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Page 2072, results 51776 - 51800

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Chronobiologic approach to aquaculture
N. C. Parker
1984, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (113) 545-552
Diel and seasonal changes in the environment directly or indirectly control many biological functions. Chronobiology, the study of biological functions in relation to time of day, time of year, lunar phases, and other consistent cues, could have important applications in aquaculture. Physiological conditions that vary seasonally include feeding time, tolerance...
Food of young-of-the-year lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in Presque Isle Harbor, Lake Superior
Donald V. Swedberg, James W. Peck
1984, Journal of Great Lakes Research (10) 280-285
The food habits of young lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) were studied by examining the digestive tracts of 293 young-of-the-year collected in Presque Isle Harbor, Lake Superior. Lake trout in the 25 to 27-mm length range started to eat food organisms before all of their yolk material was absorbed. Organisms consumed...
Water quality in the Gillham Lake-Cossatot River system during dry and wet periods
Stephen B. Smith, Thomas E. Moen
1984, Arkansas Academy of Science Proceedings (38) 68-73
Water samples were collected in the Cossatot River-Gillham Lake system during an extended dry period and after heavy rains to determine the spatial variations in certain water quality characteristics. Of particular interest was the influence of the reservoir discharge on the water quality of the tailwater compared with the effects...
Potential impacts of water diversion on fishery resources in the Great Lakes
Bruce A. Manny
1984, Fisheries (9) 19-23
Uses of Great Lakes water within the Great Lakes basin are steadily increasing, and critical water shortages elsewhere may add to the demands for diversions of water out of the basin in the near future. The impacts of such diversions on fish in the Great Lakes must be considered in...
Florida: A Jurassic transform plate boundary
Kim D. Klitgord, Peter Popenoe, Hans Schouten
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (89) 7753-7772
Magnetic, gravity, seismic, and deep drill hole data integrated with plate tectonic reconstructions substantiate the existence of a transform plate boundary across southern Florida during the Jurassic. On the basis of this integrated suite of data the pre-Cretaceous Florida-Bahamas region can be divided into the pre-Jurassic North American plate, Jurassic...
Analysis of trace metals in water by inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry using sodium dibenzyldithiocarbamate for preconcentration
C. L. Smith, Jerry M. Motooka, W. R. Willson
1984, Analytical Letters (17) 1715-1730
Since concentrations of trace elements in most natural waters seldom exceed the μg/L level, analysis of trace elements in natural waters by inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry (ICP) requires a preconcentration procedure. The elements Ag, Bi, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Mo, Ni, Pb, Sn, V, W, and Zn were separated...
Evolution of the yardangs at Rogers Lake, California
A. W. Ward, R. Greeley
1984, Geological Society of America Bulletin (95) 829-837
Yardangs are streamlined, wind-eroded hills common to most deserts. Yardangs at Rogers Lake, Mojave Desert, California, have streamlined forms characteristic of objects eroded by moving fluids, a teardrop shape that approaches an ideal 1:4 width-to-length ratio. In wind-tunnel simulations, miniature forms of various...
Permeability of fault gouge under confining pressure and shear stress
C.A. Morrow, L.Q. Shi, J.D. Byerlee
1984, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (89) 3193-3200
The permeability of both clay-rich and non-clay gouges, as well as several pure clays, was studied as a function of confining pressures from 5 to 200 MPa and shear strain to 10. Permeability ranged over four orders of magnitude, from around 10−22 to 10−18 m2 (1 darcy = 0.987 × 10−12 m2). The lowest...
CHARACTERIZATION OF SECONDARY ALTERATION IN THE COLUMBIA RIVER BASALT BY BACKSCATTERED ELECTRON IMAGING AND ENERGY-DISPERSIVE X-RAY SPECTROSCOPY.
P.P. Hearn, W.C. Steinkampf, Z. A. Brown
Romig Alton D.Jr.Goldstein Joseph I., editor(s)
1984, Conference Paper, Proceedings, Annual Conference - Microbeam Analysis Society
The thick sequences of flood basalts which underlie the Columbia River basin are important aquifiers, providing water for both agricultural and domestic use. Secondary alteration in these rocks occurs primarily as coatings or fillings in fractures and vesicles; alteration is generally believed to have occurred at low temperatures ( less...
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),...
A survey of North American migratory waterfowl for duck plague (duck virus enteritis) virus
Christopher J. Brand, Douglas E. Docherty
1984, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (20) 261-266
A survey of migratory waterfowl for duck plague (DP) virus was conducted in the Mississippi and Central flyways during 1982 and in the Atlantic and Pacific flyways during 1983. Cloacal and pharyngeal swabs were collected from 3,169 migratory waterfowl in these four flyways, principally mallards (Anas platyrhynchos L.), black ducks (Anas...
