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Page 3538, results 88426 - 88450

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Demography of an introduced red-billed Leiothrix population in Hawaii
C.J. Ralph, S.G. Fancy, T.D. Male
1998, Condor (100) 468-473
Relative abundance, timing of breeding and molting, annual survival, and philopatry of an introduced population of Red-billed Leiothrix (Leiothrix lutea) were studied at four sites on the island of Hawaii. Numbers of leiothrix on our study areas showed a regular cyclical pattern, with highest numbers during the breeding season....
Use of indicator items to monitor marine debris on a New Jersey beach from 1991 to 1996
C. A. Ribic
1998, Marine Pollution Bulletin (36) 887-891
The US National Marine Debris Monitoring Program is using indicator items from beach surveys to identify whether amounts of marine debris are changing over time. Indicator items were selected through expert opinion and assumed to reflect the trend of all debris. We used monthly data from a 1991-1996 study of...
Vulnerability of desert biological soil crusts to wind erosion: The influences of crust development, soil texture, and disturbance
Jayne Belnap, Dale A. Gillette
1998, Journal of Arid Environments (39) 133-142
Biological soil crusts, consisting of cyanobacteria, green algae, lichens, and mosses, are important in stabilizing soils in semi-arid and arid lands. Integrity of these crusts is compromised by compressional disturbances such as foot, vehicle, or livestock traffic. Using a portable wind tunnel, we found threshold friction velocities (TFVs) of undisturbed...
Development and testing of a compartmentalized reaction network model for redox zones in contaminated aquifers
Robert H. Abrams , Keith Loague, Douglas B. Kent
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 1531-1541
The work reported here is the first part of a larger effort focused on efficient numerical simulation of redox zone development in contaminated aquifers. The sequential use of various electron acceptors, which is governed by the energy yield of each reaction, gives rise to redox zones. The large difference in...
Effects of male removal on female reproductive biology in Ross' and Lesser Snow Geese
C.R. Leschack, A. D. Afton, R.T. Alisauskas
1998, The Wilson Bulletin (110) 56-64
We studied effects of mate removal on nesting and hatching success, incubation behavior, body mass, and post-hatch dispersal distance of female Ross' (Chen rossii) and Lesser Snow Geese (C. caerulescens caerulescens) at Karrak Lake. N.W.T., Canada. Male ge and widowed and paired control females were monitored through post-hatch dispersal. Nesting...
Effect of cable capacitance on in-situ borehole geophone calibration
Huaibao P. Liu, R.E. Warrick
1998, Geophysics (63) 18-24
Using 2-Hz electromagnetic moving‐coil geophones as sensing elements, we have constructed and deployed three‐component seismometers in boreholes at various sites for wave‐propagation studies associated with earthquake hazards (Liu et al., 1991). For example, one such seismometer has been deployed in a 88-m...
Geochemical and geochronological constraints on the genesis of Au-Te deposits at Cripple Creek, Colorado
K.D. Kelley, S.B. Romberger, D.W. Beaty, J.A. Pontius, L.W. Snee, H. J. Stein, T.B. Thompson
1998, Economic Geology (93) 981-1012
The Cripple Creek district (653 metric tons (t) of Au) consists of Au-Te veins and disseminated gold deposits that are spatially related to alkaline igneous rocks in an Oligocene intrusive complex. Vein paragenesis includes quartz-biotite-K feldspar-fluorite-pyrite followed by base metal sulfides and telluride minerals. Disseminated deposits consist of microcrystalline native...
Regional and local hydrogeology of calcareous fens in the Minnesota river basin, USA
J.E. Almendinger, J.H. Leete
1998, Wetlands (18) 184-202
Six calcareous fens in the Minnesota River Basin, USA are in regional hydrogeologic settings with large discharges of calcareous ground water. These settings juxtapose topographically high areas of ground-water recharge with fens in lower areas of discharge, thus creating steep upward hydraulic gradients at the fens. Coarse glacial deposits with...
Identification of Flavobacterinium and Flexibacterin species by species-specific polymerase chain reaction primers to the 16S ribosomal RNA gene
J.A. Bader, E. B. Shotts Jr.
1998, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (10) 311-319
Species-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers have been developed for the identification of the causative agents of warmwater and marine finrot in fish: Flavobacterium columnare (Flexibacter columnaris) and Flexibacter maritimus. Differences in gene sequence in the bacterial small-subunit (16S) ribosomal...
A geologic history of the north-central Appalachians, part 3. The Alleghany orogeny
R. T. Faill
1998, American Journal of Science (298) 131-179
The north-central Appalachians occupy a critical position within the 3000+ km-long Appalachian orogen, lying southwest of the boundary between the central and northern Appalachians (CNAB). The one-billion-year-long history of tectonic activity in eastern Laurentia includes the creation and evolution of the Appalachian orogen during the Paleozoic and the Mesozoic transformation...
Benthic invertebrate distributions in the San Joaquin River, California, in relation to physical and chemical factors
H.V. Leland, S.V. Fend
1998, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (55) 1051-1067
The invertebrate fauna of nontidal portions of the lower San Joaquin River and its major tributaries is described in relation to water quality and habitat using canonical correspondence analysis, autecological metrics, and indicator species analysis. A large-scale (basin-wide) pattern in community response to salinity (sulfate-bicarbonate type) was detected when standardized,...
Regulation of gill cytosolic corticosteroid receptors in juvenile Atlantic salmon: Interaction effects of growth hormone with prolactand triiodothyronine
J. M. Shrimpton, S. D. McCormick
1998, General and Comparative Endocrinology (112) 262-274
The potential effects of growth hormone (GH), prolactin (Prl), and triiodothyronine (T3) on gill Na+,K+-ATPase activity and corticosteroid receptor (CR) concentration (Bmax) and dissociation constant (Kd) were examined in juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). Compared to controls, fish injected with GH (ovine, 5.0 μg g−1) had significantly greater gill Na+,K+-ATPase...
