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Page 279, results 6951 - 6975

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Lead in the Getchell-Turquoise ridge Carlin-type gold deposits from the perspective of potential igneous and sedimentary rock sources in Northern Nevada: Implications for fluid and metal sources
R. M. Tosdal, J. S. Cline, C.M. Fanning, J. L. Wooden
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1189-1211
Lead isotope compositions of bulk mineral samples (fluorite, orpiment, and realgar) determined using conventional techniques and of ore-stage arsenian pyrite using the Sensitive High Resolution Ion-Microprobe (SHRIMP) in the Getchell and Turquoise Ridge Carlin-type gold deposits (Osgood Mountains) require contribution from two different Pb sources. One Pb source dominates the ore stage. It has a limited Pb isotope range characterized by 208Pb/ 206Pb values of 2.000...
Morphological traits of Pacific Flyway Canada Geese as an aid to subspecies identification and management
John M. Pearce, Karen S. Bollinger
2003, Journal of Field Ornithology (74) 357-369
Subspecies of Canada Geese (Branta canadensis) exhibit wide variation in body size across their range. To monitor harvest levels in the Pacific Flyway, biologists commonly use culmen length and plumage color to differentiate among subspecies on sympatric wintering grounds. Among the four large-bodied Pacific subspecies (B. c. parvipes, B. c....
Structural controls on Carlin-type gold mineralization in the gold bar district, Eureka County, Nevada
O. Yigit, E.P. Nelson, M.W. Hitzman, A. H. Hofstra
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1173-1188
The Gold Bar district in the southern Roberts Mountains, 48 km northwest of Eureka, Nevada, contains one main deposit (Gold Bar), five satellite deposits, and other resources. Approximately 0.5 Moz of gold have been recovered from a resource of 1,639,000 oz of gold in Carlin-type gold deposits in lower plate, miogeoclinal carbonate rocks below the Roberts Mountains thrust. Host rocks are unit 2 of the Upper Member...
Numerical modeling of coupled nitrification-denitrification in sediment perfusion cores from the hyporheic zone of the Shingobee River, MN
R.W. Sheibley, A. P. Jackman, J.H. Duff, F.J. Triska
2003, Advances in Water Resources (26) 977-987
Nitrification and denitrification kinetics in sediment perfusion cores were numerically modeled and compared to experiments on cores from the Shingobee River MN, USA. The experimental design incorporated mixing groundwater discharge with stream water penetration into the cores, which provided a well-defined, one-dimensional simulation of...
Late Holocene estuarine-inner shelf interactions; is there evidence of an estuarine retreat path for Tampa Bay, Florida?
B.T. Donahue, A. C. Hine, S. Tebbens, S. D. Locker, D.C. Twichell
2003, Marine Geology (200) 219-241
The purpose of this study was to determine if and how a large, modern estuarine system, situated in the middle of an ancient carbonate platform, has affected its adjacent inner shelf both in the past during the last, post-glacial sea-level rise and during the present. An additional purpose was to...
Ground cracks associated with the 1994 double spring flat earthquake, west-central Nevada
A. R. Ramelli, C.M. DePolo, J. C. Yount
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 2762-2768
The 1994 Double Spring Flat earthquake (Mw 5.8) occurred within a densely faulted step-over between the Genoa and Antelope Valley faults, two principal normal faults of the transition zone between the Basin and Range Province and the northern Sierra Nevada. The earthquake created zones of ground cracks from 0.1 to 2.8 km long along at least five northwest- to north-northwest-striking faults in the...
Extensive deposits on the Pacific plate from Late Pleistocene North American glacial lake outbursts
W. R. Normark, J.A. Reid
2003, Journal of Geology (111) 617-637
One of the major unresolved issues of the Late Pleistocene catastrophic-flood events in the northwestern United States (e.g., from glacial Lake Missoula) has been what happened when the flood discharge reached the ocean. This study compiles available 3.5-kHz high-resolution and airgun seismic reflection data, long-range sidescan sonar images, and sediment core data to define the distribution...
