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Page 2874, results 71826 - 71850

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Effects of episodic acidification on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolts
J.A. Magee, M. Obedzinski, S. D. McCormick, J.F. Kocik
2003, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (60) 214-221
The effect of episodic acidification on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) smolt physiology and survival in fresh water (FW) and seawater (SW) was investigated. Smolts were held in either ambient (control, pH 6.0-6.6), acidified (chronic, pH 4.4-6.1), or episodically acidified (episodic, pH reduction from control levels to pH ???5.2 for 48...
Arsenic in groundwater in eastern New England: Occurrence, controls, and human health implications
J. D. Ayotte, D.L. Montgomery, S. M. Flanagan, K. W. Robinson
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 2075-2083
In eastern New England, high concentrations (greater than 10 ??g/L) of arsenic occur in groundwater. Privately supplied drinking water from bedrock aquifers often has arsenic concentrations at levels of concern to human health, whereas drinking water from unconsolidated aquifers is least affected by arsenic contamination. Water from wells in metasedimentary...
Formation of modern and Paleozoic stratiform barite at cold methane seeps on continental margins
M.E. Torres, G. Bohrmann, T.E. Dube, F. G. Poole
2003, Geology (31) 897-900
Stratiform (bedded) Paleozoic barite occurs as large conformable beds within organic- and chert-rich sediments; the beds lack major sulfide minerals and are the largest and most economically significant barite deposits in the geologic record. Existing models for the origin of bedded barite fail to explain all their characteristics: the deposits...
Surface wave tomography of North America and the Caribbean using global and regional broad-band networks: Phase velocity maps and limitations of ray theory
S. Godey, R. Snieder, A. Villasenor, H.M. Benz
2003, Geophysical Journal International (152) 620-632
We present phase velocity maps of fundamental mode Rayleigh waves across the North American and Caribbean plates. Our data set consists of 1846 waveforms from 172 events recorded at 91 broad-band stations operating in North America. We compute phase velocity maps in four narrow period bands between 50 and 150...
Applicability of tetrazolium salts for the measurement of respiratory activity and viability of groundwater bacteria
P.B. Hatzinger, P. Palmer, R. L. Smith, C.T. Penarrieta, T. Yoshinari
2003, Journal of Microbiological Methods (52) 47-58
A study was undertaken to measure aerobic respiration by indigenous bacteria in a sand and gravel aquifer on western Cape Cod, MA using tetrazolium salts and by direct oxygen consumption using gas chromatography (GC). In groundwater and aquifer slurries, the rate of aerobic respiration...
Epizootiology and histopathology of Parvicapsula sp. in coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch
William T. Yasutake, Diane G. Elliott
2003, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (56) 215-221
The epizootiology and histopathology of the myxosporean Parvicapsula sp. was studied during monthly health surveys of 4 groups of coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch at a commercial farm in Puget Sound, Washington, USA, from 1984 to 1986. No Parvicapsula sp. was detected in histological samples taken from juvenile fish in fresh water, but the parasite was detected...
Impacts of the Brown Tree Snake: Patterns of Decline and Species Persistence in Guam's Avifauna
G.J. Wiles, J. Bart, R.E. Beck Jr., C.F. Aguon
2003, Conservation Biology (17) 1350-1360
Predation by brown tree snakes (Boiga irregularis ) devastated the avifauna of Guam in the Mariana Islands during the last half of the twentieth century, causing the extirpation or serious reduction of most of the island's 25 resident bird species. Past studies have provided qualitative descriptions of the decline of native...
Environmental fate of roxarsone in poultry litter. I. Degradation of roxarsone during composting
J.R. Garbarino, A.J. Bednar, D.W. Rutherford, R.S. Beyer, R.L. Wershaw
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 1509-1514
Roxarsone, 3-nitro-4-hydroxyphenylarsonic acid, is an organoarsenic compound that is used extensively in the feed of broiler poultryto control coccidial intestinal parasites, improve feed efficiency, and promote rapid growth. Nearly all the roxarsone in the feed is excreted unchanged in the manure. Poultry litter composed of the manure and bedding material...
