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Page 263, results 6551 - 6575

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Geographic variation in survival and migratory tendency among North American Common Mergansers
John M. Pearce, John A. Reed, Paul L. Flint
2005, Journal of Field Ornithology (76) 109-118
Movement ecology and demographic parameters for the Common Merganser (Mergus merganser americanus) in North America are poorly known. We used band-recovery data from five locations across North America spanning the years 1938–1998 to examine migratory patterns and estimate survival rates. We examined competing time-invariant, age-graduated models with program MARK...
Home range and space use patterns of flathead catfish during the summer-fall period in two Missouri streams
Jason C. Vokoun, Charles F. Rabeni
2005, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (134) 509-517
Flathead catfish Pylodictis olivaris were radio-tracked in the Grand River and Cuivre River, Missouri, from late July until they moved to overwintering habitats in late October. Fish moved within a definable area, and although occasional long-distance movements occurred, the fish typically returned to the previously occupied area. Seasonal...
Structural evolution of fault zones in sandstone by multiple deformation mechanisms: Moab fault, southeast Utah
N.C. Davatzes, P. Eichhubl, A. Aydin
2005, Geological Society of America Bulletin (117) 135-148
Faults in sandstone are frequently composed of two classes of structures: (1) deformation bands and (2) joints and sheared joints. Whereas the former structures are associated with cataclastic deformation, the latter ones represent brittle fracturing, fragmentation, and brecciation. We investigated the distribution of these structures, their formation, and the underlying...
New constraints on mechanisms of remotely triggered seismicity at Long Valley Caldera
E. E. Brodsky, S. G. Prejean
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-14
Regional-scale triggering of local earthquakes in the crust by seismic waves from distant main shocks has now been robustly documented for over a decade. Some of the most thoroughly recorded examples of repeated triggering of a single site from multiple, large earthquakes are measured in geothermal fields of the western...
The onset of metamorphism in ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites
Jeffrey N. Grossman, Adrian J. Brearley
2005, Meteoritics and Planetary Science (40) 87-122
Ordinary and carbonaceous chondrites of the lowest petrologic types were surveyed by X-ray mapping techniques. A variety of metamorphic effects were noted and subjected to detailed analysis using electron microprobe, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and cathodoluminescence (CL) methods. The distribution of Cr in FeO-rich olivine systematically...
River nutrient loads and catchment size
S. V. Smith, D.P. Swaney, R. W. Buddemeier, M.R. Scarsbrook, M.A. Weatherhead, Christoph Humborg, H. Eriksson, F. Hannerz
2005, Biogeochemistry (75) 83-107
We have used a total of 496 sample sites to calibrate a simple regression model for calculating dissolved inorganic nutrient fluxes via runoff to the ocean. The regression uses the logarithms of runoff and human population as the independent variables and estimates the logarithms of dissolved inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus...
LogCauchy, log-sech and lognormal distributions of species abundances in forest communities
Z.-Y. Yin, S.-L. Peng, H. Ren, Q. Guo, Z.-H. Chen
2005, Ecological Modelling (184) 329-340
Species-abundance (SA) pattern is one of the most fundamental aspects of biological community structure, providing important information regarding species richness, species-area relation and succession. To better describe the SA distribution (SAD) in a community, based on the widely used lognormal (LN) distribution model with exp(-x2) roll-off on Preston's octave scale,...
Forecasting the evolution of seismicity in southern California: Animations built on earthquake stress transfer
S. Toda, R.S. Stein, K. Richards-Dinger, S.B. Bozkurt
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-17
We develop a forecast model to reproduce the distibution of main shocks, aftershocks and surrounding seismicity observed during 1986-200 in a 300 ?? 310 km area centered on the 1992 M = 7.3 Landers earthquake. To parse the catalog into frames with equal numbers of aftershocks, we animate seismicity in...
