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Page 270, results 6726 - 6750

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Changes in redox conditions in deep‐sea sediments of the subarctic North Pacific Ocean: Possible evidence for the presence of North Pacific Deep Water
Walter E. Dean, J. V. Gardner, Eileen Hemphill-Haley
1989, Paleoceanography (4) 639-653
Cores of upper Quaternary and Holocene sediment from the subarctic North Pacific north of about 48°N contain one or more layers of oxidized brown sediment interbedded within predominantly reduced green sediment. The brown layers are enriched in several trace elements, especially Mn, Mo, Ni, and Co, relative to the green...
Attendance patterns of murres at breeding sites: Implications for monitoring
Scott A. Hatch, Martha A. Hatch
1989, Journal of Wildlife Management (53) 483-493
We studied attendance patterns (presence and absence at breeding sites) of common murres (Uria aalge) and thick-billed murres (U. lomvia) at a colony in the Semidi Islands, western Gulf of Alaska. The period from mid-laying through hatching was appropriate for censusing because counts were subject to the least amount of...
Ethylene glycol (antifreeze) poisoning in a free-ranging polar bear
Steven C. Amstrup, Craig L. Gardner, Kevin C. Myers, Frederick W. Oehme
1989, Veterinary and Human Toxicology (31) 317-319
The bright, fluorescent pink-colored remains of a polar bear were found on an Alaskan island with the gravel and snow adjacent to the bear colored bright purple. Traces of fox urine and feces found nearby were also pink. The punk and purple colors were due to rhodamine B, and ethylene...
Acute gastric dilatation and volvulus in a free-living polar bear
Steven C. Amstrup, Carol A. Nielsen
1989, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (25) 601-604
A large, adult male polar bear (Ursus maritimus) was found dead on a barrier island north of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska (USA), in June 1987. There were no external signs of trauma. A twisted distended stomach, distinctive parenchymal and fascial congestion, and significant difficulty in repositioning the...
Body composition and weight dynamics of wintering greater white-fronted geese
Craig R. Ely, Dennis G. Raveling
1989, Journal of Wildlife Management (53) 80-87
Adult greater white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons frontalis) wintering in southern Oregon and California increased or maintained body weight in autumn, lost weight from autumn through winter, and rapidly increased in weight before spring migration in late April. We documented significant annual differences in body weights for both sexes. We related...
Autumn use of Izembek Lagoon, Alaska, by brant from different breeding areas
Austin Reed, Robert A. Stehn, David H. Ward
1989, Journal of Wildlife Management (53) 720-725
Thirty-three adult brant (Branta bernicla) were radiomarked at 4 widely separated areas of the western Canadian arctic and 1 area in western Alaska during June-August 1987. Their use of the Izembek Lagoon on the Alaska Peninsula was monitored through the 1987 fall staging period (Sep-Dec). Eighty percent of the brant...
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...
Remarkable isotopic and trace element trends in potassic through sodic Cretaceous plutons of the Yukon-Koyukuk Basin, Alaska, and the nature of the lithosphere beneath the Koyukuk terrane
Joseph G. Arth, Robert E. Criss, Clara C. Zmuda, Nora K. Foley, W. W. Patton Jr., T. P. Miller
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (94) 15957-15968
During the period from 110 to 80 m.y. ago, a 450-km-long magmatic belt was active along the northern margin of Yukon-Koyukuk basin and on eastern Seward Peninsula. The plutons intruded Upper Jurassic(?) and Lower Cretaceous volcanic arc rocks and Cretaceous sedimentary rocks in Yukon-Koyukuk basin and Proterozoic and lower Paleozoic...
Back-arc with frontal-arc component origin of Triassic Karmutsen basalt, British Columbia, Canada
F. Barker, Brown A. Sutherland, J. R. Budahn, George Plafker
1989, Chemical Geology (75) 81-102
The largely basaltic, ???4.5-6.2-km-thick, Middle to Upper Triassic Karmutsen Formation is a prominent part of the Wrangellian sequence. Twelve analyses of major and minor elements of representative samples of pillowed and massive basalt flows and sills from Queen Charlotte and Vancouver Islands are ferrotholeiites that show a range of 10.2-3.8%...
Igneous history of the Koyukuk terrane, western Alaska: Constraints on the origin, evolution, and ultimate collision of an accreted island arc terrane
S. E. Box, W. W. Patton Jr.
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 15843-15867
The Koyukuk terrane of western Alaska consists of volcanic, volcaniclastic, and plutonic rocks which range from Late Paleozoic to Early Cretaceous in age. The terrane crops out in a U-shaped belt which is roughly paralleled by outer belts of ultramafic rocks, oceanic plate basalts and cherts, and retrograded blueschist facies...
A high-resolution seismic reflection/refraction study of the Chugach-Peninsular terrane boundary, southern Alaska
T.M. Brocher, M. A. Fisher, E.L. Geist, N.I. Christensen
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 4441-4455
We present results from a high-resolution seismic refraction analysis of the shallow (approximately 2 km) crustal structure along the 107-km-long Trans-Alaska Crustal Transect Chugach reflection line in southern Alaska and a comparison with laboratory measurements of field samples. The refraction analysis includes the two-dimensional interpretation of several thousand first- and...