High plant diversity in Eocene South America: Evidence from Patagonia
P. Wilf, N.R. Cuneo, K.R. Johnson, J.F. Hicks, S.L. Wing, J. D. Obradovich
2003, Science (300) 122-125
Tropical South America has the highest plant diversity of any region today, but this richness is usually characterized as a geologically recent development (Neogene or Pleistocene). From caldera-lake beds exposed at Laguna del Hunco in Patagonia, Argentina, paleolatitude ~47oS, we report 102 leaf species. Radioisotopic and paleomagnetic analyses indicate that...
Geologic setting and genesis of the Mule Canyon low-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposit, north-central Nevada
D. A. John, A. H. Hofstra, R.J. Fleck, J.E. Brummer, E.C. Saderholm
2003, Economic Geology (98) 425-463
The Mule Canyon mine exploited shallow, low-sulfidation, epithermal Au-Ag deposits that lie near the west side of the Northern Nevada rift in northern Lander County, Nevada. Mule Canyon consists of six small deposits that contained premining reserves of about 8.2 Mt at an average grade of 3.81 g Au/tonne. It is an uncommon mafic end member of low-sulfidation Au-Ag deposits associated with tholeiitic bimodal...
Shallow soil CO2 flow along the San Andreas and Calaveras Faults, California
J.L. Lewicki, William C. Evans, G.E. Hilley, M.L. Sorey, J.D. Rogie, S.L. Brantley
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
We evaluate a comprehensive soil CO2 survey along the San Andreas fault (SAF) in Parkfield, and the Calaveras fault (CF) in Hollister, California, in the context of spatial and temporal variability, origin, and transport of CO2 in fractured terrain. CO2 efflux was measured within grids with portable instrumentation and continously...
The role of microbial reductive dechlorination of TCE at a phytoremediation site
E.M. Godsy, E. Warren, V.V. Paganelli
2003, International Journal of Phytoremediation (5) 73-87
In April 1996, a phytoremediation field demonstration site at the Naval Air Station, Fort Worth, Texas, was developed to remediate shallow oxic ground water (<3.7 m deep) contaminated with chlorinated ethenes. Microbial populations were sampled in February and June 1998. The populations under the newly planted cottonwood...
Planning for population viability on Northern Great Plains national grasslands
F. B. Samson, F.L. Knopf, C.W. McCarthy, B.R. Noon, W.R. Ostlie, S.M. Rinehart, S. Larson, G. E. Plumb, G.L. Schenbeck, D.N. Svingen, T.W. Byer
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 986-999
Broad-scale information in concert with conservation of individual species must be used to develop conservation priorities and a more integrated ecosystem protection strategy. In 1999 the United States Forest Service initiated an approach for the 1.2× 106 ha of national grasslands in the Northern Great Plains to fulfill the requirement...
Staghorn tempestites in the Florida Keys
E.A. Shinn, C. D. Reich, T.D. Hickey, B. H. Lidz
2003, Coral Reefs (22) 91-97
Thirty-one samples of transported Holocene Acropora cervicornis "sticks" sampled from carbonate sand tempestite accumulations at 19 sites along a 180-km-long stretch of the Florida reef tract were dated using the radiocarbon (14C) method. The "modern fossils" collected from just a few centimeters below the surface ranged in age from 0.5...
Using 1-Hz GPS data to measure deformations caused by the denali fault earthquake
K.M. Larson, P. Bodin, J. Gomberg
2003, Science (300) 1421-1424
The 3 November 2002 moment magnitude 7.9 Denali fault earthquake generated large, permanent surface displacements in Alaska and large-amplitude surface waves throughout western North America. We find good agreement between strong ground-motion records integrated to displacement and 1-hertz Global Positioning System (GPS) position estimates collected ??? 140 kilometers from the...
Middle Devonian to Early Carboniferous event stratigraphy of Devils Gate and Northern Antelope Range sections, Nevada, U.S.A
Charles Sandberg, J. R. Morrow, F. G. Poole, W. Ziegler
2003, CFS Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 187-207
The classic type section of the Devils Gate Limestone at Devils Gate Pass is situated on the eastern slope of a proto-Antler forebulge that resulted from convergence of the west side of the North American continent with an ocean plate. The original Late Devonian forebulge, the site of which is...
