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Page 4838, results 120926 - 120950

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Regional ground-water flow concepts in the United States: Historical perspective
J.D. Bredehoeft, W. Back, B.B. Hanshaw
1982, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (189) 295-316
A number of important ideas, developed during the past 100 years, form the framework of the present understanding of regional ground-water flow. The most important of these ideas are:Differences in topographic elevation provide the principal driving force for regional flow.Flow through confining layers...
The Geoid: Effect of compensated topography and uncompensated oceanic trenches
C.G. Chase, Marcia K. McNutt
1982, Geophysical Research Letters (9) 29-32
The geoid is becoming increasingly important in interpretation of global tectonics. Most of the topography of the earth is isostatically compensated, so removal of its effect from the geoid is appropriate before tectonic modeling. The oceanic trenches, however, are dynamically depressed features and cannot be isostatically compensated in the classical...
Marine ice-pushed boulder ridge, Beaufort Sea, Alaska
Peter W. Barnes
1982, Arctic (35) 312-316
A steep-faced boulder ridge up to 4m high by 300m long was encountered along the arctic coast east of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, in the summer of 1979. Marine occurrences of similar ridges are rare. Since ice-push sorts cobble- and boulder-sized material in the construction of a ridge, recent onshore excursions of ice due to wind stress on the fast ice...
Miocene actinommid Radiolaria from the equatorial Pacific
J. R. Blueford
1982, Micropaleontology (28) 189-213
Actinommids (spumellarian Radiolaria) are a group of microfossils in which taxonomy and phylogeny hitherto have been based on features of morphology that change with the growth of individuals. To make Miocene actinommids from the equatorial Pacific useful in biostratigraphy, paleocenography, and paleoecology, ontogenetically invariant morphological features can be analyzed by...
Iridium abundance measurements across the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary in the San Juan and Raton Basins of northern New Mexico
C. J. Orth, J. S. Gilmore, J.D. Knight, R.H. Tschudy, C. L. Pillmore, James E. Fassett
1982, GSA Special Papers (190) 423-433
During the past year we have been measuring trace element abundances and searching for anomalously high iridium (Ir) concentrations in continental sedimentary rocks that span the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary in the Raton and San Juan Basins of northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. Using neutron activation and radiochemical separations, we have...
Observations of strain accumulation across the San Andreas fault near Palmdale, California, with a two-color geodimeter
J. O. Langbein, Mark F. Linker, Art McGarr, L.E. Slater
1982, Science (218) 1217-1219
Two-color laser ranging measurements during a 15-month period over a geodetic network spanning the San Andreas fault near Palmdale, California, indicate that the crust expands and contracts aseismically in episodes as short as 2 weeks. Shear strain parallel to the fault has accumulated monotonically since November 1980,...
Triggering of large earthquakes by magma-chamber inflation, Izu Peninsula (Japan)
Wayne R. Thatcher, James C. Savage
1982, Geology (10) 637-640
A close spatial and temporal association between three aseismic uplift episodes and subsequent large (M ≈ 7) earthquakes on the Izu Peninsula, Japan, suggests a causal relation. Quaternary geology, as well as studies by other workers, indicates a volcanic origin for the observed uplift, and we use a simple inflation...
Uranium in spring water and bryophytes at basin creek in central idaho
H.T. Shacklette, J. A. Erdman
1982, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (17) 221-236
Arkosic sandstones and conglomerates of Tertiary age beneath the Challis Volcanics of Eocene age at Basin Creek, 10 km northeast of Stanley, Idaho, contain uranium-bearing vitrainized carbon fragments. The economic potential of these sandstones and conglomerates is currently being assessed. Springs abound at the contacts of rock units, and water...
Subsurface valleys and geoarcheology of the eastern Sahara revealed by shuttle radar
J.F. McCauley, G. G. Schaber, C. S. Breed, M. J. Grolier, C.V. Haynes, B. Issawi, C. Elachi, R. Blom
1982, Science (218) 1004-1020
The shuttle imaging radar (SIR-A) carried on the space shuttle Columbia in November 1981 penetrated the extremely dry Selima Sand Sheet, dunes, and drift sand of the eastern Sahara, revealing previously unknown buried valleys, geologic structures, and possible Stone Age occupation sites. Radar responses from bedrock and...
