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Page 3418, results 85426 - 85450

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Influence of prerelease experience on reintroduced black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes)
E. Biggins, Astrid Vargas, Jerry L. Godbey, S.H. Anderson
1999, Biological Conservation (89) 121-129
Captive breeding is increasingly being used to create supplies of endangered animals for release into natural habitats, but rearing strategies vary and debates arise over which methods are most efficient. We assessed postrelease behaviors and survival of three groups of black-footed ferrets, each with different prerelease experience. Eighteen ferret kits...
Dendrochronology and late Holocene history of Bering piedmont glacier, Alaska
G.C. Wiles, A. Post, E.H. Muller, B. F. Molnia
1999, Quaternary Research (52) 185-195
Fluctuations of the piedmont lobe of Bering Glacier and its sublobe Steller Glacier over the past two millennia are reconstructed using 34 radiocarbon dates and tree-ring data from 16 sites across the glaciers' forelands. The general sequence of glacial activity is consistent with well-dated fluctuations of tidewater and land-terminating glaciers...
Gravel sediment routing from widespread, low-intensity landscape disturbance, Current River basin, Missouri
Robert B. Jacobson, K.B. Gran
1999, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (24) 897-917
During the last 160 years, land-use changes in the Ozarks have had the potential to cause widespread, low-intensity delivery of excess amounts of gravel-sized sediment to stream channels. Previous studies have indicated that this excess gravel bedload is moving in wave-like forms through Ozarks drainage basins. The longitudinal, areal distribution...
Potential energetic effects of mountain climbers on foraging grizzly bears
D. White Jr., K.C. Kendall, H.D. Picton
1999, Wildlife Society Bulletin (27) 146-151
Most studies of the effects of human disturbance on grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) have not quantified the energetic effects of such interactions. In this study, we characterized activity budgets of adult grizzly bears as they foraged on aggregations of adult army cutworm moths (Euxoa auxiliaris) in the alpine of...
Changes in element contents of four lichens over 11 years in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, northern Minnesota
James P. Bennett, C. M. Wetmore
1999, Environmental and Experimental Botany (41) 75-82
Four species of lichen (Cladina rangiferina, Evernia mesomorpha, Hypogymnia physodes, and Parmelia sulcata) were sampled at six locations in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness three times over a span of 11 years and analyzed for concentrations of 16 chemical elements to test the hypotheses that corticolous species would accumulate higher amounts...
Distinguishing Grenvillian basement from pre-Taconian cover rocks in the Northern Appalachians
Paul M. Karabinos, John N. Aleinikoff, C. Mark Fanning
1999, American Journal of Science (299) 502-515
Distinguishing Grenvillian basement rocks from pre-Taconian cover sequences in the Appalachians is a first-order problem essential for accurate structural interpretations. The Cavendish Formation in southeastern Vermont presents a classic example of this problem. Doll and others (1961) showed the Cavendish Formation as younger than the Middle Proterozoic Mount Holly Complex...
Potential effects of gas hydrate on human welfare
K.A. Kvenvolden
1999, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
For almost 30 years, serious interest has been directed toward natural gas hydrate, a crystalline solid composed of water and methane, as a potential (i) energy resource, (ii) factor in global climate change, and (iii) sub-marine geohazard. Although each of these issues can affect human welfare, only (iii) is considered...
Diversifying natural resources value measurements: The Trinity River study
J. G. Taylor, A. J. Douglas
1999, Society and Natural Resources (12) 315-336
An interdisciplinary team set out to establish the economic and social values of the Trinity River in northern California . This information was intended to support the Secretary of the Interior's decision on allocation of Trinity River flows . This team set out to measure the values of Trinity River...