Arsenic-bearing pyrite and marcasite in the Fire Clay coal bed, Middle Pennsylvanian Breathitt Formation, eastern Kentucky
L.F. Ruppert, J.C. Hower, C.F. Eble
2005, International Journal of Coal Geology (63) 27-35
Arsenic concentrations determined on 11 lithotype samples from the Middle Pennsylvanian Breathitt Group Fire Clay coal bed, Leslie County, KY, range from 1 to 418 ppm (whole coal basis). The 11 lithotype samples, which vary in thickness from 4 to 18 cm, were sampled from a continuous 1.38 m channel...
Assembling an ignimbrite: Compositionally defined eruptive packages in the 1912 Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes ignimbrite, Alaska
J. Fierstein, C. J. N. Wilson
2005, Geological Society of America Bulletin (117) 1094-1107
The 1912 Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (VTTS) ignimbrite was constructed from 9 compositionally distinct, sequentially emplaced packages, each with distinct proportions of rhyolite (R), dacite (D), and andesite (A) pumices that permit us to map package boundaries and flow paths from vent to distal extents. Changing pumice proportions and...
Time-dependent earthquake probabilities
J. Gomberg, M.E. Belardinelli, M. Cocco, P. Reasenberg
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-12
We have attempted to provide a careful examination of a class of approaches for estimating the conditional probability of failure of a single large earthquake, particularly approaches that account for static stress perturbations to tectonic loading as in the approaches of Stein et al. (1997) and Hardebeck (2004). We have...
Incorporating seepage losses into the unsteady streamflow equations for simulating intermittent flow along mountain front streams
R.G. Niswonger, David E. Prudic, G. Pohll, J. Constantz
2005, Water Resources Research (41) 1-16
Seepage losses along numerous mountain front streams that discharge intermittently onto alluvial fans and piedmont alluvial plains are an important source of groundwater in the Basin and Range Province of the Western United States. Determining the distribution of seepage loss along mountain front streams is important when assessing groundwater resources...
Predicted sex ratio of juvenile Kemp's Ridley sea turtles captured near Steinhatchee, Florida
A.A. Geis, W.J. Barichivich, T. Wibbels, M. Coyne, A.M. Landry Jr., D. Owens
2005, Copeia 393-398
The Kemp's Ridley (Lepidochelys kempii) is one of the most endangered sea turtles in the world, and it possesses temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD). Sex ratios produced under TSD can vary widely and can affect the reproductive ecology of a population. Therefore, sex ratios produced from TSD are of ecological and...
Assessment of regional management strategies for controlling seawater intrusion
E.G. Reichard, T.A. Johnson
2005, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (131) 280-291
Simulation-optimization methods, applied with adequate sensitivity tests, can provide useful quantitative guidance for controlling seawater intrusion. This is demonstrated in an application to the West Coast Basin of coastal Los Angeles that considers two management options for improving hydraulic control of seawater intrusion: increased injection into barrier wells and in...
Selecting a distributional assumption for modelling relative densities of benthic macroinvertebrates
B. R. Gray
2005, Ecological Modelling (185) 1-12
The selection of a distributional assumption suitable for modelling macroinvertebrate density data is typically challenging. Macroinvertebrate data often exhibit substantially larger variances than expected under a standard count assumption, that of the Poisson distribution. Such overdispersion may derive from multiple sources, including heterogeneity of habitat (historically and spatially), differing life...
High-resolution surveys for geohazards and shallow gas: NW Adriatic (Italy) and Iskenderun Bay (Turkey)
D.L. Orange, Ana Garcia-Garcia, D. McConnell, T. Lorenson, G. Fortier, F. Trincardi, E. Can
2005, Marine Geophysical Research (26) 247-266
The need for quantifying and understanding the distribution of shallow gas is both of academic interest and of relevance to offshore facilities. The combination of seafloor mapping, subbottom profiling, and multi-channel seismic data can provide information on regions of possible shallow gas, where the gas impacts the acoustic properties of...
