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Page 4637, results 115901 - 115925

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Design and implementation of evapotranspiration measuring equipment for Owens Valley, California
Michael R. Simpson, Lowell F. W. Duell Jr.
1984, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (4) 155-163
As part of a plant survivability and ground water study in Owens Valley, California, semipermanent installations are used to measure continuous range‐land evapotranspiration in the valley's phreatophyte community. A proposed mobile installation also has been designed. The semipermanent micrometeoro‐logical station collects continuous data for solution of the Bowen ratio/energy budget...
Proceedings of a workshop on fish habitat suitability index models
James W. Terrell
1984, Biological Report (85)
One of the habitat-based methodologies for impact assessment currently in use by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the Habitat Evaluation Procedures (HEP) (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1980). HEP is based on the assumption that the quality of an area as wildlife habitat at a specified target year...
A workshop model simulating fate and effect of drilling muds and cuttings on benthic communities
Gregor T. Auble, Austin K. Andrews, David B. Hamilton, James E. Roelle, Thomas G. Shoemaker
1984, Report
Oil and gas exploration and production at marine sites has generated concern over potential environmental impacts resulting from the discharge of spent drilling muds and cuttings. This concern has led to a broad array of publicly and privately sponsored research. This report described a cooperative modeling effort designed...
An engineering economic analysis of a program for artificial groundwater recharge
Eric G. Reichard, John D. Bredehoeft
1984, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (20) 929-939
This study describes and demonstrates two alternate methods for evaluating the relative costs and benefits of artificial groundwater recharge using percolation ponds. The first analysis considers the benefits to be the reduction of pumping lifts and land subsidence; the second considers benefits as the alternative costs of a comparable surface...
Late Devonian icriodontid biofacies models and alternate shallow-water conodont zonation
Charles Sandberg, Roland Dreesen
1984, GSA Special Papers (196) 143-178
Recognition of differences in the habitats, apparatuses, and ranges of Late Devonian Icriodus and Pelekysgnathus permits refinement of their biofacies interpretations and construction of an alternate icriodontid zonation. Icriodus is a euphotic genus that predominated in most environments during the early Late Devonian (Frasnian) but died out during the early Famennian. Its apparatus consists of platform...
Biological communities at the Florida Escarpment resemble hydrothermal vent taxa
C. K. Paull, Barbara Hecker, R. Commeau, R. P. Freeman-Lynde, C. Neumann, W.P. Corso, S. Golubic, J.E. Hook, E. Sikes, J. Curray
1984, Science (226) 965-967
Dense biological communities of large epifaunal taxa similar to those found along ridge crest vents at the East Pacific Rise were discovered in the abyssal Gulf of Mexico. These assemblages occur on a passive continental margin at the base of the Florida Escarpment, the interface between the relatively impermeable hemipelagic...
Reducing relative error from the CVBEM by proper treatment of the known boundary conditions
T. V. Hromadka II, Gary L. Guymon
1984, International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering (20) 2113-2120
By a proper treatment of the known boundary conditions of a boundary value problem, a complex variable boundary element method (CVBEM) can be used to exactly satisfy the known nodal point boundary values. In this fashion, a numerical model can be developed which generates relative error information along the problem...
Analysis of potential yield per recruit for striped bass produced in Chesapeake Bay
C.P. Goodyear
1984, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (4) 488-496
The yield of striped bass (Morone saxatilis) in biomass and numbers was estimated for constant recruitment of young fish into the population on the basis of vital statistics of the Maryland stock. Separate computations were performed for males, females, and sexes combined. Yield in biomass per individual entering the population...
Relationship of young-of-the-year northern pike to aquatic vegetation types in backwaters of the upper Mississippi River
L. E. Holland, M.L. Huston
1984, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (4) 514-522
The association of young-of-the-year northern pike (Esox lucius) with different aquatic plant types (e.g., submerged, emergent, floating) was studied to evaluate the impacts of a potential loss of backwaters on available fish nursery habitats in the upper Mississippi River. Eight biweekly collections were made at each of six representative lentic...
A comparative ground response study near Los Angeles using recordings of Nevada nuclear tests and the 1971 San Fernando earthquake
A. M. Rogers, Roger D. Borcherdt, P. A. Covington, D. M. Perkins
1984, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (74) 1925-1949
A comparative ground response study at sites in the Los Angeles region is based on the extensive strong-motion data set recorded in the 1971 San Fernando earthquake and 159 three-component recordings of distant nuclear tests in Nevada. Amplitude spectral ratios computed for the nuclear...
