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Page 373, results 9301 - 9325

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Population trends, reproductive success, and organochlorine chemical contaminants in waterbirds nesting in Galveston Bay, Texas
Kirke A. King, Alexander J. Krynitsky
1986, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (15) 367-376
The effects of environmental contaminants on the reproductive success of olivaceous cormorants (Phalacrocorax olivaceus), laughing gulls (Larus atricilla), and black skimmers (Rhynchops niger) nesting in Galveston Bay, Texas were investigated from 1980 through 1982. Populations of cormorants and gulls have remained stable in recent years, but skimmer numbers may have...
An instrument system for monitoring and sampling suspended sediment in the benthic boundary layer
R.W. Sternberg, R.V. Johnson II, D.A. Cacchione, D.E. Drake
1986, Marine Geology (71) 187-199
An instrument system has been constructed that can monitor and sample suspended sediment distributions in the benthic boundary layer. It consists of miniature nephelometers and suspended sediment samplers placed within one meter of the seabed. The system is capable of continuously monitoring suspended sediment profiles at eight levels between 14...
Evaluation of coded wire tags for marking lake trout
Joseph H. Elrod, Clifford P. Schneider
1986, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (6) 264-271
Among hatchery-reared lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) of the 1979-1982 year classes stocked in New York waters of Lake Ontario, more than 3 million fish were marked with a coded wire tag (CWT) plus an adipose fin clip, and 1.5 million with only conventional fin clips. Altogether, 7,640 tags were recovered...
Groundwater transport of strontium 90 in a glacial outwash environment
Kenneth L. Kipp Jr., Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, David B. Grove
1986, Water Resources Research (22) 519-530
As part of the investigation of groundwater contamination at a uranium-scrap recovery plant at Wood River Junction, Rhode Island, laboratory experiments led to the development of a model for predicting the transport of strontium 90 in glacial outwash sediments based on an approximate mechanism for ion exchange. The multicomponent system...
Volcano monitoring at the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Observatory
Christina C. Heliker, J. D. Griggs, T. Jane Takahashi, Thomas L. Wright
Henry Spall, editor(s)
1986, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (18) 4-69
The island of Hawaii has one of the youngest landscapes on Earth, formed by frequent addition of new lava to its surface.  Because Hawaiian are generally nonexplosive and easily accessible, the island has long attracted geologists interested in studying the extraordinary power of volcanic eruptions.  The U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano...
Modeling contamination of shallow unconfined aquifers through infiltration beds
D.W. Ostendorf
1986, Water Resources Research (22) 375-382
We model the transport of a simply reactive contaminant through an infiltration bed and underlying shallow, one-dimensional, unconfined aquifer with a plane, steeply sloping bottom in the assumed absence of dispersion and downgradient dilution. The effluent discharge and ambient groundwater flow under the infiltration beds are presumed to form a...
Dipping reflectors in the Norwegian Sea—ODP Leg 104 drilling results: LEG 104 SCIENTIFIC PARTY
O. Eldholm, Jorn Thiede, E. Taylor, K. Bjorklund, U. Bleil, P. Cielsielski, A. Despraries, D. Donnally, C. Froget, R. Goll, R. Henrich, E. Jansen, L. Krissek, Keith A. Kvenvolden, A.P. LeHuray, D. Love, P. Lysne, T.J. McDonald, P.J. Mudie, Lisa E. Osterman, L.M. Parson, J. Phillips, A. Pittenger, G. Qvale, G. Schoenharting, L. Viereck-Goette, A. Morton, I. Gibson
1986, Journal of the Geological Society (143) 911-912
Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 104 successfully completed a number of deep drill holes on the Outer V0ring Plateau and the Vering Basin during July and August 1985 (Fig. 1; Eldholm, Thiede, Taylor et al. 1986). One of the principal objectives of the leg was to drill and sample a...
