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Mines, mountains and hot springs: IMWA 2013 post-conference tour to Silverton, CO, August 10-13, 2013
Raymond H. Johnson
Adrian Brown, Linda Figueroa, Christian Wolkersdorfer, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Reliable Mine Water Technology: Proceedings of the International Mine Water Association Annual Conference 2013, August 6-9, 2013, Golden, Colorado, USA
An itinerary, maps, and details about the IMWA 2013 post-conference tour from Golden, Colorado to Silverton, Colorado on August 10-13, 2013, are provided....
Traces in the dark: sedimentary processes and facies gradients in the upper shale member of the Upper Devonian-Lower Mississippian Bakken Formation, Williston Basin, North Dakota, U.S.A.
Sven O. Egenhoff, Neil S. Fishman
2013, Journal of Sedimentary Research (83) 803-824
Black, organic-rich rocks of the upper shale member of the Upper Devonian–Lower Mississippian Bakken Formation, a world-class petroleum source rock in the Williston Basin of the United States and Canada, contain a diverse suite of mudstone lithofacies that were deposited in distinct facies belts. The succession consists of three discrete...
IMWA 2013 mid-conference tour to Leadville, Colorado, August 7th, 2013
Raymond H. Johnson
Adrian Brown, Linda Figueroa, Christian Wolkersdorfer, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Reliable Mine Water Technology: Proceedings of the International Mine Water Association Annual Conference 2013, August 6-9, 2013, Golden, Colorado, USA
An itinerary, maps, and details about the IMWA 2013 mid-conference tour from Golden, Colorado to Leadville, Colorado on August 7, 2013, are provided....
Environmental assessment of metal exposure to corals living in Castle Harbour, Bermuda
N.G. Prouty, N.F. Goodkin, R. Jones, C.H. Lamborg, C. D. Storlazzi, K.A. Hughen
2013, Marine Chemistry (154) 55-66
Environmental contamination in Castle Harbour, Bermuda, has been linked to the dissolution and leaching of contaminants from the adjacent marine landfill. This study expands the evidence for environmental impact of leachate from the landfill by quantitatively demonstrating elevated metal uptake over the last 30 years in corals growing in Castle...
Ecological prediction with nonlinear multivariate time-frequency functional data models
Wen-Hsi Yang, Christopher K. Wikle, Scott H. Holan, Mark L. Wildhaber
2013, Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics (18) 450-474
Time-frequency analysis has become a fundamental component of many scientific inquiries. Due to improvements in technology, the amount of high-frequency signals that are collected for ecological and other scientific processes is increasing at a dramatic rate. In order to facilitate the use of these data in ecological prediction, we introduce...
Application of uniaxial confining-core clamp with hydrous pyrolysis in petrophysical and geochemical studies of source rocks at various thermal maturities
Michael D. Lewan, Justin E. Birdwell
Luis Baez, Ken Beeney, Steve Sonnenberg, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, Denver, Colorado, 12-14 August 2013
Understanding changes in petrophysical and geochemical parameters during source rock thermal maturation is a critical component in evaluating source-rock petroleum accumulations. Natural core data are preferred, but obtaining cores that represent the same facies of a source rock at different thermal maturities is seldom possible. An alternative approach is to...
Changes in porosity and organic matter phase distribution monitored by NMR relaxometry following hydrous pyrolysis under uniaxial confinement
Kathryn E. Washburn, Justin E. Birdwell, Michael D. Lewan, Michael Miller
Luis Baez, Ken Beeney, Steve Sonnenberg, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, Denver, Colorado, 12-14 August 2013
Artificial maturation methods are used to induce changes in source rock thermal maturity without the uncertainties that arise when comparing natural samples from a particular basin that often represent different levels of maturation and different lithofacies. A novel uniaxial confinement clamp was used on Woodford Shale cores in hydrous pyrolysis...
Custom microarray construction and analysis for determining potential biomarkers of subchronic androgen exposure in the Eastern Mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki)
Erica K. Brockmeier, Fahong Yu, David Moraga Amador, Timothy A. Bargar, Nancy D. Denslow
2013, BMC Genomics (14)
Background The eastern mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) has the potential to become a bioindicator organism of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) due to its androgen-driven secondary sexual characteristics. However, the lack of molecular information on G. holbrooki hinders its use as a bioindicator coupled with biomarker data. While traditional gene-by-gene approaches provide insight for biomarker development,...
