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Page 349, results 8701 - 8725

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Reply to Dr. Stoesselfs comment on “Reaction paths and equilibrium end-points in solid-solution aqueous-solution systems”
Pierre D. Glynn, Eric J. Reardon, Niel Plummer, Eurybiades Busenberg
1992, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (56) 2559-2572
In reply to the Critical Comment of R. K. Stoessell (this issue), limiting activity coefficients of bromide in halite (γNaBr) have been calculated by least-squares fitting of Simons et al.'s (1952) bromide distribution coefficient data for the Na(Cl,Br)-NaOH-H2O system at 35°C. Regular and subregular solidsolution model fits give γNaBr...
Solute transport with multisegment, equilibrium-controlled, classical reactions: Problem solvability and feed forward method's applicability for complex segments of at most binary participants
Jacob Rubin
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 1681-1702
The feed forward (FF) method derives efficient operational equations for simulating transport of reacting solutes. It has been shown to be applicable in the presence of networks with any number of homogeneous and/or heterogeneous, classical reaction segments that consist of three, at most binary participants. Using a sequential (network type...
Effect of membrane filtration artifacts on dissolved trace element concentrations
Arthur J. Horowitz, Kent A. Elrick, Mark R. Colberg
1992, Water Research (26) 753-763
Among environment scientists, the current and almost universally accepted definition of dissolved constituents is an operational one-only those materials which pass through a 0.45-μm membrane filter are considered to be dissolved. Detailed laboratory and field studies on Fe and Al indicate that a number of factors associated...
Application of continuum models to deformation of the Aleutian Island Arc
Eric L. Geist, David W. Scholl
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (97) 4953-4967
Continuum models were constructed to describe large‐scale deformation of the Aleutian Island Arc over the past 5 m.y. These models consider the island arc as a continuum in the horizontal plane with the velocity boundary condition at the Pacific edge stated as a fraction of Pacific plate convergence transferred to...
Gravity-driven groundwater flow and slope failure potential: 1. Elastic effective-stress model
Richard M. Iverson, Mark E. Reid
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 925-938
Hilly or mountainous topography influences gravity-driven groundwater flow and the consequent distribution of effective stress in shallow subsurface environments. Effective stress, in turn, influences the potential for slope failure. To evaluate these influences, we formulate a two-dimensional, steady state, poroelastic model. The governing equations incorporate groundwater effects as body forces,...
A new Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary locality in the western Powder River basin, Wyoming: Biological and geological implications
D. J. Nichols, J. L. Brown, M. Attrep Jr., C. J. Orth
1992, Cretaceous Research (13) 3-30
A newly discovered Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary locality in the western Powder River basin, Wyoming, is characterized by a palynologically defined extinction horizon, a fern-spore abundance anomaly, a strong iridium anomaly, and shock-metamorphosed quartz grains. Detailed microstratigraphic analyses show that about one third of the palynoflora (mostly angiosperm pollen) disappeared abruptly,...
Allochthonous impact-shocked rocks and superimposed deformations at the Beaverhead site in southwest Montana
R.B. Hargraves, Karl S. Kellogg, P.S. Fiske, S.B. Hougen
1992, GSA Special Papers (293) 225-235
Upward-pointing shatter cones in sandstones of uncertain age (Middle Proterozoic? to Lower Cambrian?) and older crystalline basement rocks are exposed over an area of approximately 25 × 8 km in southwestern Montana. These shatter cones, together with pseudotachylites and breccias of various types (particularly in basement gneisses), are inferred to...
Geographic Variation in Hirundo pyrrhonota (Cliff Swallow) from Northern North America
M. Ralph Browning
1992, Western Birds (23) 21-29
The number of subspecies recognized in Hirundo pyrrhonota Vieillot (Cliff Swallow) from Alaska, Canada, and the northern contiguous United States ranges from one (Peters 1960) to three (e.g., Jewett et al. 1953, Oberholser, 1920, breeding from central Alaska to the central Great Basin, and two disjunct populations of nominate pyrrhonota,...
