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Page 3495, results 87351 - 87375

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Late Cretaceous to early Tertiary transtension and strain partitioning in the Chugach Accretionary Complex, SE Alaska
J.S. Davis, Sarah M. Roeske, Susan M. Karl
1998, Journal of Structural Geology (20) 639-654
Shear zones in the Late Cretaceous Sitka Graywacke of the Chugach accretionary complex in southeast Alaska record constrictional finite strains, with maximum principal s tretches plunging shallowly subparallel to strike of the shear zones. Macrostructural analysis indicates the finite strain formed during one deformation event. Microstructural analysis of the shear...
A review of the relationships between visitors and ungulates in national parks
R. Gerald Wright
1998, Wildlife Society Bulletin (26) 471-476
The growth in ungulate populations and the enhanced viewing opportunities they provide in many national parks, a mixed blessing to park managers, has been viewed positively by most park visitors. Visitors, long the major constituency of parks, have played a major role in the way ungulates are managed. I trace...
Degradation of chloroacetanilide herbicides: The prevalence of sulfonic and oxanilic acid metabolites in Iowa groundwaters and surface waters
Stephen J. Kalkhoff, Dana W. Kolpin, E.M. Thurman, I. Ferrer, D. Barcelo
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 1738-1740
Water samples were collected from 88 municipal wells throughout Iowa during the summer and were collected monthly at 12 stream sites in eastern Iowa from March to December 1996 to study the occurrence of the sulfonic and oxanilic metabolites of acetochlor, alachlor, and metolachlor. The sulfonic and oxanilic metabolites were...
Bacterial oxidation of dibromomethane and methyl bromide in natural waters and enrichment cultures
K.D. Goodwin, J.K. Schaefer, R.S. Oremland
1998, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (64) 4629-4636
Bacterial oxidation of14CH2Br2 and14CH3Br was measured in freshwater, estuarine, seawater, and hypersaline-alkaline samples. In general, bacteria from the various sites oxidized similar amounts of14CH2Br2 and comparatively less 14CH3Br. Bacterial oxidation of14CH3Br was rapid in freshwater samples compared to bacterial oxidation of 14CH3Br in more saline waters. Freshwater was also the only site in which...
Artificial maturation of an immature sulfur- and organic matter-rich limestone from the Ghareb Formation, Jordan
M.P. Koopmans, W.I.C. Rijpstra, J. W. De Leeuw, M. D. Lewan, J.S.S. Damste
1998, Organic Geochemistry (28) 503-521
An immature (Ro=0.39%), S-rich (S(org)/C = 0.07), organic matter-rich (19.6 wt. % TOC) limestone from the Ghareb Formation (Upper Cretaceous) in Jordan was artificially matured by hydrous pyrolysis (200, 220 ..., 300??C; 72 h) to study the effect of progressive diagenesis and early catagenesis on the amounts and distributions of...
Riparian control of stream-water chemistry: Implications for hydrochemical basin models
R. P. Hooper, Brent T. Aulenbach, Douglas A. Burns, J. McDonnell, J. Freer, C. Kendall, K. Beven
1998, IAHS-AISH Publication (248) 451-458
End-member mixing analysis has been used to determine the hydrological structure for basin hydrochemical models at several catchments. Implicit in this use is the assumption that controlling end members have been identified, and that these end members represent distinct landscape locations. At the Panola Mountain Research Watershed, the choice of...
Bluebell field, Uinta basin: Reservoir characterization for improved well completion and oil recovery
Scott L. Montgomery, C. D. Morgan
1998, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (82) 1113-1132
Bluebell field is the largest oil-producing area in the Uinta basin of northern Utah. The field includes over 300 wells and has produced 137 MMbbl oil and 177 bcf gas from fractured Paleocene-Eocene lacustrine and fluvial deposits of the Green River and Wasatch (Colton) formations. Oil and gas are produced...
