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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Infectious bursal disease virus antibodies in eider ducks and Herring Gulls
T. Hollmen, J. Christian Franson, Douglas E. Docherty, Mikaei Kilpi, Martti Hario, Lynn H. Creekmore, Margaret R. Petersen
2000, Condor (102) 688-691
We measured antibodies to infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) in blood of nesting Common Eider (Somateria mollissima) females and immature Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) in the Baltic Sea, and in blood of Spectacled Eider (Somateria fischeri) females nesting in a remote area of western Alaska. Positive (≥ 1:16) IBDV titers...
Osmium isotopes demonstrate distal transport of contaminated sediments in Chesapeake Bay
G.R. Helz, J.M. Adelson, C.V. Miller, J.C. Cornwell, J. M. Hill, M. Horan, R.J. Walker
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 2528-2534
Because the isotopic composition of anthropogenic Os is normally distinctive in comparison to continental crust and is precisely measurable, this platinum-group element is attractive as a tracer of transport pathways for contaminated sediments in estuaries. Evidence herein and elsewhere suggest that biomedical research institutions are the chief source of anthropogenic...
Bed material transport in the Virgin River, Utah
E.D. Andrews
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 585-596
Detailed information concerning the rate and particle size distribution of bed material transport by streamflows can be very difficult and expensive to obtain, especially where peak streamflows are brief and bed material is poorly sorted, including some very large boulders. Such streams, however, are common in steep, arid watersheds. Any...
Sequential dome-collapse nuées ardentes analyzed from broadband seismic data, Merapi Volcano, Indonesia
A. Brodscholl, S.B. Kirbani, B. Voight
2000, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (100) 363-369
During the sequential dome collapse of Merapi Volcano on 22 November 1994, a broadband seismic station on the western slope was the only operational seismic equipment that provided continuous on-scale recording of the event. According to visual and seismic observations, the collapse activity lasted about 10 h. We divide the...
Three-dimensional oxygen isotope imaging of convective fluid flow around the Big Bonanza, Comstock lode mining district, Nevada
R.E. Criss, M.J. Singleton, D.E. Champion
2000, Economic Geology (95) 131-142
Oxygen isotope analyses of propylitized andesites from the Con Virginia and California mines allow construction of a detailed, three-dimensional image of the isotopic surfaces produced by the convective fluid flows that deposited the famous Big Bonanza orebody. On a set of intersecting maps and sections, the δ18O isopleths clearly show...
Strain accumulation across the Eastern California Shear Zone at latitude 36°30'N
Weijun Gan, Jerry L. Svarc, J.C. Savage, W.H. Prescott
2000, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (105) 16229-16236
The motion of a linear array of monuments extending across the Eastern California Shear Zone (ECSZ) has been measured from 1994 to 1999 with the Global Positioning System. The linear array is oriented N54°E, perpendicular to the tangent to the local small circle drawn about the Pacific-North America pole of...
Uncertain nest fates in songbird studies and variation in Mayfield estimation
J.C. Manolis, D. E. Andersen, F.J. Cuthbert
2000, The Auk (117) 615-626
Determining whether nesting attempts are successful can be difficult. Yet, current protocols for estimating nesting success do not address how uncertain nest fates should be handled. We examined the problem of nest-fate uncertainty as it relates to Mayfield estimation of nesting success and in analyses of factors that influence success....
Schaben field, Kansas: Improving performance in a Mississippian shallow-shelf carbonate
Scott L. Montgomery, E. K. Franseen, S. Bhattacharya, P. Gerlach, A. Byrnes, W. Guy, T.R. Carr
2000, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (84) 1069-1086
Schaben field (Kansas), located along the northeastern shelf of the Hugoton embayment, produces from Mississippian carbonates in erosional highs immediately beneath a regional unconformity. Production comes from depths of around 4400 ft (1342 m) in partially dolomitized shelf deposits. A detailed reservoir characterization/simulation study, recently performed as part of a...
Effects of neck collars and radiotransmitters on survival and reproduction of emperor geese
Joel A. Schmutz, Julie A. Morse
2000, Journal of Wildlife Management (64) 231-237
Neck collars have been used widely for studies of goose population biology. Despite concerns about their negative impacts, few studies have employed designs capable of clearly demonstrating these effects. During a 1993-98 study of emperor geese (Chen canagica), we contrasted survival and reproduction of geese marked with tarsal bands to...
Cadmium toxicity among wildlife in the Colorado Rocky Mountains
J.R. Larison, G.E. Likens, J.W. Fitzpatrick, J.G. Crock
2000, Nature (406) 181-183
Cadmium is known to be both extremely toxic and ubiquitous in natural environments. It occurs in almost all soils, surface waters and plants, and it is readily mobilized by human activities such as mining. As a result, cadmium has been named as a potential health threat to wildlife species; however,...
SH-wave refraction/reflection and site characterization
Z. Wang, R.L. Street, E.W. Woolery, I. P. Madin
2000, Conference Paper, Geotechnical Special Publication
Traditionally, nonintrusive techniques used to characterize soils have been based on P-wave refraction/reflection methods. However, near-surface unconsolidated soils are oftentimes water-saturated, and when groundwater is present at a site, the velocity of the P-waves is more related to the compressibility of the pore water than to the matrix of the...
