Newsletter
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Report
No abstract available....
Post-breeding activities of mallards and wood ducks in north-central Minnesota
D.S. Gilmer, R.E. Kirby, I.J. Ball, J. H. Riechmann
1977, Journal of Wildlife Management (41) 345-359
We used radio telemetry to monitor the post-breeding activities of 129 mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) and 118 wood ducks (Aix sponsa) on a 932-km2 area in north-central Minnesota from 1968 to 1974. Upon completion of breeding activities and before the flightless period, all mallard drakes departed the area; this exodus peaked...
Seed production, seed populations in the soil and seedling production after fire for two congeneric pairs of sprouting and nonsprouting chaparral shrubs
Jon E. Keeley
1977, Ecology (58) 820-829
A study of seed production, seed storage in the soil, and seedling production after fire was undertaken for a sprouting and a nonsprouting congenerica pair of species of Ceanothus and Arctostaphylos. All species exhibited large fluctuations in annual seed production. There was a significant correlation between fruit production and precipitation...
Disposal of saltwater during well construction--Problems and solutions
William A. Pitt Jr., Frederick W. Meyer, John E. Hull
1977, Groundwater (15) 276-283
The recent interest in the disposal of treated sewage effluent by deep-well injection into salt-water-filled aquifers has increased the need for proper disposal of salt water as more wells are drilled and tested each year.The effects on an unconfined aquifer of the improper disposal of salt water associated with the...
Storage of treated sewage effluent and stormwater in a saline aquifer, Pinellas Peninsula, Florida
J.S. Rosenshein, J.J. Hickey
1977, Groundwater (15) 284-293
The Pinellas Peninsula, an area of 750 square kilometres (290 square miles) in coastal west-central Florida, is a small hydrogeologic replica of Florida. Most of the Peninsula's water supply is imported from well fields as much as 65 kilometres (40 miles) inland. Stresses on the hydrologic environment of the Peninsula...
Shell thinning and reproductive impairment in black ducks after cessation of DDE dosage
J. R. Longcore, Rey C. Stendell
1977, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (6) 293-304
Captive black ducks (anas rubripes) were fed dietary DDE [1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis (p-chlorophenyl)ethylene] at 10 ppm (dry weight; about 2 ppm on a natural diet basis) for 2 breeding seasons, then untreated feed for 2 succeeding years. Residues of DDE in the carcasses of adults declined 90% during the 2-year clean-up period. Following...
Dieldrin mortality of lesser snow geese in Missouri
K.M. Babcock, Edward L. Flickinger
1977, Journal of Wildlife Management (41) 100-103
In March and April 1974, 157 lesser snow geese (Chen caerulescens) died from dieldrin poisoning during northward migration through western Missouri. Evidence strongly suggested that the mortality in Missouri resulted from delayed effects upon geese exposed to aldrin-treated rice seed on wintering areas in southeast Texas....
Flowing wells in Michigan, 1974
W.B. Allen
1977, Water Information Series Report 2
Flowing wells yielding fresh water occur in both the glacial drift and the bedrock in Michigan. Most known flowing wells are in the Lower Peninsula because the greater population in that part of the State has led to more frequent drilling. A comparison of flowing-well areas in 1900 with those...
Effects of external applications of No. 2 fuel oil on common eider eggs
Robert C. Szaro, P.H. Albers
Douglas A. Wolfe, editor(s)
1977, Book chapter, Fate and Effects of Petroleum Hydrocarbons in Marine Ecosystems and Organisms
Because eggs of marine birds may be exposed to oil adhering to the feathers of adult birds, a study was undertaken to determine the effects of oil contamination. Two hundred common eider eggs were divided into four experimental sets of 50 each. Two sets were treated with No....
Effects of external applications of fuel oil on hatchability of mallard eggs
P.H. Albers
Douglas A. Wolfe, editor(s)
1977, Book chapter, Fate and Effects of Petroleum Hydrocarbons in Marine Ecosystems and Organisms
An experiment was performed to determine the toxicity of oil to incubating eggs. Number 2 fuel oil, a mixture of 9 paraffin compounds, and propylene glycol were applied to the surface of artificially incubated mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) eggs. Seven groups of 50 eggs each were treated with 1, 5, 10,...
Routing of stormwater flows through storm drains
Marshall E. Jennings, Thomas N. Keefer
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 301-305
Storm-drain flow-routing methods based on kinematic-wave routing and storage-routing methods are compared with the MLSR (multiple-linearization storm-drain routing) method for hypothetical circular pipe problems. The MLSR method, based on a diffusion-wave routing concept, is shown to give very good results without incurring the numerical solution or damping problems of...
Virion RNA polymerases of two salmonid rhabdoviruses
P. E. McAllister, R.R. Wagner
1977, Journal of Virology (22) 839-843
RNA-dependent RNA polymerases were found to be associated with two salmonid rhabdoviruses: infectious hematopoietic necrosis (IHN) virus and the virus of hemorrhagic septicemia (VHS). The protein composition of these rhabdoviruses closely resembles that of rabies virus rather than that of vesicular stomatitis virus (McAllister and Wagner, 1975). The optimal temperature...