Sensitivity analysis of conservative and reactive stream transient storage models applied to field data from multiple-reach experiments
M.N. Gooseff, K.E. Bencala, D.T. Scott, R.L. Runkel, Diane M. McKnight
2005, Advances in Water Resources (28) 479-492
The transient storage model (TSM) has been widely used in studies of stream solute transport and fate, with an increasing emphasis on reactive solute transport. In this study we perform sensitivity analyses of a conservative TSM and two different reactive solute transport models...
Ecoregions and ecoregionalization: geographical and ecological perspectives
Thomas R. Loveland, James W. Merchant
2005, Environmental Management (34) S1-S13
Ecoregions, i.e., areas exhibiting relative homogeneity of ecosystems, are units of analysis that are increasingly important in environmental assessment and management. Ecoregions provide a holistic framework for flexible, comparative analysis of complex environmental problems. Ecoregions mapping has intellectual foundations in both geography and ecology. However, a hallmark of ecoregions mapping...
Late Quaternary evolution of channel and lobe complexes of Monterey Fan
Andrea Fildani, William R. Normark
2004, Marine Geology (206) 199-223
The modern Monterey submarine fan, one of the largest deep-water deposits off the western US, is composed of two major turbidite systems: the Neogene Lower Turbidite System (LTS) and the late Quarternary Upper Turbidite System (UTS). The areally extensive LTS is a distal deposit with low-relief, poorly defined channels,...
Mineral resource of the month: clays
Robert Virta
2004, Geotimes (2004)
Clays represent one of the largest mineral commodities in the world in terms of mineral and rock production and use. Many people, however, do not recognize that clays are used in an amazingly wide variety of applications. Use continues to increase worldwide as populations and their associated needs increase. Robert...
Mineral resource of the month: lead
Gerald R. Smith
2004, Geotimes (2004)
The United States is a major producer and consumer of refined lead, representing almost one quarter of total world production and consumption. Two mines in Alaska and six in Missouri accounted for 97 percent of domestic lead production in 2002. The United States also imports enough refined lead to satisfy...
Demographic estimation methods for plants with dormancy
M. Kery, K.B. Gregg
2004, Animal Biodiversity and Conservation (27) 129-131
Demographic studies in plants appear simple because unlike animals, plants do not run away. Plant individuals can be marked with, e.g., plastic tags, but often the coordinates of an individual may be sufficient to identify it. Vascular plants in temperate latitudes have a pronounced seasonal life–cycle, so most plant demographers...
Extraordinary size and survival of American black duck, Anas rubripes, broods
J. R. Longcore, D.G. McAuley
2004, Canadian Field-Naturalist (118) 129-131
Two female American black duck, Anas rubripes, were initially observed during June 1982 with 20 Class Ib or 18-22 Class Ia-b ducklings in two wetlands in Hancock County, Cherryfield, Maine. Fifteen of 20 ducklings (75%) in one brood and 16 of 18-22 ducklings (72-89%) in the other brood survived...
Nest-site selection and hatching success of waterbirds in coastal Virginia: Some results of habitat manipulation
R.A. Rounds, R.M. Erwin, J.H. Porter
2004, Journal of Field Ornithology (75) 317-329
Rising sea levels in the mid-Atlantic region pose a long-term threat to marshes and their avian inhabitants. The Gull-billed Tern (Sterna nilotica), Common Tern (S. hirundo), Black Skimmer (Rynchops niger), and American Oystercatcher (Haematopus palliatus), species of concern in Virginia, nest on low shelly perimeters of salt marsh islands on...
Phylogenetic relationships of the endangered Shenandoah salamander (Plethodon shenandoah) and other salamanders of the Plethodon cinereus group (Caudata: Plethodontidae)
J.W. Sites, M. Morando, R. Highton, F. Huber, R.E. Jung
2004, Journal of Herpetology (38) 96-105
The Shenandoah salamander (Plethodon shenandoah), known from isolated talus slopes on three of the highest mountains in Shenandoah National Park, is listed as state-endangered in Virginia and federally endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. A 1999 paper by G. R. Thurow described P. shenandoah-like salamanders from three localities further...