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Page 5971, results 149251 - 149275

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ground-water conditions in the southern and central parts of the East Shore area, Utah, 1953-61
Ralph E. Smith, Joseph S. Gates
1963, Utah Geological and Mineralogical Survey Water-Resources Bulletin 2
The East Shore area is in north-central Utah between the Wasatch Range and Great Salt Lake, and it has been divided into the Bountiful, Weber Delta, and Brigham ground-water districts, from south to north. The area described in this report includes the Bountiful and Weber Delta districts and the southernmost...
Hydrogeologic reconnaissance of part of the headwaters area of the Price River, Utah
Robert M. Cordova
1963, Utah Geological and Mineralogical Survey Water-Resources Bulletin 4
The area investigated comprises 33 square miles in the Price River drainage basin ad is in the High Plateaus section of Utah. Precipitation on most of the area ranges from about 20 to 23 inches per year, and the average annual precipitation for the entire area was assumed to be...
Effects on the shallow artesian aquifer of withdrawing water from the deep artesian aquifer near Sugarville, Millard County, Utah
R. W. Mower
1963, Utah State Engineer Water Circular 10
Ground water occurs in a shallow (unconfined) aquifer and in at least two artesian (confined) aquifers in the unconsolidated alluvial material composing the valley fill near Sugarville, Utah. No wells are known to withdraw water from the unconfined aquifer, and this report is limited to a discussion of the effects...
Dissolved-mineral inflow to Great Salt Lake and chemical characteristics of the salt lake brine. Part I: Selected hydrologic data
D. C. Hahl, C.G. Mitchell
1963, Utah Geological and Mineralogical Survey Water-Resources Bulletin 3-I
This report presents the data collected for a study of the dissolved-mineral load contributed by surficial sources to Great Salt Lake, Utah. The study was conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the University of Utah during the period from July 1959 through June 1962, and is part...
Test drilling in the upper Sevier River drainage basin, Garfield and Piute Counties, Utah
R.D. Feltis, G.B. Robinson
1963, Utah State Engineer Water Circular 12
A test-drilling program was conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey in the upper Sevier River drainage basin (fig. 1) in the summer of 1962. The program was part of a ground-water investigation made in cooperation with the Utah State Engineer. The drilling was financed cooperatively through the State Engineer by...
In vitro culture of the flagellate protozoan Hexamita salmonis
J. R. Uzmann, S.H. Hayduk
1963, Science (140) 290-292
Trophozoites of Hexamita salmonis, asserted pathogen of juvenile salmonid fishes, were isolated from two species of Pacific salmon hosts and cultured repeatedly in an organic medium saturated with nitrogen. Primary isolates and serial subcultures usually exhibited five- to tenfold population increases per passage....
The Hexamita(= Octomitus) problem: A preliminary report
J. R. Uzmann, J.W. Jesse
1963, Progressive Fish-Culturist (25) 141-143
THE INTESTINAL FLAGELLATE, Hexamita salmonis (Moore), was described in 1922 from trout in hatcheries throughout New York State. At first associated with the so-called whirling disease of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), now believed to be a virus disease, Hexamita was subsequently held responsible for practically any otherwise unexplainable mortality in...
Formalin in the Hatchery
R.R. Rucker, W.G. Taylor, D.P. Toney
1963, Progressive Fish-Culturist (25) 203-207
FORMALIN is used extensively in hatcheries to control external parasites of fish. There are reports that formalin is toxic at some hatcheries, especially when used on rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri). This is a discussion of the development of the use of formalin to control fish parasite-in the hatchery, its properties,...
A new geographic and host record for infectious pancreatic necrosis
T. J. Parisot, W. T. Yasutake, V. Bressler
1963, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (92) 63-66
The occurrence of infectious pancreatic necrosis in rainbow trout (Salmo gairdneri), brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis), and cutthroat trout (Salmo clarki) has been experimentally authenticated for the first time in the western United States. The cutthroat trout represents a new host. Brook trout fin tissue culture inoculated with bacteria-free filtrate from...