Lead isotopes in North Pacific deep water - Implications for past changes in input sources and circulation patterns
T. van de Flierdt, M. Frank, A. N. Halliday, J.R. Hein, B. Hattendorf, D. Gunther, P.W. Kubik
2003, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (209) 149-164
The sources of non-anthropogenic Pb in seawater have been the subject of debate. Here we present Pb isotope time-series that indicate that the non-anthropogenic Pb budget of the northernmost Pacific Ocean has been governed by ocean circulation and riverine inputs, which in turn have ultimately been controlled by tectonic processes....
Fault trends on the seaward slope of the Aleutian Trench: Implications for a laterally changing stress field tied to a westward increase in oblique convergence
C. A. Mortera-Gutierrez, D.W. Scholl, R.L. Carlson
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
Normal faults along the seaward trench slope (STS) commonly strike parallel to the trench in response to bending of the oceanic plate into the subduction zone. This is not the circumstance for the Aleutian Trench, where the direction of convergence gradually changes westward, from normal to transform motion. GLORIA side-scan...
A Visual Basic program to classify sediments based on gravel-sand-silt-clay ratios
L.J. Poppe, A.H. Eliason, M. E. Hastings
2003, Computers & Geosciences (29) 805-809
Nomenclature describing size distributions is important to geologists because grain size is the most basic attribute of sediments. Traditionally, geologists have divided sediments into four size fractions that include gravel, sand, silt, and clay, and classified these sediments based on ratios of the various proportions of the fractions. Definitions of...
Sedimentation rates in the marshes of Sand Lake National Wildlife Refuge
R.A. Gleason, N.H. Euliss Jr., C. W. Holmes
2003, Report
Impoundments located within river systems in the Northern Great Plains are vulnerable to sediment inputs because intensive agriculture in watersheds has increased soil erosion and sediments in rivers. At the request of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), we evaluated the vertical accretion of sediment in the Mud Lake...
Hatching success in salamanders and chorus frogs at two sites in Colorado, USA: Effects of acidic deposition and climate
E. Muths, K. Campbell, P.S. Corn
2003, Amphibia-Reptilia (24) 27-36
The snowpack in the vicinity of the Mount Zirkel Wilderness Area is among the most acidic in the western United States. We analyzed water chemistry and examined hatching success in tiger salamanders and chorus frogs at ponds there and at nearby Rabbit Ears Pass (Dumont) to determine whether acid deposition...
Mapping mine wastes and analyzing areas affected by selenium-rich water runoff in southeast Idaho using AVIRIS imagery and digital elevation data
J.C. Mars, J.K. Crowley
2003, Remote Sensing of Environment (84) 422-436
Remotely sensed hyperspectral and digital elevation data from southeastern Idaho are combined in a new method to assess mine waste contamination. Waste rock from phosphorite mining in the area contains selenium, cadmium, vanadium, and other metals. Toxic concentrations of selenium have been found in plants and soils near some mine...
Effects of life history variation on size and growth in stream-dwelling Atlantic salmon
B.H. Letcher, G. Gries
2003, Journal of Fish Biology (62) 97-114
A large size variation amongst life histories for stream-dwelling Atlantic salmon Salmo salar was found and the relative effect of life histories on size varied over time. As early as December (age 0+ years), fish that later smolted at age 2+ years were significantly larger than fish that did not...
Chemical and isotopic properties of kukersites from Iowa and Estonia
Maria Mastalerz, A. Schimmelmann, J.C. Hower, G. Lis, J. Hatch, S.R. Jacobson
2003, Organic Geochemistry (34) 1419-1427
Kukersite samples from Estonia and Iowa were analyzed for elemental composition, functional group distribution, and carbon and hydrogen stable isotope ratios. The elemental and hydrogen isotope values, together with other analytical data, suggest a higher thermal maturity for the Iowa kukersite. The wide carbon isotopic range of 9.3??? among kukersites,...
An adenovirus linked to mortality and disease in long-tailed ducks (Clangula hyemalis) in Alaska
Tuula E. Hollmén, J. C. Franson, Paul L. Flint, J.B. Grand, Richard B. Lanctot, D. E. Docherty, H.M. Wilson
2003, Avian Diseases (47) 1434-1440
An adenovirus was isolated from intestinal samples of two long-tailed ducks (Clangula hyemalis) collected during a die-off in the Beaufort Sea off the north coast of Alaska in 2000. The virus was not neutralized by reference antiserum against known group I, II, or III avian adenoviruses and may represent a...