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Page 4114, results 102826 - 102850

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Foraging ecology as related to the distribution of planktivorous auklets in the Bering Sea
George L. Hunt Jr., Nancy M. Harrison, John F. Piatt
1993, Conference Paper, The status, ecology and conservation of marine birds of the North Pacific
We review recent accounts of the foraging ecologies of  five species of small auklets found in the Bering Sea. These birds eat a wide variety of zooplankton and micronekton. Least Auklets Aethia pusilla and Whiskered Auklets A. pygmaea, as far as is known, primarily eat copepods, whereas Created Auklets A. cristatella appear to specialize...
Modelling passive margin sequence stratigraphy
M.S. Steckler, D. Reynolds, B. Coakley, B.A. Swift, R. D. Jarrard
1993, Book chapter, Sequence Stratigraphy and Facies Associations
We have modelled stratigraphic sequences to aid in deciphering the sedimentary response to sea-level change. Sequence geometry is found to be most sensitive to sea level, but other factors, including subsidence rate and sediment supply, can produce similar changes. Sediment loading and compaction also play a major role in generating...
Chick growth in the California Gull: Relationships with hatching asynchrony and parental age
Bruce H. Pugesek
1993, Colonial Waterbirds (16) 183-189
Chick mass and growth during a six-day period were investigated among California Gulls (Larus californicus) in 1979 and 1980. In broods of two, levels of hatching asynchrony between siblings ranging from 0 - 4 days were observed. Hatching asynchrony resulted in initial mass differences between siblings that persisted and accelerated...
Seasonal variations of Zn/Cu ratios in acid mine water from Iron Mountain, California
Charles N. Alpers, D. Kirk Nordstrom, J. Michael Thompson
1993, Book chapter, Environmental geochemistry of sulfide oxidation
Time-series data on Zn/Cu weight ratios from portal effluent compositions [(Zn/Cu)water] at Iron Mountain, California, show seasonal variations that can be related to the precipitation and dissolution of melanterite [(FeII,Zn,Cu)SO4·7H2O]. Mine water and actively forming melanterite were collected from underground mine workings and chemically analyzed. The temperature-dependent solubility of Zn-Cu-bearing...
Transport and natural attenuation of Cu, Zn, As, and Fe in the acid mine drainage of Leviathan and Bryant Creeks
Jenny G. Webster, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Kathleen S. Smith
1993, Book chapter, Environmental geochemistry of sulfide oxidation
The Leviathan and Bryant Creek (LBC) drainage system, on the border of California and Nevada, flows through overburden and waste from a former open-pit sulfur mine. The drainage contains acid mine waters with high concentrations of several trace elements, including Cu, Zn, and As, derived from oxidative weathering of sulfides...
Entrenchment and widening of the upper San Pedro River, Arizona
Richard Hereford
1993, GSA Special Papers (282) 1-46
The San Pedro River of southeast Arizona is a north-flowing tributary of the Gila River. The area of the drainage basin upstream of the 40-km-long study reach is about 3,200 km2. This study traces the historical evolution of the San Pedro River channel—specifically, the deepening, widening, and sediment deposition that...
Southern surface rupture associated with the 1992 M7.4 Landers Earthquake: Did it all happen during the mainshock?
S. E. Hough, J. Mori, E. Sembera, G. Glassmoyer, C. Mueller, S. Lydeen
1993, Geophysical Research Letters (20) 2615-2618
Approximately three minutes after the magnitude 7.4 Landers mainshock on 28 June 1992, a M5.7 aftershock occurred south of the mainshock epicenter, with a location of 34° 7.65′N, 116° 23.82′W. This aftershock was recorded on an array of portable digital seismic instruments deployed in Morongo Valley, 21 km southwest of...
Variations in magma supply rate at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
John J. Dvorak, Daniel Dzurisin
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 22255-22268
When an eruption of Kilauea lasts more than 4 months, so that a well-defined conduit has time to develop, magma moves freely through the volcano from a deep source to the eruptive site at a constant rate of 0.09 km3/yr. At other times, the magma supply rate to Kilauea, estimated...
Importance of model parameterization in finite fault inversions: Application to the 1974 Mw 8.0 Peru Earthquake
Stephen H. Hartzell, Charley Langer
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 22123-22134
The spatial and temporal slip distributions for the October 3, 1974 (Mw = 8.0), Peru subduction zone earthquake and its largest aftershock on November 9 (Ms = 7.1) are calculated and analyzed in terms of the inversion parameterization and tectonic significance. Teleseismic, long-period World-Wide Standard Seismograph Network, P and SH...
