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Page 3263, results 81551 - 81575

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Gulf sturgeon spawning migration and habitat in the Choctawhatchee River system, Alabama-Florida
Dewayne A. Fox, Joseph E. Hightower, Frank M. Parauka
2000, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (129) 811-826
Information about spawning migration and spawning habitat is essential to maintain and ultimately restore populations of endangered and threatened species of anadromous fish. We used ultrasonic and radiotelemetry to monitor the movements of 35 adult Gulf sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi (a subspecies of the Atlantic sturgeon A. oxyrinchus) as they moved between Choctawhatchee...
Orbital and suborbital variability in North Atlantic bottom water temperature obtained from deep-sea ostracod Mg/Ca ratios
T. M. Cronin, G. S. Dwyer, P.A. Baker, J. Rodriguez-Lazaro, D.M. DeMartino
2000, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (162) 45-57
Magnesium/calcium (Mg/Ca) ratios were measured in the deep-sea ostracod (Crustacea) genus Krithe from Chain core 82-24-4PC from the western mid-Atlantic Ridge (3427 m) in order to estimate ocean circulation and bottom water temperature (BWT) variability over the past 200,000 years. Mg/Ca ratios have been used as a paleothermometer because the ratios...
The GSHAP Global Seismic Hazard Map
K. M. Shedlock, D. Giardini, G. Grunthal, P. Zhang
2000, Seismological Research Letters (71) 679-686
Minimization of the loss of life, property damage, and social and economic disruption due to earthquakes depends on reliable estimates of seismic hazard. National, state, and local governments, decision makers, engineers, planners, emergency response organizations, builders, universities, and the general public require seismic hazard estimates for land use planning, improved...
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...
Mercury mine drainage and processes that control its environmental impact
J. J. Rytuba
2000, Science of the Total Environment (260) 57-71
Mine drainage from mercury mines in the California Coast Range mercury mineral belt is an environmental concern because of its acidity and high sulfate, mercury, and methylmercury concentrations. Two types of mercury deposits are present in the mineral belt, silica-carbonate and hot-spring type. Mine drainage is associated with both deposit...
Non-indigenous bamboo along headwater streams of the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico: Leaf fall, aquatic leaf decay and patterns of invasion
P. J. O’Connor, A.P. Covich, F.N. Scatena, L.L. Loope
2000, Journal of Tropical Ecology (16) 499-516
The introduction of bamboo to montane rain forests of the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico in the 1930s and 1940s has led to present-day bamboo monocultures in numerous riparian areas. When a non-native species invades a riparian ecosystem, in-stream detritivores can be affected. Bamboo dynamics expected to influence stream communities in...
Macroinvertebrate assemblages on woody debris and their relations with environmental variables in the lower Sacramento and San Joaquin River drainages, California
L. R. Brown, J. T. May
2000, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (64) 311-329
Data from 25 sites were used to evaluate associations between macroinvertebrate assemblages on large woody debris (snags) and environmental variables in the lower San Joaquin and Sacramento River drainages in California as part of the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water Quality Assessment Program. Samples were collected from 1993 to 1995...
USGS research on three mid-latitude glaciers
J.R. Green, L. DeWayne Cecil, D. L. Naftz, P. F. Schuster
2000, Conference Paper, Proceedings of The Western Snow Conference
Low- and mid-latitude regions of the earth are home to 80 to 90 percent of the world's population. Because of this, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is conducting a research program to study the geochemistry of precipitation, snow, ice, and runoff samples from mid-latitude glaciers in Kyrghyzstan, Nepal, and the...
Constraints on a plume in the mid-mantle beneath the Iceland region from seismic array data
M.J. Pritchard, G.R. Foulger, B.R. Julian, J. Fyen
2000, Geophysical Journal International (143) 119-128
Teleseismic P waves passing through low-wave-speed bodies in the mantle are refracted, causing anomalies in their propagation directions that can be measured by seismometer arrays. Waves from earthquakes in the eastern Pacific and western North America arriving at the NORSAR array in Norway and at seismic stations in Scotland pass...
Transient groundwater-lake interactions in a continental rift: Sea of Galilee, Israel
S. Hurwitz, E. Stanislavsky, V. Lyakhovsky, H. Gvirtzman
2000, Geological Society of America Bulletin (112) 1694-1702
The Sea of Galilee, located in the northern part of the Dead Sea rift, is currently an intermediate fresh-water lake. It is postulated that during a short highstand phase of former Lake Lisan in the late Pleistocene, saline water percolated into the subsurface. Since its recession from the Kinarot basin...
Testing a full‐range soil‐water retention function in modeling water potential and temperature
Brian J. Andraski, Elizabeth A. Jacobson
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 3081-3089
Recent work has emphasized development of full‐range water‐retention functions that are applicable under both wet and dry soil conditions, but evaluation of such functions in numerical modeling has been limited. Here we show that simulations using the Rossi‐Nimmo (RN) full‐range function compared favorably with those using the common Brooks‐Corey function...
Urban sprawl leaves its PAH signature
P. C. Van Metre, B.J. Mahler, E. T. Furlong
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 4064-4070
The increasing vehicle traffic associated with urban sprawl in the United States is frequently linked to degradation of air quality, but its effect on aquatic sediment is less well-recognized. This study evaluates trends in PAHs, a group of contaminants with multiple urban sources, in sediment cores from 10 reservoirs and...
Temporal and spectral characteristics of seismicity observed at Popocatepetl volcano, central Mexico
A. Arciniega-Ceballos, C. Valdes-Gonzalez, P. Dawson
2000, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (102) 207-216
Popocatepetl volcano entered an eruptive phase from December 21, 1994 to March 30, 1995, which was characterized by ash and fumarolic emissions. During this eruptive episode, the observed seismicity consisted of volcano-tectonic (VT) events, long-period (LP) events and sustained tremor. Before the initial eruption on December 21, VT seismicity exhibited...
