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Page 3668, results 91676 - 91700

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A watershed approach to ecosystem monitoring in Denali National Park and preserve, Alaska
L.K. Thorsteinson, D.L. Taylor
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 795-810
The National Park Service and the National Biological Service initiated research in Denali National Park and Preserve, a 2.4 million-hectare park in southcentral Alaska, to develop ecological monitoring protocols for national parks in the Arctic/Subarctic biogeographic area. We are focusing pilot studies on design questions, on scaling issues and regionalization,...
Radiocarbon Ages and Environments of Deposition of the Wono and Trego Hot Springs Tephra Layers in the Pyramid Lake Subbasin, Nevada
L. V. Benson, J. P. Smoot, Michaele Kashgarian, A. Sarna-Wojcicki, J.W. Burdett
1997, Quaternary Research (47) 251-260
Uncalibrated radiocarbon data from core PLC92B taken from Wizards Cove in the Pyramid Lake subbasin indicate that the Trego Hot Springs and Wono tephra layers were deposited 23,200 ?? 300 and 27,300 ??300 14C yr B.P. (uncorrected for reservoir effect). Sedimentological data from sites in the Pyramid Lake and Smoke...
Multiphase groundwater flow near cooling plutons
Daniel O. Hayba, Steven E. Ingebritsen
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 12235-12252
We investigate groundwater flow near cooling plutons with a computer program that can model multiphase flow, temperatures up to 1200°C, thermal pressurization, and temperature‐dependent rock properties. A series of experiments examines the effects of host‐rock permeability, size and depth of pluton emplacement, single versus multiple intrusions, the influence of a...
Patterns of foraging and distribution of bluegill sunfish in a Mississippi River backwater: Influence of macrophytes and predation
M. R. Dewey, W. B. Richardson, S. J. Zigler
1997, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (6) 8-15
We studied the trophic interactions and spatial distributions of bluegills Lepomis macrochirus and largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides in a macrophyte bed in Lake Onalaska, a backwater lake in the upper Mississippi River. The diets of adult and age-0 bluegills were similar and changed seasonally probably in response to changes in life stages of macroinvertebrates...
Composite recovery type curves in normalized time from Theis' exact solution
Daniel J. Goode
1997, Groundwater (35) 672-678
Type curves derived from Theis’ exact nonequilibrium well function solution are proposed for graphical estimation of aquifer hydraulic properties, transmissivity (T), and storage coefficient (S), from water‐level recovery data after cessation of a constant‐rate discharge test. Drawdown (on log scale) is plotted versus the ratio of...
Dynamic deformations of shallow sediments in the Valley of Mexico, Part I: Three-dimensional strains and rotations recorded on a seismic array
P. Bodin, J. Gomberg, S.K. Singh, M. Santoyo
1997, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (87) 528-539
We study the spatial variation in earthquake ground motions, or equivalently the dynamic displacement gradient field, using a novel analysis procedure borrowed from geodesy. Seismic data recorded in the Valley of Mexico by a microarray of three three-component surface accelerographs and two three-component...
A sediment resuspension and water quality model of Lake Okeechobee
R.T. James, J. Martin, T. Wool, P.-F. Wang
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 661-677
ABSTRACT: The influence of sediment resuspension on the water quality of shallow lakes is well documented. However, a search of the literature reveals no deterministic mass-balance eutrophication models that explicitly include resuspension. We modified the Lake Okeechobee water quality model - which uses the Water Analysis...
Mixed-mode sorption of hydroxylated atrazine degradation products to sell: A mechanism for bound residue
R.N. Lerch, E.M. Thurman, E.L. Kruger
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 1539-1546
This study tested the hypothesis that sorption of hydroxylated atrazine degradation products (HADPs: hydroxyatrazine, HA; deethylhydroxyatrazine, DEHA; and deisopropylhydroxyatrazine, DIHA) to soils occurs by mixed-mode binding resulting from two simultaneous mechanisms: (1) cation exchange and (2) hydrophobic interaction. The objective was to use liquid chromatography and soil extraction experiments to...
Estimating ground-water recharge from streamflow hydrographs for a small mountain watershed in a temperate humid climate, New Hampshire, United States
D.P. Mau, T. C. Winter
1997, Groundwater (35) 291-304
Hydrographs of stream discharge were analyzed to determine ground-water recharge for two small basins draining into Mirror Lake, New Hampshire. Two methods of hydrograph analysis developed for determining ground-water recharge were evaluated, the instantaneous recharge method and the constant recharge method. For the instantaneous recharge method, recharge is assumed to...
Variation in thermal tolerance and routine metabolism among spring- and stream dwelling freshwater sculpins (Teleostei: Cottidae) of the southeastern United States
S. J. Walsh, D. C. Haney, C. M. Timmerman
1997, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (6) 84-94
Evolutionary theory predicts that some aquatic organisms may adapt by directional selection to limiting physical environmental conditions, yet empirical data are conflicting. We sought to test the assumption that sculpins (family Cottidae) inhabiting thermally stable springs of the southeastern United States differ in temperature tolerance and metabolism from populations inhabiting...
Continuous monitoring of surface deformation at Long Valley Caldera, California, with GPS
T.H. Dixon, A. Mao, M. Bursik, M. Heflin, J. Langbein, R. Stein, F. Webb
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 12017-12034
Continuous Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements at Long Valley Caldera, an active volcanic region in east central California, have been made on the south side of the resurgent dome since early 1993. A site on the north side of the dome was added in late...
