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Page 3807, results 95151 - 95175

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The development of floristic provinciality during the Middle and Late Paleozoic
C. Wnuk
1996, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (90) 5-40
Phytogeographic reconstructions have been published for most Paleozoic series since the Pr??i??doli??, but there have been few attempts to synthesize this data into a comprehensive review of the characteristics and causes of the changing phytogeographic patterns for the whole Paleozoic history of the vascular flora. Existing floristic analyses have been...
Subtidal circulation patterns in a shallow, highly stratified estuary: Mobile Bay, Alabama
M.A. Noble, W.W. Schroeder, W.J. Wiseman Jr., H. F. Ryan, G. Gelfenbaum
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (101) 25689-25703
Mobile Bay is a wide (25-50 km), shallow (3 m), highly stratified estuary on the Gulf coast of the United States. In May 1991 a series of instruments that measure near-surface and near-bed current, temperature, salinity, and middepth pressure were deployed for a year-long study of the bay. A full...
Shear wave velocity structure in North America from large-scale waveform inversions of surface waves
D. Alsina, R.L. Woodward, R.K. Snieder
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 15969-15986
A two-step nonlinear and linear inversion is carried out to map the lateral heterogeneity beneath North America using surface wave data. The lateral resolution for most areas of the model is of the order of several hundred kilometers. The most obvious feature in the tomographic images is the rapid transition...
Seismic anisotropy of the crystalline crust: What does it tell us?
Wolfgang Rabbel, Walter D. Mooney
1996, Terra Nova (8) 16-21
The study of the directional dependence of seismic velocities (seismic anisotropy) promises more refined insight into mineral composition and physical properties of the crystalline crust than conventional deep seismic refraction or reflection profiles providing average values of P-and S-wave velocities. The alignment of specific minerals by ductile rock deformation, for...
More flowers or new cladodes? Environmental correlates and biological consequences of sexual reproduction in a Sonoran Desert prickly pear cactus, Opuntia engelmannii
Janice E. Bowers
1996, Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club (123) 34-40
Should a platyopuntia expend all aerolar meristems in flower production, now new cladodes could be produced, and further reproductive effort and vegetative growth would cease. To investigate the trade-off between flower and cladode production, the numbers of flowers, fruits, and cladodes were monitored for 4 years on 30 Opuntia engelmannii...
Degassing during magma ascent in the Mule Creek vent (USA)
M.V. Stasiuk, J. Barclay, M.R. Carroll, Claude Jaupart, J.C. Ratte, R. S. J. Sparks, S.R. Tait
1996, Bulletin of Volcanology (58) 117-130
The structures and textures of the rhyolite in the Mule Creek vent (New Mexico, USA) indicate mechanisms by which volatiles escape from silicic magma during eruption. The vent outcrop is a 300-m-high canyon wall comprising a section through the top of a feeder conduit, vent and the base of an...
Erosional and depositional patterns associated with the 1993 Missouri River floods inferred from SIR-C and TOPSAR radar data
N.R. Izenberg, R. E. Arvidson, R.A. Brackett, S.S. Saatchi, G.R. Osburn, J. Dohrenwend
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (101) 23149-23167
The Missouri River floods of 1993 caused significant and widespread damage to the floodplains between Kansas City and St. Louis. Immediately downstream of levee breaks, flood waters scoured the bottoms. As the floodwaters continued, they spread laterally and deposited massive amounts of sand as crevasse splays on top of agricultural...
A semiclosed recirculating water system for high-density culture of rainbow trout
J.M. Heinen, J. A. Hankins, A.L. Weber, B.J. Watten
1996, Progressive Fish-Culturist (58) 11-22
Water recirculating systems for fish culture are potentially desirable for conserving water and reducing heating requirements, maximizing production of fish under water and space limitations, minimizing effluent problems, and maintaining better control over environmental factors. A semiclosed recirculating‐water system for intensive culture of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss is described. The system used...
Estimation of rates of aerobic hydrocarbon biodegradation by simulation of gas transport in the unsaturated zone
Matthew A. Lahvis, Arthur L. Baehr
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 2231-2249
The distribution of oxygen and carbon dioxide gases in the unsaturated zone provides a geochemical signature of aerobic hydrocarbon degradation at petroleum product spill sites. The fluxes of these gases are proportional to the rate of aerobic biodegradation and are quantified by calibrating a mathematical transport model to the oxygen...
Sea-level records at ~80 ka from tectonically stable platforms: Florida and Bermuda
K.R. Ludwig, D.R. Muhs, K. R. Simmons, R. B. Halley, E.A. Shinn
1996, Geology (24) 211-214
Studies from tectonically active coasts on New Guinea and Barbados have suggested that sea level at ∼ 80 ka was significantly lower than present, whereas data from the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of North America indicate an ∼ 80 ka sea level close...
Assessing habitat selection when availability changes
Stephen M. Arthur, Bryan F. J. Manly, Lyman L. McDonald, Gerald W. Garner
1996, Ecology (77) 215-227
We present a method of comparing data on habitat use and availability that allows availability to differ among observations. This method is applicable when habitats change over time and when animals are unable to move throughout a predetermined study area between observations. We used maximum—likelihood techniques to derive an index...
Artifact correction and absolute radiometric calibration techniques employed in the Landsat 7 image assessment system
Wayne C. Boncyk, Brian L. Markham, John L. Barker, Dennis Helder
1996, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 1996 International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, IGARSS'96. Part 1 (of 4)
The Landsat-7 Image Assessment System (IAS), part of the Landsat-7 Ground System, will calibrate and evaluate the radiometric and geometric performance of the Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM +) instrument. The IAS incorporates new instrument radiometric artifact correction and absolute radiometric calibration techniques which overcome some limitations to calibration accuracy...
