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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Chronologic evidence for multiple periods of loess deposition during the Late Pleistocene in the Missouri and Mississippi River Valley, United States: Implications for the activity of the Laurentide ice sheet
S.L. Forman, E. Arthur Bettis III, T.J. Kemmis, B.B. Miller
1992, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (93) 71-83
The loess stratigraphy of the mid-continental U.S. is an important proxy record for the activity of the Laurentide Ice Sheet in North America. One of the most outstanding problems is deciphering the age of loess deposits in this area during the late Pleistocene. Radiocarbon dating of snails and thermoluminescence dating...
The international seismological observing period in Africa
E.R. Engdahl, Eric A. Bergman
1992, Tectonophysics (209) 1-16
The International Seismological Observing Period (ISOP) is a specific time interval designated for enhanced international cooperation in the collection and dissemination of observatory measurements from the global seismographic network. The primary purpose of the ISOP is to strengthen the international infrastructure that supports current seismological practice and increase the cooperation...
Charnockites and granites of the western Adirondacks, New York, USA: A differentiated A-type suite
P.R. Whitney
1992, Precambrian Research (57) 1-19
Granitic rocks in the west-central Adirondack Highlands of New York State include both relatively homogeneous charnockitic and hornblende granitic gneisses (CG), that occur in thick stratiform bodies and elliptical domes, and heterogeneous leucogneisses (LG), that commonly are interlayered with metasedimentary rocks. Major- and trace-element geochemical analyses were obtained for 115...
The nature of Archean terrane boundaries: An example from the northern Wyoming Province
D.W. Mogk, P.A. Mueller, J. L. Wooden
1992, Precambrian Research (55) 155-168
The Archean northern Wyoming Province can be subdivided into two geologically distinct terranes, the Beartooth-Bighorn magmatic terrane (BBMT) and the Montana metasedimentary terrane (MMT). The BBMT is characterized by voluminous Late Archean (2.90-2.74 Ga) magmatic rocks (primarily tonalite, trondhjemite, and granite); metasedimentary rocks are preserved only as small, rare enclaves...
Beach-ridge development and lake-level variation in southern Lake Michigan
T.A. Thompson
1992, Sedimentary Geology (80) 305-318
The most accurate source of information on lake-level fluctuations in the Great Lakes is the historical record from lake-level gauges. Although it can be semiquantitatively extended back into the late 1700's, the historical record is too short to recognize long-term patterns of lake-level behavior. To extend the historical record, information...
Deserts: Geology and resources
Alta S. Walker
1992, Report
Approximately one-third of the Earth's land surface is desert, arid land with meager rainfall that supports only sparse vegetation and a limited population of people and animals. Deserts stark, sometimes mysterious worlds have been portrayed as fascinating environments of adventure and exploration from narratives such as that of Lawrence of...
Recovery of benthic-invertebrate communities in the White River near Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, following implementation of advanced treatment of municipal wastewater
Charles G. Crawford, David J. Wangsness
1992, Archiv fur Hydrobiologie (126) 67-84
The City of Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, completed construction of advanced-wastewater-treatment systems to enlarge and upgrade existing secondary-treatment processes at the City’s two municipal wastewater-treatment plants in 1983. These plants discharge their effluent to the White River. A study was begun in 1981 to evaluate the effects of municipal wastewater on...
Ecology of band-tailed pigeons in Oregon
R. L. Jarvis, M.F. Passmore
1992, Biological Report - US Fish & Wildlife Service (6)
The ecology of band-tailed pigeons (Columba fasciata) was investigated in western Oregon to assess the roles of survival and recruitment to population status and the relation of food, minerals, and diet to reproduction strategy. Band-tailed pigeons congregated at mineral deposits to consume minerals from mid-June to mid-September. Males generally arrived...