Negative pH, efflorescent mineralogy, and consequences for environmental restoration at the iron mountain superfund site, California
D. Kirk Nordstrom, Charles N. Alpers
1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (96) 3455-3462
The Richmond Mine of the Iron Mountain copper deposit contains some of the most acid mine waters ever reported. Values of pH have been measured as low as -3.6, combined metal concentrations as high as 200 g/liter, and sulfate concentrations as high as 760 g/liter. Copious quantities of soluble metal...
SAR studies in the Yuma Desert, Arizona: Sand penetration, geology, and the detection of military ordnance debris
G. G. Schaber
1999, Remote Sensing of Environment (67) 320-347
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images acquired over part of the Yuma Desert in southwestern Arizona demonstrate the ability of C-band (5.7-cm wavelength), L-band (24.5 cm), and P-band (68 cm) AIRSAR signals to backscatter from increasingly greater depths reaching several meters in blow sand and sandy alluvium. AIRSAR images obtained within...
Estimating lake-atmosphere CO2 exchange
D.E. Anderson, Robert G. Striegl, D.I. Stannard, C.M. Michmerhuizen, T.A. McConnaughey, J. W. LaBaugh
1999, Limnology and Oceanography (44) 988-1001
Lake‐atmosphere CO2 flux was directly measured above a small, woodland lake using the eddy covariance technique and compared with fluxes deduced from changes in measured lake‐water CO2 storage and with flux predictions from boundary‐layer and surface‐renewal models. Over a 3‐yr period, lake‐atmosphere exchanges of CO2 were measured over 5 weeks...
A geochemical reconnaissance of the Alid volcanic center and geothermal system, Danakil depression, Eritrea
J. B. Lowenstern, C. J. Janik, R.O. Fournier, T. Tesfai, W. A. Duffield, M.A. Clynne, James G. Smith, L. Woldegiorgis, K. Weldemariam, G. Kahsai
1999, Geothermics (28) 161-187
Geological and geochemical studies indicate that a high-temperature geothermal system underlies the Alid volcanic center in the northern Danakil depression of Eritrea. Alid is a very late-Pleistocene structural dome formed by shallow intrusion of rhyolitic magma, some of which vented as lavas and pyroclastic flows. Fumaroles and boiling pools distributed...
No spreading across the southern Juan de Fuca ridge axial cleft during 1994-1996
C.D. Chadwell, J. A. Hildebrand, Fred N. Spiess, J. L. Morton, W. R. Normark, C.A. Reiss
1999, Geophysical Research Letters (26) 2525-2528
Direct-path acoustic measurements between seafloor transponders observed no significant extension (−10±14 mm/yr) from August 1994 to September 1996 at the southern Juan de Fuca Ridge (44°40′ N and 130°20′ W). The acoustic path for the measurement is a 691-m baseline straddling the axial cleft, which bounds...
Subdivision of Holocene Baltic sea sediments by their physical properties [Gliederung holozaner ostseesedimente nach physikalischen Eigenschaften]
Jan Harff, Geoffrey C. Bohling, R. Endler, J.C. Davis, Ricardo A. Olea
1999, Petermanns Geographische Mitteilungen (143) 50-55
The Holocene sediment sequence of a core taken within the centre of the Eastern Gotland Basin was subdivided into 12 lithostratigraphic units based on MSCL-data (sound velocity, wet bulk density, magnetic susceptibility) using a multivariate classification method. The lower 6 units embrace the sediments until the Litorina transgression, and the...
Stasis and extinction of Silurian (Llandovery-Wenlock) trilobite associations related to oceanic cyclicity
Donald G. Mikulic, Joanne Kluessendorf
1999, Journal of Paleontology (73) 320-325
Silurian trilobites of the central United States belong to a series of temporally-successive associations which appeared abruptly, maintained taxonomic stasis for a time, and then disappeared abruptly. Their disappearance resulted from global perturbations of short-term duration and moderate magnitude, which caused substantial taxonomic replacement but no reorganization of major ecosystems....
