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Page 303, results 7551 - 7575

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Active, capable, and potentially active faults - a paleoseismic perspective
M. N. Machette
2000, Journal of Geodynamics (29) 387-392
Maps of faults (geologically defined source zones) may portray seismic hazards in a wide range of completeness depending on which types of faults are shown. Three fault terms - active, capable, and potential - are used in a variety of ways for different reasons or applications. Nevertheless, to be useful...
Timing of the Acadian Orogeny in northern New Hampshire
J.D. Eusden Jr., C.A. Guzofski, A.C. Robinson, R. D. Tucker
2000, Journal of Geology (108) 219-232
New U-Pb geochronology constrains the timing of the Acadian orogeny in the Central Maine Terrane of northern New Hampshire. Sixteen fractions of one to six grains each of zircon or monazite have been analyzed from six samples: (1) an early syntectonic diorite that records the onset of the Acadian, (2)...
Identifying populations potentially exposed to agricultural pesticides using remote sensing and a Geographic Information System
Mary H. Ward, John R. Nuckols, Stephanie J. Weigel, Susan K. Maxwell, Kenneth P. Cantor, Ryan S. Miller
2000, Environmental Health Perspectives (108) 5-12
Pesticides used in agriculture may cause adverse health effects among the population living near agricultural areas. However, identifying the populations most likely to be exposed is difficult. We conducted a feasibility study to determine whether satellite imagery could be used to reconstruct historical crop patterns. We used historical Farm Service...
Field evaluation of lead effects on Canada geese and mallards in the Coeur d'Alene River Basin, Idaho
Charles J. Henny, L. J. Blus, D. J. Hoffman, L. Sileo, Daniel J. Audet, Mark R. Snyder
2000, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (39) 97-112
Hatch year (HY) mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) in the Coeur d'Alene (CDA) River Basin had higher concentrations of lead in their blood than HY Western Canada geese (Branta canadensis moffitti) (geometric means 0.98 versus 0.28 μg/g, wet weight). The pattern for adults of both species was similar,...
White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) predation on grassland songbird nestlings
P.J. Pietz, D. A. Granfors
2000, American Midland Naturalist (144) 419-422
White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) were videotaped depredating four songbird nests in grassland habitats in southeastern and northcentral North Dakota, 1996–1999. Deer ate two Savannah sparrow (Passerculus sandwichensis), two grasshopper sparrow (Ammodramus savannarum), one clay-colored sparrow (Spizella pallida), one red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus) and three brown-headed cowbird (Molothrus ater) nestlings. Deer...
Estimating cumulative effects of clearcutting on stream temperatures
J.M. Bartholow
2000, Rivers (7) 284-297
The Stream Segment Temperature Model was used to estimate cumulative effects of large-scale timber harvest on stream temperature. Literature values were used to create parameters for the model for two hypothetical situations, one forested and the other extensively clearcut. Results compared favorably with field studies of extensive forest canopy removal....
Scaling up from field to region for wind erosion prediction using a field-scale wind erosion model and GIS
T.M. Zobeck, N. C. Parker, S. Haskell, K. Guoding
2000, Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment (82) 247-259
Factors that affect wind erosion such as surface vegetative and other cover, soil properties and surface roughness usually change spatially and temporally at the field-scale to produce important field-scale variations in wind erosion. Accurate estimation of wind erosion when scaling up from fields to regions, while maintaining meaningful field-scale process...
Potential seismic hazards and tectonics of the upper Cook Inlet basin, Alaska, based on analysis of Pliocene and younger deformation
Peter J. Haeussler, Ronald L. Bruhn, Thomas L. Pratt
2000, Geological Society of America Bulletin (112) 1414-1429
The Cook Inlet basin is a northeast-trending forearc basin above the Aleutian subduction zone in southern Alaska. Folds in Cook Inlet are complex, discontinuous structures with variable shape and vergence that probably developed by right-transpressional deformation on oblique-slip faults extending downward into Mesozoic basement beneath the Tertiary basin. The most...