Toxic responses of medaka, D-rR strain, to polychlorinatednaphthalene mixtures after embryonic exposure by in ovo nanoinjection: A partial life-cycle assessment
Sergio A. Villalobos, Diana M. Papoulias, John C. Meadows, Alan L. Blankenship, Stephanie D. Pastva, Kurunthachalam Kannan, D.E. Hinton, Donald E. Tillitt, John P. Giesy
2000, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (19) 432-440
Polychlorinated naphthalenes (PCNs) are organic compounds with some chemical properties and uses similar to polychlorinated biphenyls. Polychlorinated naphthalenes have been detected in biota from certain aquatic environments. The toxicities of several PCN technical mixtures (Halowax) to medaka (Oryzias latipes) were determined by use of an embryo nanoinjection method. Medaka eggs...
Acetogenic microbial degradation of vinyl chloride
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 2761-2763
Under methanogenic conditions, microbial degradation of [1,2-14C]vinyl chloride (VC) resulted in significant (14 ± 3% maximum recovery) but transient recovery of radioactivity as 14C-acetate. Subsequently, 14C-acetate was degraded to 14CH4 and 14CO2 (18 ± 2% and 54 ± 3% final recoveries, respectively). In contrast, under 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid (BES) amended conditions, 14C-acetate recovery remained high...
Environmental geochemistry at the global scale
J. Plant, D. Smith, B. Smith, L. Williams
2000, Journal of the Geological Society (157) 837-849
Land degradation and pollution caused by population pressure and economic development pose a threat to the sustainability of the Earth's surface, especially in tropical regions where a long history of chemical weathering has made the surface environment particularly fragile. Systematic baseline geochemical data provide a means of monitoring the state...
The northern Sacramento Mountains, southwest United States. Part II: Exhumation history and detachment faulting
V. Pease, D. Foster, J. Wooden, P. O'Sullivan, J. Argent, C. Fanning
2000, Geological Society Special Publication (164) 199-238
Thermochronologic and thermobarometric data reveal the timing, distribution and intensity of thermal events associated with detachment faulting in the Sacramento Mountains metamorphic core complex. In the northwest Sacramento Mountains, cooling rates of c. 100°C Ma−1 are associated with Late Cretaceous plutonism followed by cooling of the crust by thermal conduction....
Classification methods for monitoring Arctic sea ice using OKEAN passive/active two-channel microwave data
Gennady I. Belchansky, David C. Douglas
2000, Remote Sensing of Environment (73) 307-322
This paper presents methods for classifying Arctic sea ice using both passive and active (2-channel) microwave imagery acquired by the Russian OKEAN 01 polar-orbiting satellite series. Methods and results are compared to sea ice classifications derived from nearly coincident Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I) and Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer...
Habitat and landscape correlates of presence, density, and species richness of birds wintering in forest fragments in Ohio
Paul F. Doherty Jr., Thomas C. Grubb Jr.
2000, The Wilson Bulletin (112) 388-394
We investigated the distribution of wintering woodland bird species in 47 very small, isolated, woodland fragments (0.54-6.01 ha) within an agricultural landscape in north-central Ohio. Our objectives were to determine correlations between temporal, habitat, and landscape variables and avian presence, density, and species richness within the smallest woodlots occupied by...
The thermal inertia of Mars from the Mars Global Surveyor Thermal Emission Spectrometer
Bruce M. Jakosky, Michael T. Mellon, Hugh H. Kieffer, Phillip R. Christensen, E. Stacy Varnes, Steven W. Lee
2000, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (105) 9643-9652
We have used Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Thermal Emission Spectrometer thermal emission measurements to derive the thermal inertia of the Martian surface at the ∼100-km spatial scale. We have validated the use of nighttime-only measurements to derive thermal inertia as well as the use of a single wavelength band versus...
Dating young groundwater with sulfur hexafluoride: Natural and anthropogenic sources of sulfur hexafluoride
Eurybiades Busenberg, Niel Plummer
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 3011-3030
Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) is primarily of anthropogenic origin but also occurs naturally. The troposphere concentration of SF6 has increased from a steady state value of 0.054±0.009 to more than 4 parts per trillion volume during the past 40 years. An analytical procedure was developed for measuring concentrations of SF6 to less than...
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...
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...
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...
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...
Deformation and seismic precursors to dome-collapse and fountain-collapse nuées ardentes at Merapi Volcano, Java, Indonesia, 1994-1998
B. Voight, K.D. Young, D. Hidayat, Subandrio, M.A. Purbawinata, Antonius Ratdomopurbo, Suharna, Panut, D.S. Sayudi, R. LaHusen, J. Marso, T.L. Murray, M. Dejean, M. Iguchi, K. Ishihara
2000, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (100) 261-287
Following the eruption of January 1992, episodes of lava dome growth accompanied by generation of dome-collapse nuées ardentes occurred in 1994–1998. In addition, nuées ardentes were generated by fountain-collapse in January 1997, and the 1998 events also suggest an explosive component. Significant tilt and seismic precursors on varying time scales...
Gas hydrate and humans
K.A. Kvenvolden
2000, Conference Paper, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
The potential effects of naturally occurring gas hydrate on humans are not understood with certainty, but enough information has been acquired over the past 30 years to make preliminary assessments possible. Three major issues are gas hydrate as (1) a potential energy resource, (2) a factor in global climate change,...