The Chesapeake Bay bolide: Modern consequences of an ancient cataclysm
C. Wylie Poag
1998, Report
During the late Eocene, the formerly quiescent geological regime of the Virginia Coastal Plain was dramatically transformed when a bolide struck in the vicinity of the Delmarva Peninsula, and produced the following principal consequences:The bolide carved a roughly circular crater twice the size of the state of Rhode Island (~6400...
AIRSLUG: A fortran program for the computation of type curves to estimate transmissivity and storativity from prematurely terminated air-pressurized slug tests
E.A. Greene, A.M. Shapiro
1998, Ground Water (36) 373-375
The Fortran code AIRSLUG can be used to generate the type curves needed to analyze the recovery data from prematurely terminated air-pressurized slug tests. These type curves, when used with a graphical software package, enable the engineer or scientist to analyze field tests to estimate transmissivity and storativity. Prematurely terminating...
Petrochemistry of late miocene peraluminous silicic volcanic rocks from the Morococala field, Bolivia
VI G.B. Morgan, D. London, R. G. Luedke
1998, Journal of Petrology (39) 601-632
Late Miocene peraluminous volcanic rocks of the Morococala field, Bolivia, define a layered stratigraphy of basal andalusite-, biotite- (± muscovite)-bearing rhyolite tuffs (AR), overlain by cordierite-, biotite-bearing rhyolite tuffs (CR), and capped by biotite-bearing quartz latite tuffs, lavas, and late domal flows (QL). Mineral and whole-rock compositions become more...
A laboratory exercise in experimental bioimmuration
C. Mankiewicz
1998, Journal of Geoscience Education (46) 182-186
A paleobiology laboratory exercise using lunch meat, cheeses, and condiments provides a means for studying a method of fossil preservation called “bioimmuration.” The exercise also has students deal with problems associated with other aspects of taphonomy, taxonomy, and paleoecology....
Foods of Mountain Plovers wintering in California
F.L. Knopf
1998, Condor (100) 382-384
Prey items were identified from the stomachs of wintering Mountain Plovers (Charadrius montanus) collected in California at the Pixley National Wildlife Refuge and Carrizo Plain Natural Area in 1991, and south of the Salton Sea in 1992. Stomach contents of the 39 birds included 2,092 different food items representing 13...
Scour measurements at contracted highway crossings in Minnesota, 1997
David S. Mueller, Harry A. Hitchcock
1998, Conference Paper, International Water Resources Engineering Conference - Proceedings
During record flooding in the Minnesota River basin in April 1997, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Federal Highway Administration, collected real-time scour measurements at contracted bridge openings and provided data collection assistance to the Minnesota Department of Transportation bridge inspectors. Weather and flood plain vegetation restricted data...
Reproductive success of Belding's Savannah Sparrows in a highly fragmented landscape
A.N. Powell, Christine L. Collier
1998, The Auk (115) 508-513
Habitat fragmentation can influence the abundance and distribution of birds. Decreases in patch size increase the amount of edge habitat, which can allow greater invasion by exotic species, predators, and brood parasites (Hagan and Johnston 1992, Donovan et al., 1995). Fragmented habitats may act as population sinks and result in...
Re-evaluation and extension of the scope of elements in US Geological Survey Standard Reference Water Samples
D.B. Peart, Ronald C. Antweiler, Howard E. Taylor, D.A. Roth, T.I. Brinton
1998, Analyst (123) 455-476
More than 100 US Geological Survey (USGS) Standard Reference Water Samples (SRWSs) were analyzed for numerous trace constituents, including Al, As, B, Ba, Be, Bi, Br, Cd, Cr, Co, Cu, I, Fe, Pb, Li, Mn, Mo, Ni, Rb, Sb, Se, Sr, Te, Tl, U, V, Zn and major elements (Ca,...
An expandable radiocollar for elk calves
B.L. Smith, W.P. Burger, F. J. Singer
1998, Wildlife Society Bulletin (26) 113-117
Expandable radiocollars, designed to monitor juvenile survival and movements, were placed on 132 neonatal elk (Cervus elaphus) in Yellowstone National Park during 1987-1990. A modified design of the same collar was placed on 164 neonates of the Jackson elk herd in northwest Wyoming during 1990-1992. One of the Yellowstone calves...
