591 research outputs found

    My Haiku

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    Laugh

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    Natural resources of Lake Earl and Smith River Delta

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    The Lake Earl/Smith River Delta area is a key coastal wetland situated in northern California. The Lake and Delta have retained much of their value to wildlife and serve as an important link in a chain of such wetlands that extend southward along the Pacific Ocean from Alaska to South America. Millions of water-associated birds of the Pacific Flyway utilize these areas as feeding and resting stops along their migration paths. In California, these wetlands also serve as a significant portion of the available wintering grounds for a major share of the birds within the flyway. The Smith River is also one of the State's most productive salmon and steelhead streams. Anadromous fish produced here provide thousands of angler use days to sport fishermen and contribute substantially to the commercial fishing catch off the northern coast. Because of the importance of coastal wetlands to the fish and wildlife of California, the Department of Fish and Game has initiated a high priority statewide inventory and assessment of these wetlands. This publication is an integral part of that program. This report identifies specific resources and uses; directs attention to problems; and recommends courses of action needed to insure resource protection. It is intended as a guide for citizens, planners, administrators and other interested in the use and development of California's coastal land and waters. (132pp.

    Five Versions Of Rain

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    Energy Recovery Linac: Vacuum

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    Biostratigraphy of Middle and Late Pennsylvanian (Desmoinesian-Virgilian) ammonoids

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    New stratigraphic ranges for genera of Desmoinesian-Virgilian ammonoids are presented, based on analysis of 40,000 specimens collected from over 70 ammonoid-bearing horizons that represent at least 40 successive stratigraphic levels in the North American midcontinent. These range revisions indicate that current generic-level ammonoid zonations are inadequate, especially for correlation of Pennsylvanian series and stage boundaries. Six high-confidence, largely generic-level first-occurrence zones are proposed for the Desmoinesian through Virgilian stages: Wellerites Zone, Eothalassoceras Zone, Pennoceras Zone, Preshumardites Zone, Pseudaktubites Zone, and Shumardites Zone. Fifteen zones of lesser confidence for correlation are also suggested. The Shumarditidae Plummer & Scott, 1937, is emended to include Preshumardites Plummer & Scott, 1937, Pseudaktubites gen. nov. (type species, Preshumardites stainbrooki Plummer & Scott, 1937), and Shumardites Smith, 1903. Early Permian (Sakmarian) species previously assigned to Preshumardites are reassigned to Andrianovia gen. nov. (type species ?Preshumardites sakmarae Ruzhencev, 1938). Aktubites Ruzhencev, 1955, Eoshumardites Popov, 1960, and Parashumardites Ruzhencev, 1939, previously included in the Shumarditidae, are assigned to the new family Parashumarditidae. Eovidrioceras inexpectans gen. nov., sp. nov. is included and is interpreted as the ancestor of the cyclobacean family Vidrioceratidae Plummer & Scott, 1937. The base of the revised Wellerites Zone, defined by the first occurrence of the nominate genus, approximates but does not coincide with the Atokan-Desmoinesian boundary. Recorrelation of the stratigraphic level of the Collinsville, Oklahoma, ammonoid locality from the "Seminole Formation" (basal Missourian) to the Holdenville Formation (upper Desmoinesian), based on lithostratigraphic evidence, effectively places the first occurrence of Eothalassoceras in the upper Desmoinesian. Because Wellerites apparently became extinct before the end of the Desmoinesian, the revised Eothalassoceras Zone is used to represent the upper Desmoinesian. The Middle-Upper Pennsylvanian boundary (Desmoinesian-Missourian boundary) can be recognized by the appearance of Pennoceras, which defines the base of the new Pennoceras Zone. The Pennoceras Zone is an excellent indicator of lower Missourian strata in the northern midcontinent, north-central Texas, the Marathon Uplift, and the Appalachian Basin. The new Preshumardites Zone occupies most of the upper part of the Missourian Stage. The appearance of the ancestral shumarditid Pseudaktubites, which defines the base of the new Pseudaktubites Zone, occurs one cycle below the Missourian-Virgilian boundary, which is currently recognized at the top of the South Bend Limestone Member in eastern Kansas. No recognizable biostratigraphic event coincides with the South Bend Member, thereby resulting in an uncorrelatable chronostratigraphic boundary. The largest changeover in ammonoid faunas takes place at the base of strata containing the upper part of the Pseudaktubites Zone (Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone). The base of the Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone is stratigraphically near the original Missourian-Virgilian boundary. It is recommended that the stratigraphic level containing the base of the Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone be adopted as the official base of the Virgilian Stage. Recognition of the upper subzone of the Pseudaktubites Zone (Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone) within the Colony Creek Shale Member in north-central Texas places the base of the Virgilian within the upper part of the Canyon Group and substantially below the current position at the Canyon-Cisco group boundary. Shumardites, a taxon previously used to mark the base of the Virgilian Stage, appears in early middle Virgilian strata; consequently, the revised Shumardites Zone represents the middle-upper Virgilian interval

