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Page 3377, results 84401 - 84425

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Effects of fire retardant chemical and fire suppressant foam on shrub steppe vegetation in northern Nevada
Diane L. Larson, Wesley E. Newton, Patrick J. Anderson, Steven J. Stein
1999, International Journal of Wildland Fire (9) 115-127
The objectives of this study were to determine the effects of fire retardantchemical (Phos-Chek G75-F*) and fire suppressant foam (Silv-Ex) application,alone and in combination with fire, on Great Basin shrub steppe vegetation. Wemeasured growth, resprouting, flowering, and incidence of galling insects onChrysothamnus viscidiflorusandArtemisia tridentata. These characteristics were notaffected by any...
Killing of a muskox, Ovibos moschatus, by two wolves, Canis lupis, and subsequent caching
L. David Mech, Layne G. Adams
1999, Canadian Field-Naturalist (113) 673-675
The killing of a cow Muskox (Ovibos moschatus) by two Wolves (Canis lupus) in 5 minutes during summer on Ellesmere Island is described. After two of the four feedings observed, one Wolf cached a leg and regurgitated food as far as 2.3 km away and probably farther. The implications of...
Relations of surface-water quality to streamflow in the Atlantic Coastal, lower Delaware River, and Delaware Bay basins, New Jersey, water years 1976-93
Kathryn Hunchak-Kariouk, Debra E. Buxton, R. Edward Hickman
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4244
Relations of water quality to streamflow were determined for 18 water-quality constituents at 28 surface-water-quality stations within the drainage area of the Atlantic Coastal, lower Delaware River, and Delaware Bay Basins for water years 1976-93. Surface-water-quality and streamflow data were evaluated for trends (through time) in constituent concentrations during high...
Concentrations and distribution of manmade organic compounds in the Lake Tahoe Basin, Nevada and California, 1997-99
Michael S. Lico, Nyle Pennington
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4218
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and the Lahontan Regional Water-Quality Control Board, sampled Lake Tahoe, major tributary streams to Lake Tahoe, and several other lakes in the Lake Tahoe Basin for manmade organic compounds during 1997-99.Gasoline components were found in all samples collected...
Correlated factors in amphibian decline: Exotic species and habitat change in western Washington
M. J. Adams
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 1162-1171
Amphibian declines may frequently be associated with multiple, correlated factors. In western North America, exotic species and hydrological changes are often correlated and are considered 2 of the greatest threats to freshwater systems. Bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) introductions are frequently cited as a threat to lentic-breeding anurans native to western North...
Estimation of potential runoff-contributing areas in the Kansas-Lower Republican River basin, Kansas
Kyle E. Juracek
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4089
Digital soils and topographic data were used to estimate and compare potential runoff-contributing areas for 19 selected subbasins representing soil, slope, and runoff variability within the Kansas-Lower Republican (KLR) River Basin. Potential runoff-contributing areas were estimated separately and collectively for the processes of infiltration-excess and saturation-excess overland flow using a...
Amphibian and reptile surveys of U.S. Navy lands on the Kitsap and Toandos Peninsulas, Washington
M. J. Adams, Stephen D. West, Lorrie Kalmbach
1999, Northwestern Naturalist (80) 1-7
We inventoried amphibians and reptiles on 5 U.S. Naval holdings located on the Kitsap and Toandos Peninsulas, western Washington. Eight amphibians, including an introduced anuran, and 4 reptiles were detected, resulting in 87 new locality records. Six species were found on the Toandos Peninsula where no previous records exist. Of...
Applications and issues of GIS as tool for civil engineering modeling
S.B. Miles, C.L. Ho
1999, Journal of Computing in Civil Engineering (13) 144-152
A tool that has proliferated within civil engineering in recent years is geographic information systems (GIS). The goal of a tool is to supplement ability and knowledge that already exists, not to serve as a replacement for that which is lacking. To secure the benefits and avoid misuse of a...
Calcium ion binding to a soil fulvic acid using a donnan potential model
J.A. Marinsky, A. Mathuthu, J.H. Ephraim, M.M. Reddy
1999, Radiochimica Acta (84) 205-211
Calcium ion binding to a soil fulvic acid (Armadale Bh Horizon) was evaluated over a range of calcium ion concentrations, from pH 3.8 to 7.3, using potentiometric titrations and calcium ion electrode measurements. Fulvic acid concentration was constant (100 milligrams per liter) and calcium ion concentration varied up to 8...
Subcutaneous implantation of satellite transmitters with percutaneous antennae into male polar bears (Ursus maritimus)
Daniel M. Mulcahy, Gerald W. Garner
1999, Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine (30) 510-515
Male polar bears (Ursus maritimus) have not been successfully instrumented with satellite transmitters because they readily shed collar-mounted transmitters. Seven male polar bears were captured on the pack ice off the northern coast of Alaska and surgically implanted with satellite transmitters with percutaneous antennae into the subcutaneous space of the...
Variation in net trophic transfer efficiencies among 21 PCB congeners
C.P. Madenjian, L.J. Schmidt, S.M. Chernyak, R.F. Elliott, T.J. Desorcie, R.T. Quintal, L.J. Begnoche, R.J. Hesselberg
1999, Environmental Science & Technology (33) 3768-3773
We tested the hypothesis that the efficiency with which fish retain polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners from their food strongly depends on Kow and degree of chlorination of the congener. We used diet information, determinations of concentrations of individual PCB congeners in both coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and their prey, and bioenergetics modeling...
