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10450 results.

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Wintering localities of Cooper's hawks nesting in northeastern Oregon
Charles J. Henny
1990, Journal of Field Ornithology (61) 104-107
The life span of the Cooper's Hawks banded between 1974 and 1979 is now believed completed. The band recoveries provide the first information on the migratory characteristics of the species in the Pacific Northwest. Cooper's Hawks nesting in northeastern Oregon winter in western Mexico. The second-year female shot...
Within- and among-clutch variation of organochlorine residues in eggs of black-crowned night-herons
T. W. Custer, G. Pendleton, H. M. Ohlendorf
1990, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (15) 83-89
Within-clutch variability of DDE and PCB residues in eggs from 62 clutches of black-crowned night-herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) was small (12% and 17%) compared to among-clutch variability (88% and 83%). Significant correlations between concentrations of DDE (median r=0.8885) and of PCBs (median r=0.8244) occurred when 501 correlations were run on two randomly selected...
[Book review] Ospreys: A natural and unnatural history
Charles J. Henny
1990, The Auk (107) 808-809
The Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) is now arguably the world's best known bird of prey. The DDT-related Osprey population crash in the northeastern United States resulted in an unparalleled amount of research during the last 20 years. In 1969, when I published my first paper on Ospreys in The Auk, there...
Textural development of clayey and quartzofeldspathic fault gouges relative to their sliding behavior
Diane E. Moore, J.D. Byerlee
1990, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth (17) 1-9
Many of the secondary fault structures developed during triaxial friction experiments have been generally correlated with the structures of natural fault zones. Therefore, any physical differences that can be found between laboratory samples that slide stably and those that show stick-slip motion may help to identify the cause of earthquakes....
Role of heat and detachment in continental extension as viewed from the eastern basin and range province in Arizona
Ivo Lucchitta
1990, Tectonophysics (174) 77-114
The Bill Williams River area of west-central Arizona includes not only the Rawhide-Buckskin metamorphic core complex, which is part of the lower Colorado River highly extended terrane (HET), but also the boundary between the extended terranes of the Basin and Range Province and the less deformed Arizona Transition Zone/Colorado Plateau....
Movement and fate of atrazine and bromide in central Kansas croplands
M. Sophocleous, M.A. Townsend, Donald O. Whittemore
1990, Journal of Hydrology (115) 115-137
Two flooding experiments were conducted at two sites with different soils to study the transport and fate of the commonly used herbicide atrazine and inorganic chemicals in the Great Bend Prairie croplands of south-central Kansas. The instantaneous profile method supplemented by the use of an organic (atrazine) and an inorganic...
Trends and comparison of water quality and bottom material of northeastern Arkansas streams, 1974-85, and effects of planned diversions
J. C. Petersen
1990, Water-Resources Investigations Report 90-4017
Water quality of several rivers in Arkansas was compared using median values at individual water quality stations. Differences were detected in several properties, including common dissolved constituents, alkalinity, nutrients, fecal coliform bacteria, trace metals, pesticides, and sediment. In bottom material, organochlorine pesticides were detected much more frequently than organophosphorus pesticides...
Influence of seasonal growth, age, and environmental exposure on Cu and Ag in a bivalve indicator, Macoma balthica, in San Francisco Bay
Daniel J. Cain, Samuel N. Luoma
1990, Marine Ecology Progress Series (60) 45-55
Temporal and spatial variations in Cu and Ag in the deposit-feeding clam Macoma balthica and in surficial sediments were analysed at 8 stations in San Francisco Bay at near-monthly intervals for periods ranging from 3 to 10 yr during 1977 to 1986. Strong seasonal variations in metal concentrations of M....
