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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Mercury in the muscle tissue of fish from three northern Maine lakes
J.J. Akielaszek, T.A. Haines
1981, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (27) 201-208
There is evidence that fish in Canadian wilderness areas exhibit elevated mercury levels because of the oligotrophic nature of the lakes they inhabit (BROUZES et al. 1977). D'ITRI et al. (1971) reported higher levels of mercury in trout from oligotrophic waters than in trout from eutrophic waters in unpolluted areas....
An outbreak of duck virus enteritis (duck plague) in a captive flock of mixed waterfowl
Roy D. Montgomery, George Stein Jr., Meliton N. Novilla, Sarah S. Hurley, Robert J. Fink
1981, Avian Diseases (25) 207-213
An outbreak of duck virus enteritis occurred in a flock of captive waterfowl composed of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos), black ducks (Anas rubripes), and Canada geese (Branta canadensis). Although all three species were housed together, morbidity and mortality were confined to the 227 black ducks and Canada geese, of which 180...
Dairy-processing wastes as a replacement protein source in diets of rainbow trout
G. L. Rumsey, M. Cacace, R. R. Zall, D. J. Lisk
1981, Progressive Fish-Culturist (43) 86-88
Dairy‐processing wastes, not previously used in domestic animal and fish feeds, were evaluated as a replacement protein source in the diet of rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri). Dairy residue replaced 10% dried whey without reducing growth or feed efficiency, and feed costs were reduced. Growth and feeding efficiency were somewhat reduced...
Ecological studies of vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizae in a barrier sand dune
R. E. Koske, W. L. Halvorson
1981, Canadian Journal of Botany (59) 1413-1422
An ecological survey of the vegetation of a barrier dune on the south coast of Rhode Island showed Ammophila breviligulata, Solidago sempervirens, Lathyrus japonicus, and Myrica pensylvanica to be the dominant plant species. All plants were mycorrhizal. Six species of vesicular–arbuscular (VA) fungi occurred in association with these plants, with Gigaspora gigantea and Acaulospora scrobiculata the most abundant. Also...
Estimating bird damage from damage incidence in wine grape vineyards
R. W. DeHaven, R. L. Hothem
1981, American Journal of Enology and Viticulture (32) 1-4
Bird damage was measured during 1977 and 1978 at 32 wine grape vineyards in the San Joaquin Valley and North Coastal Region of California. Both the percentage bird loss (PBL) and the percentage of bunches damaged (BDI = bird damage incidence) were determined during 55 total-damage assessments, and the resulting...
Blast dynamics at Mount St Helens on 18 May 1980
S. W. Kieffer
1981, Nature (291) 568-570
At 8.32 a.m. on 18 May 1980, failure of the upper part of the north slope of Mount St Helens triggered a lateral eruption ('the blast') that devastated the conifer forests in a sector covering ???500 km2 north of the volcano. I present here a steady flow model for the...
Spectroscopy and decay dynamics of several methyl-and fluorine-substituted benzene radical cations
V.E. Bondybey, C. Vaughn, T.A. Miller, J.H. English, R.H. Shiley
1981, Journal of the American Chemical Society (103) 6303-6307
Spectra of several fluorobenzene cation radicals containing 1-3 methyl substituents were observed in solid Ne matrix and analyzed. Comparisons between these compounds and other fluorobenzenes studied previously as well as comparisons between the Β~ state lifetimes in the gas phase and in the matrix are used to gain a deeper...
Trace elemental analysis of bituminuos coals using the Heidelberg proton microprobe
J.R. Chen, H. Kneis, B. Martin, R. Nobiling, K. Traxel, E. C. T. Chao, J.A. Minkin
1981, Nuclear Instruments and Methods (181) 151-157
Trace elements in coal can occur as components of either the organic constituents (macerals) or the inorganic constituents (minerals). Studies of the concentrations and distribution of the trace elements are vital to understanding the geochemical millieu in which the coal was formed and in evaluating the attempts to recover rare...
Arid land monitoring using Landsat albedo difference images
Charles J. Robinove, Pat S. Chavez Jr., Dale G. Gehring, Ralph Holmgren
1981, Remote Sensing of Environment (11) 133-156
The Landsat albedo, or percentage of incoming radiation reflected from the ground in the wavelength range of 0.5 [mu]m to 1.1 [mu]m, is calculated from an equation using the Landsat digital brightness values and solar irradiance values, and correcting for atmospheric scattering, multispectral scanner calibration, and sun angle. The albedo...
Uranium in big sagebrush from western U.S. and evidence of possible mineralization in the Owyhee mountains of Idaho
J. A. Erdman, G.H. Harrach
1981, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (14) 83-94
Two regional studies of big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata), a widely distributed and dominant shrub in the western United States, have shown its responsiveness to known uranium mineralization in the Monument Hill and Pumpkin Buttes districts of the southern Powder River Basin, Wyoming, and the Uravan mineral belt area in southeastern...