Gravitational spreading of steep-sided ridges ("sackung") in Colorado
Dorothy H. Radbruch-Hall, David J. Barnes, Roger B. Colton
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 359-363
Large-scale gravitational spreading and fracturing of steep-sided ridges in the mountainous area of Colorado are characterized by horizontal linear fissures, trenches, and uphill-facing scarps on tops and sides of ridges. A pronounced north-trending cleft and several minor scarps have split a ridge extending northward from Dolores Peak in the San...
Borehole geophysical investigations in the south Texas uranium district
Harry S. Starkey
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 343-357
Contrasts of electrical properties between uranium deposits and their host rocks in South Texas are subtle. In places where deposits are small or deep, conventional geophysical well-logging techniques and hole-to-hole measurements may be the only practical method to detect changes in rock properties associated with the occurrence of uranium ore...
Hydration dating of volcanism at Newberry Crater, Oregon
Irving Friedman
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 337-342
Obsidian hydration dating of pumice and obsidian from Newberry Crater, Oreg., shows that the postcaldera activity began about 6700 yr ago and that the latest major eruptive event occurred about 1400 yr B.P. Two of the hydration dates correlate with 14C-dated pumice eruptions....
Cauldron subsidence of Oligocene age at Mount Lewis, Shoshone Range, Nevada: A reasonable interpretation
Chester T. Wrucke, Miles L. Silberman
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 331-335
James Gilluly has rejected the interpretation of Wrucke and Silberman (U.S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 876, 1975) that a thrust fault and tear fault mapped by Gilluly and Gates (U.S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 465, 1965) as structures bounding the upper plate of the Roberts Mountains thrust at Mount Lewis...
Cauldron subsidence near Mount Lewis, Nevada: A misconception
James Gilluly
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 325-329
The map and interpretation of the geology of the Mount Lewis quadrangle, northern Shoshone Range, Nev., contained in U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 465 (1965) have recently been criticized and reinterpreted by C. T. Wrucke and M. L. Silberman in Professional Paper 876 (1975). I contend, however, that the reinterpretation...
An overview of remote sensing technology transfer in Canada and the United States
W. M. Strome, D. T. Lauer
1977, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Remote Sensing of Environment
No abstract available....
A reconnaissance investigation of a large meromictic lake in southeastern Alaska
George A. McCoy
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 319-324
Redoubt Lake is one of the largest documented meromictic lakes in North America. The chemocline extends in depth from 80 to 100 m (meters) and the steepest gradient is between 98 and 100 m. The monimolimnion is anoxic, contains hydrogen sulflde, and has a salinity about two-thirds that of seawater....
Analysis of the recharge potential of storm-water basins on Long Island, New York
David A. Aronson, Robert C. Prill
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 307-318
Many of the more than 2,200 storm-water basins on Long Island, N.Y., are potential sites for infiltration of large volumes of reclaimed water (highly treated domestic and industrial sewage). By use of a finite-difference method of calculation, changes in basin storage during idealized high-intensity storms were determined for the...
Interactions of nutrients, plant growth and herbivory in a mangrove ecosystem
Christopher P. Onuf, John M. Teal, Ivan Valiela
1977, Ecology (58) 514-526
The effect of nutrient enrichment of red mangroves (Rhizophora mangle) was studied by comparing two mangrove—covered islands in the Indian River at Ft. Pierce, Florida, USA, one (high nutrient) with and one (low nutrient) without a breeding colony of pelicans and egrets. Repeated measurements taken on > 100 tagged branches...
Streamflow characteristics related to channel geometry in the Missouri River basin
E. R. Hedman, W. M. Kastner
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 285-300
The relation of flood-frequency characteristics and mean annual runoff values to active-channel and depositional-bar geometry are presented for six regions in the Missouri River basin. Equations were derived by regression analyses based on the correlation of flow characteristics with the dimensions of the channel geometry. The flow characteristics also were...
Derivation of solute-transport equations for a turbulent natural-channel flow
Nobuhiro Yotsukura
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 277-284
The continuity equation of water and the convection-diffusion equation for a solute are derived by use of an orthogonal curvilinear (natural) coordinate system, which follows the meandering and irregular pattern of natural channel geometry. The solute is assumed to be neutrally buoyant, conservative, and passive. The three-, two-, and...
Determination of 22 minor and trace elements in 8 new USGS standard rocks by instrumental activation analysis with epithermal neutrons
J.J. Rowe, Eiliv Steinnes
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 397-402
Epithermal neutron-activation analyses results of the 8 new USGS standard rocks are compared with results by spectrographic, X-ray fluorimetric, atomic absorption, radiochemical neutron-activation, instrumental neutron-activation (thermal neutrons), isotope-dilution mass spectrometric, spectrofluorimetric, radioisotopic dilution and delayed-neutron techniques for 22 elements. Results indicate the technique to be useful and dependable especially for...
A new method for determining the solubility of salts in aqueous solutions at elevated temperatures
Robert W. Potter II, Scott Babcock, David L. Brown
1977, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (5) 389-395
A new method for measuring the solubility of simple salts in water at elevated temperatures involves heating assemblages of salt crystals plus solution vapor at a constant rate in a platinum-lined bomb. The dissolution of the last salt crystal is evidenced by a distinct discontinuity in the pressure-temperature curve. Studies...