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Page 4465, results 111601 - 111625

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A comparison of several methods for the solution of the inverse problem in two-dimensional steady state groundwater flow modeling
Logan K. Kuiper
1986, Water Resources Research (22) 705-714
Two geostatistical approaches for the estimation of hydraulic conductivity and hydraulic head from hydraulic conductivity and hydraulic head measurements are developed for two-dimensional steady flow with sinks. For both approaches the field of the logarithm of hydraulic conductivity (log-conductivity) is represented as a random field with mean θ1+θ2x+θ3y where xand y denote Cartesian coordinates,...
Ground-water resource assessment of the Montauk area, Long Island, New York
K. R. Prince
1986, Water-Resources Investigations Report 85-4013
The water resources of the Montauk area were investigated from October 1980 through September 1983 to assess the availability of fresh groundwater. The principal aquifer, which consists of fine- to coarse-grained stratified glacial drift, is the sole source of freshwater. The freshwater/saltwater interface lies as much as 150 ft below...
Molt chronology of northern pintails in California
Michael R. Miller
1986, Journal of Wildlife Management (50) 57-64
Intensity and chronology of molt in 10 feather groups (head, neck, breast, belly, back, rump, side, scapular, tertial, and tail) were measured using percentages of developing feathers (pinfeathers) converted to molt scores (0-100) in samples plucked monthly from northern pintails (Anas acuta) collected by shooting from August through March 1980-82...
Feeding ecology of sandhill cranes during spring migration in Nebraska
K. J. Reinecke, Gary L. Krapu
1986, Journal of Wildlife Management (50) 71-79
We studied the food habits of midcontinent sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) during spring 1978 and 1979 at their primary staging area along the Platte River and compared population food and foraging habitat requirements with availability. Crane diets varied among the 3 principal foraging habitats, but not between sexes, ages, or...
Changes in complex resistivity during creep in granite
D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee
1986, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (124) 659-676
A sample of Westerly granite was deformed under constant stress conditions: a pore pressure of 5 MPa, a confining pressure of 10 MPa, and an axial load of 170 MPa. Pore volume changes were determined by measuring the volume of pore fluid (0.01 M KClaq) injected into the sample. After...
Origin of late Archean granite: geochemical evidence from the Vermilion Granitic Complex of northern Minnesota
W. C. Day, P.W. Weiblen
1986, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (93) 283-296
The 2,700-Ma Vermilion Granitic Complex of northern Minnesota is a granite-migmatite terrane composed of supracrustal metasedimentary rocks, mafic rocks, tonalitic and granodioritic plutonic rocks, and granite. The metasedimentary rocks are predominantly graywacke, which has been regionally metamorphosed to garnet-sillimanite-muscovite-bearing biotite schist, and has locally undergone anatexis. The mafic rocks form...
Geohydrology of the Lloyd aquifer, Long Island, New York
M. S. Garber
1986, Water-Resources Investigations Report 85-4159
The Lloyd aquifer contains only about 9% of the water stored in Long Island 's groundwater system but is the only source of potable water for several communities near the north and south shores. The Lloyd aquifer is virtually untapped throughout most of central Long Island because current legal restrictions...
Authors' reply
R.M. Hirsch, N.E. Peters
1986, Atmospheric Environment (20) 230-232
No abstract available....
Movement and fate of creosote waste in ground water, Pensacola, Florida; U.S. Geological Survey toxic waste-ground-water contamination program
Bernard J. Franks
H.C. Mattraw Jr., editor(s)
1986, Water Supply Paper 2285
Ground- and surface-water contamination by pesticides used in the wood-preserving industry is widespread in the United States. Pine poles were treated with wood preservatives from 1902 to 1981 at a creosote works near Pensacola, Florida. Diesel fuel, creosote, and pentachlorophenol were discharged to two unlined impoundments that had a direct...
Magnesioferrite from the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary, Caravaca, Spain
B.F. Bohor, E.E. Foord, R. Ganapathy
1986, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (81) 57-66
Magnesioferrite grading toward magnetite has been identified as a very small but meaningful constituent of the basal iron-rich portion of the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary clay at the Barranco del Gredero section, Caravaca, Spain. This spinel-type phase and others of the spinel group, found in K-T boundary clays at many widely...
