Applying monitoring, verification, and accounting techniques to a real-world, enhanced oil recovery operational CO2 leak
B.T. Wimmer, I.G. Krapac, R. Locke, A. Iranmanesh
2011, Energy Procedia (4) 3330-3337
The use of carbon dioxide (CO2) for enhanced oil recovery (EOR) is being tested for oil fields in the Illinois Basin, USA. While this technology has shown promise for improving oil production, it has raised some issues about the safety of...
Differential effects of dissolved organic carbon upon re-entrainment and surface properties of groundwater bacteria and bacteria-sized microspheres during transport through a contaminated, sandy aquifer
Ronald W. Harvey, D.W. Metge, A. Mohanram, X. Gao, J. Chorover
2011, Environmental Science & Technology (45) 3252-3259
Injection-and-recovery studies involving a contaminated, sandy aquifer (Cape Cod, Massachusetts) were conducted to assess the relative susceptibility for in situ re-entrainment of attached groundwater bacteria (Pseudomonas stuzeri ML2, and uncultured, native bacteria) and carboxylate-modified microspheres (0.2 and 1.0 μm diameters). Different patterns of re-entrainment were evident for the two colloids...
Accuracy of estimating wolf summer territories by daytime locations
D. J. Demma, L. David Mech
2011, American Midland Naturalist (165) 436-445
We used locations of 6 wolves (Canis lupus) in Minnesota from Global Positioning System (GPS) collars to compare day-versus-night locations to estimate territory size and location during summer. We employed both minimum convex polygon (MCP) and fixed kernel (FK) methods. We used two methods to partition GPS locations for...
Anomalous waveforms observed in laboratory-formed gas hydrate-bearing and ice-bearing sediments
Myung W. Lee, William F. Waite
2011, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (129) 1707-1720
Acoustic transmission measurements of compressional, P, and shear, S, wave velocities rely on correctly identifying the P- and S-body wave arrivals in the measured waveform. In cylindrical samples for which the sample is much longer than the acoustic wavelength, these body waves can be obscured by high-amplitude waveform features arriving just after the relatively small-amplitude P-body wave. In this study, a normal mode approach is...
Scenarios for earthquake-generated tsunamis on a complex tectonic area of diffuse deformation and low velocity: The Alboran Sea, Western Mediterranean
J. A. Alvarez-Gomez, I. Aniel-Quiroga, M. Gonzalez, Maitane Olabarrieta, E. Carreno
2011, Marine Geology (284) 55-73
The tsunami impact on the Spanish and North African coasts of the Alboran Sea generated by several reliable seismic tsunamigenic sources in this area was modeled. The tectonic setting is complex and a study of the potential sources from geological data is basic to obtain probable source characteristics. The tectonic...
Strong atmospheric chemistry feedback to climate warming from Arctic methane emissions
Ivar Isaksen, Michael Gauss, Gunnar Myhre, Katey M. Walter Anthony, Carolyn Ruppel
2011, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (25) GB2002
The magnitude and feedbacks of future methane release from the Arctic region are unknown. Despite limited documentation of potential future releases associated with thawing permafrost and degassing methane hydrates, the large potential for future methane releases calls for improved understanding of the interaction of a changing climate with processes in...
Molybdenite saturation in silicic magmas: Occurrence and petrological implications
A. Audetat, D. Dolejs, Jacob B. Lowenstern
2011, Journal of Petrology (52) 891-904
We identified molybdenite (MoS2) as an accessory magmatic phase in 13 out of 27 felsic magma systems examined worldwide. The molybdenite occurs as small (< 20 µm) triangular or hexagonal platelets included in quartz phenocrysts. Laser-ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry analyses of melt inclusions in molybdenite-saturated samples reveal 1–13 ppm Mo in...
Use of the superpopulation approach to estimate breeding population size: An example in asynchronously breeding birds
K.A. Williams, P. C. Frederick, James D. Nichols
2011, Ecology (92) 821-828
Many populations of animals are fluid in both space and time, making estimation of numbers difficult. Much attention has been devoted to estimation of bias in detection of animals that are present at the time of survey. However, an equally important problem is estimation of population size when all animals...
