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Page 366, results 9126 - 9150

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The surface integral approach to Radarclinometry
R.L. Wildey
1988, Earth, Moon and Planets (41) 141-153
Because radarclinometry is fundamentally describable in terms of a nonlinear, first-order, partial differential equation, one expects that it can, in principle, be carried out by direct deterministic integration beginning at a given threshold profile along the azimuthal coordinate. Such a boundary condition could be provided by the altimetry profile obtained...
Fuelwood production and use in rural Swaziland: a case-study of two communities
J. A. Allen, D.P. Pimentel, J.P. Lasoie
1988, Forest Ecology and Management (25) 239-254
Information of fuelwood consumption and the local production of wood was collected in two small rural communities in Swaziland. Fuelwood consumption was estimated to be 0.77 t persona??1 yeara??1 in one community (Sigombeni), and 0.63 t persona??1 in the other (Bhekinkhosi). Bhekinkhosi was found to be experiencing a significant fuelwood...
Tectonic history of the Syria Planum province of Mars
K. L. Tanaka, P. A. Davis
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 14893-14917
We attribute most of the development of extensive fractures in the Tharsis region to discrete tectonic provinces within the region, rather than to Tharsis as a single entity. One of these provinces is in Syria Planum. Faults and collapse structures in the Syria Planum tectonic province on Mars are grouped...
Serologic response of Rio Grande wild turkeys to experimental infections of Mycoplasma gallisepticum
Tonie E. Rocke, Thomas M. Yuill
1988, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (24) 668-671
The serologic response of Rio Grande wild turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo intermedia) to Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG) was determined. Free-ranging turkeys were caught in southern Texas, shipped to the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and housed in isolation facilities. Fourteen birds were exposed to MG, by intratracheal and intranasal inoculation. Eight birds received...
Accumulation and bioconcentration of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in a nearshore estuarine environment near a Pensacola (Florida) creosote contamination site
J. F. Elder, P.V. Dresler
1988, Environmental Pollution (49) 117-132
Long-term accumulation of creosote wastes at a wood-preserving facility near Pensacola, Florida, has produced high levels of organic contamination of groundwaters near Pensacola Bay. Impacts of this contamination on the nearshore environment of the bay were examined by analysis of water, sediment and tissues of two mollusc species. One of...
Geochemistry and origin of albite gneisses, northeastern Adirondack Mountains, New York
P.R. Whitney, J.F. Olmsted
1988, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (99) 476-484
Albite gneisses containing up to 8.7 percent Na2O and as little as 0.1% K2O comprise a significant part of the Proterozoic Lyon Mountain Gneiss in the Ausable Forks Quadrangle of the northeastern Adirondacks, New York State. Two distinct types of albite gneisses are present. One is a trondhjemitic leucogneiss (LAG)...
Intermediate-term, pre-earthquake phenomena in California, 1975-1986, and preliminary forecast of seismicity for the next decade
R. L. Wesson, C. Nicholson
1988, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (126) 407-446
Intermediate-term observations preceding earthquakes of magnitude 5.7 or greater in California from 1975 through 1986 suggest that: (1) The sudden appearance of earthquakes in a previously inactive area indicates an increased likelihood of a significant earthquake in that area for a period from days to years; (2) these larger earthquakes...
The radiocarbon budget for Mono Lake: An unsolved mystery
W.S. Broecker, R. Wanninkhof, G. Mathieu, T.-H. Peng, S. Stine, S. Robinson, A. Herczeg, M. Stuiver
1988, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (88) 16-26
Since 1957 the 14C/C ratio of the dissolved inorganic carbon in Mono Lake has risen by about 60‰. The magnitude of this increase is about four times larger than that expected from the invasion of bomb-produced14C from the atmosphere. We have eliminated the following explanations: (1) measurement error, (2) an unusually...
High-resolution 40Ar 39Ar chronology of Oligocene volcanic rocks, San Juan Mountains, Colorado
M. A. Lanphere
1988, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (52) 1425-1434
The central San Juan caldera complex consists of seven calderas from which eight major ash-flow tuffs were erupted during a period of intense volcanic activity that lasted for approximately 2 m.y. about 26–28 Ma. The analytical precision of conventional K-Ar dating in this time interval is not sufficient to unambiguously...
Rosaceous Chamaebatiaria-like foliage from the Paleogene of western North America
Jack A. Wolfe, Wesley Wehr
1988, Aliso (12) 177-200
Chamaebatiaria and Chamaebatia, two characteristic genera of the Californian floristic province, are traditionally placed in different subfamilies of Rosaceae, Spiraeoideae and Rosoideae, respectively. Analysis of the foliar and reproductive characters of the extant species of these genera indicates that the two genera could be closely related and the assignment of Chamaebatia to Rosoideae invalid. Fossil...
Garnet compositions and their use as indicators of peraluminous granitoid petrogenesis - southeastern Arabian Shield
du Bray
1988, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (100) 205-212
Garnet, an uncommon accessory mineral in igneous rocks, occurs in seven small peraluminous granitoid plutons in the southeastern Arabian Shield; textural equilibrium between garnet and other host granitoid minerals indicates that the garnets crystallized from their host magmas. Compositions of the garnets form three groups that reflect host-granitoid compositions, which...
