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Page 3680, results 91976 - 92000

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Anthropogenic molecular markers: Tools to identify the sources and transport pathways of pollutants
H. Takada, F. Satoh, Michael H. Bothner, B.W. Tripp, C.G. Johnson, J.W. Farrington
1997, ACS Symposium Series (671) 178-195
The activities of modern civilization have released to the oceans a wide variety of both mobilized natural compounds and synthetic compounds not found prior to modern times. Many of these compounds provide a means of identifying sources of inputs and pathways of movement of chemicals through oceanic ecosystems and serve...
Imperfect science: Uncertainty, diversity, and experts
Thomas C. Hanks
1997, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (78) 369-377
Seismic safety issues related to nuclear reactors in the eastern United States pose special challenges to the Earth and engineering sciences, given the severe consequences that can attend even very infrequent earthquakes. To deal with low-probability, potentially damaging ground motions, two major probabilistic seismic hazard analyses...
Importance of analytically verifying chemical treatments
J.J. Rach, M.P. Gaikowski, J.J. Olson
1997, Progressive Fish-Culturist (59) 222-228
Hydrogen peroxide is considered a low regμLatory priority compound by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. It is used to control fungal infections on fish eggs. We studied the treatment profiles of hydrogen peroxide in Heath, McDonald egg jar, and Clark–Williamson incubators during treatments intended to deliver an effective regimen...
Hot spots on Io: Initial results from Galileo's near infrared mapping spectrometer
R. Lopes-Gautier, A. G. Davies, R. Carlson, W. Smythe, L. Kamp, L. Soderblom, F.E. Leader, R. Mehlman
1997, Geophysical Research Letters (24) 2439-2442
The Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer on Galileo has monitored the volcanic activity on Io since June 28, 1996. This paper presents preliminary analysis of NIMS thermal data for the first four orbits of the Galileo mission. NIMS has detected 18 new hot spots and 12 others which...
Population genetic structure of a California endemic Branchiopod, Branchinecta sandiegonensis
Cathleen P. Davies, Marie A. Simovich, Stacie A. Hathaway
1997, Hydrobiologia (359) 149-158
Branchinecta sandiegonensis (Crustacea: Anostraca) is a narrow range endemic fairy shrimp discontinuously distributed in ephemeral pools on coastal mesas in San Diego County, USA. Ten populations across the range of the species were subjected to allozyme analysis for eleven loci. The species exhibits low variability (P95 =9.1–45.5) and one third of...
Wetland use, settling patterns, and recruitment in mallards
Gary L. Krapu, Raymond J. Greenwood, Chris P. Dwyer, Kathy M. Kraft, Lewis M. Cowardin
1997, Journal of Wildlife Management (61) 736-746
The correlation between number of May ponds in the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) of North America and size of the continental mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) breeding population the following spring weakened from the 1950s to the 1980s, suggesting possible changes in suitability of prairie ponds for meeting reproductive needs. We studied...
Streamwater chemistry and nutrient budgets for forested watersheds in New England: Variability and management implications
J.W. Hornbeck, S.W. Bailey, D.C. Buso, J. B. Shanley
1997, Forest Ecology and Management (93) 73-89
Chemistry of precipitation and streamwater and resulting input-output budgets for nutrient ions were determined concurrently for three years on three upland, forested watersheds located within an 80 km radius in central New England. Chemistry of precipitation and inputs of nutrients via wet deposition were similar among the three watersheds and...
Fe-Ca-phosphate, Fe-silicate, and Mn-oxide minerals in concretions from the Monterey Formation
M.D. Medrano, D.Z. Piper
1997, Chemical Geology (138) 9-23
Concentrically zoned phosphatic-enriched concretions were collected at three sites from the Monterey Formation. The following minerals were identified: vivianite, lipscombite, rockbridgeite, leucophosphite, mitridatite, carbonate fluorapatite, nontronite, todorokite, and barite. The mineralogy of the concretions was slightly different at each of the three collection sites. None of the concretions contains all...
The relationships of seabird assemblages to physical habitat features in Pacific equatorial waters during spring 1984-1991
C. A. Ribic, D. G. Ainley
1997, Conference Paper, ICES Journal of Marine Science
The association of seabird species groups with physical habitat was investigated in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean, far from any breeding colonies. This avoided birds that commute between colony and feeding habitat, behaviour that confuses associations with specific water types and current systems. Seabirds were counted on duplicate tracks in...
Assessing aquifer contamination risk using immunoassay: Trace analysis of atrazine in unsaturated zone sediments
K. E. Juracek, E.M. Thurman
1997, Journal of Environmental Quality (26) 1080-1089
The vulnerability of a shallow aquifer in south-central Kansas to contamination by atrazine (2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamines-triazine) was assessed by analyzing unsaturated zone soil and sediment samples from about 60 dryland and irrigated sites using an ultrasensitive immunoassay (detection level of 0.02 µg/kg) with verification by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Samples were collected...
Preferred crystallographic orientation in the ice I ← II transformation and the flow of ice II
K. Bennett, H.-R. Wenk, W.B. Durham, L.A. Stern, S. H. Kirby
1997, Philosophical Magazine A: Physics of Condensed Matter, Structure, Defects and Mechanical Properties (76) 413-435
The preferred crystallographic orientation developed during the ice I ← II transformation and during the plastic flow of ice II was measured in polycrystalline deuterium oxide (D2O) specimens using low-temperature neutron diffraction. Samples partially transformed from ice I to II under a non-hydrostatic stress developed a preferred crystallographic orientation in...
