Redefinition of Teneridrilus Holmquist (Oligochaeta: Tubificidae), with description of two new species from North America
Christer Erseus, Jarl K. Hiltunen, Ralph O. Brinkhurst, Don W. Schloesser
1990, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (103) 839-846
The tubificid genus Teneridrilus Holmquist, 1985 (subfamily Tubificinae) is redefined. The genus was originally monotypic for the type species, formerly classified as Ilyodrilus mastix Brinkhurst, 1978. The genus now includes Teneridrilus columbiensis, a new combination for Isochaetides columbiensis, and two new species. The first of these, Teneridrilus...
Incubation rhythm in the Fulmar Fulmarus glacialis: Annual variation and sex roles
Scott A. Hatch
1990, Ibis (132) 515-524
I monitored the incubation schedules of Fulmars Fulmarus glacialis in an Alaskan colony by observing nests where the male and female were of different colour phases. Complete shifts of up to 16 days were recorded; the average shift in mid-incubation was 4–6 days. Mean shift length was inversely correlated with...
Comments on the proposed conservation of Proptera Rafinesque, 1819 (Mollusca Bivalvia)
A.E. Bogan, J.D. Williams, S. L. H. Fuller
1990, Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature (47) 206-207
No abstract available. ...
Vanishing amphibians: new mystery in an old pattern
M.P. Hayes, M.R. Jennings
1990, Mainstream (21) 20-23
No abstract available at this time...
Measurements of the abilities of cultured fishes to moisturize their digesta
S. G. Hughes, R. Barrows
1990, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A: Physiology (96) 109-111
1. Four salmonid and four cool-water fish species were tested to determine their ability to moisturize their digesta.2. After the fish were fed, they were sacrificed, the gut contents were removed and water content was determined.3. The digesta of the salmonids contained the least water (63–72%) and those of largemouth...
Distribucion y abundancia del manati, Trichechus manatus, en Venezuela
M. Correa-Viana, T. J. O'Shea, M.E. Ludlow, J.G. Robinson
1990, BioLlania (7) 101-123
Abstract not supplied at this time...
The influence of temperature and body size on duration of immobility in salamanders of the genus Desmognathus
C. Kenneth Dodd
1990, Amphibia-Reptilia (11) 401-410
No abstract available....
Recovery of an offshore lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) population in eastern Lake Superior
Gary L. Curtis
1990, Journal of Great Lakes Research (16) 279-287
The lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) population at Stannard Rock, Michigan, an isolated offshore reef in eastern Lake Superior, was monitored each spring from 1959–79 using a permit assessment gill net fishery. This population, like nearly all of those in inshore waters, declined to low levels during the years of intense...
Mineralogy and geochemistry of altered rocks associated with Lemitar carbonatites, central New Mexico, U.S.A.
V. T. McLemore, P.J. Modreski
1990, LITHOS (26) 99-113
The intrusion of more than 100 Cambrian-Ordovician carbonatite dikes caused minor alteration of Proterozoic granitic and mafic rocks in the Lemitar Mountains, although hematization, carbonatization and fenitization caused extensive alteration locally. Ampibolites within 15-20 m of the carbonatite dike contacts were highly altered by carbonatization. Locally the Lemitar diorite/gabbro adjacent...
Review of paleomagnetic data from the Klamath Mountains, Blue Mountains, and Sierra Nevada; Implications for paleogeographic reconstructions
Edward A. Mankinen, William P. Irwin
1990, Book chapter, Paleozoic and Early Mesozoic Paleogeographic Relations; Sierra Nevada, Klamath Mountains, and Related Terranes: GSA Special Papers v. 255
Paleomagnetic studies of the Klamath Mountains, Blue Mountains, Sierra Nevada, and northwestern Nevada pertain mostly to Jurassic and Cretaceous rocks, but some data also are available for Permian and Triassic rocks of the region. Large vertical-axis rotations are indicated for rocks in many of the terranes, but few studies show...
Near-fault measurement of postseismic slip associated with the 1989 Loma Prieta, California, earthquake
M. J. Rymer
1990, Geophysical Research Letters (17) 1789-1792
Five small-aperture (0.5 to 7.7 m) quadrilaterals were installed across the San Andreas fault and newly formed extensional cracks shortly after the October 17, 1989 Loma Prieta M7.1 earthquake. Two quadrilaterals were installed across the San Andreas fault near the southeast and northwest ends of the 1989...
The Ebro margin study, northwestern Mediterranean Sea - an introduction
A. Maldonado, Nelson C. Hans
1990, Marine Geology (95) 157-163
The Ebro continental margin from the coast to the deep sea off northeastern Spain was selected for a multidisciplinary project because of the abundant Ebro River sediment supply, Pliocene and Quaternary progradation, and margin development in a restricted basin where a...
Compilation of hydrologic data for the Edwards aquifer, San Antonio area, Texas, 1989, with 1934-89 summary
G.M. Nalley, M. W. Thomas
1990, Edwards Underground Water District Bulletin 49
No abstract available....
