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Page 3675, results 91851 - 91875

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The IGBP-DIS global 1 km land cover data set, DISCover: First results
Thomas R. Loveland, A.S. Belward
1997, International Journal of Remote Sensing (18) 3289-3295
The International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme Data and Information System (IGBP-DIS) is co-ordinating the development of global land data sets from Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) data. The first is a 1 km spatial resolution land cover product 'DISCover', based on monthly Normalized Difference Vegetation Index composites from 1992 and 1993....
Soil development on a Pleistocene terrace sequence, Boise Valley, Idaho
K.L. Othberg, P.A. McDaniel, M.A. Fosberg
1997, Northwest Science (71) 318-329
Study of a sequence of terraces in the western Snake River Plain of Idaho reveals a record of at least seven terraces, the ages of which span the Pleistocene. In the Boise Valley, the youngest terraces are less than -14,500 yr and the oldest terraces are -1.7 Ma. Within this...
Altered streamflow and sediment entrainment in the Gunnison Gorge
J. G. Elliott, R. S. Parker
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 1041-1054
The Gunnison River in the Gunnison Gorge is a canyon river where upstream dams regulate mainstem discharge but do not affect debris-flow sediment supply from tributaries entering below the reservoirs. Regulation since 1966 has altered flood frequency, streambed mobility, and fluvial geomorphology creating potential resource-management issues. The duration of moderate...
Quantifying Anderson's fault types
R.W. Simpson
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 17909-17919
Anderson [1905] explained three basic types of faulting (normal, strike-slip, and reverse) in terms of the shape of the causative stress tensor and its orientation relative to the Earth's surface. Quantitative parameters can be defined which contain information about both shape and orientation [Célérier, 1995], thereby offering a way to distinguish...
Epidermal tumors of rainbow smelt with associated virus
R. L. Herman, C.N. Burke, S. Perry
1997, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (33) 925-929
Epithelial tumors of the skin occurred in landlocked populations of rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) in several lakes in New Hampshire (USA) during the spawning runs. Histologically, these were noninvasive epithelial cell lesions. Herpesvirus-like particles could be seen in the nucleus and cytoplasm. The...
Unraveling the strands of Saturn's F ring
C.D. Murray, M.K. Gordon, Winter S.M. Giuliatti
1997, Icarus (129) 304-316
Several high-resolution Voyager 2 images of Saturn's F ring show that it is composed of at least four separate, non-intersecting strands extending ~45?? in longitude. Voyager 1 images show that the two brightest strands appear to intersect, giving rise to a "braided" morphology. From a study of all available Voyager...
Industrially induced changes in Earth structure at the geysers geothermal area, California
G.R. Foulger, C.C. Grant, A. Ross, B.R. Julian
1997, Geophysical Research Letters (24) 135-137
Industrial exploitation is causing clearly-measurable changes in Earth structure at The Geysers geothermal area, California. Production at The Geysers peaked in the late 1980s at ∼3.5 × 10³ kg s−1 of steam and 1800 MW of electricity. It subsequently decreased by about 10% per year [Barker et...
Claudeonychia babini nov. gen. et nov. sp. of Ordovician Ambonychiid pelecypods from Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
John Pojeta Jr.
1997, Geobios (30) 433-436
A new genus of anteriorly-posteriorly elongate, posterodorsally alate, simplicicostate, strongly prosocline Ordovician ambonychiids is described. To honor Claude Babin and his extensive work with Ordovician pelecypods, the genus is named Claudeonychia. The type species is Claudeonychia babini nov. sp. In addition to the type species, the Ordovician species Byssonychia? byrnesi Ulrich, (1895), Opisthoptera notabilis Ulrich,...
Logistic model of nitrate in streams of the upper-midwestern United States
D. K. Mueller, B. C. Ruddy, W.A. Battaglin
1997, Journal of Environmental Quality (26) 1223-1230
Nitrate in surface water can have adverse effects on aquatic life and, in drinking-water supplies, can be a risk to human health. As part of a regional study, nitrates as N (NO3-N) was analyzed in water samples collected from streams throughout 10 Midwestern states during synoptic surveys in 1989, 1990,...
How wide is a road? The association of roads and mass-wasting in a forested montane environment
M. C. Larsen, J.E. Parks
1997, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (22) 835-848
A spatial data base of 1609 landslides was analysed using a geographic information system to determine landslide frequency in relation to highways. A 126 km long transportation network in a 201km2 area of humid-tropical, mountainous, forested terrain in Puerto Rico was used in conjunction with a series of 20 buffer...
