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Page 4563, results 114051 - 114075

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Impaired reproduction of mallards fed an organic form of selenium
Gary H. Heinz, David J. Hoffman, Lyn G. Gold
1989, Journal of Wildlife Management (53) 418-428
We fed mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) diets supplemented with 0-, 1-, 2-, 4-, 8-, or 16-ppm selenium in the form of selenomethionine. We fed another group of mallards a diet containing 16-ppm selenium as selenocystine. Females fed the control diet produced a mean of 8.1 ducklings that survived to 6 days...
Mallard survival from local to immature stage in southwestern Saskatchewan
Jay B. Hestbeck, Alexander Dzubin, J. Bernard Gollop, James D. Nichols
1989, Journal of Wildlife Management (53) 428-431
We used 3,670 recoveries from 32,647 bandings of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) in southwestern Saskatchewan during 1956-59 to estimate the probability of surviving from the local, flightless (classes II and III) stage to the flighted, immature stage. The probability  of surviving from the local to the immature stage was 0.84 ±...
Evolution of the western part of the Coast plutonic–metamorphic complex, South-Eastern Alaska, USA: A summary
David A. Brew, A. B. Ford, G. R. Himmelberg
1989, Geological Society Special Publication (43) 447-452
The western Cordillera of North America extends for over 6000 km from the tip of Baja California to the Alaska Range. It includes a wide variety of metamorphic and plutonic terrains, but none is more spectacular scenically or geologically than the Coast plutonic-metamorphic complex (Brew & Ford 1984) of...
Wolf population survival in an area of high road density
L. David Mech
1989, American Midland Naturalist (121) 387-389
Wolf mortality in a high-road-density area of Minnesota exceeds that in an adjacent wilderness, and is primarily human-caused. The wolf population there is maintained primarily by ingress from the adjacent wilderness areas. A road density of 0.58 km/km2 can be exceeded and the area still support wolves if it is...
Leopard frog and wood frog reproduction in Colorado and Wyoming
Paul Stephen Corn, Lauren J. Livo
1989, Northwestern Naturalist (70) 1-9
Between 1978 and 1988, we recorded reproductive information from populations of ranid frogs in Colorado and Wyoming. Egg masses from five plains and montane populations of northern leopard frogs (Rana pipiens) contained 645-6272 eggs (x̄ = 3045, N = 68 egg masses). In two montane populations of wood frogs (Rana...
Relationship of roof rat population indices with damage to sugarcane
Lynn W. Lefebvre, Richard M. Engeman, David G. Decker, Nicholas R. Holler
1989, Wildlife Society Bulletin (17) 41-45
Roof rats (Rattus rattus) cause substantial damage to sugarcane in South Florida (Samol 1972; Lefebvre et al. 1978, 1985). Accurate estimates of roof rat populations in sugarcane fields would be useful for determining when to to treat a field to control roof rats and for assessing the efficacy of...
Snow cover of the Upper Colorado River Basin from satellite passive microwave and visual imagery
E.G. Josberger, E. Beauvillain
1989, Nordic Hydrology (20) 73-84
A comparison of passive microwave images from the Nimbus-7 Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR) and visual images from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) of the Upper Colorado River Basin shows that passive microwave satellite imagery can be used to determine the extent of the snow cover. Eight cloud-free DMSP...
Estimates of the suspended sediment reference concentration (Ca) and resuspension coefficient (γ0) from near-bottom observations on the California shelf
D.E. Drake, D.A. Cacchione
1989, Continental Shelf Research (9) 51-64
Near-bottom current and suspended sediment measurements above a sandy clayey silt bed on the California continental shelf are used to estimate the near-bed suspended sediment reference concentration, Ca, and the bed shear stress, τ0. A proposed model contends that Ca should be proportional to the normalized excess shear stress acting on the sediment...
Heat flow and hydrothermal circulation in the Cascade Range, north-central Oregon
S. E. Ingebritsen, D. R. Sherrod, Robert H. Mariner
1989, Science (243) 1458-1462
In north-central Oregon a large area of near-zero near-surface conductive heat flow occurs in young volcanic rocks of the Cascade Range. Recent advective heat flux measurements and a heat-budget analysis suggest that ground-water circulation sweeps sufficient heat out of areas where rocks younger than 6 Ma (million years ago) are...
Ordovician graptolites from the northern Sierra de Cobachi, Sonora, Mexico
John F. Riva, Keith B. Ketner
1989, Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh (80) 71-90
Two Ordovician graptolite assemblages are recognised and described for the first time in the allochthonous siliceous assemblage or succession forming the Guayacan Group of central Sonora in northwestern Mexico. A Middle Ordovician assemblage referable to the Nemagraptus gracilis-Climacograptus wilsoni zonal interval occurs in the upper siliceous shale of unit 1 of...
