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Page 344, results 8576 - 8600

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Hydrologic and land-use factors associated with herbicides and nitrate in near-surface aquifers
Michael R. Burkart, Dana W. Kolpin
1993, Journal of Environmental Quality (22) 646-656
Selected herbicides, atrazine (2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine) metabolites, and NO−3 were examined in near-surface unconsolidated and bedrock aquifers in the midcontinental USA to study the hydrogeologic, spatial, and seasonal distribution of these contaminants. Groundwater samples were collected from 303 wells during the spring and late summer of 1991. At least one herbicide or atrazine...
Growth and mortality of larval sunfish in backwaters of the upper Mississippi River
S. J. Zigler, Cecil A. Jennings
1993, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (122) 1080-1087
We estimated the growth and mortality of larval sunfish Lepomis spp. in backwater habitats of the upper Mississippi River with an otolith‐based method and a length‐based method. Fish were sampled with plankton nets at one station in Navigation Pools 8 and 14 in 1989 and at two stations in...
Effect of mining and related activities on the sediment trace element geochemistry of Lake Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, USA. Part I: Surface sediments
Arthur J. Horowitz, Kent A. Elrick, Robert B. Cook
1993, Hydrological Processes (7) 403-423
During the summer of 1989 surface sediment samples were collected in Lake Coeur d'Alene, the Coeur d'Alene River and the St Joe River, Idaho, at a density of approximately one sample per square kilometre. Additional samples were collected from the banks of the South Fork of the Coeur d'Alene and...
Changing nest placement of Hawaiian Common Amakihi during the breeding cycle
Charles van Riper III, M. D. Kern, M. K. Sogge
1993, The Wilson Bulletin (105) 436-447
We studied the nesting behavior of the Common Amakihi (Hemignathus virens) from 1970-1981 on the island of Hawaii to determine if the species alters nest placement over a protracted 9-month breeding season. Birds preferentially chose the southwest quadrant of trees in which to build nests during all phases of the...
The proposed EROSpace institute, a national center operated by space grant universities
Paul L. Smith, LaDell R. Swiden, Frederick A. Waltz
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 550-552
The "EROSpace Institute" is a proposed visiting scientist program in associated with the U.S. Geological Survey's EROS Data Center (EDC). The Institute would be operated by a consortium of universities, possible drawn from NASA's Space Grant College and Fellowship Program consortia and the group of 17 capability-enhancement consortia, or...
CD-ROM technology at the EROS data center
Michael E. Madigan, Mary C. Weinheimer
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 526-526
The vast amount of digital spatial data often required by a single user has created a demand for media alternatives to 1/2" magnetic tape. One such medium that has been recently adopted at the U.S. Geological Survey's EROS Data Center is the compact disc (CD). CD's are a...
"Relative CIR": an image enhancement and visualization technique
Michael D. Fleming
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 493-493
Many techniques exist to spectrally and spatially enhance digital multispectral scanner data. One technique enhances an image while keeping the colors as they would appear in a color-infrared (CIR) image. This "relative CIR" technique generates an image that is both spectrally and spatially enhanced, while displaying a maximum...
Raster profile development for the spatial data transfer standard
John A. Szemraj
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 267-272
The Spatial Data Transfer Standard (SDTS), recently approved as Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 173, is designed to transfer various types of spatial data. Implementing all of the standard's options at one time is impractical. Profiles, or limited subsets of the SDTS, are the mechanisms by which...
Compositing multitemporal remote sensing data sets
J. Qi, A.R. Huete, J. Hood, Y. Kerr
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 206-213
To eliminate cloud and atmosphere-affected pixels, the compositing of multi temporal remote sensing data sets is done by selecting the maximum vale of the normalized different vegetation index (NDVI) within a compositing period. The NDVI classifier, however, is strongly affected by surface type and anisotropic properties, sensor viewing geometries,...
An empirical determination of the minimum number of measurements needed to estimate the mean random vitrinite reflectance of disseminated organic matter
Charles E. Barker, Mark J. Pawlewicz
1993, Organic Geochemistry (20) 643-651
In coal samples, published recommendations based on statistical methods suggest 100 measurements are needed to estimate the mean random vitrinite reflectance (Rv−r) to within ±2%. Our survey of published thermal maturation studies indicates that those using dispersed organic matter (DOM) mostly have an objective of acquiring 50 reflectance measurements. This...
Role of physical heterogeneity in the interpretation of small-scale laboratory and field observations of bacteria, microbial-sized microsphere, and bromide transport through aquifer sediments
Ronald W. Harvey, Nancy E. Kinner, Dan MacDonald, David W. Metge, Amoret Bunn
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 2713-2721
The effect of physical variability upon the relative transport behavior of microbial-sized microspheres, indigenous bacteria, and bromide was examined in field and flow-through column studies for a layered, but relatively well sorted, sandy glaciofluvial aquifer. These investigations involved repacked, sieved, and undisturbed aquifer sediments. In the field, peak abundance of...