Late Miocene calcareous nannofossil genus Catinaster: Taxonomy, evolution and magnetobiochronology
A. Peleo-Alampay, D. Bukry, L. Liu, J.R. Young
1998, Journal of Micropalaeontology (17) 71-85
A systematic study on the evolution and stratigraphic distribution of the species of Catinaster from several DSDP/ODP sites with magnetostratigraphic records is presented. The evolution of Catinaster from Discoaster is established by documentation of a transitional nannofossil species, Discoaster transitus. Two new subspecies, Catinaster coalitus extensus and Catinaster calyculus rectus are defined which appear to be intermediates in the evolution of Catinaster coalitus...
Survey of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae in lettuce production in relation to management and soil factors
R. L. Miller, L.E. Jackson
1998, Journal of Agricultural Science (130) 173-182
The occurrence of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae (VAM) root colonization and spore number in soil was assessed for 18 fields under intensive lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) production in California during July and August of 1995. Data on management practices and soil characteristics were compiled for each field, and included a wide range...
Paleobiology of the Sand Beneath the Valders Diamicton at Valders, Wisconsin
L.J. Maher Jr., N.G. Miller, R. G. Baker, B. Brandon Curry, D.M. Mickelson
1998, Quaternary Research (49) 208-221
Previously undescribed pollen, plant macrofossils, molluscs, and ostracodes were recovered from a 2.5-m-thick glaciolacustrine unit of silty sand and clay at Valders, Wisconsin. The interstadial sediment was deposited about 12,200 14C yr B.P. after retreat of the Green Bay lobe that deposited diamicton of the Horicon Formation, and before advance...
Fate and transport of linear alkylbenzenesulfonate in a sewage- contaminated aquifer: A comparison of natural-gradient pulsed tracer tests
C.J. Krueger, L. B. Barber, D.W. Metge, J.A. Field
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 1134-1142
Two natural-gradient tracer tests were conducted to determine the transport and biodegradation behavior of linear alkylbenzenesulfonate (LAS) surfactant under in situ conditions in a sewage-contaminated aquifer. The tests were conducted in two biogeochemically distinct zones of the aquifer: (1) an aerobic uncontaminated zone (oxic zone) and (2) a moderately aerobic,...
Simulated effects of irrigation on salinity in the Arkansas River Valley in Colorado
K. Goff, M.E. Lewis, M.A. Person, Leonard F. Konikow
1998, Ground Water (36) 76-86
Agricultural irrigation has a substantial impact on water quantity and quality in the lower Arkansas River valley of southeastern Colorado. A two-dimensional flow and solute transport model was used to evaluate the potential effects of changes in irrigation on the quantity and quality of water in the alluvial aquifer and...
The tectonic significance of pre-Scandian 40Ar/39Ar phengite cooling ages in the Caledonides of western Norway
T.B. Andersen, H. N. Berry IV, D. R. Lux, A. Andresen
1998, Journal of the Geological Society (155) 297-309
Pre-Silurian continental-margin deposits in western Norway, non-conformably overlying allochthonous continental orthogneisses retain Ordovician 40Ar/39Ar cooling ages for phengites, implying either rapid cooling immediately after a Late Ordovician orogenic event, or less likely, a slow cooling following an Early Ordovician or older orogeny. The Dalsfjord Suite–Høyvik Group basement–cover pair are probably a...
Response of a small Oregon estuary to coseismic subsidence and postseismic uplift in the past 300 years
H.M. Kelsey, Robert C. Witter, E. Hemphill-Haley
1998, Geology (26) 231-234
The Sixes River estuary, south coastal Oregon, sits above the locked portion of the Cascadia subduction zone, which intermittently releases in subduction-zone earthquakes. One such Cascadia earthquake ∼300 years ago caused subsidence and a tsunami at the Sixes estuary. The subsidence raised the...
