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Page 6191, results 154751 - 154775

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Geochemical indicators of subsurface temperature: Part 1, basic assumptions
R.O. Fournier, D. E. White, A. H. Truesdell
1974, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (2) 259-262
The chemical and isotopic compositions of hot-spring water and gas are used to estimate subsurface temperatures. The basic assumptions inherent in the methods are seldom stipulated. These assumptions include (1) a temperature-dependent reaction at depth, (2) a supply of the solid phase involved in the reaction to permit saturation of...
Adsorption of MBAS from wastewaters and secondary effluents
David A. Rickert, Joseph V. Hunter
1974, Journal of the Water Pollution Control Federation (46) 911-919
On the basis of adsorption behavior, there seems to be three groups of methylene blue active substances (MBAS) in wastewaters and secondary effluents. The first group is observed at low dosages of activated carbon, contains the bulk of the total MBAS, and is readily adsorbable. The second is noted at...
Stabilities of calcite and aragonite
C. L. Christ, P. B. Hostetler, R. M. Siebert
1974, Journal of Research of the U.S. Geological Survey (2) 175-184
A revaluation of the 25° C activity-product constants of calcite (KC) and aragonite (KA) was made on the basis of the known solubilities of these phases for which the activity of total dissolved calcium was corrected for the presence of the ion pair CaHCO3+ in the aqueous phase. The value...
Mariner 10 pictures of Mercury: First results
B. C. Murray, M. J. S. Belton, G. E. Danielson, M. E. Davies, D. Gault, B. Hapke, B. O'Leary, R.G. Strom, V. Suomi, N. Trask
1974, Science (184) 459-461
Mercury has a heavily cratered surface containing basins up to at least 1300 kilometers diameter flooded with mare-like material. Many features are closely similar to those on the moon, but significant structural differences exist. Major chemical differentiation before termination of accretion is implied....
Estimating survival rates from banding of adult and juvenile birds
Douglas H. Johnson
1974, Journal of Wildlife Management (38) 290-297
The restrictive assumptions required by most available methods for estimating survival probabilities render them unsuitable for analyzing real banding data. A model is proposed which allows survival rates and recovery rates to vary with the calendar year, and also allows juveniles to have rates different from adults. In addition to...
Hydrology and trout populations of cold-water rivers of Michigan and Wisconsin
G. E. Hendrickson, R. L. Knutilla
1974, Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters (62) 181-193
Statistical multiple-regression analyses showed significant relationships between trout populations and hydrologic parameters. Parameters showing the higher levels of significance were temperature, hardness of water, percentage of gravel bottom, percentage of bottom vegetation, variability of streamflow, and discharge per unit drainage area. Trout populations increase with lower levels of annual maximum...
Supplemental feeding program for California condors
S.R. Wilbur, W.D. Carrier, J.C. Borneman
1974, Journal of Wildlife Management (38) 343-346
A 2-year supplemental feeding program for the endangered California condor (Gymnogyps californianus) was of insufficient length to definitely show that a dependable food supply will stimulate additional breeding; however, production did increase during the study, and food supply appears a likely cause. Because no undesirable effects of feeding were noted,...
Remote sensing for identification and classification of wetland vegetation
L.M. Cowardin, V.I. Myers
1974, Journal of Wildlife Management (38) 308-314
Multispectral photography and ground truth were obtained on an area 12 miles (19.3 km) east of Bemidji, Minnesota, to identify and map wetlands less than 2 acres (0.8 hectare) in size, to map emergent vegetation in lakes, and to explore the feasibility of classifying vegetation from aerial photographs. Wetlands less...
Effects of radio packages on wild ducks
D.S. Gilmer, I.J. Ball, L.M. Cowardin, J. H. Riechmann
1974, Journal of Wildlife Management (38) 243-252
A total of 211 wild, free-flying mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) and wood ducks (Aix sponsa) were equipped with breast-mounted radio packages during the breeding seasons of 1968-72. Known predation loss was 7.6 and 12.0 percent for mallards and wood ducks respectively, 60 percent occurred within 3 weeks of instrumentation. The highest...
Upland duck nesting related to land use and predator reduction
Harold F. Duebbert, H.A. Kantrud
1974, Journal of Wildlife Management (38) 257-265
Duck nesting was studied during 1971 in north-central South Dakota under four conditions: in idle, five or six year old fields of domestic grass-legume mixtures in an area where predators including the red fox (Vulpes fulva), raccoon (Procyon lotor), striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis), and badger (Taxidea taxus) were (1) reduced...
Population dynamics of molting pintail drakes banded in south-central Saskatchewan
David R. Anderson, R.T. Sterling
1974, Journal of Wildlife Management (38) 266-274
A total of 18,820 adult male pintails (Anas acuta) were trapped, banded, and released on Pel and Kutawagan marshes in south-central Saskatchewan in July 1955-58. Two hundred and fortyeight of these banded birds were recaptured on the same marshes during subsequent trapping operations, and 1,440 were recovered (shot or found...
The Bright Angel and Mesa Butte fault systems of northern Arizona
Eugene Merle Shoemaker, R. L. Squires, M. J. Abrams
Thor Nels Vincent Karlstrom, Gordon Alfred Swann, Raymond L. Eastwood, editor(s)
1974, Book chapter, Geology of northern Arizona with notes on archaeology and paleoclimate: Part I — Regional studies
No abstract available....