Carbon assimilation characteristics of the aquatic CAM plant Isoetes howellii
Jon E. Keeley, G. Busch
1984, Plant Physiology (76) 525-530
The relationship between malic acid production and carbon assimilation was examined in the submerged aquatic Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant, Isoetes howellii Engelmann. Under natural conditions free-CO2 level in the water was highest at 0600 hours and 14CO2 assimilation rates in I. howellii were also highest at this time. After 0900 hours there was a similar pattern...
Sedimentary processes on the Atlantic Continental Slope of the United States
Harley J. Knebel
1984, Marine Geology (61) 43-74
Until recently, the sedimentary processes on the United States Atlantic Continental Slope were inferred mainly from descriptive studies based on the bathymetry and on widely spaced grab samples, bottom photographs, and seismic-reflection profiles. Over the past 6 years, however, much additional information has been collected on the bottom morphology, characteristics...
Identification of an optimal groundwater management strategy in a contaminated aquifer
S.J. Colarullo, M. Heidari, T. Maddock III
1984, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (20) 747-760
A groundwater hydraulic management model is used to identify the optimal strategy for allocating limited fresh-water supplies and containing wastes in a hypothetical aquifer affected by brine contamination from surface disposal ponds. The present cost of pumping from a network of potential supply and interception wells is minimized over a...
Side-scan sonar assessment of gray whale feeding in the Bering Sea
K.R. Johnson, C.H. Nelson
1984, Science (225) 1150-1152
Side-scan sonar was used to map and measure feeding pits of the California gray whale over 22,000 square kilometers of the northeastern Bering Sea floor. The distribution of pits, feeding whales, ampeliscid amphipods (whale prey), and a fine-sand substrate bearing the amphipods were all closely correlated. The central Chirikov Basin...
Disruption of the terrestrial plant ecosystem at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary, western interior
R.H. Tschudy, C. L. Pillmore, C. J. Orth, J. S. Gilmore, J.D. Knight
1984, Science (225) 1030-1032
The palynologically defined Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary in the western interior of North America occurs at the top of an iridium-rich clay layer. The boundary is characterized by the abrupt disappearance of certain pollen species, immediately followed by a pronounced, geologically brief change in the ratio of fern spores to angiosperm pollen....
Population structure of Adenostoma fasciculatum in mature stands of chamise chaparral in the southern Sierra Nevada, California
T.J. Stohlgren, D.J. Parsons, P.W. Rundel
1984, Oecologia (64) 87-91
In the low elevation chaparral areas of Sequoia National Park, California, pure stands of chamise (Adenostoma fasciculatum) are periodically rejuvenated by fire. Mature stands showed considerable variability in density and total biomass even though a positive correlation exists between the two. Mature stands showed a preponderance of individuals in the...
Offshore exploration and industry change: The case of the Gulf of Mexico
Emil D. Attanasi, L. J. Drew
1984, Journal of Petroleum Technology (36) 437-442
This paper considers industry structure and the exploration performance (by size class of operator) of firms searching for oil and gas in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. It also tracks the changes in industry structure that have occurred in response to a decline in the quality of remaining prospects in...
The orientation and navigation of juvenile alligators: evidence of magnetic sensitivity
Gordon H. Rodda
1984, Journal of Comparative Physiology A (154) 649-658
Displaced juvenile alligators, Alligator mississipiensis, were released on land in a 9 m diameter dodecagonal arena to test their ability to orient in the absence of terrestrial landmarks. Navigational ability seemed to improve with age. When displaced along a fairly direct route yearlings (age 7–14 months) compensated for their displacement,...
Age of the Comfort Member of the Castle Hayne Formation, North Carolina
J. E. Hazel, Laurel M. Bybell, Lucy E. Edwards, G. D. Jones, L. W. Ward
1984, GSA Bulletin (95) 1040-1044
The biostratigraphic and chronostratigraphic position of the Comfort Member of the Castle Hayne Formation has been the subject of much debate. At the Martin-Marietta Quarry at Castle Hayne, New Hanover County, North Carolina, the planktic foraminifers indicate an assignment within an interval of the uppermost Turborotalia frontosa Zone to the Turborotalia pomeroli Zone. The...
Spawning by Rhinichthys osculus (Cyprinidae), in the San Francisco River, New Mexico
Gordon A. Mueller
1984, Southwestern Naturalist (29) 354-356
The speckles dace Rhinichthys osculus [Girard] is the most widely distributed and ubiquitous fish in the western United States (Moyle, Inland Fishes of California, 1976). Although common, very little information is available concerning thje reproductive behavior of speckled dace or the environmental cues which trigger spawning activity. Several...