Earthquake hazard after a mainshock in California
Paul A. Reasenberg, Lucille M. Jones
1989, Science (243) 1173-1176
After a strong earthquake, the possibility of the occurrence of either significant aftershocks or an even stronger mainshock is a continuing hazard that threatens the resumption of critical services and reoccupation of essential but partially damaged structures. A stochastic parametric model allows determination of probabilities for aftershocks and larger mainshocks...
Disturbance-mediated accelerated succession in two Michigan forest types
Marc D. Abrams, Michael L. Scott
1989, Forest Science (35) 42-49
In northern lower Michigan, logging accelerated sugar maple (Acer saccharum) dominance in a northern white cedar (Thuja occidentals) community, and clear-cutting and burning quickly converted certain sites dominated by mature jack pine (Pinus banksiana) to early-succesional hardwoods, including Prunus, Populus, and Quercus. In both forest types the succeeding hardwoods...
Analysis of antimycin A by reversed-phase liquid chromatography/nuclear magnetic-resonance spectrometry
Steven T. K. Ha, Charles L. Wilkins, Sharon L. Abidi
1989, Analytical Chemistry (61) 404-408
A mixture of closely related streptomyces fermentation products, antimycin A, Is separated, and the components are identified by using reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography with directly linked 400-MHz proton nuclear magnetic resonance detection. Analyses of mixtures of three amino acids, alanine, glycine, and valine, are used to determine optimal measurement conditions....
Geologic analyses of Shuttle Imaging Radar (SIR-B) data of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
Lisa R. Gaddis, Peter J. Mouginis-Mark, Robert B. Singer, Verne Kaupp
1989, GSA Bulletin (101) 317-332
Analyses of imaging radar data of volcanic terranes on Earth and Venus have emphasized the need for a clearer understanding of how these data can be most effectively used to accomplish important volcanological goals, including the interpretation of eruptive styles and the characterization of the geologic history of volcanic centers....
Assessment of smolt condition for travel time analysis. Annual report 1988
D.W. Rondorf, J.W. Beeman, J.C. Faler, M.E. Free, E.J. Wagner
1989, Report
Estimates of migration rates and travel times of juvenile salmonids within index reaches of the Columbia River basin are collected through the Smolt Monitoring Program for use by the Fish Passage Center. With increased reliance upon travel time estimates in 1988 by the Fish Passage Center, this study was implemented...
Source of anomalous magnetization in an area of hydrocarbon potential: Petrologic evidence from the Jurassic Preuss Sandstone, Wyoming-Idaho thrust belt
Neil S. Fishman, Richard L. Reynolds, Mark R. Hudson, Vito F. Nuccio
1989, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (73) 182-194
The Jurassic Preuss Sandstone, which crops out in the central part of the Wyoming-Idaho thrust belt on trend with a hydrocarbon-producing region to the south, has been previously identified as the source of anomalous magnetization in the area. Elsewhere, anomalous magnetization in sedimentary rocks near hydrocarbon accumulations has been attributed to hydrocarbon-engendered magnetic minerals, but magnetization of the Preuss is controlled by detrital magnetite. Evidence...
Uranium-series dated authigenic carbonates and Acheulian sites in southern Egypt
Barney J. Szabo, W.P. McHugh, G. G. Schaber, C.V. Haynes Jr., C. S. Breed
1989, Science (243) 1053-1056
Field investigations in southern Egypt have yielded Acheulian artifacts in situ in authigenic carbonate deposits (CaCO3-cemented alluvium) along the edges of now-aggraded paleovalleys (Wadi Arid and Wadi Safsaf). Uranium-series dating of 25 carbonate samples from various localities as far apart as 70 kilometers indicates that widespread carbonate deposition occurred about...
Hydrocarbon gases in sediment of the Voring Plateau, Norwegian Sea
Keith A. Kvenvolden, Margaret Golan-Bac, T.J. McDonald, R.C. Pflaum, J.M. Brooks
1989, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results (104) 319-326
Geochemical studies at three ODP Leg 104 sites on the Wring Plateau help define the distribution of hydrocarbon gases in sediment of this prominent feature of the Norwegian continental margin. Low levels of hydrocarbon gas were encountered in sediment of the outer part of the plateau, but sediment of the...
Organic matter at sites 642, 643, and 644, ODP Leg 104
T.J. McDonald, M.C. Kennicutt II, J.M. Brooks, Keith A. Kvenvolden
1989, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results (104) 309-317
Sedimentary extractable organic matter was analyzed at three ODP Leg 104 sites in the Norwegian Sea. Organic carbon content ranged from less than 0.1% to a maximum of 1.8%. Extractable organic matter content and unresolved complex mixture concentrations were low and randomly distributed. Low levels of aliphatic (branched and normal)...