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Page 5645, results 141101 - 141125

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Chemical quality of water in the Walnut River basin, south-central Kansas
Robert B. Leonard
1972, Water Supply Paper 1982
Improper disposal of oil-field brine and other wastes has adversely affected the naturally diverse chemical quality of much of the water in the Walnut River basin, south-central Kansas. The basin is an area of about 2,000 square miles in the shape of a rough triangle with its apex toward the...
ERTS and EROS
EROS Program Staff
1972, Geotimes (17) 20-23
In June the National Aeronautics & Space Administration is to launch its first experimental satellite designed to view the Earth systematically with remote-sensing instruments that will provide new information about our resources and environment. The launching will culminate more than 8 years of planning and research by resource agencies of...
Ground-water data in the Corvallis-Albany area, central Willamette Valley, Oregon
F. J. Frank, N. A. Johnson
1972, Report
THE CORVALLIS-ALBANY AREA IS PART OF THE ALLUVIAL PLAIN THAT LIES BETWEEN THE CASCADE AND COAST RANGES IN THE CENTRAL WILLAMETTE VALLEY IN NORTHWESTERN OREGON. THE ALLUVIAL DEPOSITS (SAND AND GRAVEL) OF THE VALLEY PLAIN CONTAIN THE MOST PRODUCTIVE AQUIFERS IN THE AREA AND ARE CONSIDERED TO BE THE ONLY...
Falling-stream turbidimeter as a means of measuring sediment concentrations in streams
Harold P. Guy, Richard C. Olson
1972, Report
An optical (photocell) sensing device was used to measure the relative transparency characteristics of sediment suspensions with a view toward improving our ability to measure the temporal variations of suspended-sediment concentration moving in streams. The instrument used was a commercial "falling stream" turbidimeter that measured the relative transparency of a...
Interstitial water studies on small core samples, leg 14
L.S. Waterman, F.L. Sayles, Frank T. Manheim
1972, Initial reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project (14) 753-761
The interstitial waters from the sediments cored on Leg 14 exhibit characteristic compositional trends with three important exceptions. At most of the sites, the changes in Na and Cl are very small while enrichment of Ca and Sr and depletion of Mg and SO4 is typical of patterns observed in...
Interstitial water studies on small core samples, leg XI
F.L. Sayles, Frank T. Manheim, L.S. Waterman
1972, Initial reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project (11) 997-1007
The sediments cored at Sites 98, 99 and 100 are predominantly biogenic; those cored at Sites 101 through 106 are composed mainly of terrigenous material. As reported previously, most constituents in pore waters from the biogenic oozes exhibit minor changes in chemistry relative to sea water. In the terrigenous-hemipelagic sediments...
Pliocene uplift of the grand canyon region - time of drainage adjustment
E. D. McKee, E.H. McKee
1972, Geological Society of America Bulletin (83) 1923-1932
Tertiary gravel deposits in ancient stream channels along the southern margin of the Colorado Plateaus of northern Arizona show by composition and structure that these deposits came from sources to the south and southwest at a time when central Arizona stood higher than the present Grand Canyon region. Three cobbles...
Hawaiian-emperor chain and its relation to cenozoic circumpacific tectonics
E.D. Jackson, E. A. Silver, G. B. Dalrymple
1972, Geological Society of America Bulletin (83) 601-618
The Hawaiian Ridge and Emperor Seamounts appear to form a single chain of tholeiitic shield volcanoes that erupted sequentially on the sea floor of the central Pacific Ocean during Tertiary and Quaternary time. The chain cuts obliquely across the older Cretaceous structural patterns of that sea floor. While the pattern...
Geologic setting of the Apollo 15 samples
G.A. Swann, N. G. Bailey, R. M. Batson, V. L. Freeman, M. H. Hait, H. E. Holt, K.B. Larson, V. S. Reed, G. G. Schaber, R. L. Sutton, E.W. Wolfe, Keith A. Howard, H. G. Wilshire, J.W. Head, J.B. Irwin, D.R. Scott, W.R. Muehlberger, L. T. Silver, J. J. Rennilson
1972, Science (175) 407-415
The samples and photographs returned from the Apollo 15 site show that Hadley Delta is largely underlain by breccias whose clasts are mainly fragments of coarse-grained feldspathic rocks and nonmare-type basalt. Conspicuous sets of lineaments, visible in surface and orbital photographs of Mount Hadley and Hadley Delta, may represent systematic...
