Notes on the origin of inertinite macerals in coal: Evidence for fungal and arthropod transformations of degraded macerals
J.C. Hower, J.M.K. O’Keefe, C.F. Eble, A. Raymond, B. Valentim, T.J. Volk, A.R. Richardson, Anne B. Satterwhite, R.S. Hatch, J.D. Stucker, M.A. Watt
2011, International Journal of Coal Geology (86) 231-240
The role of fungus in the formation of coal macerals, both as a primary contributor in the form of a fungus fossil/maceral funginite, and in their role in degrading wood, thus producing degraded maceral forms, has been established. Fungus, in the course of breaking down the lignin and cellulose in wood,...
Sensitivity of Pliocene ice sheets to orbital forcing
A.M. Dolan, A.M. Haywood, D.J. Hill, H.J. Dowsett, S.J. Hunter, D.J. Lunt, S.J. Pickering
2011, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (309) 98-110
The stability of the Earth's major ice sheets is a critical uncertainty in predictions of future climate and sea level change. One method of investigating the behaviour of the Greenland and the Antarctic ice sheets in a warmer-than-modern climate is to look back at past warm periods of Earth history,...
Fe-Ni metal and sulfide minerals in CM chondrites: An indicator for thermal history
M. Kimura, Jeffrey N. Grossman, M.K. Weisberg
2011, Meteoritics and Planetary Science (46) 431-442
CM chondrites were subjected to aqueous alteration and, in some cases, to secondary metamorphic heating. The effects of these processes vary widely, and have mainly been documented in silicate phases. Herein, we report the characteristic features of Fe‐Ni metal and sulfide phases in 13 CM and 2 CM‐related chondrites to...
Sex-related differences in habitat associations of wintering American Kestrels in California's Central Valley
E.R. Pandolfino, M.P. Herzog, Z. Smith
2011, Journal of Raptor Research (45) 236-243
We used roadside survey data collected from 19 routes over three consecutive winters from 2007–08 to 2009–10 to compare habitat associations of male and female American Kestrels (Falco sparverius) in the Central Valley of California to determine if segregation by sex was evident across this region. As a species,...
Enhancement of long period components of recorded and synthetic ground motions using InSAR
J.A. Abell, J. Carlos de la Llera, Charles W. Wicks Jr.
2011, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering (31) 817-829
Tall buildings and flexible structures require a better characterization of long period ground motion spectra than the one provided by current seismic building codes. Motivated by that, a methodology is proposed and tested to improve recorded and synthetic ground motions which are consistent with the observed co-seismic displacement field...
Seasonal distribution of Gulf of Mexico sturgeon in the pensacola bay system, Florida
M.S. Duncan, B.M. Wrege, Frank M. Parauka, J. Jeffery Isely
2011, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (27) 316-321
Temporal and spatial distributions of Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi were assessed in the Pensacola bay system, Florida, using stationary ultrasonic telemetry. Fifty‐eight Gulf sturgeon were tagged within the Escambia (n = 26), Yellow (n = 8), Blackwater (n = 12) and Choctawhatchee Rivers (n = 12) in June, July, September and October, 2005. Fifty‐four Gulf sturgeon...
Efficacy and toxicity of iodine disinfection of Atlantic salmon eggs
M.A. Chalupnicki, H. G. Ketola, C. E. Starliper, D. Gallagher
2011, North American Journal of Aquaculture (73) 124-128
Recent interest in the restoration of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar in the Great Lakes has given rise to new culture techniques and management programs designed to reduce pathogen transmission while stabilizing and enhancing wild populations. We examined the toxicity of iodine to Atlantic salmon eggs and its effectiveness as a...
Emergence of viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus in the North American Great Lakes region is associated with low viral genetic diversity
T.M. Thompson, W.N. Batts, M. Faisal, P. Bowser, J.W. Casey, K. Phillips, K.A. Garver, J. Winton, Gael Kurath
2011, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (96) 29-43
Viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) is a fish rhabdovirus that causes disease in a broad range of marine and freshwater hosts. The known geographic range includes the Northern Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and recently it has invaded the Great Lakes region of North America. The goal of this work was...
Bathymetric controls on Pliocene North Atlantic and Arctic sea surface temperature and deepwater production
Marci M. Robinson, P.J. Valdes, A.M. Haywood, H.J. Dowsett, D.J. Hill, S.M. Jones
2011, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (309) 92-97
The mid-Pliocene warm period (MPWP; ~ 3.3 to 3.0 Ma) is the most recent interval in Earth's history in which global temperatures reached and remained at levels similar to those projected for the near future. The distribution of global warmth, however, was different than today in that the high latitudes warmed more...
