper extent of the Potomac Estuary between Indian Head and Morgantown, Md. The model computes water-surface elevations, flow velocities, and time-varying constituent concentrations by numerically integrating finite-difference forms of the equations of mass and momentum conservation in conjunction with...
Lead and cadmium associated with saltwater intrusion in a New Jersey aquifer system
Amleto A. Pucci Jr., Douglas A. Harriman, Elisabeth M. Ervin, Lisa Bratton, Alison Gordon
1989, Water Resources Bulletin (25) 1267-1272
The U.S. Geological Survey collected ground-water samples from the upper and middle aquifers of the Potomac-Raritan-Magothy aquifer system in a 400-square-mile area of New Jersey from 1984 through 1986. Concentrations of lead were greater than the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency maximum contaminant level (MCL) of 50 micrograms per liter in...
Impacts of exploratory drilling for oil and gas on the benthic environment of Georges Bank
J. M. Neff, Michael H. Bothner, N. J. Maciolek, J. F. Grassle
1989, Marine Environmental Research (27) 77-114
A 3-year monitoring program was performed to assess the impacts of exploratory drilling for oil and gas on the benthic environment of Georges Bank, an important commercial fishery region in the North Atlantic east of Massachusetts, USA. Surficial sediments were sampled for chemical and benthic infaunal analysis and bottom still...
State and local response to damaging land subsidence in United States urban areas
T.L. Holzer
1989, Engineering Geology (27) 449-466
Land subsidence caused by man-induced depressuring of underground reservoirs has occurred in at least nine urban areas in the United States. Significant efforts to control it have been made in three areas: Long Beach, California; Houston-Galveston, Texas; and Santa Clara Valley, California. In these areas coastal flooding and its control...
Terrain, vegetation, and landscape evolution of the R4D research site, Brooks Range Foothills, Alaska
D.A. Walker, Emily F. Binnian, B. M. Evans, N.D. Lederer, E.A. Nordstrand, P.J. Webber
1989, Holarctic Ecology (12) 238-261
Maps of the vegetation and terrain of a 22 km2 area centered on the Department of Energy (DOE) R4D (Response, Resistance, Resilience to and Recovery from Disturbance in Arctic Ecosystems) study site in the Southern Foothills Physiographic Province of Alaska were made using integrated geobotanical mapping procedures and a geographic-information...
Artificial recharge of groundwater and its role in water management
J. O. Kimrey
1989, Desalination (72) 135-147
This paper summarizes and discusses the various aspects and methods of artificial recharge with particular emphasis on its uses and potential role in water management in the Arabian Gulf region.Artificial recharge occurs when man's activities cause more water to enter an...
Populations, productivity, and feeding habits of seabirds at Cape Thompson, Alaska: Final report
Brian S. Fadely, John F. Piatt, Scott A. Hatch, David G. Roseneau
1989, Report
Investigations of seabird population sizes and breeding biology were conducted at Cape Thompson from 1959 to 1961 during pre-development studies associated with the Atomic through 1982, the Alaskan Program (OCSEAP) supported determine whether changes Energy Commission’s “Project Chariot.” From 1976 Outer Continental Shelf Environmental Assessment efforts to recensus seabirds at...
Chemical hydrogeology in natural and contaminated environments
W. Back, M.J. Baedecker
1989, Journal of Hydrology (106) 1-28
Chemical hydrogeology, including organic and inorganic aspects, has contributed to an increased understanding of groundwater flow systems, geologic processes, and stressed environments. Most of the basic principles of inorganic-chemical hydrogeology were first established by investigations of organic-free, regional-scale systems for which simplifying assumptions could be made. The problems of groundwater...
Geochemical controls of vanadium accumulation in fossil fuels
G. N. Breit, R. B. Wanty
1989, Conference Paper, American Chemical Society, Division of Petroleum Chemistry, Preprints
High vanadium contents in petroleum and other fossil fuels have been attributed to organic-matter type, organisms, volcanic emanations, diffusion of sea water, and epigenetic enrichment. However, these factors are inadequate to account for the high abundance of vanadium in some fossil fuels and the paucity in others. By examining vanadium...
Accounting for intracell flow in models with emphasis on water table recharge and stream-aquifer interaction: 2. A procedure
Donald G. Jorgensen, Donald C. Signor, Jeffrey L. Imes
1989, Water Resources Research (25) 677-684
Intercepted intracell flow, especially if cell includes water table recharge and a stream ((sink), can result in significant model error if not accounted for. A procedure utilizing net flow per cell (Fn) that accounts for intercepted intracell flow can be used for both steady state and transient simulations. Germane to...