Oil and gas reserve growth-a model for the Volga-Ural Province, Russia
M.K. Verma, G. F. Ulmishek, A.P. Gilbershtein
2000, Conference Paper, SPE/AAPG Western Regional Meetings
An understanding of reserve growth in known oil and gas fields has become a critical component of energy resource analysis. Significant statistical studies of reserve growth have been published in the U.S., whereas little information is available on other regions of the world. It may be expected that in many...
Characterization of active faulting beneath the Strait of Georgia, British Columbia
J.F. Cassidy, Gary C. Rogers, F. Waldhauser
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) 1188-1199
Southwestern British Columbia and northwestern Washington State are subject to megathrust earthquakes, deep intraslab events, and earthquakes in the continental crust. Of the three types of earthquakes, the most poorly understood are the crustal events. Despite a high level of seismicity, there is no obvious correlation between the historical crustal...
Quantification of the microphytobenthic primary production in european intertidal mudflats - A modelling approach
J. -M. Guarini, G. F. Blanchard, P. Gros
2000, Continental Shelf Research (20) 1771-1788
A deterministic model quantifying the dynamics of the microphytobenthic biomass in the first centimeter of the mud was formulated as part of the MAST-III/INTRMUD project. The main modelled processes are production by photosynthesis, active vertical migration of the microphytobenthos and global biomass losses, encompassing grazing, mortality and resuspension during immersion...
System of gigantic valleys northwest of Tharsis, Mars: Latent catastrophic flooding, northwest watershed, and implications for northern plains ocean
J. M. Dohm, R. C. Anderson, V.R. Baker, J.C. Ferris, T.M. Hare, R.G. Strom, L. P. Rudd, J. W. Rice Jr., R.R. Casavant, D. H. Scott
2000, Geophysical Research Letters (27) 3559-3562
Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) reveals a system of gigantic valleys to the northwest of the huge martian shield volcano, Arsia Mons, in the western hemisphere of Mars. These newly identified northwestern slope valleys (NSVs) potentially signify previously undocumented martian catastrophic floods and may corroborate the northern ocean hypotheses. These...
Annual bed-elevation regime in the alluvial channel of Squamish River, southwestern British Columbia Canada
S.D. Stanford, M.A. Seidl, G.M. Ashley
2000, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (25) 991-1009
The aim of this study is to examine the annual regime of channel scour and fill by monitoring bed-elevation changes in a reach of Squamish River in southwestern British Columbia, Canada. Sonar surveys of 13 river cross-sections in a sandy gravel-bed single-channel study reach were repeated biweekly over a full...
A modern earth narrative: What will be the fate of the biosphere?
R.S. Williams
2000, Technology in Society (22) 303-339
The modern Earth Narrative is the scientific description of the natural and human history of the Earth, and it is based on two fundamental concepts: Deep (or Geologic) Time and Biological Evolution. Changes in the Earth's biosphere and geosphere are discussed from the perspective of natural variability and impacts of...
Mortality and kidney histopathology of chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha exposed to virulent and attenuated Renibacterium salmoninarum strains
C. L. O'Farrell, D.G. Elliott, M.L. Landolt
2000, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (43) 199-209
An isolate of Renibacterium salmoninarum (strain MT 239) exhibiting reduced virulence in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss was tested for its ability to cause bacterial kidney disease (BKD) in chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, a salmonid species more susceptible to BKD. Juvenile chinook salmon were exposed to either 33209, the American Type...
Climatic and biotic controls on annual carbon storage in Amazonian ecosystems
H. Tian, J. M. Melillo, D. W. Kicklighter, A. D. McGuire, J. Helfrich Iii, B. Moore III, C. J. Vorosmarty
2000, Global Ecology and Biogeography (9) 315-335
1 The role of undisturbed tropical land ecosystems in the global carbon budget is not well understood. It has been suggested that inter-annual climate variability can affect the capacity of these ecosystems to store carbon in the short term. In this paper, we use a transient version of the Terrestrial...
Transformations in methane hydrates
I.-M. Chou, A. Sharma, R.C. Burruss, J. Shu, Ho-kwang Mao, R.J. Hemley, A.F. Goncharov, L.A. Stern, S. H. Kirby
2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (97) 13484-13487
Detailed study of pure methane hydrate in a diamond cell with in situ optical, Raman, and x-ray microprobe techniques reveals two previously unknown structures, structure II and structure H, at high pressures. The structure II methane hydrate at 250 MPa has a cubic unit cell of a = 17.158(2) A??...
Microbial degradation of chloroethenes in groundwater systems
Paul M. Bradley
2000, Hydrogeology Journal (8) 104-111
The chloroethenes, tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE) are among the most common contaminants detected in groundwater systems. As recently as 1980, the consensus was that chloroethene compounds were not significantly biodegradable in groundwater. Consequently, efforts to remediate chloroethene-contaminated groundwater were limited to largely unsuccessful pump-and-treat attempts. Subsequent investigation revealed that...
Stream chemistry modeling of two watersheds in the Front Range, Colorado
Thomas Meixner, Roger C. Bales, Mark W. Williams, Donald H. Campbell, Jill S. Baron
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 77-87
We investigated the hydrologic, geochemical, and biogeochemical controls on stream chemical composition on the Green Lakes Valley and Andrews Creek watersheds using the alpine hydrochemical model (AHM). Both sites had comparable data sets from 1994 and 1996, including high‐resolution spatial data and high‐frequency time series of hydrology, geochemistry, and meteorology....