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Page 3367, results 84151 - 84175

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Results of repeated leveling surveys at Newberry Volcano, Oregon, and near Lassen Peak Volcano, California
D. Dzurisin
1999, Bulletin of Volcanology (61) 83-91
Personnel from the U.S. Geological Survey's Cascades Volcano Observatory conducted first-order, class-II leveling surveys near Lassen Peak, California, in 1991 and at Newberry Volcano, Oregon, in 1985, 1986, and 1994. Near Lassen Peak no significant vertical displacements had occurred along either of two traverses, 33 and 44 km long, since...
Ordovician reef-hosted Jiaodingshan Mn-Co deposit and Dawashan Mn deposit, Sichuan Province, China
Delian Fan, James R. Hein, Jie Ye
1999, Ore Geology Reviews (15) 135-151
The Jiaodingshan Mn-Co and Dawashan Mn deposits are located in the approximately 2-m thick Daduhe unit of the Wufengian strata of Late Ordovician (Ashgill) age. Paleogeographic reconstruction places the deposits at the time of their formation in a gulf between Chengdu submarine rise and the Kangdian continent. The Jiaodingshan and...
Liquefaction and soil failure during 1994 Northridge earthquake
T.L. Holzer, Michael J. Bennett, Daniel J. Ponti, John Tinsley
1999, Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering (125) 438-452
The 1994 Northridge, Calif., earthquake caused widespread permanent ground deformation on the gently sloping alluvial fan surface of the San Fernando Valley. The ground cracks and distributed deformation damaged both pipelines and surface structures. To evaluate the mechanism of soil failure, detailed subsurface investigations were conducted at four sites. Three...
Sequential filling of a late paleozoic foreland basin
J. C. Mars’, W.A. Thomas
1999, Journal of Sedimentary Research (69) 1191-1208
Through the use of an extensive data base of geophysical well logs, parasequence-scale subdivisions within a late Paleozoic synorogenic clastic wedge resolve cycles of sequential subsidence of a foreland basin, sediment progradation, subsidence of a carbonate shelf edge, diachronously subsiding discrete depositional centers,...
Biosafety of parenteral Brucella abortus RB51 vaccine in bison calves
T.J. Roffe, S.C. Olsen, T. Gidlewski, A.E. Jensen, M.V. Palmer, R. Huber
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 950-955
Vaccination is considered among the primary management tools for reducing brucellosis prevalence in Greater Yellowstone Area (GYA) ungulates. Before their use, however, vaccine safety and efficacy must be demonstrated. Twenty-seven female bison (Bison bison) calves (approx 5 months old) were vaccinated with Brucella abortus Strain RB51 (1.5 × 1010 colony...
An example of neotectonism in a continental interior - Thebes Gap, Midcontinent, United States
R.W. Harrison, D. Hoffman, J.D. Vaughn, J. R. Palmer, C.L. Wiscombe, J. P. McGeehin, W. J. Stephenson, J. K. Odum, R. A. Williams, S.L. Forman
1999, Tectonophysics (305) 399-417
Some of the most intense neotectonic activity known in the continental interior of North America has been recently discovered on a fault zone in the Thebes Gap area, Missouri and Illinois. This faulting almost assuredly was accompanied by large earthquakes. The zone is located approximately 30 km north of the...
Experiences with information locator services
E. Christian
1999, Journal of Government Information (26) 271-285
Over the last few years, governments and other organizations have been using new technologies to create networked Information Locator Services that help people find information resources. These services not only enhance access to information, but also are designed to support fundamental information policy principles. This article relates experiences in developing...
Loss of iron to gold capsules in rock-melting experiments
K. Ratajeski, T. W. Sisson
1999, American Mineralogist (84) 1521-1527
Gold is used widely for capsules in high-temperature rock-melting studies because it is generally thought to absorb negligible Fe from silicate samples. However, we observed significant losses of Fe from fluid-absent melting experiments on hornblende gabbros at 800-975 ??C and 8 kbar, using standard piston-cylinder techniques. The extent of Fe...
Style and origin of mid-Carboniferous deformation in the Illinois Basin, USA - Ancestral rockies deformation?
J.H. McBride, W.J. Nelson
1999, Tectonophysics (305) 249-273
The integration of outcrop, borehole, and seismic reflection data from the Illinois Basin and adjacent eastern Ozark Dome in Illinois and Missouri sheds new light on the style and origin of intra-cratonic deformation. Typical structures of this region are high-angle reverse faults in Precambrian basement that propagated upward to monoclines...
Comparison of TOMS and AVHRR volcanic ash retrievals from the August 1992 eruption of Mt. Spurr
N.A. Krotkov, O. Torres, C. Seftor, A.J. Krueger, A. Kostinski, William I. Rose Jr., G.J.S. Bluth, D. Schneider, S.J. Schaefer
1999, Geophysical Research Letters (26) 455-458
On August 19, 1992, the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) onboard NOAA-12 and NASA's Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) onboard the Nimbus-7 satellite simultaneously detected and mapped the ash cloud from the eruption of Mt. Spurr, Alaska. The spatial extent and geometry of the cloud derived from the two...
Spatial distribution of Serengeti wildebeest in relation to resources
J.F. Wilmshurst, J. M. Fryxell, Brian P. Farm, A.R.E. Sinclair, C.P. Henschel
1999, Canadian Journal of Zoology (77) 1223-1232
We investigated the spatial distribution of radio-marked wildebeest (Connochaetes taurinus) in the Serengeti ecosystem in relation to the distribution of their food resources, comparing patterns in the wet and dry seasons and at local and landscape spatial scales. A mechanistic model of ruminant energy optimization predicted that wildebeest should maximize...