Remarkable invasion of San Francisco Bay (California, USA), by the Asian clam Potamocorbula amurensis. I. Introduction and dispersal
James T. Carlton, Janet K. Thompson, Laurence E. Schemel, Frederic H. Nichols
1990, Marine Ecology Progress Series (66) 81-94
The euryhaline bivalve mollusc Potamocorbula amurensis (family Corbulidae), a native of China, Japan, and Korea, has recently appeared and become very abundant in San Francisco Bay. This clam appears to have been introduced as veliger larvae in the seawater ballast of cargo vessels. It was first collected in northern San...
A possible geodetic anomaly observed prior to the Loma Prieta, California, Earthquake
Michael Lisowski, W.H. Prescott, James C. Savage, Jerry L. Svarc
1990, Geophysical Research Letters (17) 1211-1214
Monthly measurements since mid‐1981 of distance from a geodetic station located 11 km from the epicenter of the Loma Prieta earthquake (Ms = 7.1; October 17, 1989) to three stations 30 to 40 km distant provides an unusually complete record of deformation in the epicentral region in the years prior to...
The chemistry of iron, aluminum, and dissolved organic material in three acidic, metal-enriched, mountain streams, as controlled by watershed and in-stream processes
Diane M. McKnight, Kenneth E. Bencala
1990, Water Resources Research (26) 3087-3100
Several studies were conducted in three acidic, metal-enriched, mountain streams, and the results are discussed together in this paper to provide a synthesis of watershed and in-stream processes controlling Fe, Al, and DOC (dissolved organic carbon) concentrations. One of the streams, the Snake River, is naturally acidic; the other two,...
Water movement through an experimental soil liner
I.G. Krapac, K. Cartwright, S.V. Panno, B.R. Hensel, K.R. Rehfeldt, B.L. Herzog
1990, Waste Management and Research (9) 195-204
A field-scale soil liner was constructed to test whether compacted soil barriers in cover and liner systems could be built to meet the U.S. EPA saturated hydraulic conductivity requirement (⩽ 1 × 10−7 cm s−1). The 8 × 15 × 0.9 m liner was constructed in 15 cm compacted lifts using...
Survival rates of birds of tropical and temperate forests: Will the dogma survive?
James R. Karr, James D. Nichols, M. K. Klimkiewicz, J. D. Brawn
1990, American Naturalist (136) 277-291
Survival rates of tropical forest birds are widely assumed to be high relative to the survival rates of temperate forest birds. Much life-history theory is based on this assumption despite the lack of empirical data to support it. We provide the first detailed comparison of survival rates of tropical...
Solute transport with multisegment, equilibrium-controlled reactions: A feed forward simulation method
Jacob Rubin
1990, Water Resources Research (26) 2029-2055
The feed forward method (FF method) is one of the ways of formulating operational equations which simulate transport of solutes influenced by equilibrium-controlled reaction networks. The FF method provides increased solution efficiency by adapting its formulations to some of the network's fundamental features. In this study the FF method is...
Flume experiments on the alignment of transverse, oblique, and longitudinal dunes in directionally varying flows
David M. Rubin, Hiroshi Ikeda
1990, Sedimentology (37) 673-684
For more than a century geologists have wondered why some bedforms are orientated roughly transverse to flow, whereas others are parallel or oblique to flow. This problem of bedform alignment was studied experimentally using subaqueous dunes on a 3–6-m-diameter sand-covered turntable on the floor of a 4-m-wide flume.In each experiment,...
Midwestern Holocene paleoenvironments revealed by floodplain deposits in northeastern Iowa
C. A. Chumbley, R. G. Baker, E. Arthur Bettis III
1990, Science (249) 272-274
Pollen analysis of pond deposits in the upper reaches of a stream from northeastern Iowa, an area beyond the last glacial margin, provides a nearly complete record of vegetational changes during the last 12.5 thousand years. Sixty-one radiocarbon dates provide good chronological control. Spruce forest was replaced by deciduous forest...
