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Page 3260, results 81476 - 81500

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Abiotic factors affecting summer distribution and movement of male paddlefish, Polyodon spathula, in a prairie reservoir
C.P. Paukert, W.L. Fisher
2000, Southwestern Naturalist (45) 133-140
Six male paddlefish, Polyodon spathula, were implanted with ultrasonic temperature-sensing transmitters and tracked during June through August 1997 to quantify effects of physicochemical conditions on their distribution and movement in Keystone Reservoir, Oklahoma. Paddlefish moved about twice as much during night than day. Movement rate of paddlefish was related to...
Condition bias of hunter-shot ring-necked ducks exposed to lead
K. G. McCracken, A. D. Afton, M.S. Peters
2000, Journal of Wildlife Management (64) 584-590
We evaluated the condition bias hypothesis for ring-necked ducks (Aythya collaris) exposed to lead by testing the null hypothesis that ducks shot by hunters do not differ in physiological condition from those collected randomly from the same location. After adjusting for structural body size and log(e) concentration of blood lead,...
Exposure age and erosional history of an upland planation surface in the US Atlantic Piedmont
S.D. Stanford, M.A. Seidl, G.M. Ashley
2000, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (25) 939-950
The upland planation surface in the Piedmont of central New Jersey consists of summit flats, as much as 130 km2 in area, that truncate bedding and structure in diabase, basalt, sandstone, mudstone and gneiss. These flats define a low-relief regional surface that corresponds in elevation to residual hills in the...
The impact of extremely low frequency electromagnetic fields on stream periphyton: An eleven-year study
T.M. Burton, D.G. Uzarski, R.S. Stelzer, S.L. Eggert, W. V. Sobczak, D.M. Mullen
2000, Hydrobiologia (439) 61-76
Potential effects of extremely low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic fields on periphyton were studied from 1983 to 1993 using a Before, After, Control and Impact design. The study was conducted at two sites on the Ford River, a fourth-order brown water trout stream in Dickinson County, Michigan. The Reference site received...
Concentrations and characteristics of organic carbon in surface water in Arizona: Influence of urbanization
P. Westerhoff, D. Anning
2000, Journal of Hydrology (236) 202-222
Dissolved (DOC) and total (TOC) organic carbon concentrations and compositions were studied for several river systems in Arizona, USA. DOC composition was characterized by ultraviolet and visible absorption and fluorescence emission (excitation wavelength of 370 nm) spectra characteristics. Ephemeral sites had the highest DOC concentrations, and unregulated perennial sites had...
Mate fidelity and breeding site tenacity in a monogamous sandpiper, the black turnstone
Colleen M. Handel, Robert E. Gill Jr.
2000, Animal Behaviour (60) 471-481
We examined the relationship between mate fidelity and breeding site tenacity during a 5-year study of the black turnstone, Arenaria melanocephala, a socially monogamous sandpiper breeding in subarctic Alaska. We tested the predictions of several hypotheses regarding the incidence of divorce and the benefits of fidelity to mate and breeding...
New 40Ar/39Ar age of the Bishop Tuff from multiple sites and sediment rate calibration for the Matuyama-Brunhes boundary
A.M. Sarna-Wojcicki, M. S. Pringle, J. Wijbrans
2000, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (105) 21431-21443
Precise dating of sanidine from proximal ash flow Bishop Tuff and air fall Bishop pumice and ash, California, can be used to derive an absolute age of the Matuyama Reversed-Brunhes Normal (M-B) paleomagnetic transition, identified stratigraphically close beneath the Bishop Tuff and ash at many sites in the western United...
Uranium content and leachable fraction of fluorspars
E. R. Landa, T.B. Councell
2000, Health Physics (79) 286-290
Much attention in the radiological health community has recently focused on the management and regulation of naturally occurring radioactive materials. Although uranium-bearing minerals are present in a variety of fluorspar deposits, their potential consideration as naturally occurring radioactive materials has received only limited recognition. The uranium content of...
Iron and aluminum hydroxysulfates from acid sulfate waters
J.M. Bigham, D. Kirk Nordstrom
2000, Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry (40) 351-403
Acid sulfate waters are produced mostly by the oxidation of common sulfide minerals such as pyrite, chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, and marcasite in rocks, soils, sediments, and industrial wastes. This spontaneous process of mineral weathering plays a fundamental role in the supergene alteration of ore deposits, the formation of acid sulfate soils,...
Geochemistry and geodynamics of a Late Cretaceous bimodal volcanic association from the southern part of the Pannonian Basin in Slavonija (Northern Croatia)
J. Pamic, M. Belak, T.D. Bullen, M. A. Lanphere, E.H. McKee
2000, Mineralogy and Petrology (68) 271-296
In this paper we present petrological and geochemical information on a bimodal basalt-rhyolite suite associated with A-type granites of Late Cretaceous age from the South Pannonian Basin in Slavonija (Croatia). Basalts and alkali-feldspar rhyolites, associated in some places with ignimbrites, occur in volcanic bodies that are interlayered with pyroclastic and...
The role of "blebbing" in overcoming the hydrophobic barrier during biooxidation of elemental sulfur by Thiobacillus thiooxidans
C. Knickerbocker, D. Kirk Nordstrom, G. Southam
2000, Book, Chemical Geology
Brimstone Basin, in southeastern Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming is an ancient hydrothermal area containing solfataric alteration. Drainage waters flowing from Brimstone Basin had pH values as low as 1.23 and contained up to 1.7×106 MPN/ml acidophilic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria. Thiobacillus thiooxidans was the dominant sulfur-oxidizing bacterium recovered from an enrichment culture...