Transient triggering of near and distant earthquakes
J. Gomberg, M.L. Blanpied, N.M. Beeler
1997, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (87) 294-309
We demonstrate qualitatively that frictional instability theory provides a context for understanding how earthquakes may be triggered by transient loads associated with seismic waves from near and distance earthquakes. We assume that earthquake triggering is a stick-slip process and test two hypotheses about the effect of transients on the timing...
Complexities of plinian fall deposition at vent: An example from the 1912 Novarupta eruption (Alaska)
J. Fierstein, Bruce F. Houghton, C. J. N. Wilson, W. Hildreth
1997, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (76) 215-227
An extremely proximal ejecta ring, with exposures to within 100 m of vent, was deposited during later-stage plinian fall activity during the 1912 Novarupta eruption in Alaska. One bed in the ejecta ring (bed S) contains predominantly andesitic clasts which serve to delineate the striking contrast in thinning rates along...
Production of activated char from Illinois coal for flue gas cleanup
A.A. Lizzio, J.A. DeBarr, C.W. Kruse
1997, Energy and Fuels (11) 250-259
Activated chars were produced from Illinois coal and tested in several flue gas cleanup applications. High-activity chars that showed excellent potential for both SO2 and NOx removal were prepared from an Illinois No. 2 bituminous coal. The SO2 (120 °C) and NOx (25 °C) removal performance of one char compared...
Deep well injection of brine from Paradox Valley, Colorado: Potential major precipitation problems remediated by nanofiltration
Yousif K. Kharaka, Gil Ambats, James J. Thordsen, Roy A. Davis
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 1013-1020
Groundwater brine seepage into the Dolores River in Paradox Valley, Colorado, increases the dissolved solids load of the Colorado River annually by ∼2.0 × 108 kg. To abate this natural contamination, the Bureau of Reclamation plans to pump ∼3540 m3/d of brine from 12 shallow wells located along the Dolores River....
Comparative sensitivity of Selenastrum capricornutum and Lemna minor to sixteen herbicides
J.F. Fairchild, D. S. Ruessler, P.S. Haverland, A.R. Carlson
1997, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (32) 353-357
Aquatic plant toxicity tests are frequently conducted in environmental risk assessments to determine the potential impacts of contaminants on primary producers. An examination of published plant toxicity data demonstrates that wide differences in sensitivity can occur across phylogenetic groups of plants. Yet relatively few studies have been conducted with the...
Diverse primitive magmas in the Cascade arc, Northern Oregon and Southern Washington
R. M. Conrey, D. R. Sherrod, P. R. Hooper, D. A. Swanson
1997, Canadian Mineralogist (35) 367-396
Bulk-rock major- and trace-element composition, petrography and mineral compositions are presented for a diverse suite of 22 primitive mafic lavas in the Cascade Range of northern Oregon and southern Washington. With the exception of an early Western Cascade basalt, all the rocks are younger than 7 Ma. Intensive parameters [F(H2O),...
The Chesapeake Bay bolide impact: A convulsive event in Atlantic Coastal Plain evolution
C. Wylie Poag
1997, Sedimentary Geology (108) 45-90
Until recently, Cenozoic evolution of the Atlantic Coastal Plain has been viewed as a subcyclical continuum of deposition and erosion. Marine transgressions alternated with regressions on a slowly subsiding passive continental margin, their orderly succession modified mainly by isostatic adjustments, occasional Appalachian tectonism, and paleoclimatic change. This passive scenario was...
Effects of interaction between ultramafic tectonite and mafic magma on Nd-Pb-Sr isotopic systems in the Neoproterozoic Chaya Massif, Baikal-Muya ophiolite belt
Y. V. Amelin, E. Yu Ritsk, L.A. Neymark
1997, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (148) 299-316
Sm-Nd, Rb-Sr and U-Pb isotopic systems have been studied in minerals and whole rocks of harzburgites and mafic cumulates from the Chaya Massif, Baikal-Muya ophiolite belt, eastern Siberia, in order to determine the relationship between mantle ultramafic and crustal mafic sections. Geological relations in the Chaya Massif indicate that the...
Management of Sequoiadendron giganteum and Sequoia sempervirens forests in the reserves of California - Considerations of ecology and conservation
D.M. Graber
1997, Tropics (6) 429-434
Giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum), also known as “Bigtree” and “Sierra Redwood,” is entirely restricted to the Sierra Nevada mountain range in the State of California, while coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) is restricted to coastal northern California, extending northward slightly into the State of Oregon. Both charismatic species,...
Infiltration of atrazine and metabolites from a stream to an alluvial aquifer
P. J. Squillace, M. R. Burkart, W.W. Simpkins
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 89-95
ABSTRACT: The infiltration of atrazine, deethylatrazine, and deisopropylatrazine from Walnut Creek, a tributary stream, to the alluvial valley aquifer along the South Skunk River in central Iowa occurred where the stream transects the river's flood plain. A preliminary estimate indicated that the infiltration was significant...
Recalibrated mariner 10 color mosaics: Implications for mercurian volcanism
M.S. Robinson, P. G. Lucey
1997, Science (275) 197-200
Recalibration of Mariner 10 color image data allows the identification of distinct color units on the mercurian surface. We analyze these data in terms of opaque mineral abundance, iron content, and soil maturity and find color units consistent with the presence of volcanic deposits on Mercury's surface. Additionally, materials associated...
Orbital forcing of deep-sea benthic species diversity
T. M. Cronin, M.E. Raymo
1997, Nature (385) 624-627
Explanations for the temporal and spatial patterns of species biodiversity focus on stability-time, disturbance-mosaic (biogenic microhabitat heterogeneity) and competition-predation (biotic interactions) hypotheses. The stability-time hypothesis holds that high species diversity in the deep sea and in the tropics reflects long-term climatic stability. But the influence of climate change on deep-sea...