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

184904 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 3254, results 81326 - 81350

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Photographic evaluation of the impacts of bottom fishing on benthic epifauna
J.S. Collie, G.A. Escanero, P. C. Valentine
2000, ICES Journal of Marine Science (57) 987-1001
The gravel sediment habitat on the northern edge of Georges Bank (East coast of North America) is an important nursery area for juvenile fish, and the site of a productive scallop fishery. During two cruises to this area in 1994 we made photographic transects at sites of varying depths that...
Transient calcite fracture fillings in a welded tuff, Snowshoe Mountain, Colorado
A.R. Hoch, M.M. Reddy, M.J. Heymans
2000, Applied Geochemistry (15) 1495-1504
The core from two boreholes (13.1 and 19.2 m depth) drilled 500 m apart in the fractured, welded tuff near the summit of the Snowshoe Mountain, Colorado (47??30'N, 106??55'W) had unique petrographic and hydrodynamic properties. Borehole SM-4 had highly variable annual water levels, in contrast to SM-1a, whose water level...
Evaluation of planar halogenated and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in estuarine sediments using ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase induction of H4IIE cells
R.W. Gale, E.R. Long, T.R. Schwartz, D. E. Tillitt
2000, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (19) 1348-1359
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and planar halogenated hydrocarbons (PHHs), including polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDs), dibenzofurans (PCDFs), and biphenyls (PCBs) were determined in fractionated sediment extracts from the Hudson-Raritan estuary and Newark Bay, New Jersey, USA, as part of a comprehensive risk assessment. Contributions of PCDDs/PCDFs, PCBs, and PAHs to the total...
Method for flow cytometric monitoring of Renibacterium salmoninarum inactivation
R.J. Pascho, J.E. Ongerth
2000, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (41) 181-193
The slow growth of Renibacterium salmoninarum limits the usefulness of culture as a research tool. Development of a 2-color flow cytometric assay to quantify the proportions of live and dead R. salmoninarum in a test population is described. Bacteria were simultaneously stained with fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated immunoglobulin and exposed to the...
Distribution of recoveries of Steller's Eiders banded on the lower Alaska Peninsula, Alaska
C.P. Dau, Paul L. Flint, Margaret R. Petersen
2000, Journal of Field Ornithology (71) 541-548
Molting adult Steller's Eiders (Polysticta stelleri) were banded at Izembek Lagoon (1961-1998) and Nelson Lagoon (1995-1997) along the lower Alaska Peninsula to determine breeding distribution and movements. Of 52,985 Steller's Eiders banded, 347 were recovered. The overall low recovery rate may not be indicative of harvest levels but may be...
Persistence of spilled oil on shores and its effects on biota
G.V. Irvine
Sheppard C.R.C., editor(s)
2000, Seas at the millennium - an environmental evaluation (3) 267-281
Over two million tonnes of oil are estimated to enter the world's oceans every year. A small percentage, but still a large volume, of this oil strands onshore, where its persistence is governed primarily by the action of physical forces. In some cases, biota influence the persistence of stranded oil...
Triggering of earthquake aftershocks by dynamic stresses
Debi Kilb, J. Gomberg, P. Bodin
2000, Nature (408) 570-574
It is thought that small 'static' stress changes due to permanent fault displacement can alter the likelihood of, or trigger, earthquakes on nearby faults. Many studies of triggering in the nearfield, particularly of aftershocks, rely on these static changes as the triggering agent and consider them only in terms of...
Modeling regional salinization of the Ogallala aquifer, Southern High Plains, TX, USA
S. Mehta, A.E. Fryar, R.M. Brady, R. H. Morin
2000, Journal of Hydrology (238) 44-64
Two extensive plumes (combined area > 1000 km2) have been delineated within the Ogallala aquifer in the Southern High Plains, TX, USA. Salinity varies within the plumes spatially and increases with depth; Cl ranges from 50 to >500 mg 1-1. Variable-density flow modeling using SUTRA has identified three broad regions...
