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Page 2141, results 53501 - 53525

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Effects of an aquatic plant and suspended clay on the activity of fish toxicants
P.A. Gilderhus
1982, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (2) 301-306
Rotenone, antimycin, permethrin, pydrin, and Salicylanilide I were tested for their toxicities against fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) in the presence of Canadian waterweed (Elodea canadensis) or suspended clay. The plants had little effect on the activity of rotenone and antimycin but substantially reduced the activity of permethrin and pydrin (synthetic...
Perched water tables on hillsides in western Oregon: II. Preferential downslope movement of water and anions
D.P. Hammermeister, G.F. Kling, J.A. Vomocil
1982, Soil Science Society of America Journal (46) 819-826
Perched water tables on hillsides in western Oregon potentially provide a means by which pollutants from agricultural and domestic sources may enter surface waters and consequently degrade the quality of these waters. This paper reports the results of experiments which were carried out to investigate the flow of solutes and...
Characterization of organic contaminants in environmental samples associated with Mount St. Helens 1980 volcanic eruption
Wilfred E. Pereira, Colleen E. Rostad, Howard E. Taylor, John M. Klein
1982, Environmental Science and Technology (16) 387-396
Volcanic ash, surface-water, and bottom-material samples obtained in the vicinity of Mount St. Helens after the May 18, 1980, eruption were analyzed for organic contaminants by using capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-computer techniques. Classes of compounds identified include n-alkanes, fatty acids, dicarboxylic acids, aromatic acids and aldehydes, phenols, resin acids, terpenes,...
Perched water tables on hillsides in western Oregon: I. Some factors affecting their development and longevity
D.P. Hammermeister, G.F. Kling, J.A. Vomocil
1982, Soil Science Society of America Journal (46) 811-818
Perched water tables on hillsides located on the western border of the Willamette Valley in Oregon in some cases have the potential to transport pollutants from either domestic or agricultural sources downslope to streams, ponds, or reservoirs, resulting in the deterioration of the quality of these waters. In this paper,...
Unweathered and weathered aviation kerosine: Chemical characterization and effects on hatching success of duck eggs
P.H. Albers, M. L. Gay
1982, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (28) 430-434
Unweathered crude and refined oils are known to be very toxic to the embryos of aquatic birds (ALBERS 1977, 19781 SEARO et ale 1978, WHITE et al. 1979, McGILL & RICHMOND 1979, and others) but the toxicity of weathered petroleum is not as well established. The toxicity of Prudhoe Bay...
Parathion accumulation in cricket frogs and its effect on American kestrels
W. James Fleming, H. de Chacin, O. H. Pattee, T. G. Lamont
1982, Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health (10) 921-927
Adult cricket frogs (Acris crepitans) were held individually for 96 h in static systems containing initial concentrations of either 0, 0.1, 1.0, or 10 ppm parathion in 10 ml water. Mortality of cricket frogs was directly related to the parathion concentration in the water. Frogs from the 1.0- and 10-ppm...
Deep oxygenated ground water: Anomaly or common occurrence?
I.J. Winograd, F. N. Robertson
1982, Science (216) 1227-1230
Contrary to the prevailing notion that oxygen-depleting reactions in the soil zone and in the aquifer rapidly reduce the dissolved oxygen content of recharge water to detection limits, 2 to 8 milligrams per liter of dissolved oxygen is present in water from a variety of deep (100 to 1000 meters)...
Hydrogeochemical prospecting for porphyry copper deposits in the tropical-marine climate of Puerto Rico
W. R. Miller, W. H. Ficklin, R. E. Learned
1982, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (16) 217-233
A hydrogeochemical survey utilizing waters from streams and springs was conducted in the area of two known porphyry copper deposits in the tropical-marine climate of westcentral Puerto Rico. The most important pathfinder for regional hydrogeochemical surveys is sulfate which reflects the associated pyrite mineralization. Because of increased mobility due to...
Uraniferous opal, Virgin Valley, Nevada: Conditions of formation and implications for uranium exploration
R. A. Zielinski
1982, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (16) 197-216
Uraniferous, fluorescent opal, which occurs in tuffaceous sedimentary rocks at Virgin Valley, Nevada, records the temperature and composition of uranium-rich solutions as well as the time of uranium-silica coprecipitation. Results are integrated with previous geologic and geochronologic data for the area to produce a model for uranium mobility that may...