Den use by arctic foxes (Alopex lagopus) in a subarctic region of western Alaska
R. Michael Anthony
1996, Canadian Journal of Zoology (74) 627-631
Distribution, abundance, and use of arctic fox dens located in coastal tundra communities of the Yukon–Kuskokwim delta were determined in studies from 1985 to 1990. Dens were denser and less complex than those described in studies conducted above the Arctic Circle. Eighty-three dens of varying complexity were found in the...
Uncertainty and instream flow standards
D. Castleberry, J. Cech, D. Erman, D. Hankin, M. Healey, M. Kondolf, M. Mengel, M. Mohr, P. Moyle, Jennifer L. Nielsen, T. Speed, J. Williams
1996, Fisheries (21) 20-21
Several years ago, Science published an important essay (Ludwig et al. 1993) on the need to confront the scientific uncertainty associated with managing natural resources. The essay did not discuss instream flow standards explicitly, but its arguments apply. At an April 1995 workshop in Davis, California, all 12 participants agreed...
Spatial radon anomalies on active faults in California
C.-Y. King, B.-S. King, William C. Evans, W. Zhang
1996, Applied Geochemistry (11) 497-510
Radon emanation has been observed to be anomalously high along active faults in many parts of the world. We tested this relationship by conducting and repeating soil air radon surveys with a portable radon meter across several faults in California. The results confirm the existence of fault-associated radon anomalies, which...
Sand boils induced by the 1993 Mississippi River flood: Could they one day be misinterpreted as earthquake-induced liquefaction?
Y. Li, J. Craven, E.S. Schweig, S. F. Obermeier
1996, Geology (24) 171-174
In areas that are seismically active but lacking clear surficial faulting, many paleoearthquake studies depend on the interpretation of ancient liquefaction features (sand blows) as indicators of prehistoric seismicity. Sand blows, however, can be mimicked by nonseismic sand boils formed by water seeping...
Hydrogeologic controls on the groundwater interactions with an acidic lake in karst terrain, Lake Barco, Florida
T. M. Lee
1996, Water Resources Research (32) 831-844
Transient groundwater interactions and lake stage were simulated for Lake Barco, an acidic seepage lake in the mantled karst of north central Florida. Karst subsidence features affected groundwater flow patterns in the basin and groundwater fluxes to and from the lake. Subsidence features peripheral to the lake intercepted potential groundwater...
Pesticide distributions in surface water
J. K. Stamer, M.E. Wieczorek
1996, Journal - American Water Works Association (88) 79-87
The distribution of pesticide concentrations at two study sites points to herbicides that may affect management of public water supplies.Distributions of concentrations of 46 pesticides were documented from May 1992 through March 1994 for Maple Creek near Nickerson, Neb., and Platte River at Louisville, Neb. As their source of public...
Volumetric analysis of a New England barrier system using ground-penetrating-radar and coring techniques
S. Van Heteren, D. M. FitzGerald, D.C. Barber, J. T. Kelley, D. F. Belknap
1996, Journal of Geology (104) 471-483
Ground-penetrating-radar (GPR) profiles calibrated with core data allow accurate assessments of coastal barrier volumes. We applied this procedure successfully to the barrier system along Saco Bay, Maine (USA), as part of a sediment-budget study that focused on present-day sand volumes in various...
Characterization of metal adsorption variability in a sand and gravel aquifer, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, U.S.A
C. C. Fuller, J.A. Davis, J.A. Coston, E. Dixon
1996, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (22) 165-187
Several geochemical properties of an aquifer sediment that control metal-ion adsorption were investigated to determine their potential use as indicators of the spatial variability of metal adsorption. Over the length of a 4.5-m-long core from a sand and gravel aquifer, lead (Pb2+) and zinc (Zn2+) adsorption at constant chemical conditions...
A first application of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for screening cyclodiene insecticides in ground water
T. R. Dombrowski, E.M. Thurman, G. B. Mohrman
1996, ACS Symposium Series (646) 148-154
A commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) plate kit for screening of cyclodiene insecticides (aldrin, chlordane, dieldrin, endosulfan, endrin, and heptachlor) was evaluated for sensitivity, cross reactivity, and overall performance using ground-water samples from a contaminated site. Ground-water contaminants included several pesticide compounds and their manufacturing by-products, as well as...
The Springdale, Utah, landslide: An extraordinary event
R.W. Jibson, E. L. Harp
1996, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (2) 137-150
The most dramatic geologic effect of the M-5.7 St. George, Utah earthquake of 2 September 1992 was the triggering of the 14,000,000-m3 Springdale, Utah landslide. The roughly 10 m of landslide movement destroyed three houses, threatened several condominiums, disrupted utility lines, and temporarily closed the southwest entrance to Zion National...
The southern California uplift and associated earthquakes
R. O. Castle, R. L. Bernknopf
1996, Geophysical Research Letters (23) 3011-3014
Southern California earthquakes ≥ M5.5 during the period 1955/01/01–1994/01/17 were concentrated along or adjacent to the south flank of the southern California uplift, as defined both at its culmination and following its partial collapse. Spatial clustering of these earthquakes within three more-or-less distinct groups suggests either...
Movement of nitrate fertilizer to glacial till and runoff from a claypan soil
D. W. Blevins, D.H. Wilkison, B. P. Kelly, S. R. Silva
1996, Journal of Environmental Quality (25) 584-593
Although water from 20 to 25% of shallow farmstead wells in northern Missouri has concentrations of nitrate (NO3/-) exceeding 10 mg L-1 as nitrogen (N), many potential sources for this NO3/- are usually present. A field experiment was designed to trace and isolate the amount of a single application of...