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Encounter norms in more developed river settings /Martinson, Kristen S. January 1989 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 1989. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the World Wide Web.
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Surface opacity and phonological issues in Klamath and LushootseedPark, Miae. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2000. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (p. 222-227) and abstract.
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The estimation of regional secondary benefits resulting from an improvement in water quality of upper Klamath Lake, Oregon: an interindustry approachReiling, Stephen D. 16 June 1970 (has links)
The primary objective of this study was to estimate the impact
that an increase in recreational expenditures, resulting from water
quality improvements of Klamath Lake, would have upon the Klamath
County economy. As the sales of the economy expand to serve the
needs of the recreationists, real benefits will be forthcoming to the
businesses and households of the county in the forms of more business
and higher incomes.
To estimate the total impact of the increased volume of
recreational expenditures that may be made in the economy, the
economic relationships of the local economy had to be determined.
Primary data were collected from business firms in the county to
construct an input-output model of the county's economy.
The level of recreational expenditures that would be made in the
county as the water quality of the lake improved were estimated.
This was done for two different stages of water quality improvement.
The estimated levels of recreational expenditures were then analyzed
within the input-output framework to estimate the total increase in the
sales of the economy and to estimate the increase in income of
households in the county. / Graduation date: 1971
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Paleomagnetism of Jurassic plutons in the central Klamath Mountains, southern Oregon and northern CaliforniaSchultz, Karin L. 11 February 1983 (has links)
An understanding of the tectonic history of the Klamath Mountains
is crucial for a valid paleogeographic reconstruction of the Pacific
Northwest. However, prior to this study there were very few
paleomagnetic (PM) data from the Klamath Mountains (KN), which resulted
in conflicting interpretations about the role of the KM province in
the tectonic evolution of western North America. Twenty-eight sites
from five unmetamorphosed Middle Jurassic KM plutons with K-Ar ages
ranging from 161 to 139 m.y.B.P. yielded stable PM results showing
(1) a direction for the 160 in.y.B.P. Ashland pluton (D=324°, I=163°,
α₉₅=8°, n=6) nearly concordant with the coeval expected direction
(D=337°, 1=54°) and (2) clockwise rotated directions for the plutons
of Grants Pass (D=045°, I=67°, α₉₅=12°, n=4), Greyback (D=083°,I=63°,
α₉₅=9, n=9), and the Wooley Creek batholith and Slinkard pluton
combined (D=037°, 160°, α₉₅=ll°, n=9).
Tectonic interpretations of these PM data are difficult; two
interpretations are offered to explain the observed directions. In
the first, the mean PM direction of the four plutons with discordant
directions (D=057°, 1=65°, α₉₅=7°, n=22) is restored to the expected
150 m.y.B.P. (the average K-Ar age for these four plutons) direction
by rotation of a rigid block ~87° in a counterclockwise sense about a
vertical axis (the possibility of tilt of these four plutons is disregarded
in this interpretation). The Ashland pluton which shows no
rotation is problematic. Either there was (is) a tectonic boundary
west of the Ashland pluton, separating it from the rotation of the
others, or the Ashland pluton was influenced both by clockwise rotation
and tilt, the combined effect producing an essentially concordant
PM direction. In the second interpretation we distinguish
between the northern KN, intruded by the Grants Pas and Greyback
Mountain plutons, and the southern region intruded by the Wooley
Creek batholith and the Ashland and Slinkard plutons. The bases for
this distinction are recent geologic and gravity studies which
suggest that post-Middle Jurassic uplift of the domal Condrey
Mountain Schist may have caused radially outward tilt of its
adjacent terranes and plutons intruded therein, causing some of the
observed discordances in their PM directions. Thus, in the second
interpretation it is envisioned that (a) the northerly portion of
the KM, intruded by the Grants Pass and Greyback plutons, was
affected primarily by clockwise rotation about a vertical axis, and
(b) discordant directions for the remaining plutons intruded farther
south are due primarily to tilt in response to Condrey Mountain
uplift. Based on the observed inclinations, there is no evidence
of transport of the Klamath Mountain province along lines of longitude
since Middle Jurassic time.
Tectonic interpretations of the PM results of this study are
consistent with significant post-Middle Jurassic clockwise rotation
of the Klamath Mountains. The first interpretation above yields
~87° of clockwise rotation of the terrane examined. According to the
second interpretation, a clockwise rotation of ~l00° is inferred
from the average of the PM results of the northern Grants Pass and
Greyback plutons. Therefore, 10° to 25° of clockwise rotation of the
KM may have occurred prior to the formation of the Oregon Coast
Range (~55 m.y.B.P.) and the two provinces may have rotated together
since post-Lower Eocene time. / Graduation date: 1983
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Age and growth of young-of-the-year Lost River suckers Deltistes luxatus and shortnose suckers Chasmistes brevirostris of Upper Klamath Lake, OregonLogan, Daniel Joseph 26 June 1998 (has links)
Upper Klamath Lake in southern Oregon has two species of lacustrine suckers,
Lost River sucker Deltistes luxatus and shortnose sucker Chasmistes brevirostris that
were historically abundant. Results of surveys performed in the mid-1980's indicated that populations of both species were declining and ageing with apparent recruitment failure in most years since 1970. In 1988 both species were listed as endangered species and high priority has been placed on investigating recruitment of Upper Klamath Lake
suckers. Lapilli are the preferred otolith for ageing suckers. Lapilli form predictably on the day of hatch, have the most conservative morphology of the three otoliths, and deposit
easily discernable increments that begin on the day of hatch and proceed daily, and grow
in a predictable relationship with somatic growth. Ages estimated by otolith analysis and
resulting hatch dates of young-of-the-year Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker were
consistent annually and consistent with reported spawning period for suckers from Upper
Klamath Lake.