Effect of isolated fractures on accelerated flow in unsaturated porous rock
Grace W. Su, John R. Nimmo, Maria I. Dragila
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 1-1-1-5
Fractures that begin and end in the unsaturated zone, or isolated fractures, have been ignored in previous studies because they were generally assumed to behave as capillary barriers and remain nonconductive. We conducted a series of experiments using Berea sandstone samples to examine the physical mechanisms controlling flow in a...
Conceptual model for transferring information between small watersheds
E.T. Cleaves
2003, Environmental Geology (45) 190-197
Stream and watershed management and restoration can be greatly facilitated through use of physiographic landform classification to organize and communicate natural resource, hazard, and environmental information at a broad scale (1:250,000) as illustrated by the Piedmont and Coastal Plain Provinces in Maryland, or at a small scale (1:24,000) as illustrated...
Effects of ammonia on juvenile unionid mussels (Lampsilis cardium) in laboratory sediment toxicity tests
Teresa J. Newton, John W. Allran, Jonathan A. O’Donnell, Michelle Bartsch, William B. Richardson
2003, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (22) 2554-2560
Ammonia is a relatively toxic compound generated in water and sediments by heterotrophic bacteria and accumulates in sediments and pore water. Recent data suggest that unionid mussels are sensitive to un-ionized ammonia (NH3) relative to other organisms. Existing sediment exposure systems are not suitable for ammonia toxicity studies with juvenile...
A new pterosaur tracksite from the Jurassic Summerville formation, near Ferron, Utah
Debra L. Mickelson, Martin G. Lockley, John Bishop, James I. Kirkland
2003, Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces (11) 125-142
Pterosaur tracks (cf. Pteraichnus) from the Summerville Formation of the Ferron area of central Utah add to the growing record of Pteraichnus tracksites in the Late Jurassic Summerville Formation and time-equivalent, or near time-equivalent, deposits. The site is typical in revealing high pterosaur track densities, but low ichnodiversity suggesting congregations or “flocks” of...
Binding of mercury(II) to aquatic humic substances: Influence of pH and source of humic substances
M. Haitzer, G. R. Aiken, J. N. Ryan
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 2436-2441
Conditional distribution coefficients (KDOM‘) for Hg(II) binding to seven dissolved organic matter (DOM) isolates were measured at environmentally relevant ratios of Hg(II) to DOM. The results show that KDOM‘ values for different types of samples (humic acids, fulvic acids, hydrophobic acids) isolated from diverse aquatic environments were all...
Regional quaternary submarine geomorphology in the Florida Keys
B. H. Lidz, C. D. Reich, E.A. Shinn
2003, Geological Society of America Bulletin (115) 845-866
High-quality seismic reflection profiles fill a major gap in geophysical data along the south Florida shelf, allowing updated interpretations of the history of the Quaternary coral reef system. Incorporation of the new and existing data sets provides the basis for detailed color maps of the Pleistocene surface and thickness of...
Analysis of aquifer mineralization by paleodrainage channels
H. Rubin, R. W. Buddemeier
2003, Journal of Hydrology (277) 280-304
Mineralization of groundwater resources is a problem in south-central Kansas, due to the penetration of saline water from Permian bedrock formations into the overlying alluvial aquifer. One of the mechanisms involved in the mineralization involves small bedrock features of high permeability located in places occupied by streams and rivers in...
Metabolic and structural response of hyporheic microbial communities to variations in supply of dissolved organic matter
S.E.G. Findlay, R. L. Sinsabaugh, W. V. Sobczak, M. Hoostal
2003, Limnology and Oceanography (48) 1608-1617
Hyporheic sediment bacterial communities were exposed to dissolved organic matter (DOM) from a variety of sources to assess the interdependence of bacterial metabolism and community composition. Experiments ranged from small-scale core perfusions with defined compounds (glucose, bovine serum albumin) to mesocosms receiving natural leaf leachate or water from different streams. Response variables included bacterial production, oxygen consumption, extracellular enzyme activity, and community similarity...
Long-term, high-frequency current and temperature measurements along central California: Insights into upwelling/relaxation and internal waves on the inner shelf
C. D. Storlazzi, M.A. McManus, J.D. Figurski
2003, Continental Shelf Research (23) 901-918
Thermistor chains and acoustic Doppler current profilers were deployed at the northern and southern ends of Monterey Bay to examine the thermal and hydrodynamic structure of the inner (h ??? 20 m) shelf of central California. These instruments sampled temperature and current velocity at 2-min intervals over a 13-month period...