Life-history strategies of ungulates
David M. Leslie Jr., R.T. Bowyer, J.G. Kie
1999, Journal of Mammalogy (80) 1067-1069
This Special Feature resulted from a symposium on life-history strategies of ungulates presented at the 78th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Mammalogists in Blacks-burg, Virginia, in June 1998. The presentations at the symposium represented only a vignette of the wide variety of life-history strategies that exists among...
The Continental Margins Program in Georgia
M.D. Cocker, E.A. Shapiro
1999, Marine Georesources and Geotechnology (17) 199-209
From 1984 to 1993, the Georgia Geologic Survey (GGS) participated in the Minerals Management Service-funded Continental Margins Program. Geological and geophysical data acquisition focused on offshore stratigraphic framework studies, phosphate-bearing Miocene-age strata, distribution of heavy minerals, near-surface alternative sources of groundwater, and development of a PC-based Coastal Geographic Information System...
Cytochrome P4501A induction, benzo[a]pyrene metabolism, and nucleotide adduct formation in fish hepatoma cells: Effect of preexposure to 3,3',4,4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl
J.M.W. Smeets, A. Voormolen, D. E. Tillitt, J.M. Everaarts, W. Seinen, Vanden Berg
1999, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (18) 474-480
In PLHC-1 hepatoma cells, benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P) caused a maximum induction of cytochrome P4501A (CYP1A) activity, measured as ethoxyresorufin O-deethylation (EROD), after 4 to 8 h of exposure, depending on the B[a]P concentration. The decline of EROD activity at longer exposure times was probably caused by the rapid metabolism of B[a]P...
Conversion of the pathogenic fungus Colletotrichum magna to a nonpathogenic, endophytic mutualist by gene disruption
R. S. Redman, J. C. Ranson, R. J. Rodriguez
1999, Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (12) 969-975
Hygromycin-resistant transformants of the cucurbit pathogen Colletotrichum magna (teleomorph: Glomerella magna) were generated by restriction enzyme-mediated integration (REMI) transformation. A rapid pathogenicity assay involving watermelon (Citrullus lanatus) seedlings was developed and 14,400 REMI transformants were screened and assessed for their ability to cause disease, colonize plant tissues, and confer disease...
Testing releasable GPS radiocollars on wolves and white-tailed deer
Samuel B. Merrill, Layne G. Adams, Michael E. Nelson, L. David Mech
1999, Wildlife Society Bulletin (26) 830-835
We tested prototype GPS collars on 8 free-ranging wolves (Canis lupus) and 3 white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) for varying periods between February and August 1997. We programmed the 920-gm collars to make a location attempt 6-96 times per day. The collars were designed to be remotely released from the animal...
Effects of environmental change on plant species density: Comparing predictions with experiments
L. Gough, J.B. Grace
1999, Ecology (80) 882-890
Ideally, general ecological relationships may be used to predict responses of natural communities to environmental change, but few attempts have been made to determine the reliability of predictions based on descriptive data. Using a previously published structural equation model (SEM) of descriptive data from a coastal marsh landscape, we compared...
Relationships between peak ground acceleration, peak ground velocity, and Modified Mercalli Intensity in California
David J. Wald, Vincent Quitoriano, Thomas H. Heaton, Hiroo Kanamori
1999, Earthquake Spectra (15) 557-564
We have developed regression relationships between Modified Mercalli Intensity (Imm) and peak ground acceleration (PGA) and velocity (PGV) by comparing horizontal peak ground motions to observed intensities for eight significant California earthquakes. For the limited range of Modified Mercalli intensities (Imm), we find that for peak acceleration with...
Hydroxyatrazine in soils and sediments
R.N. Lerch, E.M. Thurman, P.E. Blanchard
1999, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (18) 2161-2168
Hydroxyatrazine (HA) is the major metabolite of atrazine in most surface soils. Knowledge of HA sorption to soils, and its pattern of stream water contamination suggest that it is persistent in the environment. Soils with different atrazine use histories were collected from four sites, and sediments were collected from an...
Genetic and morphometric assessment of an unusual tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) population in the Black Mountains of Arizona
A.M. McLuckie, T. Lamb, C.R. Schwalbe, R.D. Mccord
1999, Journal of Herpetology (33) 36-44
Under recent regulatory designation of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) occurring east and south of the Colorado River constitute the Sonoran population, whereas those to the west and north form the Mojave population. These management units, distinguished by significant genetic, morphometric, and ecological differences, represent...
A sampling plan for conduit-flow karst springs: Minimizing sampling cost and maximizing statistical utility
J.C. Currens
1999, Engineering Geology (52) 121-128
Analytical data for nitrate and triazines from 566 samples collected over a 3-year period at Pleasant Grove Spring, Logan County, KY, were statistically analyzed to determine the minimum data set needed to calculate meaningful yearly averages for a conduit-flow karst spring. Results indicate that a biweekly sampling schedule augmented with...
Time of day of ovulation by three duck species in subarctic Alaska
Daniel Esler
1999, Condor (101) 422-425
I examined variation in ovulation times of Northern Pintails (Anas acuta), American Wigeon (A. americana), and Lesser Scaup (Aythya affinis) breeding in subarctic Alaskan wetlands. Ovulation times and, by extension, egg-laying times were highly variable in all three species, with ovulations occurring during all hours of the day. Only Lesser...