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

184542 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 2187, results 54651 - 54675

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Validation of daily ring deposition in the otoliths of age-0 channel catfish
P.C. Sakaris, E.R. Irwin
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 212-218
We developed and validated methods for estimating the daily age of age-0 channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus. Two clutches of channel catfish eggs were hatched in the laboratory; subsequently, one was stocked in a 186-m2 earthen nursery pond and the other in a 757-L outdoor circular tank. Before stocking, subsamples of...
Effectiveness of household reverse-osmosis systems in a Western U.S. region with high arsenic in groundwater
M. Walker, R. L. Seiler, M. Meinert
2008, Science of the Total Environment (389) 245-252
It is well known to the public in Lahontan Valley in rural Nevada, USA, that local aquifers produce water with varied, but sometimes very high concentrations of arsenic (> 4??ppm). As a result, many residents of the area have installed household reverse-osmosis (RO) systems to produce drinking water. We examined...
Reconstructed historical land cover and biophysical parameters for studies of land-atmosphere interactions within the eastern United States
Louis T. Steyaert, R.G. Knox
2008, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (113) 1-27
Over the past 350 years, the eastern half of the United States experienced extensive land cover changes. These began with land clearing in the 1600s, continued with widespread deforestation, wetland drainage, and intensive land use by 1920, and then evolved to the present-day landscape of forest regrowth, intensive agriculture, urban...
A mantle plume beneath California? The mid-Miocene Lovejoy Flood Basalt, northern California
N.J. Garrison, C.J. Busby, P. B. Gans, K. Putirka, D.L. Wagner
2008, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 551-572
The Lovejoy basalt represents the largest eruptive unit identified in California, and its age, volume, and chemistry indicate a genetic affinity with the Columbia River Basalt Group and its associated mantle-plume activity. Recent field mapping, geochemical analyses, and radiometric dating suggest that the Lovejoy basalt erupted during the mid-Miocene from...
Silurian Gastropoda from the Alexander terrane, southeast Alaska
D.M. Rohr, R. B. Blodgett
2008, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 51-61
Gastropods are described from Ludlow-age strata of the Heceta Limestone on Prince of Wales Island, southeast Alaska. They are part of a diverse megabenthic fauna of the Alexander terrane, an accreted terrane of Siberian or Uralian affinities. Heceta Limestone gastropods with Uralian affinities include Kirkospira glacialis, which closely resembles "Pleurotomaria"...
Tile drainage as karst: Conduit flow and diffuse flow in a tile-drained watershed
K. E. Schilling, M. Helmers
2008, Journal of Hydrology (349) 291-301
The similarity of tiled-drained watersheds to karst drainage basins can be used to improve understanding of watershed-scale nutrient losses from subsurface tile drainage networks. In this study, short-term variations in discharge and chemistry were examined from a tile outlet collecting subsurface tile flow from a 963 ha agricultural watershed. Study...
Extent of the last ice sheet in northern Scotland tested with cosmogenic 10Be exposure ages
W.M. Phillips, A.M. Hall, C.K. Ballantyne, S. Binnie, P.W. Kubik, S. Freeman
2008, Journal of Quaternary Science (23) 101-107
The extent of the last British-Irish Ice Sheet (BIIS) in northern Scotland is disputed. A restricted ice sheet model holds that at the global Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; ca. 23-19 ka) the BIIS terminated on land in northern Scotland, leaving Buchan, Caithness and the Orkney Islands ice-free. An alternative model...
Comparison of pesticide concentrations in streams at low flow in six metropolitan areas of the United States
Lori A. Sprague, Lisa H. Nowell
2008, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (27) 288-298
To examine the effect of urban development on pesticide concentrations in streams under low-flow conditions, water samples were collected at stream sites along an urban land use gradient in six environmentally heterogeneous metropolitan areas of the United States. In all six metropolitan areas, total insecticide concentrations generally increased significantly as...
Defoliation effects on Bromus tectorum seed production: Implications for grazing
K. Hempy-Mayer, D.A. Pyke
2008, Rangeland Ecology and Management (61) 116-123
Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum L.) is an invasive annual grass that creates near-homogenous stands in areas throughout the Intermountain sagebrush steppe and challenges successful native plant restoration in these areas. A clipping experiment carried out at two cheatgrass-dominated sites in eastern Oregon (Lincoln Bench and Succor Creek) evaluated defoliation as a...