Auditory evoked potentials in the West Indian Manatee (Sirenia: Trichechus manatus)
Theodore H. Bullock, Thomas J. O'Shea, Michael C. McClune
1982, Journal of Comparative Physiology A (148) 547-554
Potentials evoked by clicks and tone pips were recorded by fine wires inserted extracranially in four West Indian manatees (Trichechus manatus) in air. Sounds were delivered via padded ear phones. Averaging a few thousand trials at 20/s reveals early peaks at N5.4 (‘vertex’ negativity to a frontal reference, at 5.4 ms),...
The United Kingdom-Caltech asteroid survey
S. J. Bus, E. F. Helin, R. S. Dunbar, Eugene Merle Shoemaker, J. Dawe, J. Barrow, M. Hartley, D. Morgan, K. Russell, A. Savage
1982, Book chapter, Reports of Planetary Programs, 1982
No abstract available....
Use and interpretation of statistics in wildlife journals
Thomas C. Tacha, William D. Warde, Kenneth P. Burnham
1982, Wildlife Society Bulletin (10) 355-362
Use and interpretation of statistics in wildlife journals are reviewed, and suggestions for improvement are offered. Populations from which inferences are to be drawn should be clearly defined, and conclusions should be limited to the range of the data analyzed. Authors should be careful to avoid improper methods...
Ice sculpture in the Martian outflow channels
Baerbel K. Lucchitta
1982, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (87) 9951-9973
Many landforms in Martian outflow channels have characteristics that suggest sculpture by glaciers, ice streams, or ice sheets. Viking Orbiter and terrestrial satellite images were examined at similar resolution to compare features of the Martian outflow channels to features produced by the movement of ice on earth. Many resemblances were...
Active geologic processes in Barrow Canyon, northeast Chukchi Sea
Stephen Eittreim, Arthur Grantz, Jonathan Greenberg
1982, Marine Geology (50) 61-76
Circulation patterns on the shelf and at the shelf break appear to dominate the Barrow Canyon system. The canyon's shelf portion underlies and is maintained by the Alaska Coastal Current (A.C.C.), which flows northeastward along the coast toward the northeast corner of the broad Chukchi Sea. Offshelf and onshelf advective...
Natural groundwater recharge in an upland area of central North Dakota, U.S.A.
B.W. Rehm, S.R. Moran, G.H. Groenewold
1982, Journal of Hydrology (59) 293-314
The magnitude of groundwater recharge to coal aquifers in a 150-km2 area in west-central North Dakota was determined using three separate approaches: (1) the net water level rise in water-table wells; (2) calculations of the fluid flux between nested piezometers, using the Darcy equation and measured values of hydraulic conductivity and...
Gas exchange characteristics of the submerged aquatic Crassulacean acid metabolism plant, Isoetes howellii
Jon E. Keeley, G. Bowes
1982, Plant Physiology (70) 1455-1458
The submerged aquatic plant Isoetes howellii Engelmann possesses Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) comparable to that known from terrestrial CAM plants. Infrared gas analysis of submerged leaves showed Isoetes was capable of net CO2 uptake in both light and dark. CO2 uptake rates were a function of CO2 levels in the medium. At 2,500 microliters CO2 per liter (gas...
Growth and condition of bluegills in Wisconsin lakes: Effects of population density and lake pH
J.G. Wiener, W.R. Hanneman
1982, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (111) 761-767
Growth and condition of bluegills Lepomis macrochirus from five acidic lakes (pH 5.1–6.0) and six circumueutral lakes (pH 6.7–7.5) in northern Wisconsin were compared. Although mean condition factors and mean back‐calculated total lengths at ages 1 to 4 varied significantly among lakes, the differences were not related to lake pH....
Susitna Hydroelectric Project: terrestrial environmental workshop and preliminary simulation model
Robert R. Everitt, Nicholas C. Sonntag, Gregory T. Auble, James E. Roelle, William Gazey
1982, Report
The technical feasibility, economic viability, and environmental impacts of a hydroelectric development project in the Susitna River Basin are being studied by Acres American, Inc. on behalf of the Alaska Power Authority. As part of these studies, Acres American recently contracted LGL Alaska Research Associates, Inc. to coordinate the terrestrial...
Degradation of phenolic contaminants in ground water by anaerobic bacteria: St. Louis Park, Minnesota
G. G. Ehrlich, D.F. Goerlitz, E.M. Godsy, M. F. Hult
1982, Ground Water (20) 703-710
Coal-tar derivatives from a coal-tar distillation and wood-treating plant that operated from 1918 to 1972 at St. Louis Park, Minnesota contaminated the near-surface ground water. Solutions of phenolic compounds and a water-immiscible mixture of polynuclear aromatic compounds accumulated in wetlands near the plant site and entered the aquifer. The concentration...