    Biostratigraphy of Middle and Late Pennsylvanian (Desmoinesian-Virgilian) ammonoids

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    New stratigraphic ranges for genera of Desmoinesian-Virgilian ammonoids are presented, based on analysis of 40,000 specimens collected from over 70 ammonoid-bearing horizons that represent at least 40 successive stratigraphic levels in the North American midcontinent. These range revisions indicate that current generic-level ammonoid zonations are inadequate, especially for correlation of Pennsylvanian series and stage boundaries. Six high-confidence, largely generic-level first-occurrence zones are proposed for the Desmoinesian through Virgilian stages: Wellerites Zone, Eothalassoceras Zone, Pennoceras Zone, Preshumardites Zone, Pseudaktubites Zone, and Shumardites Zone. Fifteen zones of lesser confidence for correlation are also suggested. The Shumarditidae Plummer & Scott, 1937, is emended to include Preshumardites Plummer & Scott, 1937, Pseudaktubites gen. nov. (type species, Preshumardites stainbrooki Plummer & Scott, 1937), and Shumardites Smith, 1903. Early Permian (Sakmarian) species previously assigned to Preshumardites are reassigned to Andrianovia gen. nov. (type species ?Preshumardites sakmarae Ruzhencev, 1938). Aktubites Ruzhencev, 1955, Eoshumardites Popov, 1960, and Parashumardites Ruzhencev, 1939, previously included in the Shumarditidae, are assigned to the new family Parashumarditidae. Eovidrioceras inexpectans gen. nov., sp. nov. is included and is interpreted as the ancestor of the cyclobacean family Vidrioceratidae Plummer & Scott, 1937. The base of the revised Wellerites Zone, defined by the first occurrence of the nominate genus, approximates but does not coincide with the Atokan-Desmoinesian boundary. Recorrelation of the stratigraphic level of the Collinsville, Oklahoma, ammonoid locality from the "Seminole Formation" (basal Missourian) to the Holdenville Formation (upper Desmoinesian), based on lithostratigraphic evidence, effectively places the first occurrence of Eothalassoceras in the upper Desmoinesian. Because Wellerites apparently became extinct before the end of the Desmoinesian, the revised Eothalassoceras Zone is used to represent the upper Desmoinesian. The Middle-Upper Pennsylvanian boundary (Desmoinesian-Missourian boundary) can be recognized by the appearance of Pennoceras, which defines the base of the new Pennoceras Zone. The Pennoceras Zone is an excellent indicator of lower Missourian strata in the northern midcontinent, north-central Texas, the Marathon Uplift, and the Appalachian Basin. The new Preshumardites Zone occupies most of the upper part of the Missourian Stage. The appearance of the ancestral shumarditid Pseudaktubites, which defines the base of the new Pseudaktubites Zone, occurs one cycle below the Missourian-Virgilian boundary, which is currently recognized at the top of the South Bend Limestone Member in eastern Kansas. No recognizable biostratigraphic event coincides with the South Bend Member, thereby resulting in an uncorrelatable chronostratigraphic boundary. The largest changeover in ammonoid faunas takes place at the base of strata containing the upper part of the Pseudaktubites Zone (Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone). The base of the Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone is stratigraphically near the original Missourian-Virgilian boundary. It is recommended that the stratigraphic level containing the base of the Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone be adopted as the official base of the Virgilian Stage. Recognition of the upper subzone of the Pseudaktubites Zone (Pseudaktubites stainbrooki Subzone) within the Colony Creek Shale Member in north-central Texas places the base of the Virgilian within the upper part of the Canyon Group and substantially below the current position at the Canyon-Cisco group boundary. Shumardites, a taxon previously used to mark the base of the Virgilian Stage, appears in early middle Virgilian strata; consequently, the revised Shumardites Zone represents the middle-upper Virgilian interval

    The development and evaluation of exercises in meaningful word practice in first grade,

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    Research chapter for this study will be found in Ash, Dorothea: "Development and evaluation of silent reading exercises in grade one" Thesis (M.A.)--Boston Universit
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