Characteristics of a sandy depositional lobe on the outer Mississippi fan from SeaMARC IA sidescan sonar images
David C. Twichell, William C. Schwab, C. Hans Nelson, Neil H. Kenyon, Homa J. Lee
1992, Geology (20) 689-692
SeaMARC IA sidescan sonar images of the distal reaches of a depositional lobe on the Mississippi Fan show that channelized rather than unconfined transport was the dominant transport mechanism for coarse-grained sediment during the formation of this part of the deep-sea fan. Overbank sheet flow of sands was not an...
Implications of morphological variation among populations of California roach Lavinia symmetricus (Cyprinidae) for conservation policy
Larry R. Brown, Peter B. Moyle, William A. Bennett, Brian D. Quelvog
1992, Biological Conservation (62) 1-10
The California roach Lavinia symmetricus is a small cyprinid native to Central California. Populations of roach are presently isolated from one another due to degradation of stream habitats between them. We examined eight populations, each from a tributary system of the San Joaquin River, to determine if morphological differences existed among them....
Seismic images of a Grenvillian terrane boundary
Bernd Milkereit, D. A. Forsyth, Alan G. Green, A. Davidson, S. Hanmer, Deborah R. Hutchinson, W. J. Hinze, R.F. Mereu
1992, Geology (20) 1027-1030
A series of gently dipping reflection zones extending to mid-crustal depths is recorded by seismic data from Lakes Ontario and Erie. These prominent reflection zones define a broad complex of southeast-dipping ductile thrust faults in the interior of the Grenville orogen. One major reflection zone provides the first image of...
Partially melted granodiorite and related rocks ejected from Crater Lake caldera, Oregon
Charles R. Bacon
1992, Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh (83) 27-47
Blocks of medium-grained granodiorite to 4 m, and minor diabase, quartz diorite, granite, aplite and granophyre, are common in ejecta of the ∼6,900 yrBP calderaforming eruption of Mount Mazama. The blocks show degrees of melting from 0–50 vol%. Because very few have adhering juvenile magma, it is thought that the...
Destriping of Landsat MSS images by filtering techniques
Jeng-Jong Pan, Chein-I Chang
1992, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (58) 1417-1423
The removal of striping noise encountered in the Landsat Multispectral Scanner (MSS) images can be generally done by using frequency filtering techniques. Frequency domain filtering has, however, several problems, such as storage limitation of data required for fast Fourier transforms, ringing artifacts appearing at high-intensity discontinuities, and edge effects between...
Lake acidity and mercury content of fish in Darwin National Reserve, Russia
Terry A. Haines, V. Komov, C. H. Jagoe
1992, Environmental Pollution (78) 107-112
Darwin National Reserve is a protected natural area on the north-west shore of the Rybinsk Reservoir, 350 km north of Moscow. In June 1989, six lakes in the Reserve and the reservoir were surveyed to assess lake acidity and the mercury content of perch, Perca fluviatilis. Five were seepage lakes...
The use of freshwater and saltwater animals to distinguish between the toxic effects of salinity and contaminants in irrigation drain water
Christopher G. Ingersoll, F.J. Dwyer, S.A. Burch, M.K. Nelson, D.R. Buckler, J. B. Hunn
1992, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (11) 503-511
Irrigation drain waters entering Stillwater Wildlife Management Area (SWMA) in south-western Nevada contain elevated levels of salinity and several inorganic contaminants (As, B, Cu, Li, Mo, and Sr). Mortalities of fish and waterfowl at the management area are believed to be associated with the poor water quality of the drains....
An aeromagnetic survey over the northwestern Ross Ice Shelf and the McMurdo Sound area
Detlef Damaske, Uwe Meyer, Anne E. McCafferty, John Behrendt, Herbert Hoppe
1992, Polarforschung (60) 152-156
As part of the expedition GANOVEX VI 1990/91, the Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe (BGR), the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI), and the United States Geological Survey (USGS) carried out an airborne magnetic survey over the northwestern Ross Ice Shelf and McMurdo Sound between Ross Island,...
The Landers earthquake; preliminary instrumental results
L. Jones, J. Mori, E. Hauksson
1992, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (23) 200-208
Early on the morning of June 28, 1992, millions of people in southern California were awakened by the largest earthquake to occur in the western United States in the past 40 yrs. At 4:58 a.m PDT (local time), faulting associated with the magnitude 7.3 earthquake broke through to earth's surface...
