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Page 4957, results 123901 - 123925

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Back-extraction of trace elements from organometallic-halide extracts for determination by flameless atomic absorption spectrometry
J. Robert Clark, John G. Viets
1981, Analytical Chemistry (53) 65-70
The Methyl isobutyl ketone-Amine synerGistic Iodkte Complex (MAGIC) extraction system offers the advantage that a large number of trace elements can be rapidly determined with a single sample preparation procedure. However, many of the elements extracted by the MAGIC system form volatile organometallic halide salts when the organic extract is...
Annual and semiannual variations of the geomagnetic field at equatorial locations
W.H. Campbell
1981, Journal of Atmospheric and Terrestrial Physics (43) 607-616
For a year of quiet solar-activity level, geomagnetic records from American hemisphere observatories located between about 0?? and 30?? north geomagnetic latitude were used to compare the annual and semiannual variations of the geomagnetic field associated with three separate contributions: (a) the quiet-day midnight level, MDT; (b) the solar-quiet daily...
Chemical constraints of groundwater management in the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico
W. Back, J.M. Lesser
1981, Journal of Hydrology (51) 119-130
Two critical objectives of water management in the Yucatan are: (1) to develop regional groundwater supplies for an expanding population and tourism based on the Mayan archeological sites and excellent beaches; and (2) to control groundwater pollution in a chemically sensitive system made...
Quaternary and geodetically measured crustal movements in the Tokai District, Central Honshu, Japan
W. Thatcher, T. Matsuda
1981, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (86) 9237-9247
Geodetic measurements made in this century demonstrate that modern movements correlate well with deformation that has occurred during the past 2 m.y. Both show effects of subduction and of the Quaternary collision of Izu Peninsula with Central Honshu. Westward from Suruga Bay, deformation is greatest near the coast, decreases markedly...
Geochemical evidence for a Brooks Range mineral belt, Alaska
S.P. Marsh, J. B. Cathrall
1981, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (15) 367-380
Geochemical studies in the central Brooks Range, Alaska, delineate a regional, structurally controlled mineral belt in east—west-trending metamorphic rocks and adjacent metasedimentary rocks. The mineral belt extends eastward from the Ambler River quadrangle to the Chandalar and Philip Smith quadrangles, Alaska, from 147° to 156°W. longitude, a distance of more...
U-Th-Pb systematics in hydrothermally altered granites from the Granite Mountains, Wyoming
J. S. Stuckless, Ignatius T. Nkomo, B. R. Doe
1981, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (45) 635-645
U-Th-Pb systematics were investigated in 15 samples representing two types of deuterically altered Archean granite (albitized and silicified-epidotized granite) from the Granite Mountains, Wyoming. The loss of K-feldspar during both types of deuteric alteration was accompanied by an extreme reduction of Pb content from roughly 40 ppm to less than...
Nuclear magnetic resonance studies of ancient buried wood-I. Observations on the origin of coal to the brown coal stage
Patrick G. Hatcher, Irving A. Breger, W.L. Earl
1981, Organic Geochemistry (3) 49-55
Various wood fragments buried in sediments under anaerobic conditions for from 450 yr to approximately 8 Myr have been examined by solid-state 13C nuclear magnetic resonance. Cellulose and other carbohydrates, the major components of Holocene wood, have been shown to be gradually hydrolyzed or otherwise lost under the conditions of...
Electrical properties of granite with implications for the lower crust
G.R. Olhoeft
1981, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (86) 931-936
The electrical properties of granite appear to be dominantly controlled by the amount of free water in the granite and by temperature. Minor contributions to the electrical properties are provided by hydrostatic and lithostatic pressure, structurally bound water, oxygen fugacity, and other parameters. The effect of sulfur fugacity may be...
Geologic controls of uranium mineralization in the Tallahassee Creek uranium district, Fremont County, Colorado.
K. A. Dickinson
1981, Mountain Geologist (18) 88-95
Two important orebodies have been defined by drilling in the Tallahassee Creek uranium district, Fremont County, Colorado, namely the Hansen and the Picnic Tree. Host rocks are respectively the upper Eocene Echo park Alluvium, and the lower Oligocene Tallahassee Creek Conglomerate. Average ore grade is about 0.08% U3O8. The principal...
Authigenic kaolinite and associated pyrite in chalk of the Cretaceous Niobrara Formation, Eastern Colorado
R. M. Pollastro
1981, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology (51) 553-562
Cores from the Smoky Hill Chalk Member of the Cretaceous Niobrara Formation have several zones containing authigenic kaolinite as spherical, moldic, polycrystalline aggregates that occur within single or multichambered foraminiferal tests and are commonly associated with framboidal pyrite. Such kaolinite is inferred to result from volcanic ash deposited during chalk...
Sedimentary framework of the Potomac River estuary, Maryland
Harley J. Knebel, E. Ann Martin, J.L. Glenn, Sally W. Needell
1981, Geological Society of America Bulletin (92) 578-589
Analyses of seismic-reflection profiles, sediment cores, grab samples, and side-scan sonar records, along with previously collected borehole data, reveal the characteristics, distribution, and geologic history of the shallow strata beneath the Potomac River estuary. The lowermost strata are sediments of the Chesapeake Group (lower Miocene to lower Pleistocene) that crop...
