Identification of organic compounds in the water of a fish culture system
J. Bonzo, D. C. Honeyfield
1996, Conference Paper, New York Academy of Sciences, Science Research Training Program, Journal of Abstracts
No abstract available at this time...
Serum factors as indicators of environmental stress: optimization of methodologies for striped bass
V. S. Blazer, D.L. Higginbotham, J.W. Fournie
J.S. Stolen, T.C. Fletcher, D. P. Anderson, J.T. Zelikoff, L.E. Twerdok, S.L. Kaattari, C.C. Bayne, editor(s)
1996, Book chapter, Modulators of Fish Immune Responses: Volume 1, Models for Environmental Toxicology, Biomarkers, Immunostimulators
No abstract available at this time...
Integrated biostratigraphic and sequence stratigraphic framework for Upper Cretaceous strata of the eastern Gulf Coastal Plain, USA
E. A. Mancini, T.M. Puckett, B.H. Tew
1996, Cretaceous Research (17) 645-669
Upper Cretaceous (Santonian-Maastrichtian stages) strata of the eastern US Gulf Coastal Plain represent a relatively complete section of marine to nonmarine mixed siliciclastic and carbonate sediments. This section includes three depositional sequences which display characteristic systems tracts and distinct physical defining surfaces. The marine lithofacies are rich in calcareous nannoplankton...
Paragenetic and minor- and trace-element studies of Mississippi Valley-type ore deposits of the Silesian-Cracow district, Poland
J.G. Viets, D. L. Leach, F.E. Lichte, R.T. Hopkins, C. A. Gent, J. W. Powell
1996, Prace - Panstwowego Instytutu Geologicznego (154) 36-71
Paragenetic and minor- and trace-element studies were conducted on samples of epigenetic ore and gangue minerals collected from mines and drill core in the Silesian-Cracow (S-C) district of southern Poland. Four discrete mineral suites representing four mineralizing stages can be identified throughout the district. The earliest epigenetic minerals deposited during...
Film cameras or digital sensors? The challenge ahead for aerial imaging
D.L. Light
1996, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (62) 285-291
Cartographic aerial cameras continue to play the key role in producing quality products for the aerial photography business, and specifically for the National Aerial Photography Program (NAPP). One NAPP photograph taken with cameras capable of 39 lp/mm system resolution can contain the equivalent of 432 million pixels at 11 ??m...
Lithium-bearing fluor-arfvedsonite from Hurricane Mountain, New Hampshire: A crystal-chemical study
Frank C. Hawthorne, R. Oberti, L. Ottolini, E.E. Foord
1996, Canadian Mineralogist (34) 1015-1019
The structures of two crystals of Li-bearing fluor-arfvedsonite (1) (K0.32Na0.68)Na2(Li0.48Fe 2+2.83Mn2+0.10Zn 0.06Fe3+1.46Ti0.07) (Si7.88Al0.12)O22[Fu1.15(OH) 0.85] and (2) (K0.25Na0.75)Na2(Li0.48Fe 2+2.84Mn2+0.11Zn 0.05Fe3+1.45Ti0.07)(Si 7.89Al0.11)O22[F1.35(OH) 0.65] from a granitic pegmatite, Hurricane Mountain, New Hampshire, have been refined to R indices of 1.5(1.6)% based on 1380(1387) reflections measured with MoK?? X-radiation. The unit cell parameters are...
Modeling reservoir density underflow and interflow from a chemical spill
Ruochuan Gu, Steve C. McCutcheon, Pei-Fang Wang
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 695-705
An integral simulation model has been developed for understanding and simulating the process of a density current and the transport of spilled chemicals in a stratified reservoir. The model is capable of describing flow behavior and mixing mechanisms in different flow regimes (plunging flow, underflow, and interflow). It computes flow...
Growth of the Tongariro volcanic complex: New evidence from K-Ar age determinations
B.J. Hobden, Bruce F. Houghton, M. A. Lanphere, I.A. Nairn
1996, New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics (39) 151-154
New K-Ar age determinations indicate that the exposed portion of the Tongariro volcanic complex has grown steadily since at least 275 ka, with intervals of vigorous cone growth at 210-200.130-70. and 25 ka to the present day....
A catastrophic flood caused by drainage of a caldera lake at Aniakchak Volcano, Alaska, and implications for volcanic hazards assessment
C. F. Waythomas, J. S. Walder, R. G. McGimsey, C.A. Neal
1996, Geological Society of America Bulletin (108) 861-871
Aniakchak caldera, located on the Alaska Peninsula of southwest Alaska, formerly contained a large lake (estimated volume 3.7 × 109 m3) that rapidly drained as a result of failure of the caldera rim sometime after ca. 3400 yr B.P. The peak discharge of the resulting flood was estimated using three methods:...
Numerical simulation of widening and bed deformation of straight sand-bed rivers. II: Model evaluation
S.E. Darby, Colin R. Thorne, A. Simon
1996, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (122) 194-202
In this paper the numerical model presented in the companion paper is tested and applied. Assessment of model accuracy was based on two approaches. First, predictions of evolution of a 13.5 km reach of the South Fork of the Forked Deer River, in west Tennessee, were compared to observations over...
A geochemical study of macerals from a Miocene lignite and an Eocene bituminous coal, Indonesia
B.A. Stankiewicz, M.A. Kruge, Maria Mastalerz
1996, Organic Geochemistry (24) 531-545
Optical and chemical studies of maceral concentrates from a Miocene lignite and an Eocene high-volatile bituminous C coal from southeastern Kalimantan, Indonesia were undertaken using pyro-Lysis, optical, electron microprobe and FTIR techniques Pyrolysis products of vitrinite from bituminous coal were dominated by straight-chain aliphatics and phenols. The huminite of the...