A distribution-based parameterization for improved tomographic imaging of solute plumes
Adam Pidlisecky, K. Singha, F. D. Day-Lewis
2011, Geophysical Journal International (187) 214-224
Difference geophysical tomography (e.g. radar, resistivity and seismic) is used increasingly for imaging fluid flow and mass transport associated with natural and engineered hydrologic phenomena, including tracer experiments, in situ remediation and aquifer storage and recovery. Tomographic data are collected over time, inverted and differenced against a background image to produce ‘snapshots’...
Global patterns of phytoplankton dynamics in coastal ecosystems
H. Paerl, Kedong Yin, J. Cloern, James E. Cloern
2011, Conference Paper, Eos
Scientific Committee on Ocean Research Working Group 137 Meeting; Hangzhou, China, 17-21 October 2010; Phytoplankton biomass and community structure have undergone dramatic changes in coastal ecosystems over the past several decades in response to climate variability and human disturbance. These changes have short- and long-term impacts on global carbon and...
Magma at depth: A retrospective analysis of the 1975 unrest at Mount Baker, Washington, USA
Juliet G. Crider, David Frank, Stephen D. Malone, Michael P. Poland, Cynthia Werner, Jacqueline Caplan-Auerbach
2011, Bulletin of Volcanology (73) 175-189
Mount Baker volcano displayed a short interval of seismically-quiescent thermal unrest in 1975, with high emissions of magmatic gas that slowly waned during the following three decades. The area of snow-free ground in the active crater has not returned to pre-unrest levels, and fumarole gas geochemistry shows a decreasing magmatic...
Effect of tidal fluctuations on transient dispersion of simulated contaminant concentrations in coastal aquifers
Ivana La Licata, Christian D. Langevin, Alyssa M. Dausman, Luca Alberti
2011, Hydrogeology Journal (19) 1313-1322
Variable-density groundwater models require extensive computational resources, particularly for simulations representing short-term hydrologic variability such as tidal fluctuations. Saltwater-intrusion models usually neglect tidal fluctuations and this may introduce errors in simulated concentrations. The effects of tides on simulated concentrations in a coastal aquifer were assessed. Three analyses are reported: in...
Road-testing the outreach best practices manual: Applicability for implementation of the development phase projects by the regional carbon sequestration partnerships
D. Daly, J. Bradbury, G. Garrett, S. Greenberg, R. Myhre, T. Peterson, L. Tollefson, S. Wade, N. Sacuta
2011, Energy Procedia (4) 6256-6262
Geologic carbon dioxide (CO2) storage verification tests by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) seven Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships (RCSPs) provided the experience base for the Public Outreach and Education for Carbon Storage Projects, a best practices manual, published in December 2009. This paper summarizes these outreach best practices; discusses...
Redefinition of the crater-density and absolute-age boundaries for the chronostratigraphic system of Mars
S.C. Werner, K. L. Tanaka
2011, Icarus (215) 603-607
For the boundaries of each chronostratigraphic epoch on Mars, we present systematically derived crater-size frequencies based on crater counts of geologic referent surfaces and three proposed “standard” crater size–frequency production distributions as defined by (a) a simple −2 power law, (b) Neukum and Ivanov, (c) Hartmann. In turn, these crater...
Hunter perceptions and acceptance of alternative deer management regulations
L. Cornicelli, David C. Fulton, M.D. Grund, J. Fieberg
2011, Wildlife Society Bulletin (35) 323-329
Wildlife managers are often confronted with a policy paradox where a majority of the public supports an outcome, but there is no agreement on specific management strategies to achieve this outcome. Previous research has also reported a link between regulatory acceptance, hunter satisfaction, and hunter participation rates. Thus, human dimensions...
Formation pressure testing at the Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well, Alaska North Slope: Operational summary, history matching, and interpretations
B. Anderson, S. Hancock, S. Wilson, C. Enger, Timothy S. Collett, R. Boswell, R. Hunter
2011, Marine and Petroleum Geology (28) 478-492
In February 2007, the U.S. Department of Energy, BP Exploration (Alaska), and the U.S. Geological Survey, collected open-hole pressure-response data, as well as gas and water sample collection, in a gas hydrate reservoir (the BPXA-DOE-USGS Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well) using Schlumberger's Modular Dynamics Formation Tester (MDT)...