Dynamic deformations of shallow sediments in the Valley of Mexico, Part II: Single-station estimates
S.K. Singh, M. Santoyo, P. Bodin, J. Gomberg
1997, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (87) 540-550
We develop simple relations to estimate dynamic displacement gradients (and hence the strains and rotations) during earthquakes in the lake-bed zone of the Valley of Mexico, where the presence of low-velocity, high-water content clays in the uppermost layers cause dramatic amplification of seismic waves and large strains. The study uses...
Short-term effects of salinity reduction and drainage on salt-marsh biogeochemical cycling and Spartina (cordgrass) production
J. W. Portnoy, I. Valiela
1997, Estuaries (20) 569-578
To assess the biogeochemical effects of tidal restrictions on salt-marsh sulfur cycling and plant growth, cores of short-formSpartina alterniflora peat were desalinated and kept either waterlogged or drained in greenhouse microcosms. Changes in netSpartina production, and porewater and solid phase chemistry of treated cores were compared to natural conditions in the field...
Effect of stream acidification and inorganic aluminum on mortality of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) in the Catskill Mountains, New York
Barry P. Baldigo, Peter S. Murdoch
1997, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (54) 603-615
Juvenile brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) were exposed in cages to fluctuating chemical conditions in four Catskill Mountain streams during the spring and fall of 1989 and the spring of 1990. Specific chemical constituents and characteristics of acidic episodes that correlated with increased fish mortality were identified. Mortality increased during acidic...
Seismic-geodynamic constraints on three-dimensional structure, vertical flow, and heat transfer in the mantle
A.M. Forte, R.L. Woodward
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 17981-17994
Joint inversions of seismic and geodynamic data are carried out in which we simultaneously constrain global-scale seismic heterogeneity in the mantle as well as the amplitude of vertical mantle flow across the 670 km seismic discontinuity. These inversions reveal the existence of a family of three-dimensional (3-D) mantle models that...
Estimating the diminution of shear-wave amplitude with distance: Application to the Los Angeles, California, urban area
S. C. Harmsen
1997, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (87) 888-903
The rate of decay with distance of shear-wave amplitude, computed from 20-sec S-wave spectra, is determined from TERRAscope records of small earthquakes in the greater Los Angeles area. Piecewise log-linear interpolation functions and traditional diminution functions are used to fit spectral decay to a...
Sandstone-body and shale-body dimensions in a braided fluvial system: Salt wash sandstone member (Morrison formation), Garfield County, Utah
J. W. Robinson, P.J. McCabea
1997, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (81) 1267-1291
Excellent three-dimensional exposures of the Upper Jurassic Salt Wash Sandstone Member of the Morrison Formation in the Henry Mountains area of southern Utah allow measurement of the thickness and width of fluvial sandstone and shale bodies from extensive photomosaics. The Salt Wash Sandstone Member is composed of fluvial channel fill,...
Herbicides and their metabolites in rainfall: Origin, transport, and deposition patterns across the midwestern and northeastern United States, 1990-1991
D. A. Goolsby, E.M. Thurman, M.L. Pomes, M. T. Meyer, W.A. Battaglin
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 1325-1333
Herbicides were detected in rainfall throughout the midwestern and northeastern United States during late spring and summer of 1990 and 1991. Herbicide concentrations exhibited distinct geographic and seasonal patterns. The highest concentrations occurred in midwestern cornbelt states following herbicide application to cropland. Volume-weighted concentrations of 0.2−0.4 μg/L...
Determination of site amplification in the Los Angeles urban area from inversion of strong-motion records
S. C. Harmsen
1997, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (87) 866-887
The amplification of strong ground motion at sites in the greater Los Angeles, California, region is determined using the generalized-inverse method of Andrews (1986). Site-amplification estimates are determined at 281 strong-motion sites that provided horizontal-component accelerograms from the 1971 San Fernando, 1987 Whittier Narrows, 1991 Sierra Madre, or 1994 Northridge...
Effect of flagellates on free-living bacterial abundance in an organically contaminated aquifer
N.E. Kinner, R.W. Harvey, M. Kazmierkiewicz-Tabaka
1997, FEMS Microbiology Reviews (20) 249-259
Little is known about the role of protists in the saturated subsurface. Porous media microcosms containing bacteria and protists, were used to determine whether flagellates from an organically contaminated aquifer could substantively affect the number of free- living bacteria (FLB). When flagellates were present, the 3-40% maximum breakthrough of fluorescent...
Injury due to leg bands in willow flycatchers
J.A. Sedgwick, R.J. Klus
1997, Journal of Field Ornithology (68) 622-629
We report an apparently unusually high incidence of leg injury in Willow Flycatchers (Empidonax traillii) as a result of banding and color banding. Color bands and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) bands applied to Willow Flycatchers from 1988-1995 resulted in an overall leg injury rate of 9.6% to birds...
Aquatic invertebrate ecology during a simulated botulism epizootic in a Sacramento Valley wetland
Jane M. Hicks, Ned H. Euliss Jr., Stanley W. Harris
1997, Wetlands (17) 157-162
We investigated the effect of decomposing duck carcasses on aquatic invertebrate numbers, biomass, and taxonomic composition in a seasonally flooded, impounded wetland in the Sacramento Valley, California during August–November 1988 and 1989. Major invertebrate taxa were copepods (Cyclopoida, occurred in 8.3% of samples), water fleas (Daphnidae, 8.9%), water boatmen (<i...