Long-term dynamics of Typha populations
J.B. Grace, R.G. Wetzel
1998, Aquatic Botany (61) 137-146
The zonation of Typha populations in an experimental pond in Michigan was re-examined 15 years after the original sampling to gain insight into the long-term dynamics. Current distributions of Typha populations were also examined in additional experimental ponds at the site that have been maintained for 23 years. The zonation...
Waterbird communities in rice fields subjected to different post-harvest treatments
J.H. Day, M. A. Colwell
1998, Waterbirds (21) 185-197
In California's Sacramento Valley, the potential value of rice fields as habitat for waterbirds may vary with harvest method, post-harvest treatment of rice straw (chopped, burned, plowed), and extent of flooding. Recent changes in rice harvesting methods (i.e., use of stripper-headers) and a legislative mandate to decrease burning of rice...
Tritium-helium 3 dating under complex conditions in hydraulically stressed areas of a buried-valley aquifer
Stephanie Dunkle Shapiro, Gary L. Rowe, Peter Schlosser, Andrea Ludin, Martin Stute
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 1165-1180
The 3H-3He dating method is applied in a buried-valley aquifer near Dayton, Ohio. The study area is large, not all sampling locations lie along well-defined flow paths, and existing wells with variable screen lengths and diameters are used. Reliable use of the method at this site requires addressing several complications: (1)...
Real-time monitoring of bluff stability at Woodway, Washington, USA
R.L. Baum, E. L. Harp, W.J. Likos, P. S. Powers, R.G. LaHusen
Evangelista A.Picarelli L.Evangelista A.Picarelli L., editor(s)
1998, Conference Paper, The geotechnics of hard soils - soft rocks. Proceedings of the second international symopsium on hard soils-soft rocks, Naples, October 1998. (Two volumes).
On January 15, 1997, a landslide of approximately 100,000-m3 from a coastal bluff swept five cars of a freight train into Puget Sound at Woodway, Washington, USA, 25 km north of downtown Seattle. The landslide resulted from failure of a sequence of dense sands and hard silts of glacial and...
Paragenesis and chemistry of multistage tourmaline formation in the sullivan Pb-Zn-Ag deposit, British Columbia
S.-Y. Jiang, M. R. Palmer, J. F. Slack, D.R. Shaw
1998, Economic Geology (93) 47-67
Detailed petrographic study, scanning electron microscope imaging, and electron microprobe analyses of tourmalines from the Sullivan Pb-Zn-Ag massive sulfide deposit (British Columbia, Canada) document multiple paragenetic stages and large compositional variations. The tourmalines mainly belong to two common solid-solution series: dravite-schorl and dravite-uvite. Ca- and Fe-rich feruvite and alkali-deficient tourmalines...
Release of sulfur- and oxygen-bound components from a sulfur-rich kerogen during simulated maturation by hydrous pyrolysis
A. Putschew, C. Schaeffer-Reiss, P. Schaeffer, M.P. Koopmans, J. W. De Leeuw, M. D. Lewan, Damste J.S. Sinninghe, J.R. Maxwell
1998, Organic Geochemistry (29) 1875-1890
An immature sulfur-rich marl from the Gessosso-solfifera Formation of the Vena del Gesso Basin (Messinian, Italy) has been subjected to hydrous pyrolysis (160 to 330??C) to simulate maturation under natural conditions. The kerogen of the unheated and heated samples was isolated and the hydrocarbons released by selective chemical degradation (Li/EtNH2...
Bayesian statistics applied to the location of the source of explosions at Stromboli Volcano, Italy
G. Saccorotti, B. Chouet, M. Martini, R. Scarpa
1998, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (88) 1099-1111
We present a method for determining the location and spatial extent of the source of explosions at Stromboli Volcano, Italy, based on a Bayesian inversion of the slowness vector derived from frequency-slowness analyses of array data. The method searches for source locations that...
Fore-arc migration in Cascadia and its neotectonic significance
R.E. Wells
1998, Geology (26) 759-762
Neogene deformation, paleomagnetic rotations, and sparse geodetic data suggest the Cascadia fore arc is migrating northward along the coast and breaking up into large rotating blocks. Deformation occurs mostly around the margins of a large, relatively aseismic Oregon coastal block composed of thick,...