Sr isotope evidence for a lacustrine origin for the upper Miocene to Pliocene Bouse Formation, lower Colorado River trough, and implications for timing of Colorado Plateau uplift
J.E. Spencer, P. J. Patchett
1997, Geological Society of America Bulletin (109) 767-778
The upper Miocene to Pliocene Bouse Formation in the lower Colorado River trough, which consists largely of siltstone with basal tufa and marl, has been interpreted as estuarine on the basis of paleontology. This interpretation requires abrupt marine inundation that has been linked...
Field guide to the Mesozoic accretionary complex along Turnagain Arm and Kachemak Bay, south-central Alaska
Dwight Bradley, Timothy M. Kusky, Susan M. Karl, Peter J. Haeussler
1997, Book chapter, 1997 Guide to the geology of the Kenai Peninsula. Alaska
Turnagain Arm, just east of Anchorage, provides a readily accessible, world-class cross section through a Mesozoic accretionary wedge. Nearly continuous exposures along the Seward Highway, the Alaska Railroad, and the shoreline of Turnagain Arm display the two main constituent units of the Chugach terrane: the McHugh Complex and Valdez Group....
Comparison of tree basal area and canopy cover in habitat models: Subalpine forest
Brian S. Cade
1997, Journal of Wildlife Management (61) 326-335
Canopy cover and basal area are 2 common measures of tree cover used in forest wildlife habitat models and resource selection studies. When choosing between these 2 measures, it is important to recognize that they may differentially estimate relative cover of coexisting tree species due to differences in bole diameter...
Ephemeral lekking behavior in the buff-breasted sandpiper, Tryngites subruficollis
Richard B. Lanctot, Patrick J. Weatherhead
1997, Behavioral Ecology (8) 268-278
We studied male reproductive behavior of the buff-breasted sandpiper Tryngites subruficoills for three yean on a 16-km2 study site in northern Alaska to document variation in male lekking behavior and to explore the causes of that variation. During the breeding season, about 75% of males on the study area displayed...
Food habits of Atlantic sturgeon off the central New Jersey coast
J. H. Johnson, D. S. Dropkin, B.E. Warkentine, J.W. Rachlin, W.D. Andrews
1997, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (126) 166-170
Limited information exists on the marine diet of the Atlantic sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus oxyrinchus. We examined the food habits of 275 Atlantic sturgeon (total length, 106–203 cm) caught in the commercial fishery off the coast of New Jersey. Stomachs were provided by fishermen. Significantly more stomachs were empty in the spring...
Trout production dynamics and water quality in Minnesota streams
T.J. Kwak, T.F. Waters
1997, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (126) 35-48
We sampled fish assemblages and quantified production dynamics of brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis, brown trout Salmo trutta, and rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss in 13 southeastern Minnesota streams during 1988–1990 to examine the influence of water quality on fish populations in fertile trout streams. Fish assemblages in 15 stream reaches were abundant,...
Wilderness-dependent wildlife: The large and carnivorous
David J. Mattson
1997, International Journal of Wilderness (3) 34-38
Wilderness is vital to the conservation of wildlife species that are prone to conflict with humans and vulnerable to human-caused mortality. These species tend to be large and are often carnivorous. Such animals are typically problematic for humans because they kill livestock and, occasionally, humans, and cause inordinate damage to...
Sodium toxicity and pathology associated with exposure of waterfowl to hypersaline playa lakes of southeast New Mexico
C.U. Meteyer, R.D. Dubielzig, F. J. Dein, L. A. Baeten, M.K. Moore, J.R. Jehl Jr., K.E. Wesenberg
1997, Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation (9) 269-280
Cause of mortality was studied in waterfowl in hypersaline playa lakes of southeast New Mexico during spring and fall migration. Mortality was not common in wild ducks resting on the playas during good weather. However, when birds remained on the lakes for prolonged periods of time, such as during experimental...
Small mammal community composition in cornfields, roadside ditches, and prairies in eastern Nebraska
E.M. Kirsch
1997, Natural Areas Journal (17) 204-211
Community composition of small mammals was examined in prairies, cornfields, and their adjacent roadside ditches in eastern Nebraska. Western harvest mice (Reithrodontomys megalotis) and meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) were associated with prairie habitat, were common in ditches, but avoided cornfields. Prairie voles (M. Ochrogaster) and white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus) were...