Aquifer reclamation design: The use of contaminant transport simulation combined with nonlinear programing
Steven M. Gorelick, Clifford I. Voss, Philip E. Gill, Walter Murray, Michael A. Saunders, Margaret H. Wright
1984, Water Resources Research (20) 415-427
A simulation-management methodology is demonstrated for the rehabilitation of aquifers that have been subjected to chemical contamination. Finite element groundwater flow and contaminant transport simulation are combined with nonlinear optimization. The model is capable of determining well locations plus pumping and injection rates for groundwater quality control. Examples demonstrate linear...
Note on the applicability of the James-Stein Estimator in regional hydrologic studies
J. Maciunas Landwehr, N.C. Matalas, J.R. Wallis
1984, Water Resources Research (20) 1630-1638
The applicability of the James-Stein estimator in regional hydrologic studies which entail the estimation of an N-dimensional location parameter is discussed. Regional studies are frequently characterized by relatively short, generally correlated, samples drawn from nonsymmetric and bounded, i.e., nonnormal, populations. By means of computer simulation studies the James-Stein estimator, subject to...
Mineralogy and chemistry of massive sulfide deposits from the Juan de Fuca Ridge
R.A. Koski, D.A. Clague, E. Oudin
1984, Geological Society of America Bulletin (95) 930-945
Six hydrothermal vent sites and associated benthic communities were located in the axial valley of the southern Juan de Fuca Ridge using transponder-navigated bottom photography. The hydrothermal deposits form ledges and shallow mounds within a central zone characterized by a linear bathymetric depression...
The use of geologic and seismologic information to reduce earthquake Hazards in California
W. J. Kockelman, C.C. Campbell
1984, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (6) 67-78
Five examples illustrate how geologic and seismologic information can be used to reduce the effects of earthquakes Included are procedures for anticipating damage to critical facilities, preparing, adopting, or implementing seismic safety studies, plans, and programs, retrofitting highway bridges, regulating development in areas subject to fault-rupture, and strengthening or removing...
Subsurface injection of treated sewage into a saline-water aquifer at St. Petersburg, Florida - Water-quality changes and potential for recovery of injected sewage
J.J. Hickey, G. G. Ehrlich
1984, Ground Water (22) 397-405
The city of St. Petersburg is testing subsurface injection of treated sewage into the Floridan aquifer as a means of eliminating discharge of sewage to surface waters and as a means of storing treated sewage for future nonpotable reuse. The injection zone at the test site at the start of...
Avian cholera in Nebraska's Rainwater Basin
Ronald M. Windingstad, J. J. Hurt, A. K. Trout, J. Cary
1984, Transactions of the North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference (49) 576-583
The first report of avian cholera in North America occurred in northwestern Texas in winter 1944 (Quortrup et al. 1946). In 1975, mortality from avian cholera occurred for the first time in waterfowl in the Rainwater Basin of Nebraska when an estimated 25,000 birds died (Zinkl et al. 1977). Avian...
Production induced boiling and cold water entry in the Cerro Prieto geothermal reservoir indicated by chemical and physical measurements
M.A. Grant, A.H. Truesdell, M.A. Manon
1984, Geothermics (13) 117-140
Chemical and physical data suggest that the relatively shallow, western part of the Cerro Prieto reservoir is bounded below by low permeability rocks, and above and at the sides by an interface with cooler water. There is no continuous permeability barrier around or immediately above the reservoir. Permeability within the...
Stable isotope geochemistry of acid mine drainage: Experimental oxidation of pyrite
B.E. Taylor, M.C. Wheeler, D. Kirk Nordstrom
1984, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (48) 2669-2678
Sulfate and water from experiments in which pyrite was oxidized at a pH of 2.0 were analyzed for sulfur and oxygen stable isotopes. Experiments were conducted under both aerobic and anaerobic sterile conditions, as well as under aerobic conditions in the presence of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans, to elucidate the pathways of...
Radioactive disequilibria in mineralised fracture samples from two uranium occurrences in northern Sweden
John A.T. Smellie, J.N. Rosholt
1984, LITHOS (17) 215-225
Mineralised fractures from two uranium occurrences in northern Sweden were examined mineralogically and isotopically to establish the presence or absence of radioactive equilibrium that may indicate recent rock-water interaction processes based on the natural mobility of uranium (i.e.; during the last 0.5 Ma). The results show evidence of radioactive disequilibrium...
Oxygen isotope calibration of the onset of ice-rafting and history of glaciation in the North Atlantic region
N. J. Shackleton, J. Backman, H. Zimmerman, D.V. Kent, M.A. Hall, David G. Roberts, D. Schnitker, J.G. Baldauf, A. Desprairies, R. Homrighausen, P. Huddlestun, J.B. Keene, A.J. Kaltenback, K.A.O. Krumsiek, A.C. Morton, J.W. Murray, J. Westberg-Smith
1984, Nature (307) 620-623
We report here that DSDP Site 552A, cored with the hydraulic piston corer on the west flank of Rockall Bank, recovered an undisturbed sequence of alternating white deep-sea carbonate oozes and dark-coloured layers that are rich in glacial debris. Oxygen isotope analysis of the sequence together with detailed nannofossil and...