Improved method for correlating late Pleistocene/Holocene records from the Bering Sea: Application of a biosiliceous/geochemical stratigraphy
J. J. Morley, Stephen Robinson
1986, Deep Sea Research Part A, Oceanographic Research Papers (33) 1203-1211
The combination of high-resolution siliceous biostratigraphy and radiocarbon dating provides a mechanism for detailed assessment of the depositional history in late Pleistocene sediments from the Bering Sea where average accumulation rates are uncharacteristically high compared to rates calculated for most other ocean basins. Vital to the development of this stratigraphy...
New method for the measurement of osmium isotopes applied to a New Zealand Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary shale
F.E. Lichte, S.M. Wilson, R.R. Brooks, R.D. Reeves, J. Holzbecher, D.E. Ryan
1986, Nature (322) 816-817
The determination of osmium content and isotopic abundances in geological materials has received increasing attention in recent years following the proposal of Alvarez et al.1 that mass extinctions at the end of the Cretaceous period were caused by the impact of a large (???10km) meteorite which left anomalously high iridium...
Evaluation of a mallard productivity model
Douglas H. Johnson, L.M. Cowardin, D. W. Sparling
J. Verner, L.M. Morrison, C.J. Ralph, editor(s)
1986, Book chapter, Wildlife 2000: modeling habitat relationships of terrestrial vertebrates
A stochastic model of mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) productivity has been developed over a 10-year period and successfully applied to several management questions. Here we review the model and describe some recent uses and improvements that increase its realism and applicability, including naturally occurring changes in wetland habitat, catastrophic weather events,...
Vegetation mapping of Nowitna National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska using Landsat MSS digital data
Stephen S. Talbot, Carl J. Markon
1986, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (52) 791-799
A Landsat-derived vegetation map was prepared for Nowitna National Wildlife Refuge. The refuge lies within the middle boreal subzone of north central Alaska. Seven major vegetation classes and sixteen subclasses were recognized: forest (closed needleleaf, open needleleaf, needleleaf woodland, mixed, and broadleaf); broadleaf scrub (lowland, alluvial, subalpine); dwarf scrub (prostrate...
Long-term water-quality characteristics of Charlotte Harbor, Florida
T. H. Fraser
1986, Water-Resources Investigations Report 86-4180
Water-quality data for nine constituents collected from January 1976 through March 1984 in upper Charlotte Harbor were examined for evidence of trend (change) with time. Average seasonal patterns and moving averages were described to aid initial descriptions of variation. Multilinear regression models were developed using independent variables that are known...
Use of detrended correspondence analysis in evaluating factors controlling species composition of periphyton
Harry V. Leland, James L. Carter
Isom Billy G., editor(s)
1986, Book chapter, Rationale for sampling and interpretation of biological data in the assessment of freshwater ecosystems
Detrended correspondence analysis (DCA) was evaluated for its usefulness in elucidating relationships among samples and among species of periphyton in an oligotrophic stream, and for its effectiveness in displaying major gradients where an experimental gradient (copper) affecting species composition was imposed. It was highly sensitive to differences among samples and...
EFFECTS OF ARTIFICIAL RECHARGE ON GROUND-WATER QUALITY, LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK.
Brian J. Schneider, Henry F. H. Ku, Edward T. Oaksford
1986, Conference Paper
Artificial-recharge experiments were conducted at East Meadow in central Nassau County, Long Island, N. Y. , from October 1982 through January 1984, to evaluate the degree of ground-water mounding and chemical effects of artificially replenishing the ground-water system with tertiary-treated wastewater. Reclaimed water was provided by the Cedar Creek wastewater-treatment...
FUNDAMENTAL MODAL BEHAVIOR OF AN EARTHQUAKE-EXCITED BRIDGE.
A. G. Brady, M. Çelebi
1986, Conference Paper
The magnitude 6. 1 Morgan Hill, California, earthquake of April 24, 1984, produced a set of acceleration records at the freeway overpass in San Jose carrying I-280/I-680 across U. S. 101, 12 km from the epicenter. Peak accelerations reached 0. 10 g at ground level and 0. 16 g in...
NEW STUDIES OF URBAN FLOOD FREQUENCY IN THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES.
Vernon B. Sauer
1986, Transportation Research Record 10-15
Five reports dealing with flood magnitude and frequency in urban areas in the southeastern United States have been published during the past 2 years by the U. S. Geological Survey (USGS). These reports are based on data collected in Tampa and Tallahassee, Florida; Atlanta, Georgia; and several cities in Alabama...