Brunhes chron excursion/polarity episode recorded during the late pleistocene, Albuquerque Volcanoes, New Mexico, USA
J. W. Geissman, L. Brown, B. D. Turrin, L. D. McFadden, S. S. Harlan
1990, Geophysical Journal International (102) 73-88
All basaltic lava flows of the Albuquerque Volcanoes (lat.: 35.2°N, long.: 253.2°E), Albuquerque-Belen Basin, New Mexico, record a short excursion/polarity episode. K-Ar isotopic age determinations (weighted average: 155 ± 47 ka) and evaluation of soil profiles on flow surfaces suggest the late Pleistocene (circa between 250 and 80 ka) as the...
New Washakiin primates (Omomyidae) from the Eocene of Wyoming and Colorado, and comments on the evolution of the Washakiini
James G. Honey
1990, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology (10) 206-221
Two new species of washakiin omomyids occur in deposits of early Bridgerian age. Shoshonius bowni, sp. nov., from the Aycross Formation, Absaroka Range, Wyoming, differs from S. cooperi in having enlarged conules on the upper molars and a second metaconule, features convergent with Washakius insignis. Washakius izetti, sp. nov., from the Green River Formation,...
Age estimates and uplift rates for late Pleistocene marine terraces: Southern Oregon portion of the Cascadia forearc
Daniel R. Muhs, Harvey M. Kelsey, Joseph F. Whelan, Galan W. McInelly
1990, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (95) 6685-6698
Interest in the Cascadia subduction zone has increased because recent investigations have suggested that slip along plates at certain types of convergent margins is characteristically accompanied by large earthquakes. In addition, other investigations have suggested that convergent margins can be broadly classified by the magnitude of their uplift rates. The...
Tectonic erosion along the Japan and Peru convergent margins
Roland von Huene, S. Lallemand
1990, Geological Society of America Bulletin (102) 704-720
The volume of material removed by subduction erosion can be estimated quantitatively if the position of the volcanic arc, the position of the paleotrench axis, and a paleo-depth reference surface are known. Estimates based on these parameters along the Japan and Peru Trenches indicate rates of erosion comparable to well-known...
Predatory behavior of grizzly bears feeding on elk calves in Yellowstone National Park
Steven P. French, Marilynn G. French
1990, Bears: Their Biology and Management (8) 335-341
Grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) were observed preying on elk calves (Cervus elaphus) on 60 occasions in Yellowstone National Park, with 29 confirmed kills. Some bears were deliberate predators and effectively preyed on elk calves for short periods each spring, killing up to 1 calf daily. Primary hunting techniques were...
Ostwald ripening of clays and metamorphic minerals
Dennis D. Eberl, J. Srodon, M. Kralik, B.E. Taylor, Zell E. Peterman
1990, Science (248) 474-477
Analyses of particle size distributions indicate that clay minerals and other diagenetic and metamorphic minerals commonly undergo recrystallization by Ostwald ripening. The shapes of their particle size distributions can yield the rate law for this process. One consequence of Ostwald ripening is that a record of the recrystallization process is...
Stability analysis of Eulerian-Lagrangian methods for the one-dimensional shallow-water equations
V. Casulli, Ralph T. Cheng
1990, Applied Mathematical Modelling (14) 122-131
In this paper stability and error analyses are discussed for some finite difference methods when applied to the one-dimensional shallow-water equations. Two finite difference formulations, which are based on a combined Eulerian-Lagrangian approach, are discussed. In the first part of this paper the results of numerical analyses for an explicit...
Diagenesis and interstitial-water chemistry at the Peruvian continental margin; major constituents and strontium isotopes
Miriam Kastner, Henry Elderfield, J.B. Martin, Erwin Suess, Keith A. Kvenvolden, Robert E. Garrison
1990, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results (112) 413-440
Two distinct hydrogeochemical regimes currently dominate the Peruvian continental margin. One, in shallower water (150-450 m) shelf to upper-slope regions, is characterized by interstitial waters with strong positive chloride gradients with depth. The maximum measured value of 1043 mM chloride at Site 680 at ITS corresponds to a degree of...