Structure of Sierra Madera, Texas, as a guide to central peaks of lunar craters
Keith A. Howard, Terry W. Offield, H. G. Wilshire
1972, GSA Bulletin (83) 2795-2808
Like hundreds of other lunar craters of probable impact origin, Copernicus contains central peaks presumed to expose rocks uplifted from beneath the crater floor. A possible analog of these peaks on Earth is the central uplift of the Sierra Madera cryptoexplosion structure, a probable impact scar (astrobleme) in stratified Permian...
Paleomagnetic correlations and Potassium-Argon dating of Middle Tertiary ash-flow sheets in the eastern Great Basin, Nevada and Utah
C. S. Grommé, E.H. McKee, M. Clark Blake Jr.
1972, GSA Bulletin (83) 1619-1638
Directions of natural remanent magnetization are used to identify and correlate individual cooling units in the middle Tertiary ash-flow province in central and eastern Nevada and western Utah. Potassium-argon dating indicates that the minimum time between eruptions of individual but genetically related ash-flow cooling units is on the order of...
Eastward migration of blue-winged teal
Brian Sharp
1972, Journal of Wildlife Management (36) 1273-1277
Of 3,789 recoveries of blue-winged teal (Anas discors) banded prior to the hunting season in the prairie pothole region, 183 (4.8 percent) were recovered, due east in New England, Ontario, Quebec, and the Maritime Provinces during the subsequent hunting season. Of 19 recoveries looked at in detail, all were banded...
Migration patterns and wintering localities of American ospreys
Charles J. Henny, W.T. Van Velzen
1972, Journal of Wildlife Management (36) 1133-1141
North American ospreys (Pandion haliaetus carolinensis), banded primarily in the Middle Atlantic States and in New England, apparently migrate to their winter grounds in the West Indies and South America on a broad front. Ospreys do not return to the United States as 1-year-olds, but an estimated 28 to 55...
Massive sulfide copper deposits of the Ergani-Maden area, Southeastern Turkey
W. R. Griffitts, J. P. Albers, Oemer Oener
1972, Economic Geology (67) 701-716
The copper deposits of the Ergani-Maden area, in the Taurus Mountains of southeastern Turkey, have been a major source of copper for more than 4,000 years. The area is underlain by gently dipping mudstones interlayered with mafic volcanic rocks and lenticular beds of limestone, mainly of Eocene age. The layered...
Normal yeast flora of the upper digestive tract of some wild columbids
R. M. Kocan, H.F. Hasenclever
1972, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (8) 365-368
Seven species of pigeons and doves were cultured for yeasts in the upper digestive tract. The following list gives the isolation rate for each columbid species and the yeasts cultured from them: feral pigeon Colwnha livia (Gmelin) 95% — Candida albicans (Robin) Berkhout, C. tropicalis (Castellani) Berkhout, C. krusei (Cast.) Berkhout, C. guilliermondii (Cast.) Langeron et Guerra, Torulopsis glabrata (Anderson) Lodder et...
Observation of nighttime feeding behavior of ducks
George A. Swanson, Alan B. Sargeant
1972, Journal of Wildlife Management (36) 959-961
A night vision scope was used during 1969-71 to study the nighttime feeding behavior of ducks on prairie wetlands of south-central North Dakota. Adult and immature ducks were observed feeding between 9:00 PM and 4:00 AM, predominantly on midges (Chironomidae) and mayflies (Ephemeroptera). The emergence pattern of these insects appeared...
Some effects of aldrin-treated rice on Gulf Coast wildlife
Edward L. Flickinger, Kirk A. King
1972, Journal of Wildlife Management (36) 706-727
Wildlife casualties from aldrin-dieldrin poisoning are associated with the planting of aldrin-treated rice seed along the Texas Gulf Coast. The fulvous tree duck (Dendrocygna bicolor), which depends on the rice field habitats and is highly susceptible to aldrin-dieldrin poisoning, is suffering a serious population decline in that area. Dead waterfowl,...
Lethal mobilization of DDT by cowbirds
A.C. Van Velzen, W.B. Stiles, Lucille F. Stickel
1972, Journal of Wildlife Management (36) 733-739
This study is an experimental demonstration of lethal mobilization of DDT by brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater) and the effects of food deprivation on the distribution and loss of DDT, DDD, and DDE. The principal experimental group consisted of 20 birds fed a dietary dosage of 100 ppm of DDT for...
Paleomagnetism and potassium-argon ages of the Sonoma Volcanics, California
Edward A. Mankinen
1972, GSA Bulletin (83) 2063-2072
Paleomagnetic data and potassium-argon ages indicate that the Sonoma Volcanics was erupted during the Pliocene Gilbert reversed and Gauss normal polarity epochs. The Gilbert reversed epoch is represented in the Howell Mountains east of Napa and east of St. Helena, in the mountains immediately east of the Valley of the...