Distribution and habitat use by manatees (Trichechus manatus manatus) in Belize and Chetumal Bay, Mexico
B. Morales-Vela, D. Olivera-Gomez, J.E. Reynolds III, G. B. Rathbun
2000, Biological Conservation (95) 67-75
The nearshore coastal areas of Belize and of Chetumal Bay, Mexico, support one of the largest populations of manatees (Trichechus manatus manatus) in the Caribbean. In order to further document the distribution, relative abundance, habitat associations, and status of this population, we conducted three aerial surveys. The flights were done...
High-resolution seismic reflection surveys and modeling across an area of high damage from the 1994 Northridge earthquake, Sherman Oaks, California
William J. Stephenson, Robert A. Williams, Jack K. Odum, David M. Worley
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) 643-654
Approximately 3.6 km of P-wave seismic-reflection data were acquired along two orthogonal profiles in Sherman Oaks, California to determine whether shallow (less than 1-km depth) geologic structures contributed to the dramatic localized damage resulting from the 1994 Northridge earthquake. Both lines, one along Matilija Avenue and one along Milbank Street,...
Using multi-scale sampling and spatial cross-correlation to investigate patterns of plant species richness
M. A. Kalkhan, T.J. Stohlgren
2000, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (64) 591-605
Land managers need better techniques to assess exoticplant invasions. We used the cross-correlationstatistic, IYZ, to test for the presence ofspatial cross-correlation between pair-wisecombinations of soil characteristics, topographicvariables, plant species richness, and cover ofvascular plants in a 754 ha study site in RockyMountain National Park, Colorado, U.S.A. Using 25...
No consistent effect of plant diversity on productivity
M.A. Huston, L.W. Aarssen, M.P. Austin, B.S. Cade, J.D. Fridley, E. Garnier, J.P. Grime, J. Hodgson, W.K. Lauenroth, K. Thompson, J.H. Vandermeer, D.A. Wardle
2000, Science (289)
Hector et al. (1) reported on BIODEPTH, a major international experiment on the response of plant productivity to variation in the number of plant species. They found “an overall log-linear reduction of average aboveground biomass with loss of species,” leading to what the accompanying Perspective (2) described as “a rule...
Stable isotope systematics of sulfate minerals
Robert R. Seal II, Charles N. Alpers, Robert O. Rye
2000, Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry (40) 541-602
Stable isotope studies of sulfate minerals are especially useful for unraveling the geochemical history of geological systems. All sulfate minerals can yield sulfur and oxygen isotope data. Hydrous sulfate minerals, such as gypsum, also yield oxygen and hydrogen isotope data for the water of hydration, and more complex sulfate minerals,...
The role of landscape and habitat characteristics in limiting abundance of grassland nesting songbirds in an urban open space
S. Haire, C.E. Bock, B.S. Cade, B.C. Bennett
2000, Landscape and Urban Planning (48) 65-82
We examine the relationships between abundance of grassland nesting songbirds observed in the Boulder Open Space, CO, USA and parameters that described landscape and habitat characteristics, in order to provide information for Boulder Open Space planners and managers. Data sets included bird abundance and plant species composition, collected during three...
Fracture process zone in granite
A. Zang, F.C. Wagner, S. Stanchits, C. Janssen, G. Dresen
2000, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (105) 23651-23661
In uniaxial compression tests performed on Aue granite cores (diameter 50 mm, length 100 mm), a steel loading plate was used to induce the formation of a discrete shear fracture. A zone of distributed microcracks surrounds the tip of the propagating fracture. This process zone is imaged by locating acoustic...
Alachlor transformation patterns in aquatic field mesocosms under variable oxygen and nutrient conditions
D.W. Graham, M.K. Miley, F. Denoyelles, Val H. Smith, E.M. Thurman, R. Carter
2000, Water Research (34) 4054-4062
Alachlor is one of the most commonly used herbicides in both Europe and North America. Because of its toxic properties, its fate and attenuation in natural waters is practically important. This paper assesses factors that affect alachlor decay rate in aquatic systems using field-scale experimental units. In particular, we used...
Information technology developments within the national biological information infrastructure
Gladys Cotter, Mike Frame
2000, Mathematics and Computers in Modern Science - Acoustics and Music, Biology and Chemistry, Business and Economics 206-211
Looking out an office window or exploring a community park, one can easily see the tremendous challenges that biological information presents the computer science community. Biological information varies in format and content depending whether or not it is information pertaining to a particular species (i.e. Brown Tree Snake), or a...