Co-oxidation of the sulfur-containing amino acids in an autoxidizing lipid system
Gary Wedemeyer, A.M. Dollar
1963, Journal of Food Science (28) 537-540
Oxidation of the sulfur amino acids by autoxidizing lipids was studied in a model system consisting of an amino acid dispersed in cold-pressed, molecularly distilled menhaden oil (20–80% w/w). Under all conditions investigated, cysteine was oxidized completely to cystine. Preliminary results suggest that at 110°C the oxidation follows first-order kinetics...
Publications on fish parasites and diseases, 330 B.C.-A.D
E.A. McGregor
1963, Special Scientific Report - Fisheries 474
These references were collected in 1924, but until now this collection has been available only in manuscript form. Because of the current increased interest in this field, this bibliography is being issued to make it more generally accessible. They include the earliest known references to fish parasites (330 B.C.) as...
Mycobacteria in adult salmonid fishes returning to national fish hatcheries in Washington, Oregon and California in 1958-59
A. J. Ross
1963, Special Scientific Report - Fisheries 462
Incidence of acid-fast bacillus infections in salmonid fishes at West Coast hatcheries was determined for 1957-59. No evidence was obtained which would indicate a definite trend towards either increased or decreased rates of infection. It is apparent that the incidence of infection is higher in hatchery-marked fish than in unmarked...
X-ray crystallographic data for minerals
Richard A. Robie, Philip M. Bethke, M.S. Toulmin, Jerry L. Edwards
1963, Trace Elements Investigations 830
X-ray crystallographic data are of particular importance to the mineralogist. Beyond the considerations of structural chemistry they provide. one of the most accurate methods for phase and/or compositional determination and for obtaining _the molar volumes and densities of minerals {Robie and Bethke, 1962)....
Hydrogeology of the carbonate rocks of the Lebanon Valley, Pennsylvania
Harold Meisler
1963, Ground Water Report 18
The Lebanon Valley, which is part of the Great Valley in southeastern Pennsylvania, is underlain by carbonate rocks in the southern part and by shale in the northern part. The carbonate rocks consist of alternating beds of limestone and dolomite of Cambrian and Ordovician age. Although the beds generally dip...
Hydrology of Brooklyn Lake near Keystone Heights, Florida
William E. Clark, Rufus H. Musgrove, Clarence G. Menke, Joseph W. Cagle Jr.
1963, Florida Geological Survey Report of Investigations 33
Brooklyn Lake receded about 20 feet during 1954-58 and reached its lowest stage of record (97.2 feet) in February 1958; this was the lowest stage in the memory of longtime residents. This unusually large recession was a result of deficient rainfall during more than a 3-year period, January 1954 to...
Geology and ground-water resources of northwestern King County, Washington
Bruce A. Liesch, Charles E. Price, Kenneth L. Walters
1963, Water Supply Bulletin 20
King County, in the west-central part of the State of Washington, includes about 2,135 square miles. The eastern part of the county lies in the Sierra-Cascade Mountains province and the remainder is in the Puget Trough of the Pacific Border province. The area covered by the present investigation is almost...
Geology and ground water resources of Kidder County, North Dakota
Jon L. Rau, Wallace E. Bakken, James Chmelik, Barrett J. Williams, P.G. Randich, L. R. Petri, D. G. Adolphson, Edward Bradley
1963, Bulletin 36
Kidder County was covered with glacial ice at least three times during the Wisconsin Stage of the Pleistocene, but the entire sequence of drifts has not been observed in one exposure. The drift which covers the area was deposited during three ice advances termed the Long Lake, Burnstad and Streeter...
Floods of January-February 1963 in California and Nevada
S. E. Rantz, E. E. Harris
1963, Report
Widespread flooding occurred in central California and northwestern Nevada during January 31 - February 1, 1963, as a result of intense precipitation of about 72 hours duration. The flood-producing storm was of the warm type, with precipitation falling as rain at altitudes as high as 8,000 feet. The heavy precipitation,...
Use of hydrologic models in the analysis of flood runoff
John Shen
1963, Report
The analog technique is applied to the analysis of flood runoff. A quasi-linear analog model has been developed for simulating the runoff-producing characteristics of a drainage system. Where storage is linear a unique relationship correlating the inflow and outflow peaks is derived. The technique for synthesizing flood-frequency distribution is also...