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Page 5004, results 125076 - 125100

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Metals in riparian wildlife of the lead mining district of southeastern Missouri
K. R. Niethammer, Richard D. Atkinson, Thomas S. Baskett, Fred B. Samson
1985, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (14) 213-223
Five species of riparian vertebrates (425 individuals) primarily representing upper trophic levels were collected from the Big River and Black River drainages in two lead mining districts of southeastern Missouri, 1981–82. Big River is subject to metal pollution via erosion and seepage from large tailings piles from inactive lead mines....
Remote sensing of lunar pyroclastic mantling deposits
Lisa R. Gaddis, Carle M. Pieters, B. Ray Hawke
1985, Icarus (61) 461-489
Mantling deposits on the Moon are considered to be pyroclastic units emplaced on the lunar surface as a result of explosive fire fountaining. These pyroclastic units are characterized as having low albedos, having smooth fine-textured surfaces, and consisting in part of homogeneous, Febearing volcanic glass and partially crystallized spheres. Mantling...
Effects of flow alterations on trout, angling, and recreation in the Chattahoochee River between Buford Dam and Peachtree Creek
John M. Nestler, Robert T. Milhouse, Jay Troxel, Janet A. Fritschen
1985, Report
In 1974 county governments in the Atlanta vicinity realized that demands on the Chattahoochee River for water supply plus the streamflow required for water quality nearly equaled the minimum flow in the river. Increased demands for water supply in the following years could not be supplied under the then existing...
Late Pleistocene—Holocene geology of the central Virgin Island Platform
Charles W. Holmes, Jack L. Kindinger
1985, Marine Geology (64) 41-64
Geophysical and sedimentological data collected on the central Virgin Islands insular shelf provide a unique opportunity to investigate carbonate shelf processes in an active tectonic environment. Although complicated by fluctuating sea level during the Quaternary, the sedimentological regimes have been controlled by the tectonic fragmentation of the region. South of...
Sorption of lead onto two gram-negative marine bacteria in seawater
Ronald W. Harvey, James O. Leckie
1985, Marine Chemistry (15) 333-344
Laboratory adsorption experiments performed at environmentally significant lead (Pb) and cell concentrations indicate that the marine bacteria examined have significant binding capacities for Pb. However, the behavior governing Pb sorption onto gram-negative bacteria in seawater may be quite complex. The sorption kinetics appear to involve two distinct phases, i.e., a...
Use of otoliths to determine age and growth of largemouth bass in Florida
M.V. Hoyer, J.V. Shireman, M.J. Maceina
1985, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (114) 307-309
The annual formation of otolith annuli was validated through age 5 for Florida largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides floridanus. Sectioned otoliths (sagittae) gave more reliable ages than whole otoliths. Beginning at age 2, at least one annulus was obscure in some whole‐otolith mounts, a problem that worsened with fish age. By...
Mid-Atlantic Ridge coccolith and silicoflagellate biostratigraphy, Deep Sea Drilling Project Sites 558 and 563.
David Bukry
1985, Initial Reports of the D.S.D.P. (82) 591-603
Low-latitude coccolith zonation can be used for biostratigraphy at Mid-Atlantic Ridge sites DSDP 558 (lat. 38°N) and DSDP 563 (lat. 34°N). The low-latitude zonal sequence from lower Oligocene to Holocene is interrupted by coolwater assemblages in upper middle Miocene and by hiatuses that removed the lower Pliocene and part of...
Tropical Pacific silicoflagellate zonation and paleotemperature trends of the late Cenozoic
David Bukry
1985, Initial Reports of the D.S.D.P. (85) 477-497
Quantitative study of late Cenozoic silicoflagellates at tropical Pacific DSDP Sites 572 and 575 shows that the greatest amplitude of fluctuation in relative paleotemperature values occurred in the late Miocene. The coolest minimum paleotemperature values (near 75 = 30) also occurred in the late Miocene. The warmest intervals (Ts =...
Gas hydrates on the northern California continental margin
Michael E. Field, Keith A. Kvenvolden
1985, Geology (13) 517-520
The inner continental margin of northern California is underlain by a well-defined and extensive acoustic reflector that crosses other reflectors and mimics the surface of the sea floor. This bottom-simulating reflector (BSR) lies at a typical subsurface depth of about 250 m and has been mapped continuously beneath the Klamath...
Book Review: The microscopic pond
Terry T. Terrell
1985, American Biology Teacher (47) 113-113
People have been fascinated by the variety of life in a drop of water since microscopes were invented....
Fish and wildlife mitigation options for port development in Tampa Bay: results of a workshop
Gregor T. Auble, Austin K. Andrews, David B. Hamilton, James E. Roelle
1985, Report
This report records the results of a workshop held September 25-27, 1983, in Tampa, Florida. The organization of the report closely follows the organization of the workshop itself. The workshop began with a definition of objectives and several presentations providing general background. The context and objectives of the workshop are...
Environmental systems and management activities on the Kennedy Space Center, Merritt Island, Florida: results of a modeling workshop
David B. Hamilton, Austin K. Andrews, Gregor T. Auble, Richard A. Ellison, Adrian H. Farmer, James E. Roelle
1985, Report
In the early 1960's, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) began purchasing 140,000 acres on Merritt Island, Florida, in order to develop a center for space exploration. Most of this land was acquired to provide a safety and security buffer around NASA facilities. NASA, as the managing...