Regional geochemical studies in the Patagonia Mountains, Santa Cruz County, Arizona
M.A. Chaffee, R. H. Hill, S. J. Sutley, J.R. Watterson
1981, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (14) 135-153
The Patagonia Mountains in southern Arizona contain the deeply buried porphyry copper system at Red Mountain as well as a number of other base- and precious-metal mines and prospects. The range contains complex Basin and Range geology with units ranging in age from Precambrian to Holocene. Rock types present include...
Petrogenesis of garnet two-mica granites in the Ruby Mountains, Nevada
R. W. Kistler, E. D. Ghent, J. R. O’Neil
1981, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (86) 10591-10606
Garnet-two-mica granites of Jurassic (160 ± 3 m.y.) and Cretaceous (83 ± 1.3 m.y.) ages intrude amphibolite facies metasedimentary rocks of Precambrian age and lower Paleozoic sedimentary rocks in the northern part of the Ruby Mountains, Nevada. High initial 87Sr/86Sr and high values of δ18O for minerals suggest a dominantly sedimentary...
Petrology and geochronology of metamorphosed volcanic rocks and a middle Cretaceous volcanic neck in the east-central Sierra Nevada, California
R. W. Kistler, S.E. Swanson
1981, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (86) 10489-10501
Metamorphosed Mesozoic volcanic rocks from the east-central Sierra Nevada range in composition from basalt to rhyolite and have ages, based on whole rock Rb-Sr and U-Pb zircon dating, of about 237–224, 185, 163, 134, and 100 m.y. The major plutons of the batholith in this area are of Triassic (215–200...
Paleogeography and sedimentology of Upper Cretaceous turbidites, San Diego, California
T. H. Nilsen, P. L. Abbott
1981, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (65) 1256-1284
Upper Cretaceous (Campanian and Maestrichtian) marine strata of the Rosario Group in the San Diego area include the Point Loma Formation and overlying Cabrillo Formation. These units contain six facies associations: (1) shelf and lagoonal sandstone, (2) slope and basin-plain(?) mudstone, (3) outer-fan lobe sandstone, (4) middle-fan channel-fill sandstone, (5)...
Variations in stable- isotope ratios of ground waters in seismically active regions of California
J. R. O’Neil, Chi-Yu King
1981, Geophysical Research Letters (8) 429-432
Measurements of D and 18O concentrations of ground waters in seismically active regions are potentially useful in earthquake prediction and in elucidating mechanisms operative during earthquakes. Principles of this method are discussed and some preliminary data regarding a magnitude 5.7 earthquake at the Oroville Dam in 1975...
234U and 238U concentration in brine from geopressured aquifers of the northern Gulf of Mexico basin
T. F. Kraemer
1981, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (56) 210-216
The234U and238U concentration in brine from six Gulf Coast geopressured aquifers has been determined. The results reveal very low uranium concentrations (from 0.003 to 0.03 μg/l) and uranium activity ratios slightly greater than unity (from 1.06 to 1.62). Reducing conditions within the aquifers are responsible for the low uranium concentrations....
Preconsolidation stress of aquifer systems in areas of induced land subsidence
Thomas L. Holzer
1981, Water Resources Research (17) 693-704
Aquifer systems in the Eloy-Picacho area, Arizona, the Houston-Galveston area, Texas, and the Tulare-Wasco area and Santa Clara Valley, California, appear to have been overconsolidated by an amount that ranged approximately from 1.6 to 6.2 bars (16 to 63 m of water) before man began to withdraw groundwater from them....
Hydrologic testing of tight zones in southeastern New Mexico
K.F. Dennehy, P. A. Davis
1981, Groundwater (19) 482-489
Increased attention is being directed toward the investigation of tight zones in relation to the storage and disposal of hazardous wastes. Shut-in tests, slug tests, and pressure-slug tests are being used at the proposed Waste Isolation Pilot Plant site, located in southeastern New Mexico, to...
Plate-tectonic mechanism of Laramide deformation.
W. Hamilton
1981, Contributions to Geology - University of Wyoming, Laramie (19) 87-92
The Laramide compressive deformation of the craton was caused by a clockwise rotation of about 2-4o of the Colorado Plateau region relative to the continental interior, during late Late Cretaceous and early Tertiary time. Late Paleozoic and Neogene deformation of the craton also were produced by motion of a southwestern...
Late Cenozoic stages and molluscan zones of the U.S. Middle Atlantic Coastal Plain
B. W. Blackwelder
1981, Journal of Paleontology, Supplement, Part II (55)
Pliocene to Holocene deposits of the U.S.Atlantic Coastal Plain from Maryland to Georgia are divided into four stages and four substages using molluscan biostratigraphic data. These divisions are the Wiltonian and Burwellian Stages (early Pliocene), Gouldian and Windyan Substages of the Colerainian Stage (late Pliocene to early Pleistocene), and Myrtlean...