Transmission risk of Lyme disease and implications for tick management
Howard S. Ginsberg
1993, American Journal of Epidemiology (138) 65-73
Transmission risk of Lyme disease at a site can be estimated using the probability of exposure (P1 = probability of being bitten by at least one infected tick); P1 =1 - (1 - kt)n, where n = number of tick bites per person and kt = spirochete prevalence in questing ticks. This probability is more directly related to...
A pressure-packer system for conducting rising head tests in water table wells
Benjamin S. Levy, Lawrence J. Pannell, John P. Dadoly
1993, Journal of Hydrology (148) 189-202
The pressure system developed for fully-saturated well screens has been modified for conducting rising head tests in water table wells installed in highly permeable aquifers. The pressure system consists of a compressed air source and 1 inch diameter PVC piping with a packer attached at the end. The pressure system...
Application of morphologic burrow interpretations to discern continental burrow architects: Lungfish or crayfish?
Stephen T. Hasiotis, Charles E. Mitchell, Russell R. Dubiel
1993, Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces (2) 315-333
A methodology for trace fossil identification using burrowing signatures is tested by evaluating ancient and modern lungfish and crayfish burrows and comparing them to previously undescribed burrows in a stratigraphic interval thought to contain both lungfish and crayfish burrows. Permian burrows that bear skeletal remains of the lungfish Gnathorhiza, from museum...
Transport of volatile organic compounds across the capillary fringe
Kathleen A. McCarthy, Richard L. Johnson
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 1675-1683
Physical experiments were conducted to investigate the transport of a dissolved volatile organic compound (trichloroethylene, TCE) from shallow groundwater to the unsaturated zone under a variety of conditions including changes in the soil moisture profile and water table position. Experimental data indicated that at moderate groundwater velocities (0.1 m/d), vertical...
Toward the simulation of the effects of the Great Lakes on regional climate
Gary T. Bates, F. Giorgi, Steven W. Hostetler
1993, Monthly Weather Review (121) 1373-1387
This paper describes a set of numerical experiments aimed at evaluating the feasibility of applying a version of the National Center for Atmospheric Research-Pennsylvania State University regional model (MM4) to regional climate simulation over the Great Lakes Basin. The objectives of this initial modeling investigation are 1) to examine whether...
The Parkfield prediction fallacy
James C. Savage
1993, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (83) 1-6
The Parkfield earthquake prediction is generally stated as a 95% probability that the next moderate earthquake there should occur before January 1993. That time limit is based on a two-sided 95% confidence interval. Because at the time of the prediction (1985) it was already clear that the earthquake had not...
Rainfall-threshold conditions for landslides in a humid-tropical system
Matthew C. Larsen, Andrew Simon
1993, Geografiska Annaler, Series A: Physical Geography (75A) 13-23
Landslides are triggered by factors such as heavy rainfall, seismic activity, and construction on hillslopes. The leading cause of landslides in Puerto Rico is intense and/or prolonged rainfall. A rainfall threshold for rainfall-triggered landsliding is delimited by 256 storms that occurred between 1959 and 1991 in the central mountains of...
Comparison of Penman-Monteith, Shuttleworth-Wallace, and modified Priestley-Taylor evapotranspiration models for wildland vegetation in semiarid rangeland
David I. Stannard
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 1379-1392
Eddy correlation measurements of sensible and latent heat flux are used with measurements of net radiation, soil heat flux, and other micrometeorological variables to develop the Penman-Monteith, Shuttleworth-Wallace, and modified Priestley-Taylor evapotranspiration models for use in a sparsely vegetated, semiarid rangeland. The Penman-Monteith model, a one-component model designed for use...
Confirmation of rate-dependent behavior in water retention during drainage in nonswelling porous materials
Jim Constantz
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 1331-1334
In the water retention process in porous material, changes in water content are assumed to be independent of the rate at which the matric potential varies. Periodically, researchers have presented results that do not support this assumption, indicating that water retention may be rate-dependent under certain conditions. In the present...
Restoration of lowland streams: an introduction
L.L. Osborne, P.B. Bayley, L.W.G. Higler, B. Statzner, F. Triska, T. Moth Iverson
1993, Freshwater Biology (29) 187-194
This paper introduces the Lowland Streams Restoration Workshop that was held in Lund, Sweden in August 1991.Attenders at the Workshop participated in working groups which discussed and reported on the state of knowledge of stream restoration and identified critical areas of information need. Currently, most restoration efforts are emission‐orientated (i.e....
Interactive coupling of a lake thermal model with a regional climate model
Steven W. Hostetler, G. T. Bates, F. Giorgi
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres (98) 5045-5057
A one‐dimensional model of lake temperature, evaporation, and ice has been coupled in an interactive mode with the climate version of the National Center for Atmospheric Research/Pennsylvania State University regional (mesoscale) atmospheric model (MM4). The coupled MM4‐lake model makes possible high‐resolution simulations of climate in the proximity of large water...
Elk Lake in perspective
R.Y. Anderson, Walter E. Dean, J. Platt Bradbury
1993, GSA Special Papers (276) 1-6
Elk Lake is located in the forested region of north-central Minnesota at the headwaters of the Mississippi River and occupies one of countless basins left behind as the last great Pleistocene ice sheet retreated northward into Canada. In this respect it resembles many other moderately deep, dimictic, hard-water lakes in...