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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Fixed-wing airplane versus helicopter surveys of manatees (Trichechus manatus)
Galen B. Rathbun
1988, Marine Mammal Science (4) 71-75
The abundance of manatees, as with most marine mammals, is difficult to determine because they are visible for only short periods of time while at the surface of the water (Eberhardt et al. 1979, Powell et al. 1981). Aerial surveys are generally considered to be the most accurate method of...
Trends in lead concentrations in major U.S. rivers and their relation to historical changes in gasoline-lead consumption
R. B. Alexander, R. A. Smith
1988, Water Resources Bulletin (24)
Declines in concentrations of dissolved lead occurred at nearly two-thirds of 306 locations on major U.S. rivers from 1974 to 1985. Declines in dissolved lead concentrations are statistically significant (p < 0.10) at approximately one-third of the sampling locations. Statistically significant increases in dissolved lead concentrations occurred at only 6...
Groundwater flow and transport modeling
Leonard F. Konikow, J.W. Mercer
1988, Journal of Hydrology (100) 379-409
Deterministic, distributed-parameter, numerical simulation models for analyzing groundwater flow and transport problems have come to be used almost routinely during the past decade. A review of the theoretical basis and practical use of groundwater flow and solute transport models is used to illustrate...
Concurrent mobile on-site and in situ striped bass contaminant and water quality studies in the Choptank River and upper Chesapeake Bay
L. W. Hall Jr., S. J. Bushong, M.C. Ziegenfuss, W. S. Hall, R. L. Herman
1988, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (7) 815-830
In situ and mobile on-site striped bass prolarval and yearling survival studies were conducted in the Choptank River and in the Chesapeake and Delaware (C & D) Canal area of the Upper Chesapeake Bay. Extensive chemical analyses of both organic and inorganic contaminants in the habitat water were performed and water...
The chemical evolution of a travertine-depositing stream: Geochemical processes and mass transfer reactions
Michelle M. Lorah, Janet S. Herman
1988, Water Resources Research (24) 1541-1552
This field study focuses on quantitatively defining the chemical changes occurring in Falling Spring Creek, a travertine-depositing stream located in Alleghany County, Virginia. The processes of CO2outgassing and calcite precipitation or dissolution control the chemical evolution of the stream. The observed chemical composition of the water was used with the...
The design and use of a hydraulic potentiomanometer for direct measurement of differences in hydraulic head between groundwater and surface water
T. C. Winter, J. W. LaBaugh, P.O. Rosenberry
1988, Limnology and Oceanography (33) 1209-1214
The hydraulic potentiomanometer described herein consists of a potentiometer connected to a manometer by a flexible tube. The device is used to directly measure the direction of seepage as well as the hydraulic-head difference between groundwater and surface water. The device works most effectively in sandy materials. For accurate measurements...
Absence of strain accumulation in the Shumagin seismic gap, Alaska, 1980-1987
M. Lisowski, J.C. Savage, W.H. Prescott, W.K. Gross
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 7909-7922
Measurements of the deformation of a trilateration network in the Shumagin seismic gap in the interval 1980–1987 failed to detect any significant strain accumulation (observed extension rate in the direction of plate convergence 0.00±0.03 μstrain/yr). Dislocation models of the subduction process and measurements at a comparable network at a known...
Determining transit losses for water deliveries by use of stream-aquifer models
Russell K. Livingston
1988, Conference Paper
Hydrologic modeling of stream-aquifer interaction commonly has been used to quantify transit losses associated with water deliveries, such as those from reservoir storage. This technique requires estimation of model parameters that include stage-discharge relations, channel-storage coefficient, aquifer transmissivity, and aquifer-storage coefficient. Because data to reliably estimate or calibrate these parameters...
Inversion for slip distribution using teleseismic P waveforms: North Palm Springs, Borah Peak, and Michoacan earthquakes
C. Mendoza, S.H. Hartzell
1988, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (78) 1092-1111
We have inverted the teleseismic P waveforms recorded by stations of the Global Digital Seismograph Network for the 8 July 1986 North Palm Springs, California, the 28 October 1983 Borah Peak, Idaho, and the 19 September 1985 Michoacan, Mexico, earthquakes to recover the distribution of slip on each of the...
Simulation technique for modeling flow on floodplains and in coastal wetlands
Raymond W. Schaffranek, Robert A. Baltzer
1988, Conference Paper
The system design is premised on a proven, areal two-dimensional, finite-difference flow/transport model which is supported by an operational set of computer programs for input data management and model output interpretation. The purposes of the project are (1) to demonstrate the utility of the model for providing useful highway design...
Statistical Methods and Sampling Design for Estimating Step Trends in Surface-Water Quality
Robert M. Hirsch
1988, Water Resources Bulletin (24) 493-503
This paper addresses two components of the problem of estimating the magnitude of step trends in surface water quality. The first is finding a robust estimator appropriate to the data characteristics expected in water-quality time series. The J. L. Hodges-E. L. Lehmann class of estimators is found to be robust...
Dipolar-dephasing 13C NMR studies of decomposed wood and coalified xylem tissue: Evidence for chemical structural changes associated with defunctionalization of lignin structural units during coalification
Patrick G. Hatcher
1988, Energy & Fuels (2) 48-58
A series of decomposed and coalified gymnosperm woods was examined by conventional solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and by dipolar-dephasing NMR techniques. The results of these NMR studies for a histologically related series of samples provide clues as to the nature of codification reactions that lead to the defunctionalization...