Rare earth, major, and trace element composition of Monterey and DSDP chert and associated host sediment: Assessing the influence of chemical fractionation during diagenesis
R.W. Murray, Marilyn R. Buchholtz ten Brink, David C. Gerlach, G. Price Russ, David L. Jones
1992, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (56) 2657-2671
Chert and associated host sediments from Monterey Formation and Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) sequences were analyzed in order to assess chemical behavior during diagenesis of biogenic sediments. The primary compositional contrast between chert and host sediment is a greater absolute SiO2 concentration in chert, often with final SiO2 ≥ 98 wt%....
A tsunami about 1000 years ago in Puget Sound, Washington
Brian F. Atwater, A.L. Moore
1992, Science (258) 1614-1617
Water surged from Puget Sound sometime between 1000 and 1100 years ago, overrunning tidal marshes and mantling them with centimeters of sand. One overrun site is 10 kilometers northwest of downtown Seattle; another is on Whidbey Island, some 30 kilometers farther north. Neither site has been widely mantled with sand...
Descriptive risk assessment of the effects of acidic deposition on Rocky Mountain amphibians
Paul Stephen Corn, Frank A. Vertucci
1992, Journal of Herpetology (26) 361-369
We evaluated the risk of habitat acidification to the six species of amphibians that occur in the mountains of Colorado and Wyoming. Our evaluation included extrinsic environmental factors (habitat sensitivity and amount of acidic atmospheric deposition) and species-specific intrinsic factors (sensitivity to acid conditions, habitat preferences, and timing of breeding)....
Evaluating fishery rehabilitation under uncertainty: A bioeconomic analysis of quota management for the Green Bay yellow perch fishery
Barry L. Johnson, S.R. Milliman, R.C. Bishop, J.F. Kitchell
1992, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (12) 703-720
The fishery for yellow perch Perca flavescens in Green Bay, Lake Michigan, is currently operating under a rehabilitation plan based on a commercial harvest quota. We developed a bioeconomic computer model that included links between population density and growth, recruitment, and fishing effort for this fishery. Random variability was included in the...
A sharp and flat section of the core-mantle boundary
J.E. Vidale, H.M. Benz
1992, Nature (359) 627-629
The transition zone between the Earth's core and mantle plays an important role as a boundary layer for mantle and core convection1. This zone conducts a large amount of heat from the core to the mantle, and contains at least one thermal boundary layer2,3; the proximity of reactive silicates and...
A geochemical transport model for redox-controlled movement of mineral fronts in groundwater flow systems: A case of nitrate removal by oxidation of pyrite
Peter Engesgaard, Kenneth L. Kipp
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2829-2843
A one-dimensional prototype geochemical transport model was developed in order to handle simultaneous precipitation-dissolution and oxidation-reduction reactions governed by chemical equilibria. Total aqueous component concentrations are the primary dependent variables, and a sequential iterative approach is used for the calculation. The model was verified by analytical and numerical comparisons and...
Selenium and other elements in freshwater fishes from the irrigated San Joaquin valley, California
Michael K. Saiki, Mark R. Jennings, Thomas W. May
1992, Science of the Total Environment (126) 109-137
Arsenic (As), chromium (Cr), mercury (Hg), and selenium (Se) were measured in composite whole-body samples of five fishes — bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus), common carp (Cyprinus carpio), mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis), largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), and Sacramento blackfish (Orthodon microlepidotus) — from the San Joaquin River system to determine if concentrations were...
Determining the minimum instream flow for hydro peaking projects
Robert T. Milhous
1992, Hydro Review (11) 67-74
A new analytical technique is available for quantifying and predicting the effect that a proposed hydro peaking operation, or a change in an existing project's operation, will have on physical habitat for aquatic populations downstream of the project. The technique, known as the dual flow analysis, is based on elements...
On the inference of absolute stress levels from seismic radiation
P. K. P. Spudich
1992, Tectonophysics (211) 99-106
This paper determines the conditions under which it is possible to learn the absolute stress level at a subset of points on a fault from observation of the fault kinematics. Specifically, the points on a rupturing fault can be divided into two groups, those points at which the rake rotates...