Shallow water processes govern system-wide phytoplankton bloom dynamics: A field study
J.K. Thompson, Jeffrey R. Koseff, Stephen G. Monismith, L.V. Lucas
2008, Journal of Marine Systems (74) 153-166
Prior studies of the phytoplankton dynamics in South San Francisco Bay, California, USA have hypothesized that bivalve filter-feeders are responsible for the limited phytoplankton blooms in the system. This study was designed to examine the effects of benthic grazing and light attenuation on this shallow, turbid, and nutrient replete system....
A genomic view of the NOD-like receptor family in teleost fish: Identification of a novel NLR subfamily in zebrafish
K.J. Laing, M. K. Purcell, J. R. Winton, J.D. Hansen
2008, BMC Evolutionary Biology (8)
Background. A large multigene family of NOD-like receptor (NLR) molecules have been described in mammals and implicated in immunity and apoptosis. Little information, however, exists concerning this gene family in non-mammalian taxa. This current study, therefore, provides an in-depth investigation of this gene family in lower vertebrates including extensive phylogenetic...
Dunes on Titan observed by Cassini Radar
J. Radebaugh, R. D. Lorenz, J. I. Lunine, S. D. Wall, G. Boubin, E. Reffet, Randolph L. Kirk, R.M. Lopes, E. R. Stofan, Laurence A. Soderblom, M. Allison, M. Janssen, P. Paillou, P. Callahan, Carl Spencer, The Cassini Radar Team
2008, Icarus (194) 690-703
Thousands of longitudinal dunes have recently been discovered by the Titan Radar Mapper on the surface of Titan. These are found mainly within ±30° of the equator in optically-, near-infrared-, and radar-dark regions, indicating a strong proportion of organics, and cover well over 5% of Titan's surface. Their longitudinal duneform,...
Estimation of perennial vegetation cover distribution in the Mojave Desert using MODIS-EVI data
C.S.A. Wallace, R. H. Webb, K.A. Thomas
2008, GIScience and Remote Sensing (45) 167-187
This paper details a method to create regional models of perennial vegetation cover using pre-existing field data and satellite imagery. Total cover of perennial vegetation is an important ecological attribute of desert ecosystems, including the Mojave Desert, USA, an area of 125,000 km2. Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer Enhanced Vegetation Index (MODIS-EVI)...
Cancer mortality in a Chinese population exposed to hexavalent chromium in drinking water
J.J. Beaumont, R.M. Sedman, S.D. Reynolds, C.D. Sherman, L.-H. Li, R.A. Howd, M.S. Sandy, L. Zeise, G.V. Alexeeff
2008, Epidemiology (19) 12-23
BACKGROUND: In 1987, investigators in Liaoning Province, China, reported that mortality rates for all cancer, stomach cancer, and lung cancer in 1970-1978 were higher in villages with hexavalent chromium (Cr)-contaminated drinking water than in the general population. The investigators reported rates, but did not report statistical measures of association or...
Incorporating GIS building data and census housing statistics for sub-block-level population estimation
S.-S. Wu, L. Wang, X. Qiu
2008, Professional Geographer (60) 121-135
This article presents a deterministic model for sub-block-level population estimation based on the total building volumes derived from geographic information system (GIS) building data and three census block-level housing statistics. To assess the model, we generated artificial blocks by aggregating census block areas and calculating the respective housing statistics. We...
Environmental geochemistry of a Kuroko-type massive sulfide deposit at the abandoned Valzinco mine, Virginia, USA
R.R. Seal II, J. M. Hammarstrom, A.N. Johnson, N.M. Piatak, G.A. Wandless
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 320-342
The abandoned Valzinco mine, which worked a steeply dipping Kuroko-type massive sulfide deposit in the Virginia Au-pyrite belt, contributed significant metal-laden acid-mine drainage to the Knight's Branch watershed. The host rocks were dominated by metamorphosed felsic volcanic rocks, which offered limited acid-neutralizing potential. The ores were dominated by pyrite, sphalerite,...
Three-dimensional flow in the storative semiconfining layers of a leaky aquifer
N. Sepulveda
2008, Ground Water (46) 144-155
An analytical solution for three-dimensional (3D) flow in the storative semiconfining layers of a leaky aquifer fully penetrated by a production well is developed in this article to provide a method from which accurate hydraulic parameters in the semiconfining layers can be derived from aquifer test data. The analysis of...