Biodegradation of disinfection byproducts as a potential removal process during aquifer storage recovery
J. E. Landmeyer, P. M. Bradley, J. M. Thomas
2000, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (36) 861-867
The biodegradation potential of two drinking water disinfection byproducts was investigated using aquifer materials obtained from approximately 100 and 200 meters below land surface in an aerobic aquifer system undergoing aquifer storage recovery of treated surface water. No significant biodegradation of a model trihalomethane compound, chloroform, was observed in aquifer...
Katmai volcanic cluster and the great eruption of 1912
W. Hildreth, J. Fierstein
2000, Geological Society of America Bulletin (112) 1594-1620
In June 1912, the world's largest twentieth century eruption broke out through flat-lying sedimentary rocks of Jurassic age near the base of Trident volcano on the Alaska Peninsula. The 60 h ash-flow and Plinian eruptive sequence excavated and subsequently backfilled with ejecta a flaring funnel-shaped vent since called Novarupta. The...
Suspended-sediment and fresh-water discharges in the Ob and Yenisey rivers, 1960-1988
R.H. Meade, N.N. Bobrovitskaya, V.I. Babkin
2000, International Journal of Earth Sciences (89) 465-469
Of the world's great rivers, the Ob and Yenisey rank among the largest suppliers of fresh water and among the smallest suppliers of suspended sediment to the coastal ocean. Sediment in the middle reaches of the rivers is mobilized from bordering terraces and exchanged between channels and flood plains. Sediment...
SHRIMP U-Pb geochronology of volcanic rocks, Belt Supergroup, western Montana: Evidence for rapid deposition of sedimentary strata
K. V. Evans, J. N. Aleinikoff, J. D. Obradovich, C.M. Fanning
2000, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (37) 1287-1300
New sensitive high resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) U–Pb zircon analyses from two tuffs and a felsic flow in the middle and upper Belt Supergroup of northwestern Montana significantly refine the age of sedimentation for this very thick (15-20 km) Middle Proterozoic stratigraphic sequence. In ascending stratigraphic order, the results are...
An evaluation of restoration efforts in fishless lakes stocked with exotic trout
D.C. Drake, R.J. Naiman
2000, Conservation Biology (14) 1807-1820
Detrimental effects of introduced fishes on native amphibian populations have prompted removal of introduced cutthroat (Oncorhynchus clarki), rainbow (Oncorhynchus mykiss), and brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) from naturally fishless lakes at Mt. Rainier National Park, Washington (U.S.A.). Using paleolimnological indicators (diatoms, invertebrates, and sediment characteristics) in eight 480-year-old sediment cores from...
Recorded main shock and aftershock motions
E. Safak, M. Erdik, K. Beyen, D. Carver, E. Cranswick, M. Çelebi, E. Durukal, W. Ellsworth, T. Holzer, M. Meremonte, C. Mueller, O. Ozel, S. Toprak
2000, Earthquake Spectra (16) 97-112
No abstract available....
A 22,000-year record of monsoonal precipitation from northern Chile's Atacama Desert
J.L. Betancourt, C. Latorre, J.A. Rech, Jay Quade, K.A. Rylander
2000, Science (289) 1542-1546
Fossil rodent middens and wetland deposits from the central Atacama Desert (22° to 24°S) indicate increasing summer precipitation, grass cover, and groundwater levels from 16.2 to 10.5 calendar kiloyears before present (ky B.P.). Higher elevation shrubs and summer-flowering grasses expanded downslope across what is now the edge of Absolute Desert,...
Beach and reef-flat sediments along the south shore of Molokai, Hawaii
R.S. Calhoun, M.E. Field
Magoon O TRobbins L LEwing LMagoon O TRobbins L LEwing L, editor(s)
2000, Conference Paper, Carbonate Beaches 2000
As part of the U.S. Geological Survey's multi-disciplinary Coral Reef Project addressing the health and geological variability of coral reef systems, sediment components and their distribution along the fringing reef on the south shore of the Hawaiian island of Molokai are being examined. Particular interest is being paid to the...