Depletion of Appalachian coal reserves - how soon?
R. C. Milici
2000, International Journal of Coal Geology (44) 251-266
Much of the coal consumed in the US since the end of the last century has been produced from the Pennsylvanian strata of the Appalachian basin. Even though quantities mined in the past are less than they are today, this basin yielded from 70% to 80% of the nation's annual...
Geochemical effects of rapid sedimentation in aquatic systems: Minimal diagenesis and the preservation of historical metal signatures
E. Callender
2000, Journal of Paleolimnology (23) 243-260
Rapid sedimentation exerts a pronounced influence on early sedimentary diagenesis in that there is insufficient time for a sediment particle to equilibrate in any one sediment layer before that layer may be displaced vertically by another layer. These sedimentation patterns are common in surface-water reservoirs whose sedimentation rates (1-10 cm...
Combining accuracy assessment of land-cover maps with environmental monitoring programs
S.V. Stehman, R.L. Czaplewski, S.M. Nusser, L. Yang, Z. Zhu
2000, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (64) 115-126
A scientifically valid accuracy assessment of a large-area, land-cover map is expensive. Environmental monitoring programs offer a potential source of data to partially defray the cost of accuracy assessment while still maintaining the statistical validity. In this article, three general strategies for combining accuracy assessment and environmental monitoring protocols are...
Sustainability of the Lake Superior fish community: Interactions in a food web context
James F. Kitchell, Sean P. Cox, Chris J. Harvey, Timothy B. Johnson, Doran M. Mason, Kurt K. Schoen, Kerim Aydin, Charles Bronte, Mark Ebener, Michael Hansen, Michael Hoff, Steve Schram, Don Schreiner, Carl J. Walters
2000, Ecosystems (3) 545-560
The restoration and rehabilitation of the native fish communities is a long-term goal for the Laurentian Great Lakes. In Lake Superior, the ongoing restoration of the native lake trout populations is now regarded as one of the major success stories in fisheries management. However, populations of the deepwater morphotype (siscowet...
Aquatic ecosystem protection and restoration: Advances in methods for assessment and evaluation
M.B. Bain, A.L. Harig, D.P. Loucks, R.R. Goforth, K.E. Mills
2000, Environmental Science and Policy (3) 89-98
Many methods and criteria are available to assess aquatic ecosystems, and this review focuses on a set that demonstrates advancements from community analyses to methods spanning large spatial and temporal scales. Basic methods have been extended by incorporating taxa sensitivity to different forms of stress, adding measures linked to system...
Atrazine adsorption and colloid-facilitated transport through the unsaturated zone
Lori A. Sprague, J.S. Herman, G.M. Hornberger, A.L. Mills
2000, Journal of Environmental Quality (29) 1632-1641
One explanation for unexpectedly widespread ground water contamination from atrazine (2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine) may be the occurrence of colloid-facilitated transport, whereby the dissolved herbicide becomes adsorbed to mobile colloids that migrate through preferential flow-paths in the soil zone and into the ground water. The objectives of this study were to determine the...
A model for the magmatic-hydrothermal system at Mount Rainier, Washington, from seismic and geochemical observations
S.C. Moran, D. R. Zimbelman, S. D. Malone
2000, Bulletin of Volcanology (61) 425-436
Mount Rainier is one of the most seismically active volcanoes in the Cascade Range, with an average of one to two high-frequency volcano-tectonic (or VT) earthquakes occurring directly beneath the summit in a given month. Despite this level of seismicity, little is known about its cause. The VT earthquakes occur...
Direct comparison of XAFS spectroscopy and sequential extraction for arsenic speciation in coal
Frank E. Huggins, G.P. Huffman, A. Kolker, S. Mroczkowski, C.A. Palmer, R. B. Finkelman
2000, ACS Division of Fuel Chemistry, Preprints (45) 547-551
The speciation of arsenic in an Ohio bituminous coal and a North Dakota lignite has been examined by the complementary methods of arsenic XAFS spectroscopy and sequential extraction by aqueous solutions of ammonium acetate, HCl, HF, and HNO3. In order to facilitate a more direct comparison of the two methods,...