Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

10454 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 321, results 8001 - 8025

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
History and status of introduced mammals and impacts to breeding seabirds on the California channel and Northwestern Baja California Islands
G.J. McChesney, B.R. Tershy
1998, Waterbirds (21) 335-347
The California Channel Islands, U.S.A., and Northwestern Baja California Islands, Mexico, host important breeding populations of several seabird species, including the endemic Black-vented Shearwater (Puffinus opisthomelas) and Xantus' Murrelet (Synthliboramphus hypoleucus). Mammals introduced to nearly all of the islands beginning in the late 1800s to early 1900s include: cats (Felis...
Effect of interannual climate variability on carbon storage in Amazonian ecosystems
H. Tian, J. M. Melillo, D. W. Kicklighter, David A. McGuire, J. V. K. Helfrich III, B. Moore III, C. J. Vorosmarty
1998, Nature (396) 664-667
The Amazon Basin contains almost one-half of the world's undisturbed tropical evergreen forest as well as large areas of tropical savanna. The forests account for about 10 per cent of the world's terrestrial primary productivity and for a similar fraction of the carbon stored in land ecosystems, and short-term field...
Long-term effects of a lock and dam and greentree reservoir management on a bottomland hardwood forest
S.L. King, J. A. Allen, J.W. McCoy
1998, Forest Ecology and Management (112) 213-226
We investigated the long-term effects of a lock and dam and greentree reservoir management on a riparian bottomland hardwood forest in southern Arkansas, USA, by monitoring stress, mortality, and regeneration of bottomland hardwood trees in 53 permanent sampling plots from 1987-1995. The lock and dam and greentree reservoir management have...
Application of the surface complexation concept to complex mineral assemblages
J.A. Davis, J.A. Coston, D.B. Kent, C. C. Fuller
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 2820-2828
Two types of modeling approaches are illustrated for describing inorganic contaminant adsorption in aqueous environments: (a) the component additivity approach and (b) the generalized composite approach. Each approach is applied to simulate Zn2+ adsorption by a well-characterized sediment collected from an aquifer at Cape Cod, MA. Zn2+ adsorption by the...
Molybdate transport in a chemically complex aquifer: Field measurements compared with solute-transport model predictions
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 2727-2740
A natural-gradient tracer test was conducted in an unconfined sand and gravel aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Molybdate was included in the injectate to study the effects of variable groundwater chemistry on its aqueous distribution and to evaluate the reliability of laboratory experiments for identifying and quantifying reactions that control...
Ordovician K-bentonites in the Argentine Precordillera: Relations to Gondwana margin evolution
W.D. Huff, Stig M. Bergstrom, Dennis R. Kolata, C.A. Cingolani, R.A. Astini
1998, Geological Society Special Publication (142) 107-126
Ordovician K-bentonites have now been recorded from >20 localities in the vicinity of the Argentine Precordillera. Most occur in the eastern thrust belts, in the San Juan Limestone and the overlying the Gualcamayo Formation, but a few ash beds are known also from the central thrust belts....
Vulnerability to predation and physiological stress responses in juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) experimentally infected with Renibacterium salmoninarum
M.G. Mesa, T.P. Poe, A.G. Maule, C.B. Schreck
1998, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (55) 1599-1606
We experimentally infected juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) with Renibacterium salmoninarum (Rs), the causative agent of bacterial kidney disease (BKD), to examine the vulnerability to predation of fish with differing levels of Rs infection and assess physiological change during progression of the disease. Immersion challenges conducted during 1992 and 1994...
Soufrière Hills eruption, Montserrat, 1995 - 1997: volcanic earthquake locations and fault plane solutions
W. P. Aspinall, A.D. Miller, L.L. Lynch, J.L. Latchman, R.C. Stewart, R.A. White, J.A. Power
1998, Geophysical Research Letters (25) 3397-3400
A total of 9242 seismic events, recorded since the start of the eruption on Montserrat in July 1995, have been uniformly relocated with station travel-time corrections. Early seismicity was generally diffuse under southern Montserrat, and mostly restricted to depths less than 7 km. However, a NE-SW alignment of epicentres beneath...
