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Page 5824, results 145576 - 145600

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Overlapping plutonism, volcanism, and tectonism in the boulder batholith region, western Montana
G.D. Robinson, M. R. Klepper, J. D. Obradovich
1968, Memoir of the Geological Society of America (116) 557-576
It is well known that the Boulder batholith region experienced intensive plutonism, volcanism, and tectonism that all began in Late Cretaceous time, after at least 700 m.y. of structural and igneous inactivity except for sporadic epeirogeny. Recent stratigraphic, structural, paleontologic, arid, especially, radiometric evidence makes it possible to date these...
Water-supply problems in southwest Florida
Durward H. Boggess
1968, Open-File Report FL 68-003
Water-supply problems in southwest Florida are largely related to the quality, or deterioration in the quality of the water, rather than to the quantity of water available. When we consider that the abundant supply of water visible at the surface is only a fraction of the quantity stored in the...
Seismic survey in the region of recent earthquake activity near Denver, Colorado
B.F. Rummerfield, A. Peter Olson, D.B. Hoover
1968, Geophysics (33) 915-925
A seismic-reflection survey was carried out near Denver, Colorado, for the U. S. Geological Survey, to determine if structures exist in the 12,000-ft sedimentary section or in the Precambrian basement that might explain the recent earthquake activity. No major faults were revealed in the sedimentary section. Reflections from a steeply dipping horizon believed to be in the basement complex may be indicative of faulting; however, the magnitude cannot...
Reward banding to determine reporting rate of recovered mourning dove bands
R. E. Tomlinson
1968, Journal of Wildlife Management (32) 6-11
Reward bands placed on the other leg of certain regularly banded immature mourning doves (Zenaidura macroura) were used to develop information on reporting rates of recovered dove bands. Reports from 15 widely separated sections of the United States showed considerable variation in recovery rate of doves both with and without...
Water quality of streams tributary to Lakes Superior and Michigan
Jerome W. Zimmerman
1968, Special Scientific Report - Fisheries 559
Water quality of streams tributary to Lakes Superior and Michigan was analyzed for 142 stations on 99 streams tributary to Lake Superior and 83 stations on 56 streams tributary to Lake Michigan during 1962-65. Concentrations of aluminum, copper, and iron were not affected greatly by flow or season. Magnesium, calcium,...
Distribution of manganese between coexisting biotite and hornblende in plutonic rocks
L. P. Greenland, D. Gottfried, R.I. Tilling
1968, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (32) 1149-1163
The distribution of manganese between coexisting biotite and hornblende for 80 mineral pairs from igneous rocks of diverse provenance (including Southern California, Sierra Nevada, Boulder, and Boulder Creek batholiths and the Jemez Mountains volcanics) has been determined by neutron activation analysis. Data on...
Herpetic keratoconjunctivitis: Therapy with synthetic double-stranded RNA
I. Friedman, C. Evans, C.W. Meighan, L.J. Foote, P.V. Aiello, J.H. Park, S. Baron
1968, Science (162) 811-813
A study was undertaken in rabbits to determine how late in the course of keratoconjunctivitis caused by herpes simplex recovery could be effected by an inducer of interferon. Interferon was induced by means of synthetic double-stranded RNA copolymer formed with polynosinic acid : polycytidilic acid RNA. Therapy promotes recovery from...
Alga-like forms in onverwacht series, South Africa: Oldest recognized lifelike forms on earth
A.E.J. Engel, B. Nagy, L.A. Nagy, C.G. Engel, G.O.W. Kremp, C.M. Drew
1968, Science (161) 1005-1008
Spheroidal and cupshaped, carbonaceous alga-like bodies, as well as filamentous structures and amorphous carbonaceous matter occur in sedimentary rocks of the Onverwacht Series (Swaziland System) in South Africa. The Onverwacht sediments are older than 3.2 eons, and they are probably the oldest, little-altered sedimentary rocks on Earth. The basal Onverwacht...