New Tertiary stratigraphy for the Florida Keys and southern peninsula of Florida
K.J. Cunningham, D.F. McNeill, L.A. Guertin, P.F. Ciesielski, T.M. Scott, L. De Verteuil
1998, Geological Society of America Bulletin (110) 231-258
Seven lithologic formations, ranging in age from Oligocene to Pleistocene, were recently penetrated by core holes in southernmost Florida. From bottom to top, they are the early Oligocene Suwannee Limestone; late-early Oligocene-to-Miocene Arcadia Formation, basal Hawthorn Group; late Miocene Peace River Formation, upper Hawthorn Group; newly proposed late Miocene-to-Pliocene Long...
CAM Photosynthesis in Submerged Aquatic Plants
Jon E. Keeley
1998, Botanical Review (64) 121-175
Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is a CO2-concentrating mechanism selected in response to aridity in terrestrial habitats, and, in aquatic environments, to ambient limitations of carbon. Evidence is reviewed for its presence in five genera of aquatic vascular plants, including Isoe??tes, Sagittaria, Vallisneria, Crassula, and Littorella. Initially, aquatic CAM was considered...
Understory vegetation in old and young Douglas-fir forests of western Oregon
J. D. Bailey, C. Mayrsohn, P. S. Doescher, Elizabeth St. Pierre, J. C. Tappeiner
1998, Forest Ecology and Management (112) 289-302
We studied understory composition in thinned and unthinned Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco)/western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla (Raf.) Sarg.) stands on 28 sites in western Oregon. These stands had regenerated naturally after timber harvest, 40–70 years before thinning. Commercial thinning had occurred 10–24 years previously, with 8–60% of the volume removed...
The deep structure of a sea-floor hydrothermal deposit
R.A. Zierenberg, Y. Fouquet, D. J. Miller, J.M. Bahr, P.A. Baker, T. Bjerkgard, C.A. Brunner, R.C. Duckworth, R. Gable, J. Gieskes, W.D. Goodfellow, H. M. Groschel-Becker, G. Guerin, J. Ishibashi, G. Iturrino, R.H. James, K.S. Lackschewitz, L.L. Marquez, P. Nehlig, J.M. Peter, C.A. Rigsby, P. Schultheiss, Wayne C. Shanks III, Bernd R. T. Simoneit, M. Summit, D.A.H. Teagle, M. Urbat, G.G. Zuffa
1998, Nature (392) 485-488
Hydrothermal circulation at the crests of mid-ocean ridges plays an important role in transferring heat from the interior of the Earth. A consequence of this hydrothermal circulation is the formation of metallic ore bodies known as volcanic-associated massive sulphide deposits. Such deposits, preserved on land, were important sources of copper...
Results from the Mars global surveyor thermal emission spectrometer
P. R. Christensen, D.L. Anderson, S.C. Chase, R.T. Clancy, R. N. Clark, B.J. Conrath, H. H. Kieffer, R.O. Kuzmin, M. C. Malin, J.C. Pearl, T. L. Roush, M. D. Smith
1998, Science (279) 1692-1696
The Thermal Emission Spectrometer spectra of low albedo surface materials suggests that a four to one mixture of pyroxene to plagioclase, together with about a 35 percent dust component provides the best fit to the spectrum. Qualitative upper limits can be placed on the concentration of carbonates (<10 percent), olivine...
Forage site selection by lesser snow geese during autumn staging on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska
Jerry W. Hupp, Donna G. Robertson
1998, Wildlife Monographs (138) 1-40
Lesser snow geese (Chen caerulescens caerulescens) of the Western Canadian Arctic Population feed intensively for 2-4 weeks on the coastal plain of the Beaufort Sea in Canada and Alaska at the beginning of their autumn migration. Petroleum leasing proposed for the Alaskan portion of the staging area on the Arctic...
2,3,6-/3,4,5-Trimethyl substituted diaryl carotenoid derivatives (Chlorobiaceae) in petroleums of the Belarussian Pripyat River Basin
D.J. Clifford, J.L. Clayton, Damste J.S. Sinninghe
1998, Conference Paper, Organic Geochemistry
Degradation products of the 2,3,6-/3,4,5-trimethyl substituted analog of isorenieratene were characterized in Belarussian petroleums. Devonian oils of low maturity were found to contain high concentrations (e.g., 35 mg/g) of C40 diaryl isoprenoids (2,3,6-/3,4,5-trimethyl substitution) along with an abundance of maturation-related compounds. A maturation scheme for diaryl carotenoid (2,3,6-/3,4,5-trimethyl substitution) precursors...
Predicting CH4 adsorption capacity of microporous carbon using N2 isotherm and a new analytical model
Jielun Sun, S. Chen, M. Rostam-Abadi, M.J. Rood
1998, ACS Division of Fuel Chemistry, Preprints (43) 596-599
A new analytical pore size distribution (PSD) model was developed to predict CH4 adsorption (storage) capacity of microporous adsorbent carbon. The model is based on a 3-D adsorption isotherm equation, derived from statistical mechanical principles. Least squares error minimization is used to solve the PSD without any pre-assumed distribution function....
Factors controlling As and U in shallow ground water, southern Carson Desert, Nevada
A. H. Welch, M.S. Lico
1998, Applied Geochemistry (13) 521-539
Unusually high As and U concentrations (> 100 ??g/L) are widespread in shallow ground water beneath the southern Carson Desert. The high concentrations, which locally exceed 1000 ??g/L, are of concern from a human health standpoint because the shallow ground water is used for domestic supply. Possible affects on wildlife...