Relationships between microbial communities and environmental parameters at sites impacted by mining of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits, Prince William Sound, Alaska
A. L. Foster, L. Munk, R.A. Koski, Wayne C. Shanks III, L.L. Stillings
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 279-307
The relations among geochemical parameters and sediment microbial communities were examined at three shoreline sites in the Prince William Sound, Alaska, which display varying degrees of impact by acid-rock drainage (ARD) associated with historic mining of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits. Microbial communities were examined using total fatty acid methyl esters...
Differences in phosphorus and nitrogen delivery to the Gulf of Mexico from the Mississippi River Basin
R. B. Alexander, R. A. Smith, G. E. Schwarz, E.W. Boyer, J.V. Nolan, J. W. Brakebill
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 822-830
Seasonal hypoxia in the northern Gulf of Mexico has been linked to increased nitrogen fluxes from the Mississippi and Atchafalaya River Basins, though recent evidence shows that phosphorus also influences productivity in the Gulf. We developed a spatially explicit and structurally detailed SPARROW water-quality model that reveals important differences in...
Winter fidelity and apparent survival of lesser snow goose populations in the Pacific flyway
C.K. Williams, M.D. Samuel, Vasily V. Baranyuk, E.G. Cooch, Donald K. Kraege
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 159-167
The Beringia region of the Arctic contains 2 colonies of lesser snow geese (Chen caerulescens caerulescens) breeding on Wrangel Island, Russia, and Banks Island, Canada, and wintering in North America. The Wrangel Island population is composed of 2 subpopulations from a sympatric breeding colony but separate wintering areas, whereas the...
Effects of ionic strength, temperature, and pH on degradation of selected antibiotics
K.A. Loftin, C.D. Adams, M. T. Meyer, R. Surampalli
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 378-386
Aqueous degradation rates, which include hydrolysis and epimerization, for chlortetracycline (CTC), oxytetracycline (OTC), tetracycline (TET), lincomycin (LNC), sulfachlorpyridazine (SCP), sulfadimethoxine (SDM), sulfathiazole (STZ), trimethoprim (TRM), and tylosin A (TYL) were studied as a function of ionic strength (0.0015, 0.050, or 0.084 mg/L as Na2HPO4), temperature (7, 22, and 35°C), and...
High resolution shallow geologic characterization of a late Pleistocene eolian environment using ground penetrating radar and optically stimulated luminescence techniques: North Carolina, USA
D. Mallinson, S. Mahan, Christine Moore
2008, Southeastern Geology (45) 161-177
Geophysical surveys, sedimentology, and optically-stimulated luminescence age analyses were used to assess the geologic development of a coastal system near Swansboro, NC. This area is a significant Woodland Period Native American habitation and is designated the "Broad Reach" archaeological site. 2-d and 3-d subsurface geophysical surveys were performed using a...
Chemical and toxicologic assessment of organic contaminants in surface water using passive samplers
D.A. Alvarez, W.L. Cranor, S.D. Perkins, R.C. Clark, S.B. Smith
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 1024-1033
Passive sampling methodologies were used to conduct a chemical and toxicologic assessment of organic contaminants in the surface waters of three geographically distinct agricultural watersheds. A selection of current-use agrochemicals and persistent organic pollutants, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, polychlorinated biphenyls, and organochlorine pesticides, were targeted using the polar organic chemical...
Evaluation of an index of biotic integrity approach used to assess biological condition in western U.S. streams and rivers at varying spatial scales
M. R. Meador, T.R. Whittier, R. M. Goldstein, R. M. Hughes, D.V. Peck
2008, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (137) 13-22
Consistent assessments of biological condition are needed across multiple ecoregions to provide a greater understanding of the spatial extent of environmental degradation. However, consistent assessments at large geographic scales are often hampered by lack of uniformity in data collection, analyses, and interpretation. The index of biotic integrity (IBI) has been...
Ways of learning: Observational studies versus experiments
T.L. Shaffer, Douglas H. Johnson
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 4-13
Manipulative experimentation that features random assignment of treatments, replication, and controls is an effective way to determine causal relationships. Wildlife ecologists, however, often must take a more passive approach to investigating causality. Their observational studies lack one or more of the 3 cornerstones of experimentation: controls, randomization, and replication. Although...