Seismic evidence for active magmatic underplating beneath the Basin and Range Province, western United States
Craig M. Jarchow, George A. Thompson, Rufus D. Catchings, Walter D. Mooney
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 22095-22108
Near-vertical and wide-angle seismic reflection data provide evidence for the presence of a magma body at the base of the crust beneath Buena Vista Valley in northwestern Nevada. The seismic response of this hypothesized magma body is characterized by high-amplitude, near-vertical P wave reflections and a comparably strong P-to-S converted...
Formation of left-lateral fractures within the Summit Ridge Shear Zone, 1989 Loma Prieta, California, Earthquake
Arvid M. Johnson, Robert W. Fleming
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 21823-21837
The 1989 Loma Prieta, California, earthquake is characterized by the lack of major, throughgoing, coseismic, right-lateral faulting along strands of the San Andreas fault zone in the epicentral area. Instead, throughout the Summit Ridge area there are zones of tension cracks and left-lateral fracture zones oriented about N45°W, that is,...
Deformation from 1973 to 1987 in the epicentral area of the 1959 Hebgen Lake, Montana, earthquake (Ms = 7.5)
James C. Savage, Michael Lisowski, W.H. Prescott, A.D. Pitt
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 2145-2153
A 40‐km aperture trilateration network centered on the 1959 Hebgen Lake earthquake epicenter has been surveyed in 1973, 1974, 1976, 1978, 1981, 1984, and 1987. The deformation inferred from those surveys is described roughly by a uniaxial, 0.266 ± 0.014 μstrain/yr, N15°E ± 1°extension that is uniform in both time...
Deformation from 1973 through 1991 in the epicentral area of the 1992 Landers, California, Earthquake (Ms = 7.5)
James C. Savage, Michael Lisowski, M. Murray
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 19951-19958
Deformation of a 50 × 60 km trilateration network that spans the epicenter of the 1992 Landers earthquake(Ms = 7.5) was measured by seven surveys over the 19 years preceding the earthquake. Three moderate earthquakes (1979 Homestead Valley, Ms = 5.6; 1986 North Palm Springs, Ms = 6.0; and 1992 Joshua Tree, Ms =...
Economic analysis of critical habitat designation for the desert tortoise (Mojave population)
Mel Schamberger, Timothy J. MacGillvray, Dirk D. Draper
1993, Report
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service emergency 1isted the Mojave population of the desert tortoise as endangered on August 4, 1989. The Mojave population formally was listed as threatened on April 2, 1990. The Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended, requires that the economic benefits and costs and other...
Exopolymer microenvironments of microbial flora: Multiple and interactive effects on trophic relationships
Alan W. Decho, Glenn R. Lopez
1993, Limnology and Oceanography (38) 1633-1645
Microbial cells in natural environments are often encased in different types of exopolymer secretions (EPS), ranging from tight capsules surrounding individual cells to the looser slime matrices of biofilms. The different physical and chemical properties of exopolymers could have secondary effects on trophic interactions between microbial cells and consumer animals....
Managing biological diversity
Fred B. Samson, Fritz L. Knopf
1993, Wildlife Society Bulletin (21) 509-514
Biological diversity is the variety of life and accompanying ecological processes (Off. Technol. Assess. 1987, Wilcove and Samson 1987, Keystone 1991). Conservation of biological diversity is a major environmental issue (Wilson 1988, Counc. Environ. Quality 1991). The health and future of the earth's ecological systems (Lubchenco et al....
Flow recommendations for maintaining riparian vegetation along the Upper Missouri River, Montana
Michael L. Scott, Gregor T. Auble, Jonathan M. Friedman, Lee S. Ischinger, Erik D. Eggleston, Mark A. Wondzell, Patrick B. Shafroth, Jennifer T. Back, Mette S. Jordan
1993, Report
Montana Power Company, Inc. (MPC) submitted a final license application to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) on November 30, 1992. In this application, MPC proposed a plan for the protection of fish, wildlife, habitat, and water-quality resources. One concern was maintenance of woody riparian vegetation along the...
Using a Geographic Information System to determine the relation between stream quality and geology in the Roberts Creek watershed, Clayton County, Iowa
Stephen J. Kalkhoff
1993, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (29) 989-996
A geographic information system (GIS) was used to determine the relation between the stream-water quality and underlying geology in Roberts Creek watershed, Clayton County, Iowa, for base-flow conditions during the spring and summer of 1988–90. Geologic, stream, basin and subbasin boundaries, and water-quality sampling-site coverages were created by digitizing available...