Teleseismically recorded seismicity before and after the May 7, 1986, Andreanof Islands, Alaska, earthquake
E.R. Engdahl, S. Billington, C. Kisslinger
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 15481-15498
The May 7, 1986, Andreanof Islands earthquake (Mw 8.0) is the largest event to have occurred in that section of the Aleutian arc since the March 9, 1957, Aleutian Islands earthquake (Mw 8.6). Teleseismically well-recorded earthquakes in the region of the 1986 earthquake are relocated with a plate model and with careful...
Seismic reflection images of the crust of the northern part of the Chugach terrane, Alaska: Results of a survey for the Trans-Alaska Crustal Transect (TACT)
M. A. Fisher, T.M. Brocher, W. J. Nokleberg, George Plafker, G.L. Smith
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 4424-4440
Deep crustal seismic reflection data show strong reflections from the middle and lower crust of the convergent continental margin near the eastern end of the Aleutian trench. These data were collected across the Border Ranges fault system, a major suture zone that separates the Peninsular and Chugach tectonostratigraphic terranes. The...
Nesting biology of pacific loons, Gavia pacifica, on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
Margaret R. Petersen
1989, Canadian Field-Naturalist (103) 265-269
The nesting biology of Pacific Loons, Gavia pacifica, was studied from 1973 to 1975 on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska. Loons maintained territories on ponds throughout the pre-nesting period. Both adults incubated eggs and raised the young. Males incubated more than females during early incubation, and females more than males during...
Exploration computer applications to primary dispersion halos: Kougarok tin prospect, Seward Peninsula, Alaska, USA
Jeffrey C. Reid
1989, Conference Paper, Application of Computers and Operations Research in the Mineral Industry
Computer processing and high resolution graphics display of geochemical data were used to quickly, accurately, and efficiently obtain important decision-making information for tin (cassiterite) exploration, Seward Peninsula, Alaska (USA). Primary geochemical dispersion patterns were determined for tin-bearing intrusive granite phases of Late Cretaceous age with exploration bedrock lithogeochemistry at the...
Changes in floral diversities, floral turnover rates, and climates in Campanian and Maastrichtian time, North Slope of Alaska
N. O. Frederiksen
1989, Cretaceous Research (10) 249-266
One-hundred-and-ten angiosperm pollen taxa have been found in upper Campanian to Masstrichtian rocks of the Colville River region, North Slope of Alaska. These are the highest paleolatitude Campanian and Maastrichtian floras known from North America. Total angiosperm pollen diversity rose during the Campanian and declined toward the end of the...
The Kanuti ophiolite, Alaska
R. A. Loney, G. R. Himmelberg
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 15869-15900
The Kanuti ophiolite is a mafic-ultramafic thrust sheet of probable Jurassic age, formerly considered to be the upper part of the Yukon-Koyukuk ophiolite belt (Angayucham terrane). It is here called the Kanuti ophiolite after the Kanuti River region on the southeastern flank of the Yukon-Koyukuk Basin. The thrust sheet crops...
Petrology and age of volcanic-arc rocks from the continental margin of the Bering Sea: Implications for Early Eocene relocation of plate boundaries
A. S. Davis, L.-B.G. Pickthorn, T.L. Vallier, M. S. Marlow
1989, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (26) 1474-1490
Eocene volcanic flow and dike rocks from the Beringian margin have arc characteristics, implying a convergent history for this region during the early Tertiary. The extrusive rocks are basalt, basaltic andesite, andesite, and minor dacite and rhyolite. The intrusive sample is from a quartz diorite dike intruding serpentinized peridotite. Major-element...
A satellite-based digital data system for low-frequency geophysical data
S. Silverman, C. Mortensen, M. Johnston
1989, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (79) 189-198
A reliable method for collection, display, and analysis of low-frequency geophysical data from isolated sites, which can be throughout North and South America and the Pacific Rim, has been developed for use with the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) system. Geophysical data primarily intended for earthquake hazard and crustal deformation...
Extra-pair copulation in the greater white-fronted goose
Craig R. Ely
1989, The Condor (91) 990-991
Controlled experiments and quantitative field studies with both captive and wild waterfowl (Family Anatidae) have demonstrated that extra-pair copulations (EPCs, both forced and unforced) may be a viable alternative reproductive strategy for males (Mineau and Cooke 1979; Burns et al. 1980; Cheng et al. 1982, 1983; Afron 1985; Evarts and...
Geologic implications of topographic, gravity, and aeromagnetic data in the northern Yukon-Koyukuk province and its borderlands, Alaska
J. W. Cady
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 15821-15841
The northern Yukon-Koyukuk province is characterized by low elevation and high Bouguer gravity and aeromagnetic anomalies in contrast to the adjacent Brooks Range and Ruby geanticline. Using newly compiled digital topographic, gravity, and aeromagnetic maps, I have divided the province into three geophysical domains. The Koyukuk domain, which is nearly...