CFIRP: What we learned in the first ten years
C. L. Chambers, W.C. McComb, J. C. Tappeiner II, L.D. Kellogg, R.L. Johnson, G. Spycher
1999, Conference Paper, Forestry Chronicle
In response to public dissatisfaction with forest management methods, we initiated the College of Forestry Integrated Research Project (CFIRP) to test alternative silvicultural systems in Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii stands in western Oregon. We compared costs and biological and human responses among a control and three replicated silvicultural alternatives to clearcutting...
Harlequin Duck recovery from the Exxon Valdez oil spill: A population genetics perspective
Richard B. Lanctot, Buddy L. Goatcher, Kim T. Scribner, Sandra L. Talbot, Barbara J. Pierson, Daniel Esler, Denny Zwiefelhofer
1999, The Auk (116) 781-791
Concerns about Harlequin Duck (Histrionicus histrionicus) population recovery following the Exxon Valdez oil spill led biologists to ask whether birds located in different molting and wintering areas belong to genetically distinct and, thus, demographically independent populations. Owing to the lack of direct observations of movements among marine areas, three classes...
Effectiveness of an existing estuarine no-take fish sanctuary within the Kennedy Space Center, Florida
D.R. Johnson, N.A. Funicelli, James A. Bohnsack
1999, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (19) 436-453
Approximately 22% of the waters of the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, which encompasses the Kennedy Space Center, Florida, have been closed to public access and fishing since 1962. These closed areas offer an opportunity to test the effectiveness of “no-take” sanctuaries by analyzing two replicated estuarine areas. Areas open...
Lethal levels of selected water quality variables to larval and juvenile Lost River and shortnose suckers
M. K. Saiki, D.P. Monda, B.L. Bellerud
1999, Environmental Pollution (105) 37-44
Resource managers hypothesize that occasional fish kills during summer-early fall in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, may be linked to unfavorable water quality conditions created by massive algal blooms. In a preliminary effort to address this concern, short-term (96-h-long) laboratory tests were conducted with larval and juvenile Lost River (Deltistes luxatus)...
Chemical, multispectral, and textural constraints on the composition and origin of rocks at the Mars Pathfinder landing site
H.Y. McSween Jr., S.L. Murchie, J.A. Crisp, N.T. Bridges, R. C. Anderson, J.F. Bell III, D.T. Britt, J. Bruckner, G. Dreibus, T. Economou, A. Ghosh, M.P. Golombek, J.P. Greenwood, J. R. Johnson, H. J. Moore, R.V. Morris, T. J. Parker, R. Rieder, R. Singer, H. Wänke
1999, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (104) 8679-8715
Rocks at the Mars Pathfinder site are probably locally derived. Textures on rock surfaces may indicate volcanic, sedimentary, or impact-generated rocks, but aeolian abration and dust coatings prevent unambiguous interpretation. Multispectral imaging has resolved four spectral classes of rocks: gray and red, which occur on different surfaces of the same...
Observations on the palynology, petrography and geochemistry of the Western Kentucky number 4 coal bed
C.F. Eble, S.F. Greb, D.A. Williams, J.C. Hower
1999, International Journal of Coal Geology (39) 121-139
Eight bench-column samples of the Western Kentucky Number 4 coal bed, collected from an area along the southern margin of the Western Kentucky Coal Field, were analyzed palynologically, petrographically, and geochemically to document both temporal and spatial variability among these parameters. The Western Kentucky Number 4 coal occurs near the...
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...
Coupling groundwater and riparian vegetation models to assess effects of reservoir releases
Abraham E. Springer, Julie M. Wright, Patrick B. Shafroth, Juliet C. Stromberg, Duncan T. Patten
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 3621-3630
Although riparian areas in the arid southwestern United States are critical for maintaining species diversity, their extent and health have been declining since Euro‐American settlement. The purpose of this study was to develop a methodology to evaluate the potential for riparian vegetation restoration and groundwater recharge. A numerical groundwater flow...