Automated detection of Pi 2 pulsations using wavelet analysis: 1. Method and an application for substorm monitoring
M. Nose, T. Iyemori, M. Takeda, T. Kamei, D. K. Milling, D. Orr, H. J. Singer, E. W. Worthington, N. Sumitomo
1998, Earth, Planets and Space (50) 773-783
Wavelet analysis is suitable for investigating waves, such as Pi 2 pulsations, which are limited in both time and frequency. We have developed an algorithm to detect Pi 2 pulsations by wavelet analysis. We tested the algorithm and found that the results of Pi 2 detection are consistent with those...
Microbial diversity in a hydrocarbon- and chlorinated-solvent- contaminated aquifer undergoing intrinsic bioremediation
M.A. Dojka, P. Hugenholtz, S.K. Haack, N.R. Pace
1998, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (64) 3869-3877
A culture-independent molecular phylogenetic approach was used to survey constituents of microbial communities associated with an aquifer contaminated with hydrocarbons (mainly jet fuel) and chlorinated solvents undergoing intrinsic bioremediation. Samples were obtained from three redox zones: methanogenic, methanogenic-sulfate reducing, and iron or sulfate reducing. Small-subunit rRNA genes were amplified directly...
Regression models of herbicide concentrations in outflow from reservoirs in the midwestern USA, 1992-1993
W.A. Battaglin, D. A. Goolsby
1998, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (34) 1369-1390
Reservoirs are used to store water for public water supply, flood control, irrigation, recreation, hydropower, and wildlife habitat, but also often store undesirable substances such as herbicides. The outflow from 76 reservoirs in the midwestern USA, was sampled four times in 1992 and four times in 1993. At least one...
Paleoseismic investigations in the Santa Cruz mountains, California: Implications for recurrence of large-magnitude earthquakes on the San Andreas fault
David P. Schwartz, D. Pantosti, K. Okumura, T. J. Powers, J. C. Hamilton
1998, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (103) 17985-18001
Trenching, microgeomorphic mapping, and tree ring analysis provide information on timing of paleoearthquakes and behavior of the San Andreas fault in the Santa Cruz mountains. At the Grizzly Flat site alluvial units dated at 1640–1659 A.D., 1679–1894 A.D., 1668–1893 A.D., and the present ground surface are displaced by a single...
Suitability of parametric models to describe the hydraulic properties of an unsaturated coarse sand and gravel
Andy Mace, David L. Rudolph, R. Gary Kachanoski
1998, Groundwater (36) 465-475
The performance of parametric models used to describe soil water retention (SWR) properties and predict unsaturated hydraulic conductivity (K) as a function of volumetric water content (θ) is examined using SWR and K(θ) data for coarse sand and gravel sediments. Six 70 cm long, 10 cm diameter cores of glacial...
A policy model to initiate environmental negotiations: Three hydropower workshops
Berton Lee Lamb, Jonathan G. Taylor, Nina Burkardt, Phadrea D. Ponds
1998, Human Dimensions of Wildlife: An International Journal (3) 1-17
How do I get started in natural resource negotiations? Natural resource managers often face difficult negotiations when they implement laws and policies regulating such resources as water, wildlife, wetlands, endangered species, and recreation. As a result of these negotiations, managers must establish rules, grant permits, or create management plans. The...
Cultural resource applications for a GIS: Stone conservation at Jefferson and Lincoln Memorials
Kyle Joly, Tony Donald, Douglas Comer
1998, Cultural Resources Management (21) 17-18
Geographical information systems are rapidly becoming essential tools for land management. They provide a way to link landscape features to the wide variety of information that managers must consider when formulating plans for a site, designing site improvement and restoration projects, determining maintenance projects and protocols, and even interpreting the...
Trace element trophic transfer in aquatic organisms: A critique of the kinetic model approach
J.R. Reinfelder, N.S. Fisher, S. N. Luoma, J.W. Nichols, W.-X. Wang
1998, Science of the Total Environment (213) 117-135
The bioaccumulation of trace elements in aquatic organisms can be described with a kinetic model that includes linear expressions for uptake and elimination from dissolved and dietary sources. Within this model, trace element trophic transfer is described by four parameters: the weight-specific ingestion rate (IR); the assimilation efficiency (AE); the...