Determination of bioavailable contaminants in the lower Missouri River following the flood of 1993
J. D. Petty, B.C. Poulton, C.S. Charbonneau, J.N. Huckins, S.B. Jones, J.T. Cameron, H.F. Prest
1998, Environmental Science & Technology (32) 837-842
The semipermeable membrane device (SPMD) technology was employed to determine the presence of bioavailable organochlorine pesticides (OCs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)in the water of the main stem of the lower Missouri River and three of its tributaries. The SPMDs were deployed in 1994 following the extensive flood...
Geographic, temporal, and age-specific variation in diets of Glaucous Gulls in western Alaska
Joel A. Schmutz, K.A. Hobson
1998, Condor (100) 119-130
We collected boluses and food remains of adult Glaucous Gulls (Larus hyperboreus) at or near nests and chicks, and digestive tracts from adults at three sites on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska that differed in proximity to marine and terrestrial foods. We observed both geographic and temporal variation in diet; gulls...
Hydrodynamic forcing and sediment character in Boston Harbor
T.M. Ravens, O.S. Madsen, R. P. Signell, E.E. Adams, P.M. Gschwend
1998, Journal of Waterway, Port, Coastal and Ocean Engineering (124) 40-42
Calculated annual excess skin friction stress at various locations in Quincy Bay (outer Boston Harbor) was found to be correlated positively with sediment sand content. The correlation was optimized when a critical shear stress (??c) of 0.085 Pa was assumed for the bay. The excess shear stress was correlated negatively...
Volcanoes
Robert I. Tilling
1998, Report
Volcanoes destroy and volcanoes create. The catastrophic eruption of Mount St. Helens on May 18, 1980, made clear the awesome destructive power of a volcano. Yet, over a time span longer than human memory and record, volcanoes have played a key role in forming and modifying the planet upon which...
Seismic or hydrodynamic control of rapid late-Holocene sea-level rises in southern coastal Oregon, USA?
A.R. Nelson, Y. Ota, M. Umitsu, K. Kashima, Y. Matsushima
1998, Holocene (8) 287-299
Intertidal stratigraphy has been instrumental in demonstrating the hazard posed by great earthquakes at the Cascadia subduction zone, but inferring an earthquake history from interbedded sequences of peat and mud is complicated by many factors that influence sedimentation and relative sea-level change on both tectonic and nontectonic coasts. Rapid-to-sudden rises...
Attraction of brown bears to red pepper spray deterrent: Caveats for use
Tom S. Smith
1998, Wildlife Society Bulletin (26) 92-94
Humans in brown bear (Ursus arctos) country may unexpectedly encounter hears with sometimes harmful consequences. Firearms may be an effective defense, but they destroy bears, their use is illegal in most national parks, and many people prefer not to carry them, Consequently, nonlethal bear deterrents have long been sought as...
Bioenergetic relations in submerged aquatic vegetation: An experimental test of prey use by juvenile bluegills
W. B. Richardson, S. J. Zigler, M. R. Dewey
1998, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (7) 1-12
We experimentally tested the hypotheses that bluegills in vegetated habitats grow more rapidly than in nonvegetated habitats because (1) vegetated habitats contain a greater caloric density and (2) are less susceptible to energetic depletion. The 10-week experiment was conducted in enclosures containing factorial combinations of the presence or absence of...
Effects of management practices on grassland birds: Marbled Godwit
Jill A. Dechant, Marriah L. Sondreal, Douglas H. Johnson, Lawrence D. Igl, Christopher M. Goldade, Melvin P. Nenneman, Betty R. Euliss
1998, Report, Effects of management practices on grassland birds
Information on the habitat requirements and effects of habitat management on grassland birds were summarized from information in more than 5,500 published and unpublished papers. A range map is provided to indicate the relative densities of the species in North America, based on Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) data. Although birds...
Overview of the International Symposium on Eurasian Ruffe (Gymnocephalus cernuus) Biology, Impacts, and Control
Jeffrey L. Gunderson, Michael R. Klepinger, Charles R. Bronte, J. Ellen Marsden
1998, Journal of Great Lakes Research (24) 165-169
The International Symposium on the Biology and Management of Ruffe was organized to address the potential threat ruffe pose to North American fisheries. Scientists in diverse disciplines from Eurasia and North America were brought together in an attempt to examine all aspects of the North American invasion of ruffe, and...