Geology and structural evolution of the Muruntau gold deposit, Kyzylkum desert, Uzbekistan
L.J. Drew, B. R. Berger, N.K. Kurbanov
1996, Ore Geology Reviews (11) 175-196
The Muruntau gold deposit in the Kyzylkum desert of Uzbekistan is the largest single deposit (??? 1100 tonnes of gold) of the class of low-sulfide syndeformation/synigenous gold deposits formed in the brittle/ductile transition zone of the crust within transpressional shear zones. Hosted by the Cambrian to Ordovician Besopan Suite, the...
Predictive techniques for river channel evolution and maintenance
J. M. Nelson
1996, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (90) 321-333
Predicting changes in alluvial channel morphology associated with anthropogenic and natural changes in flow and/or sediment supply is a critical part of the management of riverine systems. Over the past few years, advances in the understanding of the physics of sediment transport in conjunction with rapidly increasing capabilities in computational...
XVAN: A computer program for the analysis of spatial estimation errors
Ricardo A. Olea
1996, Computers & Geosciences (22) 445-448
[No abstract available]...
Lithologic analysis from multispectral thermal infrared data of the alkalic rock complex at Iron Hill, Colorado
K. Watson, L. C. Rowan, T. L. Bowers, C. Anton-Pacheco, P. Gumiel, S.H. Miller
1996, Geophysics (61) 706-721
Airborne thermal-infrared multispectral scanner (TIMS) data of the Iron Hill carbonatite-alkalic igneous rock complex in south-central Colorado are analyzed using a new spectral emissivity ratio algorithm and confirmed by field examination using existing 1:24 000-scale geologic maps and petrographic studies. Color composite images show that the alkalic rocks could be...
Waters associated with an active basaltic volcano, Kilauea, Hawaii: Variation in solute sources, 1973-1991
R.I. Tilling, B.F. Jones
1996, Geological Society of America Bulletin (108) 562-577
Chemical and isotopic analyses of samples collected from a December 1962-m-deep research borehole at the summit of Kilauea Volcano provide unique time-series data for composition of waters in the uppermost part of its hydrothermal system. These waters have a distinctive geochemical signature: a very low proportion of chloride relative to...
Uranium-series dating of carbonate (tufa) deposits associated with quaternary fluctuations of Pyramid Lake, Nevada
Barney J. Szabo, C. A. Bush, L. V. Benson
1996, Quaternary Research (45) 271-281
Uranium-series dating of dense tufa deposited in a small cave, at former lake margins, and in large tufa mounds clarifies the timing of lake-level variation during the past 400,000 yr in the Pyramid Lake basin. A moderate-sized lake occasionally overflowed the Emerson Pass sill at elevation of ???1207 m between...
Hydrogeology of the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project borehole KP-1 1. Hydraulic conditions adjacent to the well bore
Frederick L. Paillet, D. M. Thomas
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 11675-11682
Temperature and formation resistivity logs obtained in borehole KP-1 of the Hawaii Scientific Drilling Project indicate that the adjacent formation is characterized by several zones of distinctly different average temperature and water salinity. A series of hydraulic analyses and water sampling programs were conducted to rule out the possibility of...
Rupture distribution of the 1977 western Argentina earthquake
C.J. Langer, S. Hartzell
1996, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (94) 121-132
Teleseismic P and SH body waves are used in a finite-fault, waveform inversion for the rupture history of the 23 November 1977 western Argentina earthquake. This double event consists of a smaller foreshock (M0 = 5.3 ?? 1026 dyn-cm) followed about 20 s later by a larger main shock (M0...
Clinobisvanite, eulytite, and namibite from the Pala pegmatite district, San Diego Co., California, USA
Eugene E. Foord
1996, Mineralogical Magazine (60) 387-388
No abstract available....
Bulgarian archaeoastronomy site or Bulgarian quarry site?
R. K. Mark, B. W. Rogers
1996, Journal of Cave and Karst Studies (58) 56-58
[No abstract available]...
Earthquake prediction: The interaction of public policy and science
L.M. Jones
1996, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Earthquake prediction research has searched for both informational phenomena, those that provide information about earthquake hazards useful to the public, and causal phenomena, causally related to the physical processes governing failure on a fault, to improve our understanding of those processes. Neither informational nor causal phenomena are a subset of...
Bromine incorporation factors for trihalomethane formation for the Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio Rivers
R. E. Rathbun
1996, Science of the Total Environment (192) 111-118
The bromine incorporation factor describes the distribution of the four trihalomethane compounds in the mixture formed when a natural water is chlorinated. This factor was determined for the Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio Rivers by chlorinating water samples at three levels each of pH and free chlorine concentration. Samples were collected...
Using thermal-infrared imagery to delineate ground-water discharge
W.S.L. Banks, R. L. Paylor, W.B. Hughes
1996, Groundwater (34) 434-443
On March 8 and 9, 1992, a thermal-infrared-multispectral scanner (TIMS) was flown over two military ordnance disposal facilities at the Edgewood Area of Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. The data, collected by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, in cooperation with the U.S. Army and...
The reversibility of virus attachment to mineral surfaces
J.P. Loveland, J. N. Ryan, G.L. Amy, R.W. Harvey
1996, Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects (107) 205-221
Virus transport through groundwater is limited by attachment to mineral surfaces and inactivation. Current virus transport models do not consider the implications of the reversibility of virus attachment to minerals. To explore the reversibility of virus attachment to mineral surfaces, we attached PRD1, a bacteriophage considered to be a good...