A new laboratory approach to shale analysis using NMR relaxometry
Kathryn E. Washburn, Justin E. Birdwell
Luis Baez, Ken Beeney, Steve Sonnenberg, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, Denver, Colorado, 12-14 August 2013
Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) relaxometry is a non-invasive technique commonly used to assess hydrogen-bearing fluids in petroleum reservoir rocks. Measurements made using LF-NMR provide information on rock porosity, pore-size distributions, and in some cases, fluid types and saturations (Timur, 1967; Kenyon et al., 1986; Straley et al., 1994; Brown,...
Increases in flood magnitudes in California under warming climates
Tapash Das, Edwin P. Maurer, David W. Pierce, Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel R. Cayah
2013, Journal of Hydrology (501) 101-110
Downscaled and hydrologically modeled projections from an ensemble of 16 Global Climate Models suggest that flooding may become more intense on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada mountains, the primary source for California’s managed water system. By the end of the 21st century, all 16 climate projections for the...
Characterizing tight-gas systems with production data: Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado
Philip H. Nelson, Stephen L. Santus
Luis Baez, Ken Beeney, Steve Sonnenberg, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, Denver, Colorado, 12-14 August 2013
The study of produced fluids allows comparisons among tight-gas systems. This paper examines gas, oil, and water production data from vertical wells in 23 fields in five Rocky Mountain basins of the United States, mostly from wells completed before the year 2000. Average daily rates of gas, oil, and water...
Comparing approaches to spatially explicit ecosystem service modeling: a case study from the San Pedro River, Arizona
Kenneth J. Bagstad, Darius J. Semmens, Robert Winthrop
2013, Ecosystem Services (5) 40-50
Although the number of ecosystem service modeling tools has grown in recent years, quantitative comparative studies of these tools have been lacking. In this study, we applied two leading open-source, spatially explicit ecosystem services modeling tools – Artificial Intelligence for Ecosystem Services (ARIES) and Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and...
Low salinity hydrocarbon water disposal through deep subsurface drip irrigation: leaching of native selenium
Carleton R. Bern, Mark A. Engle, Adam R. Boehlke, John W. Zupancic
Adrian Brown, Linda Figueroa, Christian Wolkersdorfer, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Reliable Mine Water Technology: Proceedings of the International Mine Water Association Annual Conference 2013, August 6-9, 2013, Golden, Colorado, USA
A subsurface drip irrigation system is being used in Wyoming’s Powder River Basin that treats high sodium, low salinity, coal bed methane (CBM) produced water with sulfuric acid and injects it into cropped fields at a depth of 0.92 m. Dissolution of native gypsum releases calcium that combats soil degradation...
Evaluating analytical approaches for estimating pelagic fish biomass using simulated fish communities
Daniel L. Yule, Jean V. Adams, David M. Warner, Thomas R. Hrabik, Patrick M. Kocovsky, Brian Weidel, Lars G. Rudstam, Patrick J. Sullivan
2013, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (70) 1845-1857
Pelagic fish assessments often combine large amounts of acoustic-based fish density data and limited midwater trawl information to estimate species-specific biomass density. We compared the accuracy of five apportionment methods for estimating pelagic fish biomass density using simulated communities with known fish numbers that mimic Lakes Superior, Michigan, and Ontario,...
Untested pesticide mitigation requirements: ecological, agricultural, and legal implications
Nimish B. Vyas
2013, Drake Journal of Agricultural Law (18) 335-348
Every pesticide sold in the United States must have a U.S. Environmental Agency approved label on its container. The label provides directions for the pesticide’s use and is legally enforceable under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act. For a pesticide with high ecological risks, mitigation statements may...
Wintering and breeding bird monitoring data analysis 2010-2013: San Antonio Missions National Historical Park
Daniel J. Twedt
2013, National Park Service Natural Resource Data Series NPS/GULN/NRDS—2013/556
Following guidance issued within the Avian Inventory and Monitoring in National Parks of the Gulf Coast Network: Gulf Coast Network Avian Monitoring Plan, 40 point locations were established and monitored within San Antonio Missions National Historical Park. During three breeding seasons (May – Jun) and winters (Dec – Feb) between...
The roles of large top predators in coastal ecosystems: new insights from long term ecological research
Adam E. Rosenblatt, Michael R. Heithaus, Martha E. Mather, Philip Matich, James C. Nifong, William J. Ripple, Brian R. Silliman
2013, Oceanography (26) 156-167
During recent human history, human activities such as overhunting and habitat destruction have severely impacted many large top predator populations around the world. Studies from a variety of ecosystems show that loss or diminishment of top predator populations can have serious consequences for population and community dynamics and ecosystem stability....
