Racial determination of origin of mourning doves in hunters' bags
J.W. Aldrich, A.J. Duvall, A. D. Geis
1958, Journal of Wildlife Management (22) 71-75
No abstract available. ...
Exploration of Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 4 and adjacent areas, northern Alaska, 1944-53; Part 1, History of the exploration
J. C. Reed
1958, Professional Paper 301
No abstract available....
Test wells, Meade and Kaolak areas, Alaska, with micropaleontology of Meade test well 1 and Kaolak test well 1, northern Alaska
Florence Rucker Collins, H. R. Bergquist
1958, Professional Paper 305-F
No abstract available....
The next decade in geochemistry
E. Ingerson
1958, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (14) 185-203
The purpose, associations, functions; and activities of the Geochmical Society are reviewed briefly. Work on the Colorado Plateau uranium deposits is described as an example of what geochemical research, in conjunction with detailed field work, mineralogical studies, and related techniques can contribute to the understanding of a type of deposit....
Parasitological methods for identification and abundance estimates of downstream migrant races of salmon
J. R. Uzmann, R.A. Lander, M. N. Hesselholt
1958, Conference Paper, Proceedings eighth Alaska science conference
No abstract available ...
Resistance to furunculosis and ulcer disease in Eastern brook trout, Salvelinus fontinalis
S. F. Snieszko, C. E. Dunbar, G. L. Bullock
1958, Conference Paper, Bacteriological Proceedings
No abstract available at this time...
Fishery management problems and possibilities on large southeastern reservoirs
John W. Parsons
1958, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (87) 333-355
Principal problems concerning the fisheries of large reservoirs in the Southeast are: inefficient and highly selective exploitation of fish stocks, and protection and reclamation of damaged or threatened fisheries in tailwaters and tributary streams. Seven mainstream reservoirs on which data are available support an average angling pressure of 4.9 trips...
Surface-current studies of Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron, 1956
James H. Johnson
1958, Special Scientific Report - Fisheries 267
No abstract available....
G-1-W-1 values-spectrochemical determination using an internal standard
E. J. Young
1958, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (13) 339-340
No abstract available....
Biogeochemistry of the rare-earth elements with particular reference to hickory trees
W. O. Robinson, H. Bastron, K. J. Murata
1958, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (14) 55-67
Hickory trees concentrate the rare-earth elements in their leaves to a phenomenal degree and may contain as much as 2300 p.p.m. of total rare earths based on the dry weight of the leaves. The average proportions of the individual elements (atomic percent of the total rare-earth elements) in the leaves...
Role of clay minerals in the transportation of iron
D. Carroll
1958, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (14) 1-28
The clay minerals have iron associated with them in several ways:1.(1) as an essential constituent2.(2) as a minor constituent within the crystal lattice where it is in isomorphous substitution and3.(3) as iron oxide on the surface of the mineral platelets. Nontronite, “hydromica,” some...
The water, deuterium, gas and uranium content of tektites
I. Friedman
1958, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (14) 316-324
The water content, deuterium concentration of the water, total gas and uranium contents were determined on tektite samples and other glass samples from Texas, Australia, Philippine Islands, Java, French Indo-China, Czechoslovakia, Libyan Desert, Billiton Island, Thailand, French West Africa, Peru, and New Mexico. The water content ranges from 0.24 per...
Relationship between Secchi disc readings and light penetration in Lake Huron
Alfred M. Beeton
1958, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (87) 73-79
Fifty-seven paired photometer and Secchi disc measurements made at 18 stations in Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron support the view that a counter-clockwise current usually occurs in the Bay with more transparent Lake Huron water flowing in along the northwest shore and less transparent Bay water flowing out along the...
Use of mononitrophenols containing halogens as selective sea lamprey larvicides
Vernon C. Applegate, John H. Howell, Manning A. Smith
1958, Science (127) 336-338
No abstract available....
Floods of June 1954 in Iowa
Ivan Dale Yost
1958, Water Supply Paper 1370-A
No abstract available....
Ground-water factors affecting drainage in the First Division, Buffalo Rapids Irrigation Project, Prairie and Dawson Counties, Montana, with a section on chemical character of the water
E. A. Moulder, Francis Anthony Kohout, E. R. Jochens
1958, Water Supply Paper 1424
No abstract available....
Ground-water resources of the San Luis Valley, Colorado, with a section on an inflow-outflow study of the area
William J. Powell, Philip B. Mutz
1958, Water Supply Paper 1379
No abstract available....
Ulcer disease in trout
R. G. Piper
1958, Fishery Leaflet 466
Uranium in carbonaceous rocks in the Townsend and Helena Valleys, Montana
George Earle Becraft
1958, Bulletin 1046-G
No abstract available....
Trout in the Great Lakes
James W. Moffett
1958, U.S. Trout News (3) 8-10
Abstract has not been submitted...
Determination of the oxidation state of uranium in apatite and phosphorite deposits
R. S. Clarke Jr., Z. S. Altschuler
1958, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (13) 127-142
Geological and mineralogical evidence indicate that the uranium present in apatite may proxy for calcium in the mineral structure as U(IV). An experimental investigation was conducted and chemical evidence was obtained that establishes the presence of U(IV) in apatite.The following analytical procedure was developed for the determination of U(IV). Carbonatefluorapatite...
Potassium bromide method of infrared sampling
R.G. Milkey
1958, Analytical Chemistry (30) 1931-1933
In the preparation of potassium bromide pressed windows for use in the infrared analysis of solids, severe grinding of the potassium bromide powder may produce strong absorption bands that could interfere seriously with the spectra of the sample. These absorption bands appear to be due to some crystal alteration of...
Quartz helix magnetic susceptibility balance using the Curie-Cheneveau principle
F. E. Senftle, M. D. Lee, A. A. Monkewicz, J. W. Mayo, T. Pankey
1958, Review of Scientific Instruments (29) 429-432
A quartz spring balance is described which can be used to measure the magnetic susceptibility of submilligram amounts of sample. The magnetic field is supplied by a moving permanent magnet, and the susceptibility is determined by the deflection of the spring observed in a measuring microscope. The apparatus is calibrated by a comparison standard (platinum) and results are shown for platinum, nickel aluminate, lead, manganese, and sucrose. A precision of better...
Semimicrodetermination of tantalum with selenous acid
F. S. Grimaldi, M. M. Schnepfe
1958, Analytical Chemistry (30) 2046-2049
Tantalum is separated and determined gravimetrically by precipitation with selenous acid from a highly acidic solution containing oxalic and tartaric acids. The method is selective for the determination of up to 30 mg. of tantalum pentoxide, and tolerates relatively large amounts of scandium, yttrium, cerium, titanium, zirconium, thorium, vanadium, niobium,...
Apparatus and technique for multiple tests by the confined-spot method of colorimetric analysis: Application to field estimation of nickel and copper
J. H. McCarthy Jr., R.E. Stevens
1958, Analytical Chemistry (30) 535-538
The confined-spot method of colorimetric analysis is generally applicable to the semiquantitative estimation of traces of ions in solution that form colored precipitates or otherwise alter material on a confined area of reagent paper. For precise results, the rate of flow of test solutions through the reagent paper must be...