Nutrient loss accelerated by clear-cutting of a forest ecosystem
F.H. Bormann, G.E. Likens, D.W. Fisher, R.S. Pierce
1968, Science (159) 882-884
The forest of a small watershed-ecosystem was cut in order to determine the effects of removal of vegetation on nutrient cycles. Relative to undisturbed ecosystems, the cut ecosystem exhibited accelerated loss of nutrients: nitrogen lost during the first year after cutting was equivalent to the amount annually turned over in...
Exsolution in clinoamphiboles
M. Ross, J. J. Papike, P.W. Weiblen
1968, Science (159) 1099-1102
Ten amphibole specimens from a variety of metamorphic rocks such as talc schists, eclogites, and metamorphosed iron formations contain lamellae of a second amphibole oriented parallel to (101) or (100), or both, of the host. Tremolites, actinolites, and hornblendes commonly have lamellae of a calcium-poor clinoamphibole with P21/m space-group symmetry,...
Hydration rind dates rhyolite flows
I. Friedman
1968, Science (159) 878-880
Hydration of obsidian has been used to date rhyolite flows, containing obsidian or porphyritic glass, at Glass Mountain (Medicine Lake Highlands) and Mono Lake, California. The method is simple and rapid and can be used to date flows that erupted between 200 and approximately 200,000 years ago....
Measurement of geothermal flux through poorly consolidated sediments
J.H. Sass, R. J. Munroe, A.H. Lachenbruch
1968, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (4) 293-298
In many regions, crystalline rocks are covered by hundreds of meters of unconsolidated and poorly consolidated sediments. Estimates of heat flux within these sediments using standard continental techniques (temperature and conductivity measurements at intervals of 10 to 30 meters) are unreliable, mainly...
Geologic history of the continental margin of North America in the Bering Sea
D.W. Scholl, E. C. Buffington, D.M. Hopkins
1968, Marine Geology (6) 297-330
The North American continental margin beneath the Bering Sea is nearly 1,300 km long and extends from Alaska to eastern Siberia. The margin is a canyon-scarred 3,200–3,400-m high escarpment separating one of the world's largest epicontinental seas (the shallow Bering Sea) and the...
Activity product constant of cryolite at 25°C and one atmosphere using selective-ion electrodes to estimate sodium and fluoride activities
C. E. Roberson, J.D. Hem
1968, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (32) 1343-1351
The activity product constant of cryolite (Na3AlF6) at 25°C and 1 atm total pressure was calculated from data for solutions from which synthetic cryolite or mixtures of cryolite and a solid apparently related to ralstonite had precipitated. The activities of fluoride and of sodium were estimated using specific ion...
Simultaneous determination of tantalum and hafnium in silicates by neutron activation analysis
L. P. Greenland
1968, Analytica Chimica Acta (42) 365-370
A neutron activation procedure suitable for the routine determination of tantalum and hafnium in silicates is described. The irradiated sample is fused with sodium peroxide and leached, and the insoluble hydroxides are dissolved in dilute hydrofluoric acid-hydrochloric acid. After LaF3 and AgCl scavenges, tantalum and hafnium...
Middle pennsylvanian plant fossils: Problematic occurrence in the bronx
E-an Zen, S.H. Mamay
1968, Science (161) 157-158
A possible glacial boulder of undeformed and unmetamorphosed siltstone containing Middle Pennsylvanian plant fossils was recovered from the Bronx. The rock cannot be explained by known geologic relations and suggests the possibility of undetected outliers of Pennsylvanian rocks in the Hudson valley....
Mineralogy as a function of depth in the prehistoric Makaopuhi tholeiitic lava lake, Hawaii
B.W. Evans, J.G. Moore
1968, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (17) 85-115
The electron probe X-ray microanalyzer has been used to determine the compositional variability of the groundmass minerals and glass in 10 specimens from a complete 225-foot section of the prehistoric tholeiitic lava lake of Makaopuhi Crater, Hawaii. The order of beginning of crystallization was: (1) chromite, (2) olivine, (3) augite,...