Why do some, but not all, tropical birds migrate? A comparative study of diet breadth and fruit preference
W.A. Boyle, Courtney J. Conway, Judith L. Bronstein
2011, Evolutionary Ecology (25) 219-236
Annual migrations of birds profoundly influence terrestrial communities. However, few empirical studies examine why birds migrate, in part due to the difficulty of testing causal hypotheses in long-distance migration systems. Short-distance altitudinal migrations provide relatively tractable systems in which to test explanations for migration. Many past studies explain tropical altitudinal...
Patterns of space and habitat use by northern bobwhites in south Florida, USA
A. Singh, T.C. Hines, J.A. Hostetler, H. Franklin Percival, M.K. Oli
2011, European Journal of Wildlife Research (57) 15-26
The manner by which animals use space and select resources can have important management consequences. We studied patterns of habitat selection by northern bobwhites (Colinus virginianus) on Babcock-Webb Wildlife Management Area, Charlotte County, Florida and evaluated factors influencing the sizes of their home ranges. A total of 1,245 radio-tagged bobwhites...
Regional correlations of V s30 and velocities averaged over depths less than and greater than 30 meters
D.M. Boore, E.M. Thompson, H. Cadet
2011, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (101) 3046-3059
Using velocity profiles from sites in Japan, California, Turkey, and Europe, we find that the time-averaged shear-wave velocity to 30 m (V S30), used as a proxy for site amplification in recent ground-motion prediction equations (GMPEs) and building codes, is strongly correlated with average velocities to depths less than...
USGS 1-min Dst index
J.L. Gannon, Jeffrey J. Love
2011, Journal of Atmospheric and Solar-Terrestrial Physics (73) 323-334
We produce a 1-min time resolution storm-time disturbance index, the USGS Dst, called Dst8507-4SM. This index is based on minute resolution horizontal magnetic field intensity from low-latitude observatories in Honolulu, Kakioka, San Juan and Hermanus, for the years 1985–2007. The method used to produce the index uses a combination of time-...
Regional magnetic domains of the Circum-Arctic: A framework for geodynamic interpretation
R. W. Saltus, E. L. Miller, C. Gaina, P. J. Brown
2011, Geological Society Memoir (35) 49-60
We identify and discuss 57 magnetic anomaly pattern domains spanning the Circum-Arctic. The domains are based on analysis of a new Circum-Arctic data compilation. The magnetic anomaly patterns can be broadly related to general geodynamic classification of the crust into stable, deformed (magnetic and nonmagnetic), deep magnetic high, oceanic and...
Geology and petroleum potential of the Timan-Pechora Basin Province, Russia
Christopher J. Schenk
2011, Geological Society Memoir 283-294
The Timan–Pechora Basin Province represents the northeastern-most cratonic block of Eastern European Russia. More than 16 billion barrels of oil (BBO) and 40 trillion cubic feet of gas (TCFG) have been discovered in this basin. Three geological assessment units (AU) were defined for assessing the potential for undiscovered oil and...
Transitions of interaction outcomes in a uni-directional consumer-resource system
Y. Wang, Donald L. DeAngelis
2011, Journal of Theoretical Biology (280) 43-49
A uni-directional consumer–resource system of two species is analyzed. Our aim is to understand the mechanisms that determine how the interaction outcomes depend on the context of the interaction; that is, on the model parameters. The dynamic behavior of the model is described and, in particular, it is demonstrated that no periodic...
Patterns of coral disease across the Hawaiian Archipelago: Relating disease to environment
G.S. Aeby, G.J. Williams, E.C. Franklin, J. Kenyon, E.F. Cox, S. Coles, Thierry M. Work
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
In Hawaii, coral reefs occur across a gradient of biological (host abundance), climatic (sea surface temperature anomalies) and anthropogenic conditions from the human-impacted reefs of the main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) to the pristine reefs of the northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI). Coral disease surveys were conducted at 142 sites from across...