Near-infrared reflectance spectra of mixtures of kaolin-group minerals: Use in clay mineral studies
James K. Crowley, Norma Vergo
1988, Clays and Clay Minerals (36) 310-316
Near-infrared (NIR) reflectance spectra for mixtures of ordered kaolinite and ordered dickite have been found to simulate the spectral response of disordered kaolinite. The amount of octahedral vacancy disorder in nine disordered kaolinite samples was estimated by comparing the sample spectra to the spectra of reference mixtures. The resulting estimates...
Assessing the Birkenes Model of stream acidification using a multisignal calibration methodology
Richard P. Hooper, Alex Stone, Nils Christophersen, de Grosbois, Hans M. Seip
1988, Water Resources Research (24) 1308-1316
A revision of the Birkenes model of streamwater acidification has been attempted to incorporate additional chemical and hydrologic information gained in the last 6 years since its original construction. The first stage of this effort has been an analysis of the hydrologic submodel with the goal of extending it to...
Regression estimates for topological‐hydrograph input
Michael R. Karlinger, D. Phillip Guertin, Brent M. Troutman
1988, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (114) 446-456
Physiographic, hydrologic, and rainfall data from 18 small drainage basins in semiarid, central Wyoming were used to calibrate topological, unit‐hydrograph models for celerity, the average rate of travel of a flood wave through the basin. The data set consisted of basin characteristics and hydrologic data for the 18 basins and...
Climatological observations and predicted sublimation rates at Lake Hoare, Antarctica.
G.D. Clow, C.P. McKay, G.M. Simmons Jr., R.A. Wharton Jr.
1988, Journal of Climate (1) 715-728
In December 1985, an automated meteorological station was established at Lake Hoare in the dry valley region of Antarctica. Here, we report on the first year-round observations available for any site in Taylor Valley. This dataset augments the year-round data obtained at Lake Vanda (Wright Valley) by winter-over crews during...
Seismic stratigraphy of the Mississippi-Alabama shelf and upper continental slope
J. L. Kindinger
1988, Marine Geology (83) 79-94
The Mississippi-Alabama shelf and upper continental slope contain relatively thin Upper Pleistocene and Holocene deposits. Five stages of shelf evolution can be identified from the early Wisconsinan to present. The stages were controlled by glacioeustatic or relative sea-level changes and are...
Near-bottom currents over the continental slope in the Mid-Atlantic Bight
G.T. Csanady, J.H. Churchill, B. Butman
1988, Continental Shelf Research (8) 653-671
From a set of 28 current meter records we have found that near-bottom currents faster than 0.2 m s-1 occur frequently over the outer continental shelf of the Mid-Atlantic Bight (bottom depth <210 m) but very rarely (<1% of the time) between bottom depths of 500 m and 2 km...
The effect of mining on the sediment - trace element geochemistry of cores from the Cheyenne River arm of Lake Oahe, South Dakota, U.S.A.
A. J. Horowitz, K. A. Elrick, E. Callender
1988, Chemical Geology (67) 17-33
Six cores, ranging in length from 1 to 2 m, were collected in the Cheyenne River arm of Lake Oahe, South Dakota, to investigate potential impacts from gold-mining operations around Lead, South Dakota. Sedimentation rates in the river arm appear to be event-dominated and rapid, on the order of 6-7...
Decline in long-term growth trends of white oak
R.L. Phipps, J.C. Whiton
1988, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (18) 24-32
Quercus alba tree-ring collections from 89 locations throughout much of its range, from Connecticut to North Carolina to Iowa, were examined for evidence of growth decline initiated in the 1950s. The expected trend of annual basal area increments, based on pre-1950 growth, appears to be linear, with the slope varying...
The formation and failure of natural dams
John E. Costa, Robert L. Schuster
1988, Geological Society of America Bulletin (100) 1054-1068
Of the numerous kinds of dams that form by natural processes, dams formed from landslides, glacial ice, and late-neoglacial moraines present the greatest threat to people and property. Landslide dams form in a wide range of physiographic settings. The most common types of mass movements that form landslide dams are...
Nationwide regression models for predicting urban runoff water quality at unmonitored sites
Gary D. Tasker, N. E. Driver
1988, Water Resources Bulletin (24) 1091-1101
Regression models are presented that can be used to estimate mean loads for chemical oxygen demand, suspended solids, dissolved solids, total nitrogen, total ammonia plus nitrogen, total phosphorous, dissolved phosphorous, total copper, total lead, and total zinc at unmonitored sites in urban areas. Explanatory variables include drainage area, imperviousness of...
Semianalytical computation of path lines for finite-difference models
D.W. Pollock
1988, Ground Water (26) 743-750
A semianalytical particle tracking method was developed for use with velocities generated from block centered finite-difference ground-water flow models. The method is based on the assumption that each directional velocity component varies linearly within a grid cell in its own coordinate directions. This assumption allows...
Overview of the structure and geothermal potential of Newberry Volcano, Oregon
D.V. Fitterman
1988, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (93) 10059-10066
Evidence from a broad range of geological and geophysical investigations of Newberry Volcano in central Oregon suggests the presence of a small magma body beneath the summit caldera. Drilling has encountered temperatures indicative of a hydrothermal system above the hypothesized magma body. On the basis of hydrothermal mineralogy the temperature...