Methods of characterizing fluid movement and chemical transport in fractured rock
Paul A. Hsieh, Allen M. Shapiro, C.C. Barton, F.P. Haeni, C. D. Johnson, C. Martin, F.L. Paillet, T. C. Winter, D.L. Wright
J.T. Cheney, J. Christopher Hepburn, editor(s)
1993, Book chapter, Field trip guidebook for the Northeastern United States
No abstract available. ...
Establishment of Populus deltoides under simulated alluvial groundwater declines
Charles A. Segelquist, Michael L. Scott, Gregor T. Auble
1993, American Midland Naturalist (130) 274-285
Establishment, growth, and survival of seedlings of Populus deltoides subsp. monilifera (plains cottonwood) were examined in an experimental facility simulating five rates of declining alluvial groundwater. The treatments were permanent saturation, drawdown rates of 0.4, 0.7, 2.9 cm/d and immediate drainage. The experiment was conducted outdoors in planters...
The influence of mountain meteorology on precipitation chemistry at low and high elevations of the Colorado Front Range, USA
A. Scott Denning
1993, Atmospheric Environment (27) 2337-2349
We explored the seasonal characteristics in wet deposition chemistry for two sites located at different elevations along the east slope of the Colorado Front Range in Rocky Mountain National Park. Seasonally separated precipitation was stratified into highly concentrated (high salt), dilute (low salt), or acid-dominated precipitation groups. These groups and...
Regional assessment of factors related to herbicides and nitrate in near-surface aquifers of the midcontinent
M. R. Burkart, D.W. Kolpin
1993, Conference Paper
No abstract available....
Does magmatism influence low-angle normal faulting?: Comment and reply
An Yin, Tom Parsons, George A. Thompson
1993, Geology (21) 956-958
No abstract available....
The marine snail, Cerithidea californica, matures at smaller sizes where parasitism is high
K. D. Lafferty
1993, Oikos (68) 3-11
I investigated life-history and parasitism in the salt marsh snail, Cerithidea californica. Latitude and growing conditions were important factors determining maturation size. After accounting for environmental variation, there was a negative association between the maturation size of snails and the prevalence of parasitic castration by larval trematodes. As predicted by...
Arsenate inhibition of denitrification in nitrate contaminated sediments
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle
1993, Soil Biology and Biochemistry (25) 1459-1462
Short-term and chronic exposure effects of arsenic on sediment denitrification were evaluated. N2O production rates were determined for As-contaminated (chronic treatment) and uncontaminated (short-term treatment) sediments exposed to a range of As concentrations. The As-containing sediments, collected from an herbicide-contaminated shallow aquifer, exhibited significantly lower rates of denitrification with increasing...
Simulating the volatilization of solvents in unsaturated soils during laboratory and field infiltration experiments
H. Jean Cho, Peter R. Jaffe, James A. Smith
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 3329-3342
This paper describes laboratory and field experiments which were conducted to study the dynamics of trichloroethylene (TCE) as it volatilized from contaminated groundwater and diffused in the presence of infiltrating water through the unsaturated soil zone to the land surface. The field experiments were conducted at the Picatinny Arsenal, which...
Long-term frozen storage of stream water samples for dissolved orthophosphate, nitrate plus nitrite, and ammonia analysis
Ronald J. Avanzino, Vance C. Kennedy
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 3357-3362
Many researchers have used freezing as an effective, short-term, water sample preservation method for subsequent nutrient analysis. In this study, filtered samples held at −16±2°C for 4–8 years were reanalyzed for orthophosphate, nitrate plus nitrite, and ammonia. Orthophosphate and ammonia concentrations decreased by 0.2 μg P/L and 5 μg N/L,...
Effect of mining and related activities on the sediment trace element geochemistry of Lake Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, USA. Part I: Surface sediments
Arthur J. Horowitz, Kent A. Elrick, Robert B. Cook
1993, Hydrological Processes (7) 403-423
During the summer of 1989 surface sediment samples were collected in Lake Coeur d'Alene, the Coeur d'Alene River and the St Joe River, Idaho, at a density of approximately one sample per square kilometre. Additional samples were collected from the banks of the South Fork of the Coeur d'Alene and...
Survival of hatching-year female canvasbacks wintering on Chesapeake Bay
G. Michael Haramis, Dennis G. Jorde, Christine M. Bunck
1993, Journal of Wildlife Management (57) 763-771
Low annual survival of hatching-year (HY) females is a critical management concern for canvasbacks (Aythya valisineria), and may contribute substantially to reduced reproductive potential and the male-biased sex ratio of the species. To evaluate the contribution of mortality on a traditional wintering area to low annual survival, we estimated survival...
Influence of Pb on microbial activity in Pb-contaminated soils
J. E. Landmeyer, P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle
1993, Soil Biology and Biochemistry (25) 1465-1466
Investigations of the influence of Pb on soil microbial communities have focused on Pb concentrations of 1 g kg-’ or less (Barkay et al., 1985; Capone et al., 1983; Chang and Broadbent, 1981; Doelman and Haanstra, 1979; Trevors et al., 1985). However, a number of environments exist in which Pb...
Use of mesoscale models for simulation of seasonal weather and climate change for the Rocky Mountain States
R. A. Pielke, Jill Baron, T. Chase, J. Copeland, Timothy G.F. Kittel, T. J. Lee, R. Walko, W. Zeng
1993, Book, Second international conference/workshop on integrating geographic information systems and environmental modelling
No abstract available....