Problems in estimating age-specific survival rates from recovery data of birds ringed as young
David R. Anderson, Kenneth P. Burnham, Gary C. White
1985, Journal of Animal Ecology (54) 89-98
(1) The life table model is frequently employed in the analysis of ringer samples of young in bird populations. The basic model is biologically unrealistic and of little use in making inferences concerning age-specific survival probabilities. (2) This model rests on a number of restrictive assumptions, the failure of which...
Reinterpretation of the palynology and age of laramide syntectonic deposits, southwestern Montana, and revision of the Beaverhead Group
Douglas J. Nichols, W. J. Perry Jr., J.C.H. Johns
1985, Geology (13) 149-153
New palynological data from syntectonic deposits in southwestern Montana have major temporal implications for Laramide structural relations in the northern Rocky Mountains. Conglomerate and associated sandstones representing the bulk of material eroded from the thrust-faulted margin of the Blacktail-Snowcrest foreland massif are middle Campanian (Aquilapollenites senonicus Interval Zone; estimated absolute age...
Barrier island arcs along abandoned Mississippi River deltas
Shea Penland, John R. Suter, Ron Boyd
1985, Marine Geology (63) 197-233
Generation of transgressive barrier island arcs along the Mississippi River delta plain and preservation of barrier shoreline facies in their retreat paths on the inner shelf is controlled by: (1) shoreface translation; (2) age of the transgression; and (3) the thickness of the barrier island arc sediment package. Barrier island...
Two-million-year record of deuterium depletion in Great Basin ground waters
Isaac J. Winograd, Barney J. Szabo, Tyler B. Coplen, A.C. Riggs, Peter T. Kolesar
1985, Science (227) 519-522
Fluid inclusions in uranium series-dated calcitic veins from the southern Great Basin record a reduction of 40 per mil in the deuterium content of groundwater recharge during the Pleistocene. This variation is tentatively attributed to major uplift of the Sierra Nevada Range and the Transverse Ranges during this epoch with...
Acute oral toxicity and repellency of 933 chemicals to house and deer mice
E. W. Schafer Jr., W. A. Bowles Jr.
1985, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (14) 111-129
Five individual bioassay repellency or toxicity variables were estimated or determined for deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) and house mice (Mus musculus) under laboratory conditions. ALD's (Approximate Lethal Doses) or LD50's of 230 chemicals to deer mice are presented, as are food reduction (FR) values (3-day feeding test as a 2.0%...
Geologic evidence for recurrent moderate to large earthquakes near Charleston, South Carolina
Stephen F. Obermeier, Gregory Gohn, Robert E. Weems, R. L. Gelinas, Meyer Rubin
1985, Science (227) 408-411
Multiple generations of earthquake-induced sand blows in Quaternary sediments and soils near Charleston, South Carolina, are evidence of recurrent moderate to large earthquakes in that area. The large 1886 earthquake, the only historic earthquake known to have produced sand blows at Charleston, probably caused the youngest observed blows. Older (late...
Structure and eruptive mechanisms at Surtsey Volcano, Iceland
James G. Moore
1985, Geological Magazine (122) 649-661
Glassy basalt tuff was the primary material cored in 1979 from a 181 m deep drill hole on the east tuff ring of Surtsey volcano. Despite the fact that the hole extends 122 m below sea level all the core is similar to the exposed tephra composing the two tuff...
Plasticity at crack tips in Gd3Ga5O12 garnet single crystals deformed at temperatures below 950°C
H. Garem, J. Rabier, Stephen H. Kirby
1985, Philosophical Magazine A: Physics of Condensed Matter, Structure, Defects and Mechanical Properties (51) 485-496
Single crystals of Gd3Ga5O12 have been strained under confining pressure (1 5 GPa) at temperatures below 950°C. No evidence for macroscopic plasticity was found, but transmission electron microscopy revealed dislocation generation at crack tips. Deformation mechanisms are different from those operating in the high-temperature regime: extending stacking faults in {110} planes...
Classification of deep-sea, fine-grained sediments
Walter E. Dean, Margaret Leinen, D.A. Stow
1985, Journal of Sedimentary Petrology (55) 250-256
Most deep-sea sediments contain one or more biogenic components and one dominant nonbiogenic component, usually clay or silty clay. The authors present a descriptive classification scheme in which deep-sea, fine-grained sediments are placed within a three-components system of calcareous-biogenic, siliceous-biogenic, and nonbiogenic components. In a three-procedure the user assesses whether...
Variations in the global carbon cycle during the Cretaceous related to climate, volcanism, and changes in atmospheric CO2
M.A. Arthur, Walter E. Dean, S.O. Schlanger
1985, Book chapter, The carbon cycle and atmospheric CO2: Natural variations archean to present
The stratigraphic record from both deep-sea and shallow-water depositional environments indicates that during late Aptian through Cenomanian time (1) global climates were considerably warmer than at present; (2) latitudinal gradients of atmospheric and oceanic temperatures were considerably less than at present; (3) rates of accumulation of organic matter of both...