Data sharing by scientists: Practices and perceptions
Carol Tenopir, Suzie Allard, K. Douglass, Arsev Umur Aydinoglu, Lei Wu, Eleanor Read, Maribeth Manoff, Mike Frame
2011, PLoS ONE (6) 1-21
BackgroundScientific research in the 21st century is more data intensive and collaborative than in the past. It is important to study the data practices of researchers – data accessibility, discovery, re-use, preservation and, particularly, data sharing. Data sharing is a valuable part of the scientific method allowing...
Management intensity alters decomposition via biological pathways
Kyle Wickings, A. Stuart Grandy, Sasha Reed, Cory Cleveland
2011, Biogeochemistry (104) 365-379
Current conceptual models predict that changes in plant litter chemistry during decomposition are primarily regulated by both initial litter chemistry and the stage-or extent-of mass loss. Far less is known about how variations in decomposer community structure (e.g., resulting from different ecosystem management types) could influence litter chemistry during decomposition....
Efficacy of monitoring and empirical predictive modeling at improving public health protection at Chicago beaches
Meredith B. Nevers, Richard L. Whitman
2011, Water Research (45) 1659-1668
Efforts to improve public health protection in recreational swimming waters have focused on obtaining real-time estimates of water quality. Current monitoring techniques rely on the time-intensive culturing of fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) from water samples, but rapidly changing FIB concentrations result in management errors that lead to the public being...
Regional spectral analysis of three moderate earthquakes in Northeastern North America
John Boatwright, Linda C. Seekins
2011, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (101) 1769-1782
We analyze Fourier spectra obtained from the horizontal components of broadband and accelerogram data from the 1997 Cap-Rouge, the 2002 Ausable Forks, and the 2005 Rivière-du-Loup earthquakes, recorded by Canadian and American stations sited on rock at hypocentral distances from 23 to 602 km. We check the recorded spectra closely...
Salvage logging versus the use of burnt wood as a nurse object to promote post-fire tree seedling establishment
J. Castro, Craig D. Allen, M. Molina-Morales, Sara Maranon-Jimenez, A. Sanchez-Miranda, R. Zamora
2011, Restoration Ecology (19) 537-544
Intense debate surrounds the effects of post-fire salvage logging (SL) versus nonintervention policies on forest regeneration, but scant support is available from experimental studies. We analyze the effect of three post-fire management treatments on the recruitment of a serotinous pine (Pinus pinaster) at a Mediterranean mountain. Treatments were applied 7...
Effects of slow recovery rates on water column geochemistry in aquitard wells
K. E. Schilling
2011, Applied Geochemistry (26) 1108-1114
Monitoring wells are often installed in aquitards to verify effectiveness for preventing migration of surface contaminants to underlying aquifers. However, water sampling of aquitard wells presents a challenge due to the slow recovery times for water recharging the wells, which can take as long as weeks, months or years to...
Complex dynamics at the interface between wild and domestic viruses of finfish
Gael Kurath, J. Winton
2011, Current Opinion in Virology (1) 73-80
Viral traffic occurs readily between wild and domesticated stocks of finfish because aquatic environments have greater connectivity than their terrestrial counterparts and because the global expansion and dynamic nature of intensive aquaculture provide multiple pathways of transmission and unique drivers of virus adaptation. Supported by examples from the literature, we...
The significance of turbulent flow representation in single-continuum models
Thomas Reimann, C. Rehrl, W.B. Shoemaker, T. Geyer, S. Birk
2011, Water Resources Research (47)
Karst aquifers exhibit highly conductive features caused from rock dissolution processes. Flow within these structures can become turbulent and therefore can be expressed by nonlinear gradient functions. One way to account for these effects is by coupling a continuum model with a conduit network. Alternatively, turbulent flow can be considered...
Location and agricultural practices influence spring use of harvested cornfields by cranes and geese in Nebraska
Michael J. Anteau, Mark H. Sherfy, A.A. Bishop
2011, Journal of Wildlife Management (75) 1004-1011
Millions of ducks, geese, and sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis; hereafter cranes) stop in the Central Platte River Valley (CPRV) of Nebraska to store nutrients for migration and reproduction by consuming corn remaining in fields after harvest. We examined factors that influence use of cornfields by cranes and geese (all mid‐continent...