Quaternary glacial stratigraphy and chronology of Mexico
Sidney White
1986, Quaternary Science Reviews (5) 201-205
The volcano Iztaccíhuatl in central Mexico was glaciated twice during the middle Pleistocene, once probably in pre-Illinoian (or pre-Bull Lake) time, and once in late Illinoian (or Bull Lake) time. Glaciation during the late Pleistocene was restricted to the late Wisconsin (or Pinedale). A maximum advance and one readvance are...
Rb-Sr, K-Ar, and stable isotope evidence for the ages and sources of fluid components of gold-bearing quartz veins in the northern Sierra Nevada foothills metamorphic belt, California
J.K. Bohlke, R. W. Kistler
1986, Economic Geology (81) 296-322
Gold-bearing quartz veins occur in and near major fault zones in deformed oceanic and island-arc rocks west of the main outcrop of the Sierra Nevada composite batholith. Veins typically occupy minor reverse faults that crosscut blueschist to amphibolite-grade metamorphic rocks whose metamorphic ages range from early Paleozoic to Jurassic. Vein...
Deformation of poorly consolidated sediment during shallow emplacement of a basalt sill, Coso Range, California
W. A. Duffield, C. R. Bacon, P.T. Delaney
1986, Bulletin of Volcanology (48) 97-107
A 150-m-long, wedge-shaped unit of folded and faulted marly siltstone crops out between undeformed sedimentary rocks on the north flank of the Coso Range, California. The several-meter-thick blunt end of this wedge abuts the north margin of a basaltic sill of comparable thickness. Chaotically deformed siltstone crops out locally at...
Structure of the North American Atlantic Continental Margin
J. S. Schlee, K.K. Klitgord
1986, Journal of Geological Education (34) 72-89
The use of multichannel seismic-reflection profiles to study oceanic areas has advanced our understanding of deep crustal structure and the history of its development. Off eastern North America, where the structure of the continental margin is essentially constructional, seismic profiles have approximated geologic cross sections up to 10–15 km...
Optical reflection from planetary surfaces as an operator-eigenvalue problem
R.L. Wildey
1986, Earth, Moon and Planets (36) 103-116
The understanding of quantum mechanical phenomena has come to rely heavily on theory framed in terms of operators and their eigenvalue equations. This paper investigates the utility of that technique as related to the reciprocity principle in diffuse reflection. The reciprocity operator is shown to be unitary and Hermitian; hence,...
Nd-Sr-Pb isotope constraints on the sources of west Maui volcano, Hawaii
E. Hegner, D. Unruh, M. Tatsumoto
1986, Nature (319) 478-480
The origin of the Emperor-Hawaiian volcanic chain is attributed to the northwesterly movement of the Pacific plate over a stationary mantle plume (hotspot)1. There has been considerable controversy as to the nature and number of sources of Hawaiian hotspot volcanism. Thus far, most geochemical models have been based on rock...
A comparison of several methods for the solution of the inverse problem in two-dimensional steady state groundwater flow modeling
Logan K. Kuiper
1986, Water Resources Research (22) 705-714
Two geostatistical approaches for the estimation of hydraulic conductivity and hydraulic head from hydraulic conductivity and hydraulic head measurements are developed for two-dimensional steady flow with sinks. For both approaches the field of the logarithm of hydraulic conductivity (log-conductivity) is represented as a random field with mean θ1+θ2x+θ3y where xand y denote Cartesian coordinates,...
Cyclic terpenoids of contemporary resinous plant detritus and of fossil woods, ambers and coals
Bernd R. T. Simoneit, J.O. Grimalt, T.-G. Wang, R.E. Cox, Patrick G. Hatcher, A. Nissenbaum
1986, Organic Geochemistry (10) 877-889
Cyclic terpenoids present in the solvent extractable material of fossil woods, ambers and brown coals have been analyzed. The sample series chosen consisted of wood remains preserved in Holocene to Jurassic sediments and a set of of ambers from the Philippines (copalite), Israel, Canada and Dominican Republic. The brown coals...