Otolith increment analysis is necessarily lethal, whereas scale circuli analysis is not lethal. My findings suggest that scale circuli count is an inefficient estimator of daily Daily age estimates for
age in young-of-the-year Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker. any given circuli count varied by approximately 51 days in Lost River sucker and 30 days Additionally, my results do not accurately predict the size or age at
in shortnose sucker.
which scales are formed, thereby invalidating an assumption of age and growth models.
Consequently, scale circuli analysis cannot be used to produce accurate estimates of age or growth for young-of-the-year Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker. Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker achieve a relatively large size by the autumn of their first year, consistent with other members of Catostomidae. Interspecific
difference in growth rates was evident in each year with Lost River sucker exhibiting
faster growth than shortnose sucker in each year. Abundance of young-of-the-year suckers does not appear to be strongly correlated to somatic growth rate, though hatch date and environmental parameters are highly correlated with abundance. In both Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker, in years with the highest abundance (1991 and 1993), the mean hatch dates of surviving fish were later
than in years with the lowest abundance. Also, young-of-the-year Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker experienced wide environmental fluctuations in Upper Klamath Lake as seasonal limnological and climatic variation create a dynamic habitat for young suckers. Water temperature, precipitation, air temperature, and minimum lake elevation are all strongly correlated to abundance of young-of-the-year suckers. / Graduation date: 1999
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Calcium metasomatism in the Josephine peridotite, southwest OregonHarris, Raymond Charles, 1957- January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
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Hydrothermal metasomatic banding in alpine-type peridotitesGottschalk, Richard Robert January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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The Klamath's path after terminationBilka, Monica Nicole. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.) -- University of Montana, 2008. / Title from title screen. Description based on contents viewed May 5, 2009. Includes bibliographical references (p. 113-119).
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A population study of three iris (iridaceae) species native to the Siskiyou Mountains in southwestern Oregon and adjacent CaliforniaWilson, Carol Anne 01 January 1983 (has links)
The series Californicae is a natural grouping of Iris species native to Oregon, Washington and California. Natural and experimental hybridization is characteristic of the series which has led to confusing taxonomies for some species. Populations of species belonging to this series and found on the northwestern slopes of the Siskiyou Mountains cf southwestern Oregon and adjacent California were investigated. Methods used were numerical classification techniques for morphological characters including both discriminant and K-means cluster analyses and a chemotaxonomi c analysis of flavonoid pigments using thin layer chromatography.
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Hydraulic predictors and seasonal distribution of Manayunkia speciosa density in the Klamath River, CA, with implications for ceratomyxosis, a disease of salmon and troutJordan, Michelle S. 09 November 2012 (has links)
The freshwater polychaete Manayunkia speciosa was identified as an obligate host of the salmonid parasite Ceratomyxa shasta in 1997, prompting increased research on the small benthic invertebrate. Ceratomyxa shasta infection in fish can cause mortality, and presents a disease risk for both hatchery and wild salmon and trout. Ceratomyxa shasta is endemic to rivers of the Pacific Northwest, and its effects have been particularly well documented in the Klamath River, Oregon and California. One option for managing C. shasta impacts is by decreasing densities of M. speciosa through habitat manipulation, thus decreasing amplification of the parasite. The Klamath River is regulated by irrigation and hydropower dams, thus manipulating the hydrograph to destabilize habitat is a possibility. Decreasing habitat through flow manipulation requires a thorough understanding of the hydraulic environment of polychaete habitat, and how that environment changes with discharge. This thesis proposes an influence diagram of physical variables driving M. speciosa density, and investigates several of them. Samples were collected for enumerating M. speciosa
density from nine sites in the Klamath River over 15 months, and seasonal density changes were examined, as were the relationships between density and hydraulic variables (depth, average velocity, substrate size, Reynolds number, Froude number). Density increased directly with depth and inversely with velocity, and was greater on small (silt, sand) and large (boulder, bedrock) substrate relative to medium substrate (gravel, cobble). Density was highest in the summer (July, August, September), and there was evidence that summer densities were influenced by spring discharges through the mechanism of substrate mobilization. Differences in infection prevalence among seasons and habitats were also investigated; however, very low overall incidence of infection limited any conclusions. Based on these results, it is recommended that habitat modeling for management of M. speciosa populations include a habitat stability component that incorporates s whether peak discharge the previous year surpassed a stability threshold. / Graduation date: 2013
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