Local extinction and turnover rates at the edge and interior of species' ranges
P.F. Doherty Jr., T. Boulinier, D. Nichols James. Nichols
2003, Conference Paper, Annales Zoologici Fennici
One hypothesis for the maintenance of the edge of a species' range suggests that more central (and abundant) populations are relatively stable and edge populations are less stable with increased local extinction and turnover rates. To date, estimates of such metrics are equivocal due to design and analysis flaws. Apparent...
Uptake of elements from seawater by ferromanganese crusts: Solid-phase associations and seawater speciation
A. Koschinsky, J.R. Hein
2003, Marine Geology (198) 331-351
Marine Fe-Mn oxyhydroxide crusts form by precipitation of dissolved components from seawater. Three hydrogenetic crust samples (one phosphatized) and two hydrothermal Mn-oxide samples were subjected to a sequential-leaching procedure in order to determine the host phases of 40 elements. Those host-phase associations are discussed with respect to element speciation in...
Variable near-surface deformation along the Commerce segment of the Commerce geophysical lineament, southeast Missouri to southern Illinois, USA
J. K. Odum, W. J. Stephenson, R. A. Williams
2003, Tectonophysics (368) 155-170
Recent studies have demonstrated a plausible link between surface and near-surface tectonic features and the vertical projection of the Commerce geophysical lineament (CGL). The CGL is a 5- to 10-km-wide zone of basement magnetic and gravity anomalies traceable for more than 600 km, extending from Arkansas through southeast Missouri and...
Characterization of the time-dependent strain field at seismogenic depths using first-motion focal mechanisms: Observations of large-scale decadal variations in stress along the San Andrea fault system
S.A. Sipkin, P.G. Silver
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
We present a method for summing moment tensors derived from first-motion focal mechanisms to study temporal dependence in features of the subsurface regional strain field. Time-dependent processes are inferred by comparing mechanisms summed over differing time periods. We apply this methodology to seismogenic zones in central and southern California using...
Possible Juventae Chasma subice volcanic eruptions and Maja Valles ice outburst floods on Mars: Implications of Mars Global surveyor crater densities, geomorphology, and topography
M. G. Chapman, M.T. Gudmundsson, A.J. Russell, T.M. Hare
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (108) 2-1
This article discusses image, topographic, and spectral data from the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) mission that provide new information concerning the surface age, geomorphology, and topography of the Juventae Chasma/Maja Valles system. Our study utilizes data from two instruments on board MGS: images from the Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) and...
Nesting behavior of Palila, as assessed from video recordings
M.E. Laut, P.C. Banko, E.M. Gray
2003, Pacific Science (57) 385-392
We quantified nesting behavior of Palila (Loxiodes bailleui), an endangered Hawaiian honeycreeper, by recording at nests during three breeding seasons using a black-and-white video camera connected to a Videocassette recorder. A total of seven nests was observed. We measured the following factors for daylight hours: percentage of time the female...
Structure and mechanics of the Hayward-Rodgers Creek Fault step-over, San Francisco Bay, California
T. Parsons, R. Sliter, E.L. Geist, R.C. Jachens, B. E. Jaffe, A. Foxgrover, P. E. Hart, J. McCarthy
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 2187-2200
A dilatational step-over between the right-lateral Hayward and Rodgers Creek faults lies beneath San Pablo Bay in the San Francisco Bay area. A key seismic hazard issue is whether an earthquake on one of the faults could rupture through the step-over, enhancing its maximum possible magnitude. If ruptures are terminated at the step-over, then another important issue is how strain transfers through the step. We developed a combined...
Atlantic coast feeding habits of striped bass: A synthesis supporting a coast-wide understanding of trophic biology
J. F. Walter III, A.S. Overton, K.H. Ferry, M. E. Mather
2003, Fisheries Management and Ecology (10) 349-360
The recent increase in the Atlantic coast population of striped bass, Morone saxatilis (Walbaum), prompted managers to re-evaluate their predatory impact. Published and unpublished diet data for striped bass on the Atlantic Coast of North America were examined for geographical, ontogenetic and seasonal patterns in the diet and to assess...