Variability of site response in Seattle, Washington
S. Hartzell, D. Carver, E. Cranswick, A. Frankel
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) 1237-1250
Ground motion from local earthquakes and the SHIPS (Seismic Hazards Investigation in Puget Sound) experiment is used to estimate site amplification factors in Seattle. Earthquake and SHIPS records are analyzed by two methods: (1) spectral ratios relative to a nearby site on Tertiary sandstone, and (2) a source/site spectral inversion...
Development and application of a comprehensive simulation model to evaluate impacts of watershed structures and irrigation water use on streamflow and groundwater: The case of Wet Walnut Creek Watershed, Kansas, USA
S.R. Ramireddygari, M.A. Sophocleous, J.K. Koelliker, S.P. Perkins, R.S. Govindaraju
2000, Journal of Hydrology (236) 223-246
This paper presents the results of a comprehensive modeling study of surface and groundwater systems, including stream-aquifer interactions, for the Wet Walnut Creek Watershed in west-central Kansas. The main objective of this study was to assess the impacts of watershed structures and irrigation water use on streamflow and groundwater levels,...
Temporal variations in parameters reflecting terminal-electron-accepting processes in an aquifer contaminated with waste fuel and chlorinated solvents
Jennifer T. McGuire, Erik W. Smith, David T. Long, David W. Hyndman, Sheridan K. Haack, Michael J. Klug, Michael A. Velbel
2000, Chemical Geology (169) 471-485
A fundamental issue in aquifer biogeochemistry is the means by which solute transport, geochemical processes, and microbiological activity combine to produce spatial and temporal variations in redox zonation. In this paper, we describe the temporal variability of TEAP conditions in shallow groundwater contaminated with both waste fuel and chlorinated solvents....
Orphan caribou, Rangifer tarandus, calves: A re-evaluation of overwinter survival data
Kyle Joly
2000, Canadian Field-Naturalist (114) 322-323
Low sample size and high variation within populations reduce power of statistical tests. These aspects of statistical power appear to have affected an analysis comparing overwinter survival rates of non-orphan and orphan Caribou (Rangifer tarandus) calves by an earlier study for the Porcupine Caribou Herd. A re-evaluation of the data...
Breeding Atlantic Puffins, Fratercula arctica, and other birds species of Coburg Island, Nunavut
Martin D. Robards, H.G. Gilchrist, K. Allard
2000, Canadian Field-Naturalist (114) 72-77
Coburg Island and neighbouring waters were recently designated a Canadian National Wildlife Area. The large seabird colony at Cambridge Point has been previously described, and is dominated by Thick-billed Murres (160 000 pairs). We found that a small offshore island, named Princess Charlotte Monument, also supported breeding populations of seven...
Ore-fluid evolution at the Getchell Carlin-type gold deposit, Nevada, USA
Jean S. Cline, Albert H. Hofstra
2000, European Journal of Mineralogy (12) 195-212
Minerals and fluid-inclusion populations were examined using petrography, microthermometry, quadrupole mass-spectrometer gas analyses and stable-isotope studies to characterize fluids responsible for gold mineralization at the Getchell Carlin-type gold deposit. The gold-ore assemblage at Getchell is superimposed on quartz-pyrite vein mineralization associated with a Late-Cretaceous granodiorite stock that intruded Lower-Paleozoic sedimentary...
Redox conditions and the efficiency of chlorinated ethene biodegradation: Field studies
F. H. Chapelle, P. M. Bradley
2000, Conference Paper, ACS Division of Environmental Chemistry, Preprints
The effect of redox conditions on the efficiency of chlorinated ethene biodegradation was investigated at two field sites. One site (NAS Cecil Field, FL) is characterized by predominantly Fe(III)-reducing conditions in the contaminant source area, grading to predominantly sulfate- reducing conditions downgradient. This sequence of redox conditions led to relatively...
Multispecies reactive tracer test in an aquifer with spatially variable chemical conditions
J.A. Davis, D.B. Kent, J.A. Coston, K.M. Hess, J.L. Joye
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 119-134
A field investigation of multispecies reactive transport was conducted in a well‐characterized, sand and gravel aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The aquifer is characterized by regions of differing chemical conditions caused by the disposal of secondary sewage effluent. Ten thousand liters of groundwater with added tracers (Br, Cr(VI), and EDTA...
In-situ analysis of solid bitumen in coal: Examples from the Bowen Basin and the Illinois Basin
Maria Mastalerz, M. Glikson
2000, International Journal of Coal Geology (42) 207-220
Solid bitumen and associated vitrinite from selected coals from the Bowen Basin and the Illinois Basin were studied using electron microprobe and micro-FTIR techniques. The coal studied covers a range of vitrinite reflectance from 0.59% to 1.33%. Carbon content in the bitumen is generally lower than in vitrinite in coals...
Accuracy and precision of estimating age of gray wolves by tooth wear
P. S. Gipson, W.B. Ballard, R. M. Nowak, L.D. Mech
2000, Journal of Wildlife Management (64) 752-758
We evaluated the accuracy and precision of tooth wear for aging gray wolves (Canis lupus) from Alaska, Minnesota, and Ontario based on 47 known-age or known-minimum-age skulls. Estimates of age using tooth wear and a commercial cementum annuli-aging service were useful for wolves up to 14 years old. The precision...
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...
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...