Rate of strontium sorption and the effects of variable aqueous concentrations of sodium and potassium on strontium distribution coefficients of a surficial sediment at the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory, Idaho
R.L. Bunde, J.J. Rosentreter, M. J. Liszewski
1998, Environmental Geology (34) 135-142
The rate of strontium sorption and the effects of variable aqueous concentrations of sodium and potassium on strontium sorption were measured as part of an investigation to determine strontium chemical transport properties of a surficial sediment at the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL), Idaho. Batch experimental techniques were used to...
Nesting ecology of Spectacled Eiders Somateria fischeri on the Indigirka River Delta, Russia
John M. Pearce, Daniel Esler, Andrei G. Degtyarev
1998, Wildfowl (49) 110-123
In 1994 and 1995 we investigated breeding biology and nest site habitat of Spectacled Eiders on two study areas within the coastal fringe of the Indigirka River Delta, Russia (71°20' N, 150°20' E). Spectacled Eiders were first observed on 6 June in both years and nesting commenced by mid-June. Average...
Depth of the base of the Jackson aquifer, based on geophysical exploration, southern Jackson Hole, Wyoming, USA
Bernard T. Nolan, David L. Campbell, R. Michael Senterfit
1998, Hydrogeology Journal (6) 374-382
A geophysical survey was conducted to determine the depth of the base of the water-table aquifer in the southern part of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, USA. Audio-magnetotellurics (AMT) measurements at 77 sites in the study area yielded electrical-resistivity logs of the subsurface, and these were used to infer lithologic changes with...
Effect of environmental setting on sediment, nitrogen, and phosphorus concentrations in Albemarle-Pamlico drainage basin, North Carolina and Virginia, USA
G. McMahon, D.A. Harned
1998, Environmental Management (22) 887-903
Environmental settings were defined, through an overlay process, as areas of coincidence between categories of three mapped variables - land use, surficial geology, and soil drainage characteristics. Expert judgment was used in selecting factors thought to influence sediment and nutrient concentrations in the Albemarle-Pamlico drainage area. This study's findings support...
Microbial oxidation of elemental selenium in soil slurries and bacterial cultures
P.R. Dowdle, R.S. Oremland
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 3749-3755
The microbial oxidation of elemental selenium [Se(O)] was studied by employing 75Se(O) as a tracer. Live, oxic soil slurries demonstrated a linear production of mostly Se(IV), with the formation of smaller quantities of Se(VI). Production of both Se(IV) and Se(VI) was inhibited by autoclaving, formalin, antibiotics, azide, and 2,4-dinitrophenol, thereby...
Foods of Spectacled Eiders Somateria fischeri in the Bering Sea, Alaska
Margaret R. Petersen, John F. Piatt, K.A. Trust
1998, Wildfowl (49) 124-128
The winter diet of Spectacled Eiders living in marine habitats is known only from two individuals described by Cottam (1939). Here we examine marine diets from 36 stomachs collected near St. Lawrence Island, Bering Sea, Alaska, during May-June in 1987 and 1992. All Spectacled Eiders ate Mollusca, including Gastropoda (snails;...
Development of migratory behavior in northern white-tailed deer
M.E. Nelson
1998, Canadian Journal of Zoology (76) 426-432
I examined the development of migratory behavior in northern white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) from 1975 to 1996 by radio-tracking adult females and their fawns. Of 40 migratory fawns with radio-collared mothers, all returned from winter ranges to their mothers' summer ranges, as did 36 fawns with unknown mothers. Of 1.5-...
Climate variations and changes in mass of three glaciers in western North America
S. M. Hodge, D.C. Trabant, R. M. Krimmel, T.A. Heinrichs, R.S. March, E.G. Josberger
1998, Journal of Climate (11) 2161-2179
Time series of net and seasonal mass balances for three glaciers in western North America, one in the Pacific Northwest and two in Alaska, show various relationships to Pacific hemisphere climate indexes. During the winter season the two coastal, maritime-regime glaciers, over 2000 km apart, are affected almost identically, albeit...