Uranium-lead isochron age and preliminary sulfur isotope systematics of the Felder uranium deposit, south Texas
K.R. Ludwig, Martin B. Goldhaber, Richard L. Reynolds, Kathleen R. Simmons
1982, Economic Geology (77) 557-563
Uranium-lead isotope systematics of roll-front ores in Miocene sandstone at the Felder and McLean uranium deposits (south Texas coastal plain) give a well-defined 207 Pb/ 204 Pb- 235 U/ 204 Pb isochron age of 5.07 + or - 0.15 m.y. The relatively slight degree of scatter of the points defining the isochron is probably due to initial Pb...
Temperature dependence of unsaturated hydraulic conductivity of two soils
Jim Constantz
1982, Soil Science Society of America Journal (46) 466-470
Packed columns of Oakley sand (mixed, mesic Typic Paleudalfs) and Hanford sandy loam (mixed, nonacid, thermic Typic Xerorthents) were used to develop isothermal steady-state fluxes. Soil matric potentials were measured and unsaturated hydraulic conductivities were calculated over a range of matric potentials at 2°, 25°, and 45° ± 0.5°C. In...
Acute and chronic toxicity studies with monochlorobenzene in rainbow trout
George M. Dalich, R. E. Larson, William H. Gingerich
1982, Aquatic Toxicology (2) 127-142
The toxicity of monochlorobenzene (CB) was investigated in rainbow trout following acute intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration and chronic exposure via the water in a continuously flowing system for 15 or 30 days.In the acute study overt toxicity and hepatotoxicity were monitored over a 96-h time period. Variables measured to assess toxicity...
Lakes and lake-like waters of the Hawaiian Archipelago
J. A. Maciolek
1982, Occasional Papers Bernice P. Bishop Museum (25) 1-14
This summary of Hawaiian lacustrine limnology is based on 12 years of field and literature surveys of archipelagic inland waters. Lakes here are distinguished from other standing waters by limits on surface oceanic area (> 0.1 ha) and depth (> 2 m), and by the absence of flatural surface oceanic connection....
On conducting the modified ‘Slug’ test in tight formations
C.E. Neuzil
1982, Water Resources Research (18) 439-441
The method introduced by Bredehoeft and Papadopulos (1980) for conducting a modified ‘slug’ test in tight formations does not assure the condition of approximate equilibrium necessary at the start of the test. In addition, compressibility in the shut-in well can be significantly larger than the compressibility of water, which Bredehoeft...
Volatilization of ketones from water
R. E. Rathbun, D. Y. Tai
1982, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (17) 281-293
The overall mass-transfer coefficients for the volatilization from water of acetone, 2-butanone, 2-pentanone, 3-pentanone, 4-methyl-2-pentanone, 2-heptanone, and 2-octanone were measured simultaneously with the oxygen-absorption coefficient in a laboratory stirred water bath. The liquid-film and gas-film coefficients of the two-film model were determined for the ketones from the overall coefficients,...
Lumber spill in central California waters: Implications for oil spills and sea otters
G.R. VanBlaricom, R.J. Jameson
1982, Science (215) 1503-1505
A large quantity of lumber was spilled in the ocean off central California during the winter of 1978, and it spread through most of the range of the threatened California sea otter population within 4 weeks. The movement rates of lumber were similar to those of oil slicks observed elsewhere....
Molecular size of aquatic humic substances
E.M. Thurman, R.L. Wershaw, Ronald L. Malcolm, D.J. Pinckney
1982, Organic Geochemistry (4) 27-35
Aquatic humic substances, which account for 30 to 50% of the organic carbon in water, are a principal component of aquatic organic matter. The molecular size of aquatic humic substances, determined by small-angle X-ray scattering, varies from 4.7 to 33 Å in their radius of gyration, corresponding to a molecular...
Accumulation of 14C-naphthalene in the tissues of redhead ducks fed oil-contaminated crayfish
I. Barry Tarshis, Barnett A. Rattner
1982, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (11) 155-159
Crayfish, artificially contaminated with14C-naphthalene-5% water-soluble fraction of No. 2 fuel oil, were force-fed to one-year-old redhead ducks to determine the accumulation of petroleum hydrocarbons. The relative distribution of carbon-14 activity in the gall bladder containing bile, and fat were similar, and significantly greater (P < 0.05) than the activity in...
Ancient plate boundaries in the Bering Sea region
M. S. Marlow, Alan K. Cooper, David W. Scholl, H. McLean
1982, Geological Society, London, Special Publications (10) 201-211
Plate tectonic models of the Bering Sea suggest that the abyssal Bering Sea Basin is underlain by oceanic crust, a supposition supported by refraction and magnetic data. The oceanic crust is thought to be a remnant of the Kula(?) plate that was isolated within what is now the Bering...