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Page 407, results 10151 - 10175

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Structure of the New England herring gull population
John A. Kadlec, William H. Drury
1968, Ecology (49) 644-676
Measurements of the rates of population increase, reproduction, and mortality together with an observed age ratio, were used to analyze the population of the Herring Gull in New England. Data from sporadic censuses prior to this study, aerial censuses by the authors, and National Audubon Society Christmas Bird Count indicated...
Monitoring of changes in quality of ground water
H. E. LeGrand
1968, Groundwater (6) 14-18
Ground water of acceptable quality is commonly interspersed with water of inferior quality. Water of inferior quality may be naturally occurring salty water commonly underlying fresh water, or it may be enclaves of contaminated water from wastes that lie in the fresh-water bodies. Disposal of wastes on and in the...
Age determination of blue-winged teal
C.W. Dane
1968, Journal of Wildlife Management (32) 267-274
Primary feather length, markings on the greater secondary coverts, and the degree of bill spotting were evaluated as characters for use in the spring to distinguish first-year, blue-winged teal (Anas discors) females from older ones. The length of the 10th primary feather did not prove suitable to separate different aged...
Well logging in ground‐water hydrology
W.S. Keys
1968, Groundwater (6) 10-18
In 1966 more than 50 billion gallons of water was pumped daily from an estimated 10 to 15 million water wells in the United States. This was more than one‐sixth of the national withdrawal of water. On the basis of past rates of increase, a much greater future use of ground water is suggested. Our annual investment in water wells is one‐half to three‐quarter...
Basalts dredged from the Amirante ridge, western Indian ocean
R.L. Fisher, C.G. Engel, T.W.C. Hilde
1968, Deep-Sea Research and Oceanographic Abstracts (15) 521-534
Oceanic tholeiitic basalts were dredged from 2500 to 3000 m depth on each flank of the Amirante Ridge, 1200 km southeast of Somalia in the western Indian Ocean, by R.V. Argo in 1964. One sample, probably shed from a flow or dike in basement beneath the coralline cap, gave a wholerock...
Geologic history of the continental margin of North America in the Bering Sea
D.W. Scholl, E. C. Buffington, D.M. Hopkins
1968, Marine Geology (6) 297-330
The North American continental margin beneath the Bering Sea is nearly 1,300 km long and extends from Alaska to eastern Siberia. The margin is a canyon-scarred 3,200–3,400-m high escarpment separating one of the world's largest epicontinental seas (the shallow Bering Sea) and the...
Activity product constant of cryolite at 25°C and one atmosphere using selective-ion electrodes to estimate sodium and fluoride activities
C. E. Roberson, J.D. Hem
1968, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (32) 1343-1351
The activity product constant of cryolite (Na3AlF6) at 25°C and 1 atm total pressure was calculated from data for solutions from which synthetic cryolite or mixtures of cryolite and a solid apparently related to ralstonite had precipitated. The activities of fluoride and of sodium were estimated using specific ion...
Mineralogy as a function of depth in the prehistoric Makaopuhi tholeiitic lava lake, Hawaii
B.W. Evans, J.G. Moore
1968, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (17) 85-115
The electron probe X-ray microanalyzer has been used to determine the compositional variability of the groundmass minerals and glass in 10 specimens from a complete 225-foot section of the prehistoric tholeiitic lava lake of Makaopuhi Crater, Hawaii. The order of beginning of crystallization was: (1) chromite, (2) olivine, (3) augite,...
Infectious pancreatic necrosis: Selection of virus-free stock from a population of carrier trout
K. Wolf, M. C. Quimby, C. P. Carlson, G. L. Bullock
1968, Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada (25) 383-391
Infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN) is a virulent disease of young trouts and is easily transmitted from infected animals through water and with eggs. At present, the most effective control measure consists of propagation of specific pathogen-free stock. Methods are described for using fish cell cultures to detect IPN virus in...
Paleomagnetism and the compositions of highly-oxidised iron-titanium oxides in basalts
P.J. Smith
1968, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (1) 88-92
As a preliminary step towards determination of the source of the natural remanence in highly-oxidised basalt lava flows, electron probe microanalysis has been carried out on the two main phases in each of two types of highly-oxidised iron-titanium oxide. The discovery of the source of NRM in these basalts is...
Effects of the earthquake of March 27, 1964, at Seward, Alaska
Richard W. Lemke
1967, Professional Paper 542-E
Seward, in south-central Alaska, was one of the towns most devastated by the Alaska earthquake of March 27, 1964. The greater part of Seward is built on an alluvial fan-delta near the head of Resurrection Bay on the southeast coast of the Kenai Peninsula. It is one of the few...
Roughness characteristics of natural channels
Harry Hawthorne Barnes
1967, Water Supply Paper 1849
Color photographs and descriptive data are presented for 50 stream channels for which roughness coefficients have been determined. All hydraulic computations involving flow in open channels require an evaluation of the roughness characteristics of the channel. In the absence of a satisfactory quantitative procedure this evaluation remains chiefly an art....
Marine sediment sample preparation for analysis for low concentrations of fine detrital gold
H. Edward Clifton, Arthur Hubert, R. Lawrence Phillips
1967, Circular 545
Analyses by atomic absorption for detrital gold in more than 2,000 beach, offshore, marine-terrace, and alluvial sands from southern Oregon have shown that the values determined from raw or unconcentrated sediment containing small amounts of gold are neither reproducible nor representative of the initial sample. This difficulty results from a...