The geology and distribution of impact craters on Venus: What are they telling us?
G. G. Schaber, R.G. Strom, H. J. Moore, Laurence A. Soderblom, Randolph L. Kirk, D.J. Chadwick, D.D. Dawson, Lisa R. Gaddis, J. M. Boyce, Joel F. Russell
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (97) 13257-13301
Magellan has revealed an ensemble of impact craters on Venus that is unique in many important ways. We have compiled a data base describing the 842 craters on 89% of Venus' surface mapped through orbit 2578. (The craters range in diameter from 1.5 to 280 km.) We have studied the...
An earthquake mechanism based on rapid sealing of faults
M.L. Blanpied, D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee
1992, Nature (358) 574-576
Recent seismological, heat flow and stress measurements in active fault zones such as the San Andreas have led to the suggestion1,2 that such zones can be relatively weak. One explanation for this may be the presence of overpressured fluids along the fault3–5, which would reduce the shear stress required for sliding...
Alternate reproductive strategies in the California gull
Bruce H. Pugesek, P. Wood
1992, Evolutionary Ecology (6) 279-295
We analysed 6 years of reproduction data for 176 California gulls (Larus californicus) surviving from 1980 to 1988. Using a statistical model adapted from Rao's (1958) and Tucker's (1966) generalized growth curve analysis, we reconstructed the reproductive patterns of gulls aged from 0 to 26 years. Individuals were...
Seismic constraints on the nature of lower crustal reflectors beneath the extending Southern Transition Zone of the Colorado Plateau, Arizona
Thomas E. Parsons, John M. Howie, George A. Thompson
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (97) 12391-12407
We determine the reflection polarity and exploit variations in P and S wave reflectivity and P wave amplitude versus offset (AVO) to constrain the origin of lower crustal reflectivity observed on new three-component seismic data recorded across the structural transition of the Colorado Plateau. The near vertical incidence reflection data...
Post-rifting stress relaxation at the divergent plate boundary in northeast Iceland
G.R. Foulger, C.-H. Jahn, G. Seeber, P. Einarsson, B.R. Julian, K. Heki
1992, Nature (358) 488-490
Interaction of the elastic lithosphere with the underlying anelastic asthenosphere causes strain to propagate along the Earth's surface in a diffusion-like manner following tectonism at plate boundaries. This process transfers stress between adjacent tectonic segments and influences the temporal tectonic pattern along a plate boundary. Observations of such strain transients...
Interactive effects of selenium, methionine, and dietary protein on survival, growth, and physiology in mallard ducklings
David J. Hoffman, C. J. Sanderson, L. J. LeCaptain, Eugene Cromartie, Grey W. Pendleton
1992, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (23) 163-171
Concentrations of over 100 ppm (100 mg/kg) selenium (Se) have been found in aquatic food chains associated with irrigation drainwater. Both quantity and composition of dietary protein for wild ducklings may vary in selenium-contaminated environments. Day-old mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) ducklings received one of the following diets containing 22% protein: unsupplemented...
An implosive component in the seismic moment tensor of a mining-Induced tremor
Arthur McGarr
1992, Geophysical Research Letters (19) 1579-1582
In early 1988, a special study in one of the major South African gold fields yielded seismograms that indicate seismic moment tensors having substantial implosive components. The moment tensor, resulting from the inversion of the ground motion data from the best-recorded event, was decomposed into isotropic and deviatoric components from...
Larval American shad: Effects of age and group size on swimming and feeding behavior
R. M. Ross, T. W. H. Backman
1992, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (121) 508-516
We analyzed the behavior of 3–4‐d‐old prolarval and 28–33‐d‐old metalarval American shad Alosa sapidissima in groups of 3–1,000 fish per 22‐L glass tank, to determine whether (1) previously described juvenile behavior patterns first develop in larvae, (2) group size or density alters the behavior of larvae, and (3) schooling or other forms...