Galileo observations of Post-Imbrium lunar craters during the first Earth-Moon flyby
Alfred S. McEwen, Lisa R. Gaddis, Gerhard Neukum, Harald Hoffman, Carle M. Pieters, James W. Head
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (98)
Copernican‐age craters are among the most conspicuous features seen on the far side and western limb of the Moon in the Galileo multispectral images acquired in December 1990. Among the new morphologic observations of far‐side craters are bright rays, continuous ejecta deposits, and dark rings associated with probable impact‐melt veneers....
Recent growth increases in old-growth longleaf pine
D.C. West, T.W. Doyle, M.L. Tharp, J.J. Beauchamp, William J. Platt, D.J. Downing
1993, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (23) 846-853
Longleaf pine (Pinuspalustris Mill.) tree-ring data were obtained from an old-growth stand located in Thomas County, Georgia. The tree-ring chronology from the pine stand is composed of a collection of cores extracted from 26 trees ranging in age from approximately 100 to 400 years. These cores were prepared, dated, and measured,...
Helium isotope and gas discharge variations associated with crustal unrest in Long Valley Caldera, California, 1989-1992
M.L. Sorey, B. M. Kennedy, W.C. Evans, C. D. Farrar, G.A. Suemnicht
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 15871-15889
The onset of anomalous seismic activity in 1989 beneath Mammoth Mountain on the southwestern rim of the Long Valley caldera, California, was followed within ∼4 months by a large increase in 3He/4He in vapor discharged from a fumarole on the north side of the mountain. The helium isotopic ratio at this...
Phase boundaries and mantle convection
J.E. Vidale, T. Lay
1993, Science (261) 1401-1402
No abstract available....
A new anoline lizard (Phenacosaurus) from the highland of Cerro de la Neblina, Southern Venezuela
C.W. Myers, E.E. Williams, R.W. McDiarmid
1993, American Museum Novitates (No. 3070)
Phenacosaurus neblininus, new species, was discovered during the 1984-1985 expedition to Cerro de la Neblina on the Venezuelan-Brazilian border. It was found at several highland camps (> 1600 m) but seems unaccountably rare, with only six specimens collected. The closest relative of this lizard may be another new species (Williams...
Sharpness of upper-mantle discontinuities determined from high-frequency reflections
H.M. Benz, J.E. Vidale
1993, Nature (365) 147-150
An understanding of the nature of seismic discontinuities in the Earth's upper mantle is important for understanding mantle processes: in particular, the amplitude and sharpness of these discontinuities are critical for assessing models of upper-mantle phase changes and chemical layering. So far, seismic studies aimed at determining the thickness and...
Paleomagnetic and 40Ar/39Ar evidence for remagnetization of Mesozoic oceanic rocks on the Vizcaino Peninsula, Baja California Sur, Mexico
Jonathan T. Hagstrum, Margarita Lopez Martinez, Derek York
1993, Geophysical Research Letters (20) 1831-1834
Previously published paleomagnetic data for Upper Jurassic pillow lavas of the Vizcaino Peninsula indicate that they were deposited near a paleolatitude of 14°N or S. Whether or not this result implies northward transport with respect to the continental interior has been controversial due to the lack of reliable Jurassic reference...
Upper crustal densities derived from sea floor gravity measurements: Northern Juan De Fuca Ridge
Mark L. Holmes, H. Paul Johnson
1993, Geophysical Research Letters (20) 1871-1874
A transect of sea floor gravity stations has been analyzed to determine upper crustal densities on the Endeavour segment of the northern Juan de Fuca Ridge. Data were obtained using ALVIN along a corridor perpendicular to the axis of spreading, over crustal ages from 0 to 800,000 years. Calculated elevation...
The depth dependence of earthquake duration and implications for rupture mechanisms
J.E. Vidale, H. Houston
1993, Nature (365) 45-47
The duration of rupture is a fundamental characteristic of earthquakes, and is important for understanding the mechanics of faulting1,2. The complexity of the seismic source and the incoherence of the high-frequency seismic wavefield often inhibit the identification, location and timing of features in the later part of earthquake rupture. Here...
Changing nest placement of Hawaiian Common Amakihi during the breeding cycle
Charles van Riper III, M. D. Kern, M. K. Sogge
1993, The Wilson Bulletin (105) 436-447
We studied the nesting behavior of the Common Amakihi (Hemignathus virens) from 1970-1981 on the island of Hawaii to determine if the species alters nest placement over a protracted 9-month breeding season. Birds preferentially chose the southwest quadrant of trees in which to build nests during all phases of the...
Growth and survival of Mountain Plovers
Brian J. Miller, Fritz L. Knopf
1993, Journal of Field Ornithology (64) 500-506
Growth and survival rates of Mountain Plovers (Charadrius montanus) were monitored using radiotelemetry from hatching until birds left the breeding grounds on the Pawnee National Grassland, Weld County, Colorado. Chick weights increased logarithmically (r) = 0.961) and tarsus length linearly (r = 0.948) with age. Using the average...
Toward conservation of midcontinental shorebird migrations
Susan K. Skagen, Fritz L. Knopf
1993, Conservation Biology (7) 533-541
Shorebirds represent a highly diverse group of species, many of which experience tremendous energy demands associated with long-distance migratory flights. Transcontinental migrants are dependent upon dynamic freshwater wetlands for stopover resources essential for replenishment of lipid reserves and completion of migration. Patterns of shorebird migration across midcontinental wetlands were detected...