Reactor-released radionuclides in Susquehanna River sediments
C.R. Olsen, I.L. Larsen, N.H. Cutshall, J.F. Donoghue, O.P. Bricker, H.J. Simpson
1981, Nature (294) 242-245
Three Mile Island (TMI) and Peach Bottom (PB) reactors have introduced 137Cs, 134Cs, 60Co, 58Co and several other anthropogenic radionuclides into the lower Susquehanna River. Here we present the release history for these nuclides (Table 1) and radionuclide concentration data (Table 2) for sediment samples collected in the river and...
Pb210 geochronology and trace metal concentrations of sediments from Upper Klamath Lake and Lake Euwana, Oregon.
E.A. Martin, C. A. Rice
1981, Northwest Science (55) 269-280
Rates of sedimentation calculated from analyses of 210Pb activities in cores from two shallow lakes whose mean depths are 2.4m, Upper Klamath Lake and Lake Euwana (Klamath County, Oregon), indicate that they are filling at approximately 3.0mm/yr. Average sedimentation rates for compaction-corrected cores range from 0.9mm/yr to 8.5mm/yr or from...
Woolly erionite from the Reese River zeolite deposit, Lander County, Nevada, and its relationship to other erionites
Arthur J. Gude III, Richard A. Sheppard
1981, Clays and Clay Minerals (29) 378-384
Woolly erionite from the Reese River deposit, Nevada, is identical in appearance to that at the type locality, near Durkee, Oregon. Both of these erionites differ in appearance from all other erionite reported in the past 20 years from diverse rocks throughout the world which are described as prismatic or...
Issue in pollution control: interplant cost differences and economies of scale.
R.W. Pittman
1981, Land Economics (57) 1-17
Seeks evidence concerning the issues of the relative efficiencies of different institutional arrangements for pollution control and the implications of control requirements for economies of scale and barriers to entry. Data is derived from the estimation of a production function for 30 pulp and paper mills in Wisconsin and Michigan....
7.3 quake in Algeria reviewed.
Robert O. Burford, Philip W. Harsh
1981, Geotimes (26) 18-20
A team from the U.S. Geological Survey studies the surface effects of the Oct. 1980 10 shock, whose epicenter was west of Algiers, near the African Plate boundary. -Authors...
Exsolution of Ca-clinopyroxene from orthopyroxene aided by deformation
S. H. Kirby, M.A. Etheridge
1981, Physics and Chemistry of Minerals (7) 105-109
Monoclinic calcium-poor shear-transformation lamellae and calcium-rich exsolution lamellae occur parallel to (100) in orthopyroxene. The formation of both structures from an orthopyroxene host involves a shear on (100) parallel to [001], with additional cation exchange in the exsolution case. The shear transformation involves a macroscopic simple shear angle of 13.3??...
Coregonus prognathus Smith: a nomen dubium
Thomas N. Todd
1981, Copeia (1981) 489-490
No unique phenotypes were observed among the specimens and no single species clearly dominated the samples. I conclude therefore that the species Coregonus prognathus has no taxonomic validity. Because of the poor condition and uncertain identity of the holotype, Coregonus prognathus should be considered a nomen dubium....
Allelic variability in species and stocks of Lake Superior ciscoes (Coregoninae)
Thomas N. Todd
1981, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (38) 1808-1813
Starch gel electrophoresis was used as a means of recognizing species and stocks in Lake Superior Coregonus. Allelic variability at isocitrate dehydrogenase and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase loci was recorded for samples of lake herring (Coregonus artedii), bloater (C. hoyi), kiyi (C. kiyi), and shortjaw cisco (C. zenithicus) from five Lake Superior...
The role of nutrient reserves in mallard reproduction
Gary L. Krapu
1981, The Auk (98) 29-38
Mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) populations breeding in temperate North America obtain a significant part of the energy and lipid requirements of reproduction at sites occupied prior to arrival on the breeding grounds. Protein for egg formation, however, is obtained principally from the diet during the nesting period. Both sexes arrive heavy...
Environmental and genetic contributions to morphological differentiation in ciscoes (Coregoninae) of the Great Lakes
Thomas N. Todd, Gerald R. Smith, Louella E. Cable
1981, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (38) 59-67
Laboratory-produced progeny of Coregonus alpenae, C. zenithicus, C. hoyi, and C. kiyi and their wild parents were used to examine the contributions of genotype and environment to morphology. Morphological differences between parents and offspring were generally greater than those between species, indicating strong environmental effects. The phenotypic effects on most characters can probably be attributed to different developmental...
The winter season - Northern Great Plains
David O. Lambeth, Craig A. Faanes
1981, American Birds (35) 311-313
This winter was hardly a winter by usual standards. At Grand Forks six record highs were set in February, a month which averaged 11°F above normal, and a -20° reading was not recorded the entire season for the first time in 50 years. Fort Peck Lake in Montana finally iced...