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Publications

These publications showcase the significant science conducted in our Science Centers.

Filter Total Items: 16727

Gravity modelling across the Transantarctic Mountains, Northern Victoria Land Gravity modelling across the Transantarctic Mountains, Northern Victoria Land

During GANOVEX V and GANOVEX VI, new gravity data were collected in northern Victoria Land. The GANOVEX V data cover the Mt. Melbourne 1:250.000 quadrangle, while the GANOVEX VI data Transantarctic Mountains south of the Drygalski Ice Tongue. The two data sets are connected by a coastal traverse. The measurements were constrained by satellite-positioned elevation (GPS) data and, in some...
Authors
T.F. Redfield, J. C. Behrendt

Modeling tidal exchange and dispersion in Boston Harbor Modeling tidal exchange and dispersion in Boston Harbor

Tidal dispersion and the horizontal exchange of water between Boston Harbor and the surrounding ocean are examined with a high-resolution (200 m) depth-averaged numerical model. The strongly varying bathymetry and coastline geometry of the harbor generate complex spatial patterns in the modeled tidal currents which are verified by shipboard acoustic Doppler surveys. Lagrangian exchange...
Authors
Richard P. Signell, Bradford Butman

Interactive effects of selenium, methionine, and dietary protein on survival, growth, and physiology in mallard ducklings Interactive effects of selenium, methionine, and dietary protein on survival, growth, and physiology in mallard ducklings

Concentrations of over 100 ppm (100 mg/kg) selenium (Se) have been found in aquatic food chains associated with irrigation drainwater. Both quantity and composition of dietary protein for wild ducklings may vary in selenium-contaminated environments. Day-old mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) ducklings received one of the following diets containing 22% protein: unsupplemented (controls), 15...
Authors
David J. Hoffman, C. J. Sanderson, L. J. LeCaptain, Eugene Cromartie, Grey W. Pendleton

Aluminum in soil solutions from a subalpine spruce-fir forest at Whiteface Mountain, New York Aluminum in soil solutions from a subalpine spruce-fir forest at Whiteface Mountain, New York

Direct or indirect Al toxicity has been suggested as a principal factor in forest tree declines. We monitored ambient soil solutions in undisturbed and experimentally manipulated soils from a fir [Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.]-spruce forest on Whiteface Mountain, NY, in order to characterize soil solution Al concentrations over a range of acid anion loadings. Under both natural and...
Authors
E. K. Miller, Thomas G. Huntington, A. H. Johnson, A. J. Friedland

Closure of the Isthmus of Panama: The near-shore marine record of Costa Rica and western Panama Closure of the Isthmus of Panama: The near-shore marine record of Costa Rica and western Panama

The final closure of the Isthmus of Panama at ∼3.5 Ma divided the American tropical ocean into two separate and different oceanographic regions. Consequences for the marine biota were profound, but, hitherto, correlation of the Pacific and Caribbean coastal sections has not been precise enough to track biologic patterns. We present here a correlation of 31 sections from the Pacific and...
Authors
Anthony G. Coates, Jeremy B. C. Jackson, Laurel S. Collins, Thomas M. Cronin, Harry J. Dowsett, Laurel M. Bybell, Peter Jung, Jorge Obando

Band reporting rates of mallards in the Mississippi alluvial valley Band reporting rates of mallards in the Mississippi alluvial valley

We captured 2,182 mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) in eastcentral Arkansas and marked 730 with standard bands, 728 with 10 reward bands, and 724 with 'dummy' radio transmitters during November 1986-89 to estimate band reporting rates in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV). Assuming all transmitters were reported, reporting rates were 0.16 (SE=0.049) for standard bands and 0.34 (SE=0.081)...
Authors
Kenneth J. Reinecke, Charles W. Shaiffer, Don Delnicki

Evaluation of aerial transects for counting winter mallards Evaluation of aerial transects for counting winter mallards

Winter waterfowl surveys rarely use sampling methods, and little is known about the precision and biases of their population estimates. Consequently, we developed aerial transect surveys (n=5) in 4 strata comprising 16 substrata in the lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley during winters 1987-88 through 1989-90 to estimate mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) population indices and determine...
Authors
Kenneth J. Reinecke, Michael W. Brown, James R. Nassar

Annual survival rates of adult and immature eastern population tundra swans Annual survival rates of adult and immature eastern population tundra swans

Tundra swans (Cygnus columbianus) of the eastern population were neckbanded in Maryland, North Carolina, and Alaska from 1966 through 1990. These swans were resighted and recaptured during autumn, winter, and spring, 1966-1990. Although the original motivation for this study involved swan movements, we wanted to use the resulting data to test hypotheses about sources of variation in swan...
Authors
James D. Nichols, J. Bart, Roland J. Limpert, William J.L. Sladen, James E. Hines

Feeding flights of breeding double-crested cormorants at two Wisconsin colonies Feeding flights of breeding double-crested cormorants at two Wisconsin colonies

Unmarked Double-crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) (n = 523) were followed by airplane from Cat Island and Spider Island, two nesting colonies in Wisconsin, to their first landing site. Cormorants flew an average of 2.0 km from Cat Island (maximum 40 km) and 2.4 km from Spider Island (maximum12 km). The mean direction of landing sites differed seasonally for fights from Spider...
Authors
T. W. Custer, C. Bunck

A model for the generation of two-dimensional surf beat A model for the generation of two-dimensional surf beat

A finite difference model predicting group-forced long waves in the nearshore is constructed with two interacting parts: an incident wave model providing time-varying radiation stress gradients across the nearshore, and a long-wave model which solves the equations of motion for the forcing imposed by the incident waves. Both shallow water group-bound long waves and long waves generated...
Authors
Jeffrey H. List

Limitations of quantitative analysis of deep crustal seismic reflection data: Examples from GLIMPCE Limitations of quantitative analysis of deep crustal seismic reflection data: Examples from GLIMPCE

Amplitude preservation in seismic reflection data can be obtained by a relative true amplitude (RTA) processing technique in which the relative strength of reflection amplitudes is preserved vertically as well as horizontally, after compensating for amplitude distortion by near-surface effects and propagation effects. Quantitative analysis of relative true amplitudes of the Great Lakes
Authors
Myung W. Lee, Deborah R. Hutchinson
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