Geothermal energy planning and communication for native Americans. Final report. Draft (open access)

Geothermal energy planning and communication for native Americans. Final report. Draft

The purpose was to explore and develop geothermal energy resources on Indian lands. Activities included the following: (1) continued review of Indian communities and their potential for geothermal energy development; (2) introduced tribes to the availability of geothermal energy and removed the barriers to the implementation of this energy source; (3) provided information by telephone and by mailing packages of information; (4) published articles on geothermal energy development in the UIPA newsletter and supplied articles to other Indian publication; (5) conducted two seminars specific to geothermal energy development on Indian lands in western states; (6) carried out survey of Indian attitudes and opinions toward energy in general and geothermal energy in specific; (7) incorporated geothermal energy development information in Economic Development Administration sponsored tribal government management programs, and (8) developed draft written material addressing Indian planning problems and supporting their ability to affect a more productive working relationship with government agencies and reduced dependency.
Date: March 30, 1982
Creator: Robertson, T.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Floristic composition and plant succession on near-surface radioactive-waste-disposal facilities in the Los Alamos National Laboratory (open access)

Floristic composition and plant succession on near-surface radioactive-waste-disposal facilities in the Los Alamos National Laboratory

Since 1946, low-level radioactive waste has been buried in shallow landfills within the confines of the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Five of these sites were studied for plant composition and successional patterns by reconnaissance and vegetation mapping. The data show a slow rate of recovery for all sites, regardless of age, in both the pinon-juniper and ponderosa pine communities. The sites are not comparable in succession or composition because of location and previous land use. The two oldest sites have the highest species diversity and the only mature trees. All sites allowed to revegetate naturally tend to be colonized by the same species that originally surrounded the sites. Sites on historic fields are colonized by the old field flora, whereas those in areas disturbed only by grazing are revegetated by the local native flora.
Date: March 1, 1982
Creator: Tierney, G.D. & Foxx, T.S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Changing Use of Health Care Services by Unmarried Older Women, 1969 to 1975: Final Report to the NRTA-AARP Andrus Foundation (open access)

The Changing Use of Health Care Services by Unmarried Older Women, 1969 to 1975: Final Report to the NRTA-AARP Andrus Foundation

Final report to the National Retired Teachers Association (NRTA)- American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) Andrus Foundation. This reports on a research study of the changing use of health care services by unmarried older women from 1969 to 1975.
Date: March 12, 1982
Creator: Martin, Cora A. & Eve, Susan Brown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Selected Electronic Funds Transfer Issues: Privacy, Security, and Equity (open access)

Selected Electronic Funds Transfer Issues: Privacy, Security, and Equity

A background paper by the Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) about issues related to selected electronic funds transfers.
Date: March 1982
Creator: United States. Congress. Office of Technology Assessment.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feed-pump hydraulic performance and design improvement, Phase I: research program design. Final report. Volume 2 (open access)

Feed-pump hydraulic performance and design improvement, Phase I: research program design. Final report. Volume 2

As a result of prior EPRI-sponsored studies, it was concluded that a research program should be designed and implemented to provide an improved basis for the design, procurement, testing, and operation of large feed pumps with increased reliability and stability over the full range of operating conditions. This two-volume report contains a research plan which is based on a review of the present state of the art and which defines the necessary R and D program and estimates the benefits and costs of the program. The recommended research program consists of 30 interrelated tasks. It is designed to perform the needed research; to verify the results; to develop improved components; and to publish computer-aided design methods, pump specification guidelines, and a troubleshooting manual. Most of the technology proposed in the research plan is applicable to nuclear power plants as well as to fossil-fired plants. This volume contains appendixes on pump design, cavitation damage, performance testing, hydraulics, two-phase flow in pumps, flow stability, and rotor dynamics.
Date: March 1, 1982
Creator: Brown, W. H.; Gopalakrishnan, S.; Fehlau, R.; Thompson, W. E. & Wilson, D. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
March 1982 environmental data for sites in the National Solar Data Network (open access)

March 1982 environmental data for sites in the National Solar Data Network

Environmental information collected at the sites of the National Solar Data Network is presented in the form of tables for each solar site. The sites are grouped into 12 zones, each of which consists of several adjacent states. The insolation table presents the total, diffuse, direct, maximum, and extraterrestrial radiation for the solar site. It also shows the ratio of total to extraterrestrial radiation as a percent. The temperature table gives the average, daytime, nighttime, maximum, minimum and inlet-water temperatures for the solar site. All of the passive and some of the active solar sites are equipped with wind sensors which provide information for two wind tables furnishing wind speed and direction. For some sites, a humidity table provides relative humidity values for day and night. It also gives values for the maximum and minimum humidity for each day. A technical discussion of the instruments and measurements used to obtain these data tables is included. (LEW)
Date: March 1, 1982
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal resource assessment for the state of Texas: status of progress, November 1980. Final report (open access)

Geothermal resource assessment for the state of Texas: status of progress, November 1980. Final report

Data pertaining to wells and thermal aquifers and data interpretation methods are presented. Findings from a program of field measurements of water temperatures (mainly in South-Central Texas) and an assessment of hydrologic properties of three Cretaceous aquifers (in North-Central Texas) are included. Landsat lineaments and their pertinance to the localization of low-temperature geothermal resources are emphasized. Lineament data were compared to structural and stratigraphic features along the Balcones/Ouachita trend in Central Texas to test for correlations. (MHR)
Date: March 1, 1982
Creator: Woodruff, C. M., Jr.; Caran, S. C.; Gever, C.; Henry, C. D.; Macpherson, G. L. & McBride, M. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal resource assessment for the state of Texas: status of progress, November 1980. Final report. Appendices E through H (open access)

Geothermal resource assessment for the state of Texas: status of progress, November 1980. Final report. Appendices E through H

These appendices include: a folio of maps showing lineaments perceived across the state; an index and critique of the Landsat images used in perceiving the lineaments; a selected bibliography on lineaments; and a discussion of area-specific assessments of geothermal resources near military bases in Bexar, Travis, and Val Verde Counties. (MHR)
Date: March 1, 1982
Creator: Woodruff, C. M., Jr.; Caran, S. C.; Gever, C.; Henry, C. D.; Macpherson, G. L. & McBride, M. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library