Summit crater lake observations, and the location, chemistry, and pH of water samples near Mount Chiginagak volcano, Alaska: 2004-2012
Janet R. Schaefer, William E. Scott, William C. Evans, Bronwen Wang, Robert G. McGimsey
2013, Report of Investigations of the Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys 2011-6
Mount Chiginagak is a hydrothermally active volcano on the Alaska Peninsula, approximately 170 km south–southwest of King Salmon, Alaska (fig. 1). This small stratovolcano, approximately 8 km in diameter, has erupted through Tertiary to Permian sedimentary and igneous rocks (Detterman and others, 1987). The highest peak is at an elevation...
Variation in salinity tolerance among larval anurans: implications for community composition and the spread of an invasive, non-native species
Mary E. Brown, Susan C. Walls
2013, Copeia (2013) 543-551
Amphibians in freshwater coastal wetlands periodically experience acute exposure to salinity from hurricane-related overwash events, as well as chronic exposure associated with rising sea levels. In a comparative experimental approach, we examined whether seven species of anuran amphibians vary in their tolerance to changes in salinity. In a laboratory study,...
Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance characterization of organic content in shales
Kathryn E. Washburn, Justin E. Birdwell, Joseph D. Seymour, Catherine Kirkland, Sarah J. Vogt
2013, Conference Paper, Proceedings: International Symposium of the Society of Core Analysts
Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) relaxometry is a non-invasive technique commonly used to assess hydrogen-bearing fluids in petroleum reservoir rocks. Longitudinal T1 and transverse T2 relaxation time measurements made using LF-NMR on conventional reservoir systems provides information on rock porosity, pore size distributions, and fluid types and saturations in some...
Reverberations on the watery element: A significant tsunamigenic historical earthquake offshore the Carolina coast
Susan E. Hough, Jeffrey Munsey, Steven N. Ward
2013, Seismological Research Letters (84) 891-898
We investigate an early nineteenth-century earthquake that has been previously cataloged but not previously investigated in detail or recognized as a significant event. The earthquake struck at approximately 4:30 a.m. LT on 8 January 1817 and was widely felt throughout the southeastern and mid-Atlantic United States. Around 11:00 a.m. the same day, an eyewitness described a...
NMR measurement of oil shale magnetic relaxation at high magnetic field
Joseph D. Seymour, Kathryn E. Washburn, Catherine M. Kirkland, Sarah J. Vogt, Justin E. Birdwell, Sarah L. Codd
2013, Conference Paper, Proceedings: International Symposium of the Society of Core Analysts
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) at low field is used extensively to provide porosity and pore-size distributions in reservoir rocks. For unconventional resources, due to low porosity and permeability of the samples, much of the signal exists at very short T2 relaxation times. In addition, the organic content of many shales...
Enamel-based mark performance for marking Chinese mystery snail Bellamya chinensis
Alec Wong, Craig R. Allen, Noelle M. Hart, Danielle M. Haak, Kevin L. Pope, Nicholas A. Smeenk, Bruce J. Stephen, Daniel R. Uden
2013, Management of Biological Invasions (4) 231-234
The exoskeleton of gastropods provides a convenient surface for carrying marks, and i the interest of improving future marking methods our laboratory assessed the performance of an enamel paint. The endurance of the paint was also compared to other marking methods assessed in the past. We marked the shells of...
Croaking gourami, Trichopsis vittata (Cuvier, 1831), in Florida, USA
Pamela J. Schofield, Darren J. Pecora
2013, BioInvasions Records (2) 247-251
The croaking gourami, Trichopsis vittata, is documented from wetland habitats in southern Florida. This species was previously recorded from the same area over 15 years ago, but was considered extirpated. The rediscovery of a reproducing population of this species highlights the dearth of information available regarding the dozens of non-native...
Evaluation of near-critical overdamping effects in slug-test response
Edwin P. Weeks, Arthur C. Clark
2013, Groundwater (51) 775-780
A slug test behaves as a harmonic oscillator, subject to both inertial effects and viscous damping. When viscous and inertial forces are closely balanced, the system is nearly critically damped, and water-level recovery is affected by inertial effects, but does not exhibit oscillation. These effects were investigated by use of...