Sedimentary exhalative nickel-molybdenum ores in south China
D.A. Lott, R.M. Coveney Jr., J.B. Murowchick, R. I. Grauch
1999, Economic Geology (94) 1051-1066
Unique bedded Ni-Mo ores hosted by black shales were discovered in localized paleobasins along the Yangzte platform of southern China in 1971. Textural evidence and radiometric dates imply ore formation during sedimentation of black shales that grade into readily combustible beds, termed stone coals, which contain 10 to 15 percent...
Precocious breeding by yearling Giant Canada Geese
R.D. Drobney, J.M. Checkett, J.M. Coluccy, D.A. Graber
1999, The Auk (116) 1145-1147
Many species of waterfowl are capable of breeding as yearlings. In the subfamily Anserinae, however, reproduction normally does not commence until individuals reach two to four years of age (Rohwer 1992). Most published accounts indicate that Canada Geese (Branta canadensis) conform to the pattern typically found in other geese, deferring...
Brucellosis in Yellowstone National Park bison: Quantitative serology and infection
T.J. Roffe, Jack C. Rhyan, K. Aune, L.M. Philo, D.R. Ewalt, T. Gidlewski, S.G. Hennager
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 1132-1137
We collected complete sets of tissues, fluids, and swabs (approx 30) from 37 Yellowstone National Park (YNP) female bison (Bison bison) killed as a result of management actions by the Montana Department of Livestock and YNP personnel. Our goal was to establish the relation between blood tests demonstrating an animal...
Stable isotope, chemical, and mineral compositions of the Middle Proterozoic Lijiaying Mn deposit, Shaanxi Province, China
Hsueh-Wen Yeh, James R. Hein, Jie Ye, Delian Fan
1999, Ore Geology Reviews (15) 55-69
The Lijiaying Mn deposit, located about 250 km southwest of Xian, is a high-quality ore characterized by low P and Fe contents and a mean Mn content of about 23%. The ore deposit occurs in shallow-water marine sedimentary rocks of probable Middle Proterozoic age. Carbonate minerals in the ore deposit...
Micrometeorologic methods for measuring the post-application volatilization of pesticides
M.S. Majewski
1999, Conference Paper, Water, Air, and Soil Pollution
A wide variety of micrometeorological measurement methods can be used to estimate the postapplication volatilization of pesticides from treated fields. All these estimation methods require that the entire study area have the same surficial characteristics, including the area surrounding the actual study site, and that the pesticide under investigation be...
Effects of ambient water quality on the endangered Lost River sucker in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon
B.A. Martin, M. K. Saiki
1999, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (128) 953-961
Populations of the Lost River sucker Deltistes luxatus have declined so precipitously in the Upper Klamath Basin of Oregon and California that this fish was recently listed for federal protection as an endangered species. Although Upper Klamath Lake is a major refuge for this species, fish in the lake occasionally...
Surface water-ground water interaction: Herbicide transport into municipal collector wells
Ingrid M. Verstraeten, J.D. Carr, G. V. Steele, E.M. Thurman, K.C. Bastian, D.F. Dormedy
1999, Journal of Environmental Quality (28) 1396-1405
During spring runoff events, herbicides in the Platte River are transported through an alluvial aquifer into collector wells located on an island in the river in 6 to 7 d. During two spring runoff events in 1995 and 1996, atrazine [2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine] concentrations in water from these...
Sidescan-sonar mapping of benthic trawl marks on the shelf and slope off Eureka, California
A. M. Friedlander, G.W. Boehlert, M.E. Field, J.E. Mason, J.V. Gardner, P. Dartnell
1999, Fishery Bulletin (97) 786-801
The abundance and orientation of trawl marks was quantified over an extensive portion (>2700 km2) of the Eureka, California, outer shelf and slope, an important commercial bottom trawling ground for such high-value species as rockfish, sole, and sablefish. Fishing logbook data indicate that the entire reporting area was trawled about...
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...
Importance of microscopy in durability studies of solidified and stabilized contaminated soils
I. Klich, L.P. Wilding, L.R. Drees, E. R. Landa
1999, Soil Science Society of America Journal (63) 1274-1283
Solidification/stabilization (S/S) is recognized by the U.S. EPA as a best demonstrated available technology for the containment of contaminated soils and other hazardous wastes that cannot be destroyed by chemical, thermal, or biological means. Despite the increased use of S/S technologies, little research has been conducted on the weathering and...
Synopsis of strontium isotope variations in groundwater at Aspo, southern Sweden
Z. E. Peterman, B. Wallin
1999, Applied Geochemistry (14) 939-951
Strontium isotope ratios are used to identify end-member ground-water compositions at Aspo in southeastern Sweden where the Hard Rock Laboratory (HRL) has been constructed to evaluate the suitability of crystalline rock for the geologic disposal of nuclear waste. The Hard Rock Laboratory is a decline (tunnel) constructed in 1.8 Ga-old...
Comparison of trace element concentrations in tissue of common carp and implications for monitoring
R. M. Goldstein, L.R. DeWeese
1999, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (35) 1133-1140
Common carp (Cyprinus carpio) collected from four sites in the Red River of the North in 1994 were analyzed for arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), chromium (Cr), copper (Cu), lead (Pb), nickel (Ni), selenium (So), and zinc (Zn). Concentrations differed among liver, muscle, and whole body. Generally, trace element concentrations were...
Apparatus investigates geological aspects of gas hydrates
J.S. Booth, W.J. Winters, William P. Dillon
1999, Oil & Gas Journal (97) 63-70
The US Geological Survey (USGS), in response to potential geohazards, energy resource potential, and climate issues associated with marine gas hydrates, has developed a laboratory research system that permits hydrate genesis and dissociation under deep-sea conditions, employing user-selected sediment types and pore fluids.The apparatus, GHASTI (gas hydrate and sediment test...