North American landscape characterization project: The production of a continental scale three-decade Landsat data set
Terry L. Sohl, John L. Dwyer
1998, Geocarto International (13) 43-51
The North American Landscape Characterization (NALC) project is a component of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Landsat Pathfinder program. Pathfinder projects are focused on the investigation of global change utilizing current remote sensing technologies. The NALC project is a cooperative effort between the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency...
Feldspars as a source of nutrients for microorganisms
J.R. Rogers, P.C. Bennett, W.J. Choi
1998, American Mineralogist (83) 1532-1540
Phosphorus and nitrogen are essential macronutrients necessary for the survival of virtually all living organisms. In groundwater systems, these nutrients can be quite scarce and can represent limiting elements for growth of subsurface microorganisms. In this study we examined silicate sources of these elements by characterizing the colonization and weathering...
An individual-based, spatially-explicit simulation model of the population dynamics of the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, Picoides borealis
B. H. Letcher, J.A. Priddy, J. R. Walters, L.B. Crowder
1998, Biological Conservation (86) 1-14
Spatially-explicit population models allow a link between demography and the landscape. We developed a spatially-explicit simulation model for the red-cockaded woodpecker, Picoides borealis, an endangered and territorial cooperative breeder endemic to the southeastern United States. This kind of model is especially appropriate for this species because it can incorporate the spatial...
Riverine based eco-tourism: Trinity River non-market benefits estimates
A. J. Douglas, J. G. Taylor
1998, International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology (5) 136-148
California's Central Valley Project (CVP) was approved by voters in a statewide referendum in 1933. CVP referendum approval initiated funding for construction of important water development projects that had far reaching effects on regional water supplies. The construction of Trinity Dam in 1963 and the subsequent transbasin diversion of Trinity...
Regional land cover characterization using Landsat thematic mapper data and ancillary data sources
James E. Vogelmann, Terry L. Sohl, P.V. Campbell, D.M. Shaw
Veith G., editor(s)
1998, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (51) 415-428
As part of the activities of the Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics (MRLC) Interagency Consortium, an intermediate-scale land cover data set is being generated for the conterminous United States. This effort is being conducted on a region-by-region basis using U.S. Standard Federal Regions. To date, land cover data sets have been...
Developmental geology of coalbed methane from shallow to deep in Rocky Mountain basins and in Cook Inlet-Matanuska Basin, Alaska, USA and Canada
R. C. Johnson, R. M. Flores
1998, International Journal of Coal Geology (35) 241-282
The Rocky Mountain basins of western North America contain vast deposits of coal of Cretaceous through early Tertiary age. Coalbed methane is produced in Rocky Mountain basins at depths ranging from 45 m (150 ft) to 1981 m (6500 ft) from coal of lignite to low-volatile bituminous rank. Although some...
Mountains and Calderas on Io: Possible Implications for Lithosphere Structure and Magma Generation
M. H. Carr, A. S. McEwen, K. A. Howard, F. C. Chuang, P. Thomas, Peter Schuster, J. Oberst, G. Neukum, G. Schubert
1998, Icarus (135) 146-165
The combination of Voyager images and newly acquired Galileo images with low illumination and resolutions ranging from 2 to 6 km/pixel now allows determination of the global distribution of mountains and volcanic centers on Io. The mountains generally do not have characteristics typical of terrestrial volcanic landforms, they are evenly...
Level II scour analysis for Bridge 28 (ROCHTH00370028) on Town Highway 37, crossing Brandon Brook, Rochester, Vermont
Emily C. Wild, Matthew A. Weber
1998, Open-File Report 98-273
This report provides the results of a detailed Level II analysis of scour potential at structure ROCHTH00370028 on Town Highway 37 crossing Brandon Brook, Rochester, Vermont (figures 1–8). A Level II study is a basic engineering analysis of the site, including a quantitative analysis of stream stability and scour (FHWA,...
Fungal life-styles and ecosystem dynamics: Biological aspects of plant pathogens, plant endophytes and saprophytes
R. J. Rodriguez, R. S. Redman
1997, Advances in Botanical Research (24) 169-193
This chapter discusses various biochemical, genetic, ecological, and evolutionary aspects of fungi that express either symbiotic or saprophytic life-styles. An enormous pool of potential pathogens exists in both agricultural and natural ecosystems, and virtually all plant species are susceptible to one or more fungal pathogens. Fungal pathogens have the potential...