Secretinite: A proposed new maceral of the inertinite maceral group
P.C. Lyons, Patrick G. Hatcher, F. W. Brown
1986, Fuel (65) 1094-1098
The new maceral secritinite (name derived from the word ‘secretory’) is proposed for subcircular, ovoid, crescent-shaped or oblong, commonly round on one or more sides, noncellular, highly reflective components of the inertinite maceral group. This maceral of secretory origin, known from many bituminous coals throughout the world, has been confused...
The solubility of BaCO3(cr) (witherite) in CO2-H2O solutions between 0 and 90°C, evaluation of the association constants of BaHCO3+(aq) and BaCO30(aq) between 5 and 80°C, and a preliminary evaluation of the thermodynamic properties of Ba2+(aq)
Eurybiades Busenberg, Niel Plummer
1986, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (50) 2225-2233
One hundred and fifty new measurements of the solubility of witherite were used to evaluate the equilibrium constant of the reaction BaCO3(cr) = Ba2+(aq) + CO32−(aq) between 0 and 90°C and 1 atm total pressure. The temperature dependence of the equilibrium constant is given by logK = 607.642 + 0.121098T − 20011.25/T − 236.4948 logT where T is in degrees...
Halley’s comet; a benevolent visitor to Earth
H. Spall
1986, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (18) 98-102
In late 1985 and early 1986 a comet was visible to the Earth that has been observed for over 2000 years. One of the most famous of celestial visitors, Comet Halley appeared last in 1910 and will not be seen again until the year 2061. the comet has been the...
New theories about ancient extinctions
H. Spall
1986, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (18) 90-92
The abrupt disappearance of all the dinosaurs about 65 million years ago, along with perhaps half the plant species and other animals, has been one of the great geological mysteries. Clues to the cause of these extinctions have been scarce and open to many interpretations. But all this may be changing....
Analysis of thematic map classification error matrices.
G.H. Rosenfield
1986, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (52) 681-686
The classification error matrix expresses the counts of agreement and disagreement between the classified categories and their verification. Thematic mapping experiments compare variables such as multiple photointerpretation or scales of mapping, and produce one or more classification error matrices. This paper presents a tutorial to implement a typical problem of...
What won't Turnstones eat?
Robert E. Gill Jr.
1986, British Birds (79) 402-403
The Turnstone Arenaria interpres probably has one of the most varied diets of any wader species. Besides the 'normal' foods taken (see, e.g., Prater 1972, Nettleship 1973, Jones 1975), a considerable variety of 'unusual' foods and feeding behaviours has also been reported. Items taken include soap, gull excrement, dog food,...
An interpretation of induced electric currents in long pipelines caused by natural geomagnetic sources of the upper atmosphere
W.H. Campbell
1986, Surveys in Geophysics (8) 239-259
Electric currents in long pipelines can contribute to corrosion effects that limit the pipe's lifetime. One cause of such electric currents is the geomagnetic field variations that have sources in the Earth's upper atmosphere. Knowledge of the general behavior of the sources allows a prediction of the occurrence times, favorable...
Effect of sediment depth and sediment type on the survival of Vallisneria americana Michx grown from tubers
Nancy B. Rybicki, Virginia Carter
1986, Aquatic Botany (24) 233-240
Sedimentation resulting from storms may have been one of the reasons for the elimination of submersed aquatic vegetation from the tidal Potomac River in the late 1930's. Laboratory studies were conducted to investigate the effects of different depths of overlying sediment and composition of sediment on the survival of Vallisneria americana Michx...
A statistical methodology for estimating transport parameters: Theory and applications to one-dimensional advectivec-dispersive systems
Brian J. Wagner, Steven M. Gorelick
1986, Water Resources Research (22) 1303-1315
A simulation nonlinear multiple-regression methodology for estimating parameters that characterize the transport of contaminants is developed and demonstrated. Finite difference contaminant transport simulation is combined with a nonlinear weighted least squares multiple-regression procedure. The technique provides optimal parameter estimates and gives statistics for assessing the reliability of these estimates under...