Principal component analysis of geodetically measured deformation in Long Valley caldera, eastern California, 1983-1987
J.C. Savage
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 13297-13305
Typical geodetic measurements of deformation consist of repeated surveys of a particular geodetic network. Such deformation data can be interpreted as a consequence of one or more self-coherent sources by means of principal component analysis. A self-coherent source is defined as any source that produces deformation that is time and...
Cyclic development of igneous features and their relationship to high-temperature hydrothermal features in the Henderson porphyry molybdenum deposit, Colorado
R.B. Carten, E. P. Geraghty, B.M. Walker
1988, Economic Geology (83) 266-296
The Henderson porphyry molybdenum deposit was formed by the superposition of coupled alteration and mineralization events, of varying intensity and size, that were associated with each of at least 11 intrusions. Deposition of molybdenite was accompanied by time-equivalent silicic and potassic alteration. High-temperature alteration and mineralization are spatially and temporally...
Teleseismic and near-field analysis of the Nahanni earthquakes in the Northwest Territories, Canada
G. L. Choy, J. Boatwright
1988, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (78) 1627-1652
The analysis of the Nahanni earthquakes of October 5, 1985 (MS 6.6), and December 23, 1985 (MS 6.9), will have important implications for the assessment of seismic hazards in intraplate environments. To maximize the information available to seismic engineers, broadband data recorded teleseismically are analyzed jointly with strong-motion data recorded...
A tentative protocol for measurement of radon availability from the ground
A.B. Tanner
1988, Radiation Protection Dosimetry (24) 79-83
A procedure is being tested in order to determine its suitability for assessing the intrinsic ability of the ground at a particular site to supply 222Rn to a basement structure to be built on the site. Soil gas is sucked from a borehole probe through an alpha scintillation chamber and flow...
Geochemistry of some gases in hydrothermal fluids from the southern Juan de Fuca Ridge
William C. Evans, L. D. White, J. B. Rapp
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 15305-15313
Five samples of hydrothermal fluids from two vent areas on the southern Juan de Fuca Ridge were analyzed for dissolved gases. Concentrations in the end-member hydrothermal fluid of H2 (270–527 μmol/kg), CH4 (82–118 μmol/kg), and CO2 (3920–4460 μmol/kg) are well above values in ambient seawater and are similar to concentrations reported for other...
Anomalous shear wave attenuation in the shallow crust beneath the Coso volcanic region, California
C. Sanders, P. Ho-Liu, D. Rinn, Kanamori Hiroo
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 3321-3338
We use seismograms of local earthquakes to image relative shear wave attenuation structure in the shallow crust beneath the region containing the Coso volcanic-geothermal area of eastern California. SV and P wave amplitudes were measured from vertical component seismograms of earthquakes that occurred in the Cososouthem Sierra Nevada region from July 1983 to August...
Distribution of late Cenozoic volcanic vents in the Cascade Range: Volcanic arc segmentation and regional tectonic considerations
M. Guffanti, C.S. Weaver
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 6513-6529
Spatial, temporal, and compositional distributions of approximately 4000 volcanic vents formed since 16 Ma in Washington, Oregon, northern California, and northwestern Nevada illustrate the evolution of volcanism related to subduction of the Juan de Fuca plate system and extension of the Basin and Range province. Vent data were obtained from...
A magmatic model of Medicine Lake Volcano, California
J.M. Donnelly-Nolan
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 4412-4420
Medicine Lake volcano is a Pleistocene and Holocene shield volcano of the southern Cascade Range. It is located behind the main Cascade arc in an extensional tectonic setting where high-alumina basalt is the most commonly erupted lava. This basalt is parental to the higher-silica calc-alkaline and tholeiitic lavas that make...
Growth, carcass composition, and taste of rainbow trout of different strains fed diets containing primarily plant or animal protein
R. R. Smith, H. L. Kincaid, J. M. Regenstein, G. L. Rumsey
1988, Aquaculture (70) 309-321
Ten rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri) strains were evaluated during early growth from 30 g to 250 g on two diets — one based on plant protein (soybean and cottonseed meal) and the other on animal protein (fish meal). Diets were formulated to be nutritionally isocaloric and isonitrogenous. Fish were fed...
The response of creeping parts of the San Andreas fault to earthquakes on nearby faults: Two examples
R.W. Simpson, S.S. Schulz, L.D. Dietz, Robert O. Burford
1988, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (126) 665-685
Rates of shallow slip on creeping sections of the San Andreas fault have been perturbed on a number of occasions by earthquakes occurring on nearby faults. One example of such perturbations occurred during the 26 January 1986 magnitude 5.3 Tres Pinos earthquake located about 10 km southeast of Hollister, California....
Observed oil and gas field size distributions: A consequence of the discovery process and prices of oil and gas
L.J. Drew, E. D. Attanasi, J.H. Schuenemeyer
1988, Mathematical Geology (20) 939-953
If observed oil and gas field size distributions are obtained by random samplings, the fitted distributions should approximate that of the parent population of oil and gas fields. However, empirical evidence strongly suggests that larger fields tend to be discovered earlier in the discovery process than they would be by...