On graphically representing the confidence region for an unknown rotation in three dimensions
M.S. Hanna, T. Chang
1990, Computers & Geosciences (16) 163-194
In assessing the errors involved in reconstructing tectonic plate rotations, it is desirable to have confidence regions for the unknown rotation. This paper presents a method for graphing such confidence regions, which exhibits the dependence of the range of possible angles of rotation on the axis considered. Namely, the minimum...
Computational open-channel hydraulics for movable-bed problems
Chintu Lai
Chang Howard H.Hill Joseph C., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulic Engineering - Proceedings of the 1990 National Conference
As a major branch of computational hydraulics, notable advances have been made in numerical modeling of unsteady open-channel flow since the beginning of the computer age. According to the broader definition and scope of 'computational hydraulics,' the basic concepts and technology of modeling unsteady open-channel flow have been systematically studied...
Ground-water control of evaporite deposition
W.W. Wood, W. E. Sanford
1990, Economic Geology (85) 1226-1235
Topographically closed basins may be hydrologically open as a result of seepage losses to underlying or surrounding ground-water systems. In such cases, these losses can have a substantial control over the suite and the thicknesses of evaporite minerals formed in the basin. The ratio of ground-water outflow to inflow (flux...
New geologic map of the Island of Hawaii
Edward Wolfe, Jean Morris
1990, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Recent geologic mapping on the Island of Hawaii is compiled in a detailed new 1:100,000-scale geologic map. The lava flows and pyroclastic deposits of each volcano are assigned to major lithostratigraphic units based on lithology and stratigraphic relations. However, the emphasis of the map is strongly chronostratigraphic. Lavas of latest...
D/H on Mars: Effects of floods, volcanism, impacts, and polar processes
M. H. Carr
1990, Icarus (87) 210-227
Water in the Martian atmosphere is 5.1 times more enriched in deuterium than terrestial water. The enrichment has been previously attributed to either a massive loss of water early in the planet's history or the presence of only a very small...
Volcanic hazards in the Pacific Northwest
C.D. Miller
1990, Geoscience Canada (17) 183-187
The Cascade Range stretches from southwestern British Columbia to northern California; the Range consists of major composite volcanic centres, most of which have been active during late Pleistocene and Holocene time. In addition, thousands of smaller basaltic or basaltic-andesite volcanoes have been active during the past few million years. Flowage...
Evidence against a late Wisconsinan ice shelf in the Gulf of Maine
R. N. Oldale, R.S. Williams Jr., Steven M. Colman
1990, Quaternary Science Reviews (9) 1-13
Proposals for the formation of a late Wisconsinan ice shelf in the Gulf of Maine during the retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet are considered to be inappropriate. An Antarctic-type ice shelf does not fit the field data that indicate temperate glacial, terrestrial, and marine climates for the region between...
Time allocation by northern fulmars during the breeding season
Scott A. Hatch
1990, Ornis Scandinavica (21) 89-98
Averaged over the whole breeding cycle (pre-laying through mid-chick stage), breeding fulmars spent about 39% of their time at the breeding site and 61% of their time at sea. Annual means of site occupancy before egg-laying were positively correlated with breeding success, suggesting that time allocation was a sensitive indicator...
Synthetic calibration of a Rainfall-Runoff Model
David B. Thompson, Jerome A. Westphal
Chang Howard H.Hill Joseph C., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulic Engineering - Proceedings of the 1990 National Conference
A method for synthetically calibrating storm-mode parameters for the U.S. Geological Survey's Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System is described. Synthetic calibration is accomplished by adjusting storm-mode parameters to minimize deviations between the pseudo-probability disributions represented by regional regression equations and actual frequency distributions fitted to model-generated peak discharge and runoff volume. Results...
Mechanisms controlling Cu, Fe, Mn, and Co profiles in peat of the Filson Creek Fen, northeastern Minnesota
K. Walton-Day, L.H. Filipek, C. S.E. Papp
1990, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (54) 2933-2946
Filson Creek Fen, located in northeastern Minnesota, overlies a Cu-Ni sulfide deposit. A site in the fen was studied to evaluate the hydrogeochemical mechanisms governing the development of Fe, Mn, Co, and Cu profiles in the peat. At the study site, surface peat approximately 1 m thick is separated from...
Geological setting of chemosynthetic communities in the Monterey Fan Valley system
R.W. Embley, S.L. Eittreim, C.H. McHugh, W. R. Normark, G.H. Rau, Barbara Hecker, A.E. DeBevoise, H. Gary Greene, William B. F. Ryan, C. Harrold, C. Baxter
1990, Deep Sea Research Part A, Oceanographic Research Papers (37) 1651-1667
Alvin dives and camera tows within the "meander area" of the Monterey and Ascension Fan Valleys have located nine chemosynthetic communities over depths ranging from 3000 to 3600 m over a distance of 55 km. Most of the observed communities consist largely of Calyptogena phaseoliformis, but Solemya (species unknown) and...
Operation of U.S. Geological Survey unmanned digital magnetic observatories
L.R. Wilson
1990, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (59) 45-54
The precision and continuity of data recorded by unmanned digital magnetic observatories depend on the type of data acquisition equipment used and operating procedures employed. Three generations of observatory systems used by the U.S. Geological Survey are described. A table listing the frequency of component failures in the current observatory...