Origin of rainwater acidity near the Los Azufres geothermal field, Mexico
M.P. Verma, J.L. Quijano, Chad Johnson, J.Y. Gerardo, V. Arellano
2000, Geothermics (29) 593-608
The chemical and isotopic compositions of rainwater were monitored at Los Azufres geothermal field (88 MWe) and its surroundings during May - September 1995, which is the rainy season. Samples were collected from eight sites: three within the field, three in its surroundings and two sufficiently far from the field...
Detrital zircon geochronology of Neoproterozoic to Middle Cambrian miogeoclinal and platformal strata: Northwest Sonora, Mexico
E.L. Gross, John H. Stewart, G.E. Gehreis
2000, Geofisica Internacional (39) 295-308
Eighty-five detrital zircon grains from Mesoproterozoic and/or Neoproterozoic to Middle Cambrian sedimentary strata in northwest Sonora, Mexico, have been analyzed to determine source terranes and provide limiting depositional ages of the units. The zircon suites from the Mesoproterozoic and/or Neoproterozoic El Alamo Formation and El Aguila unit yield ages between...
Liquefaction evidence for the strength of ground motions resulting from Late Holocene Cascadia subduction earthquakes, with emphasis on the event of 1700 A.D.
S. F. Obermeier, S.E. Dickenson
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) 876-896
During the past decade, paleoseismic studies done by many researchers in the coastal regions of the Pacific Northwest have shown that regional downdropping and subsequent tsunami inundation occurred in response to a major earthquake along the Cascadia subduction zone. This earthquake occurred almost certainly in 1700 A.D., and is believed...
U.S. Geological Survey Assessment 2000: Estimates of undiscovered oil and gas resources for the world
Thomas S. Ahlbrandt, G. Whitney
2000, Minerals and Energy - Raw Materials Report (15) 36-39
Worldwide supply of oil and natural gas is ultimately linked to the geologic abundance and distribution of those fossil fuels. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has completed a new assessment of the technically recoverable undiscovered oil and gas resources of the world. Nearly 1000 provinces were defined and known petroleum...
Nitrogen solutes in an Adirondack forested watershed: Importance of dissolved organic nitrogen
M.R. McHale, M.J. Mitchell, Jeffery J. McDonnell, C.P. Cirmo
2000, Biogeochemistry (48) 165-184
Nitrogen (N) dynamics were evaluated from 1 June 1995 through 31 May 1996 within the Arbutus Lake watershed in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State, U.S.A. At the Arbutus Lake outlet dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), NO3/- and NH4/+ contributed 61%, 33%, and 6% respectively, to the total dissolved nitrogen...
Correlation of 1- to 10-Hz earthquake resonances with surface measurements of S-wave reflections and refractions in the upper 50 m
R. A. Williams, W. J. Stephenson, A.D. Frankel, E. Cranswick, M. E. Meremonte, J. K. Odum
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) 1323-1331
Resonances observed in earthquake seismograms recorded in Seattle, Washington, the central United States and Sherman Oaks, California, are correlated with each site's respective near-surface seismic velocity profile and reflectivity determined from shallow seismic-reflection/refraction surveys. In all of these cases the resonance accounts for the highest amplitude shaking at the site...
Development of a grid-cell topographic surface for Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia
Cynthia S. Loftin, Wiley Rasberry, Wiley M. Kitchens
2000, Wetlands (20) 487-499
The Okefenokee Swamp is a 160,000 ha freshwater wetland in Southeast Georgia, USA that developed in a landscape basin. Hydrologic variability across the swamp suggests that water-surface elevations are not uniform across the swamp. The topographic surface map discussed herein was developed to describe the swamp topography at local to...