Alaska
E. H. Lathram, Arthur Grantz, D.F. Barnes, David A. Brew, A. Thomas Ovenshine, George Plafker, R. L. Detterman, H.L. Foster, M. Churkin Jr., W. W. Patton Jr., J. M. Hoare, I.L. Tailleur, W. P. Brosge, T. P. Miller, C.L. Sainsbury
1974, Geological Society Special Publication (4) 563-589
No abstract available....
Tectonic evolution of the southern Gulf of Mexico
George W. Moore, Luis Del Castillo
1974, GSA Bulletin (85) 607-618
A detailed magnetic survey in the southern Gulf of Mexico shows subdued irregular magnetic anomalies that are similar in wave length to those attributed to sea-floor spreading on present-day oceanic rises. The small amplitude of these anomalies, about 75γ, would be compatible with an oceanic basalt source at a depth...
Oceanic crust forms basement of eastern Panamá
J. E. Case
1974, GSA Bulletin (85) 645-652
Basement rocks of parts of eastern Panamá include tholeiitic pillow basalt and diabase overlain by sedimentary rocks typical of deep oceanic environments. Both paleontologic and stratigraphic evidence indicate that some of these rocks are of Late Cretaceous age or older. Regional Bouguer anomalies over the basement terrane exceed +120 mgal,...
Growth responses of Spartina patens and Spartina alterniflora by means of a two dimensional factorial design
W. L. Halvorson, A. C. Singer
1974, American Midland Naturalist (91) 444-449
Growth of Spartina patens and Spartina alterniflora was compared under identical greenhouse conditions. Mature plants were grown in quartz sand and watered with the following solutions: (1) full Hoagland's solution; (2) Hoagland's minus iron; (3) Hoagland's minus nitrogen; (4) Hoagland's with NaCl added to 28 o/oo; (5) sea water of...
Salmonellosis in a captive heron colony
L. N. Locke, H. M. Ohlendorf, R.B. Shillinger, T. Jareed
1974, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (10) 143-145
Salmonellosis caused by Salmonella typhimurium was one of several factors responsible for losses among young herons being held at the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center. The infection was demonstrated in five black-crowned night herons (Nycticorax nycticorax), three common egrets (Casmerodius albus), two little blue herons (Florida caerulea), one cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis), one...
Venus: Atmospheric motion and structure from Mariner 10 pictures
B. C. Murray, M. J. S. Belton, G. Edward Danielson, M. E. Davies, D. Gault, B. Hapke, B. O'Leary, R.G. Strom, V. Suomi, N. Trask
1974, Science (183) 1307-1315
The Mariner 10 television cameras imaged the planet Venus in the visible and near ultraviolet for a period of 8 days at resolutions ranging from 100 meters to 130 kilometers. The general pattern of the atmospheric circulation in the upper tropospheric/lower stratospheric region is displayed in the pictures. Atmospheric flow...
A prototype global volcano surveillance system monitoring seismic activity and tilt
E.T. Endo, P.L. Ward, D.H. Harlow, R. V. Allen, J. P. Eaton
1974, Bulletin Volcanologique (38) 315-344
The Earth Resources Technology Satellite makes it feasible for the first time to monitor the level of activity at widely separated volcanoes and to relay these data almost instantancously to one central office. This capability opens a new era in volcanology where the hundreds of normally...
Orange material in the Sulpicius Gallus formation at the southwestern edge of Mare Serenitatis
Baerbel K. Lucchitta, H.H. Schmitt
1974, Conference Paper, Proceedings, 5th Lunar Science Conference
Orange and red materials were observed and photographed in the dark mantle of the Sulpicius Gallus Formation on the southwestern rim of the Serenitatis basin. These materials occur only within the dark mantle that overlies old rilled mare and highland units and are absent on the younger mare unit in...
Effect of mine drainage on the quality of streams in Colorado, 1971-72
Dennis A. Wentz
1974, Colorado Water Resources Circular 21
In July 1971, a study of the effects of mine drainage on Colorado's streams was begun in cooperation with the Colorado Water Pollution Control Commission. The objectives of this study were to determine the extent and magnitude of the problem as a whole, and to gain a greater understanding of...
Effects of metal-mine drainage on water quality in selected areas of Colorado, 1972-73
Robert E. Moran, Dennis A. Wentz
1974, Colorado Water Resources Circular 25
Colorado is a child of mining. In the past, towns such as Cripple Creek, Leadville, Creede, and many others were the lifeblood of the economy. While metal mining is still economically important to Colorado, another legacy of this past activity is attracting increasing attention—the detrimental effects of drainage from abandoned...
Fluid inclusion and light stable isotope study of the climax molybdenum deposits, Colorado
W. E. Hall, Irving Friedman, J. Thomas Nash
1974, Economic Geology (69) 88-901
The Climax mine contains three molybdenite ore bodies and widespread late quartz-pyrite-sericite barren mineralization, each related to separate intrusive phases of the Climax stock. Alteration zones spatially related to each molybdenite ore body include a silica zone below, a potassium-silicate zone that approximately coincides with ore, and overlying quartz-sericite-pyrite-topaz, argillic,...