Shallow degassing events as a trigger for very-long-period seismicity at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i
Matthew Patrick, David Wilson, David Fee, Tim R. Orr, Donald A. Swanson
2011, Bulletin of Volcanology (73) 1179-1186
The first eruptive activity at Kīlauea Volcano’s summit in 25 years began in March 2008 with the opening of a 35-m-wide vent in Halema‘uma‘u crater. The new activity has produced prominent very-long-period (VLP) signals corresponding with two new behaviors: episodic tremor bursts and small explosive events, both of which represent...
Microbial consortia of gorgonian corals from the Aleutian islands
Michael A. Gray, Robert P. Stone, Molly R. McLaughlin, Christina A. Kellogg
2011, FEMS Microbiology Ecology (76) 109-120
Gorgonians make up the majority of corals in the Aleutian archipelago and provide critical fish habitat in areas of economically important fisheries. The microbial ecology of the deep-sea gorgonian corals Paragorgea arborea, Plumarella superba, and Cryogorgia koolsae was examined with culture-based and 16S rRNA gene-based techniques. Six coral colonies (two per species) were...
Innate immune response development in nestling tree swallows
T. Stambaugh, B.J. Houdek, M.P. Lombardo, P.A. Thorpe, Caldwell Hahn
2011, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (123) 779-787
We tracked the development of innate immunity in nestling Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) and compared it to that of adults using blood drawn from nestlings during days 6, 12, and 18 of the ∼20-day nestling period and from adults. Innate immunity was characterized using an in vitro assay of the ability...
Sphaeridiotrema globulus and Sphaeridiotrema pseudoglobulus (Digenea): Species differentiation based on mtDNA (Barcode) and partial LSUrDNA sequences
L. Bergmame, J. Huffman, Rebecca A. Cole, S. Dayanandan, V. Tkach, J.D. McLaughlin
2011, Journal of Parasitology (97) 1132-1136
Flukes belonging to Sphaeridiotrema are important parasites of waterfowl, and 2 morphologically similar species Sphaeridiotrema globulus and Sphaeridiotrema pseudoglobulus, have been implicated in waterfowl mortality in North America. Cytochrome oxidase I (barcode region) and partial LSU-rDNA sequences from specimens of S. globulus and S. pseudoglobulus, obtained from naturally and experimentally infected hosts from...
Sphene and zircon in the Highland Range volcanic sequence (Miocene, southern Nevada, USA): Elemental partitioning, phase relations, and influence on evolution of silicic magma
L.L. Colombini, C. F. Miller, G.A.R. Gualda, J. L. Wooden, J.S. Miller
2011, Mineralogy and Petrology (102) 29-50
Sphene is prominent in Miocene plutonic rocks ranging from diorite to granite in southern Nevada, USA, but it is restricted to rhyolites in coeval volcanic sequences. In the Highland Range volcanic sequence, sphene appears as a phenocryst only in the most evolved rocks (72–77 mass% SiO2; matrix glass 77–78 mass%...
On the use of log-transformation vs. nonlinear regression for analyzing biological power laws
X. Xiao, E.P. White, M.B. Hooten, S.L. Durham
2011, Ecology (92) 1887-1894
Power‐law relationships are among the most well‐studied functional relationships in biology. Recently the common practice of fitting power laws using linear regression (LR) on log‐transformed data has been criticized, calling into question the conclusions of hundreds of studies. It has been suggested that nonlinear regression (NLR) is preferable, but no...
The shakeout scenario: Meeting the needs for construction aggregates, asphalt, and concrete
W. H. Langer
2011, Earthquake Spectra (27) 505-520
An Mw 7.8 earthquake as described in the ShakeOut Scenario would cause significant damage to buildings and infrastructure. Over 6 million tons of newly mined aggregate would be used for emergency repairs and for reconstruction in the five years following the event. This aggregate would be applied mostly in the form...
Chemically mediated interactions between macroalgae Dictyota spp. and multiple life-history stages of the coral Porites astreoides
V.J. Paul, Ilsa B. Kuffner, L.J. Walters, R. Ritson-Williams, K.S. Beach, M.A. Becerro
2011, Marine Ecology Progress Series (426) 161-170
Competition between corals and macroalgae is often assumed to occur on reefs, especially those that have undergone shifts from coral to algal dominance; however, data examining these competitive interactions, especially during the early life-history stages of corals, are scarce. We conducted a series of field and outdoor seawater-table experiments to...