Ground-water conditions and geologic reconnaissance of the Upper Sevier River basin, Utah
Carl H. Carpenter, Gerald B. Robinson, Louis Jay Bjorklund
1967, Water Supply Paper 1836
The upper Sevier River basin is in south-central Utah and includes an area of about 2,400 .square miles of high plateaus and valleys. It comprises the entire Sevier River drainage basin above Kingston, including the East Fork Sevier River and its tributaries. The basin was investigated to determine general ground-water...
Geohydrologic reconnaissance of the Soquel-Aptos area, Santa Cruz County, California
J. P. Akers, J.J. Hickey
1967, Open-File Report 67-3
This report summarizes existing knowledge on the geohydrology of the Soquel-Aptos area, near, and including the eastern part, of Santa Cruz, California, and outlines work necessary for making a complete appraisal of the water resources of the area.The area is underlain mostly by marine and continental sedimentary deposits of Tertiary...
Time and space relationships of the taconic allochthon and autochthon
E. Zen
1967, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (97) 1-82
The Taconic rock sequence extends from near Sudbury, Vermont, to near Poughkeepsie, New York, a length of about 150 miles; and from just west of the Green Mountain Range and Berkshire Highlands to the valleys of the Hudson River and Lake Champlain, a width of about 20 miles. The Taconic rocks are now in...
Salt resources of Thailand
Louis S. Gardner
1967, Report of Investigation - Thailand, Department of Mineral Resources (11)
In recent years beds of rock salt, as much as 820 feet thick, have been found in the subsurface of northeastern Thailand in a thick sequence of 'red beds' of the Maha Sarakam formation at the top of the Korat group of Mesozoic age. These salt-bearing rocks are widespread in...
Test hold in aquifer with many water-bearing zones at Jacksonville, Florida
G.W. Leve, D. A. Goolsby
1967, Groundwater (5) 18-22
One of the deepest water‐exploration wells in the southeastern United States was completed in 1966 at Jacksonville, Florida. It was drilled to a depth of nearly 2,500 feet to supply geologic and hydrologic information on the deeper unexplored part of the Floridan aquifer. This aquifer consists of a series of water producing zones separated by nonproducing zones. An important new fresh‐water producing zone was found, and the contact between...
Some oligochaetes from Lake Michigan
Jarl K. Hiltunen
1967, Transactions of the American Microscopical Society (86) 433-454
Twenty-six species of Tubificidae, 12 Naididae, and 1 Lumbriculidae were found in three regions of Lake Michigan- Green Bay, the southern end of the lake proper, and the harbor at Ludington, Michigan. One new naidid species is described. Methods of identification of some species are discussed and illustrated. The abundance...
Exploration for artesian water in the Sokoto Basin, Nigeria
H. R. Anderson, William Ogilbee
1967, Groundwater (5) 42-46
The Sokoto basin in semiarid northwestern Nigeria contains Cretaceous and Tertiary semiconsolidated deposits that dip gently northwest off an oldland of pre-Cretaceous crystalline rocks. Until recent years the dug well has been the chief source of ground water for the Hausa cultivators and the pastoral Fulani inhabitants of the region....
Holocene changes in sea level: Evidence in Micronesia
F.P. Shepard, Joseph R. Curray, W.A. Newman, A.L. Bloom, N.D. Newell, J. I. Tracey Jr., H.H. Veeh
1967, Science (157) 542-544
Investigation of 33 islands, scattered widely across the Caroline and Marshall Island groups in the Central Pacific revealed no emerged reefs in which corals had unquestionably formed in situ, or other direct evidence of postglacial high stands of sea level. Low unconsolidated rock terraces and ridges of reefflat...
Epifauna of the Patuxent River Estuary, Maryland, for 1963 and 1964
R. L. Cory
1967, Chesapeake Science (8) 71-89
Methods of collection and analysis of epifaunal communities from six stations in the Patuxent estuary are described. The stations were distributed from Solomons near the mouth of the estuary, upstream to Lower Marlboro, near the limit of salt water intrusion. Species composition and abundance, seasons of attachment, and production of the epifaunal community were...
Post-paleozoic radiometric ages and their relevance to fault movements, Northern Southeastern Alaska
R. A. Loney, David A. Brew, Marvin A. Lanphere
1967, GSA Bulletin (78) 511-526
Recently determined lead-alpha and potassium-argon ages from northern southeastern Alaska indicate major plutonic events in the Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Tertiary; in contrast, previous studies suggested that only one complex Jurassic and Cretaceous event occurred. The ages presented in this paper indicate the following Mesozoic and Tertiary plutonic events: Middle or...
Results of the second phase of the drought-disaster test-drilling program near Morristown, N.J.
John Vecchioli, William D. Nichols, Bronius Nemickas
1967, New Jersey Division of Water Policy and Supply Water Resources Circular 17
The continued drought in northeastern New Jersey through the summer of 1966 with its attendant water-supply problems resulted in an extension of the drought-disaster test-drilling program originally requested by the Office of Emergency Planning on August 30, 1965. Authorization to continue test drilling was fiven by the Office of Emergency...
Molecular characteristics versus biological activity
Vernon C. Applegate, Manning A. Smith, Bennett R. Willeford
1967, Chemistry (40) 28-30
The molecular characteristics of mononitrophenols containing halogens not only play a key role in their biological activity but provide a novel example of selective toxicity among vertebrate animals. It has been reported that efforts to control the parasitic sea lamprey in the Great Lakes are directed at present to...