Lake trout spawning habitat in the Six Fathom Bank-Yankee Reef lake trout sanctuary, Lake Huron
Thomas A. Edsall, Charles L. Brown, Gregory W. Kennedy, Thomas P. Poe
1992, Journal of Great Lakes Research (18) 70-90
Attempts to reestablish self-sustaining stocks of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in the lower four Great Lakes, where the species was extinguished in the 1950s and 1960s, have been largely unsuccessful. To avoid many of the problems believed to be contributing to this failure, the fishery management community recently established several...
Sulfur isotopic disequilibrium and fluid-rock interaction during metamorphism of sulfidic black shales from the Waterville-Augusta area, Maine, USA
N.H.S. Oliver, T.C. Hoering, T.W. Johnson, D. Rumble III, Wayne C. Shanks III
1992, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (56) 4257-4265
Sulfur isotope ratios of pyrite (py) and pyrrhotite (po) from regionally metamorphosed graphitic sulfidic schists and related rocks from south-central Maine, USA, were analysed using SO2 and SF6 techniques. There is a broad range in δ34S values for both pyrite and pyrrhotite at most outcrops, up to 8%. and overall the values...
Environmental benefits vs. costs of geologic mapping
S.B. Bhagwat, R. C. Berg
1992, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (19) 33-40
Boone and Winnebago Counties, Illinois, U.S.A., were selected for this study, required by the Illinois State Senate, because mapping and environmental interpretations were completed there in 1981. Costs of geologic mapping in these counties in 1990 dollars were $290,000. Two estimates of costs of statewide mapping were made, one extrapolated...
The timing of wing molt in tundra swans: energetic and non-energetic constraints
S.L. Earnst
1992, Condor (94) 847-856
Date of wing molt initiation, based on the regression of tenth primary length on capture date, was calculated for breeding and nonbreeding Tundra Swans (Cygnus columbianus columbianus) on the Colville River Delta, Alaska. Breeding females initiated wing molt significantly later than breeding males and nonbreeding males and females; the molt...
The stable isotope geochemistry of acid sulfate alteration
R. O. Rye, P. M. Bethke, M.D. Wasserman
1992, Economic Geology (87) 225-262
Acid sulfate wall-rock alteration, characterized by the assemblage alunite + kaolinite + quartz + or - pyrite, results from base leaching by fluids concentrated in H 2 SO 4 . Requisite amounts of H 2 SO 4 can be generated by different mechanisms in three principal geologic environments: (1) by atmospheric oxidation of sulfides in the supergene environment,...
Utility of radiocarbon-dated stratigraphy in determining late Holocene earthquake recurrence intervals, upper Cook Inlet region, Alaska
S. Bartsch-Winkler, H. R. Schmoll
1992, Geological Society of America Bulletin (104) 684-694
During the great 1964 earthquake, parts of coastal southern Alaska subsided tectonically as much as 2 m, and this led to burial of high-intertidal organic-rich marshes by low-intertidal and tidal silt. In the tectonically active part of upper Cook Inlet, the presence of stratigraphic sections containing numerous prehistoric interbedded layers...
Evaluation of models proposed for the 1991 revision of the International Geomagnetic Reference Field
N.W. Peddie
1992, Journal of Geomagnetism & Geoelectricity (44) 793-803
The 1991 revision of the International Geomagnetic Reference Field (IGRF) comprises a definitive main-field model for 1985.0, amain-field model for 1990.0, and a forecast secular-variation model for the period 1990-1995. The five 1985.0 main-field models and five 1990.0 main-field models that were proposed have been evaluated by comparing...
Geochemistry and origin of the Bald Knob manganese deposit, North Carolina
M.J.K. Flohr
1992, Economic Geology (87) 2023-2040
Geochemical and textural evidence for the submarine hydrothermal origin of the Bald Knob Mn deposit, North Carolina, is preserved in a mineralogically diverse suite of rocks that have experienced amphibolite facies metamorphism. Manganese- and Mn-Fe-rich lithologies have high Mn/Fe ratios and low concentrations of Ni, Cu, Zn, U, Th, and...