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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
On baseline corrections and uncertainty in response spectrafor baseline variations commonly encountered in digital accelerograph records
Sinan Akkar, David M. Boore
2009, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (99) 1671-1690
Most digital accelerograph recordings are plagued by long-period drifts, best seen in the velocity and displacement time series obtained from integration of the acceleration time series. These drifts often result in velocity values that are nonzero near the end of the record. This is clearly unphysical and can lead to...
Comparing approaches for simulating the reactive transport of U(VI) in ground water
G.P. Curtis, M. Kohler, J.A. Davis
2009, Mine Water and the Environment (28) 84-93
The reactive transport of U(VI) in a well-characterized shallow alluvial aquifer at a former U(VI) mill located near Naturita, CO, was predicted for comparative purposes using a surface complexation model (SCM) and a constant K d approach to simulate U(VI) adsorption. The ground water at the site had U(VI) concentrations that...
Experimental infection of cliff swallows (Petrochelidon pyrrhonota) with varying doses of West Nile virus
P.T. Oesterle, N.M. Nemeth, Kaci K. VanDalen, H. Sullivan, K.T. Bentler, G.R. Young, R. G. McLean, L. Clark, C. Smeraski, Jeffrey S. Hall
2009, American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (81) 1159-1164
Cliff swallows (Petrochelidon pyrrhonota) were inoculated with differing doses of West Nile virus (WNV) to evaluate their potential role as reservoir hosts in nature. Swallows often nest in large colonies in habitats and months associated with high mosquito abundance and early WNV transmission in North America. Additionally, cliff swallow diet...
Simulating and understanding sand wave variation: A case study of the Golden Gate sand waves
F. Sterlini, S.J.M.H. Hulscher, D.M. Hanes
2009, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (114)
In this paper we present a detailed comparison between measured features of the Golden Gate sand wave field and the results of a nonlinear sand wave model. Because the Golden Gate sand waves exhibit large variation in their characteristics and in their environmental physics, this area gives us the opportunity...
Using geometrical, textural, and contextual information of land parcels for classification of detailed urban land use
S.-S. Wu, X. Qiu, E.L. Usery, L. Wang
2009, Annals of the Association of American Geographers (99) 76-98
Detailed urban land use data are important to government officials, researchers, and businesspeople for a variety of purposes. This article presents an approach to classifying detailed urban land use based on geometrical, textural, and contextual information of land parcels. An area of 6 by 14 km in Austin, Texas, with...
Isotopic composition of low-latitude paleoprecipitation during the Early Cretaceous
M.B. Suarez, Luis A. Gonzalez, Greg A. Ludvigson, F.J. Vega, J. Alvarado-Ortega
2009, Geological Society of America Bulletin (121) 1584-1595
The response of the hydrologic cycle in global greenhouse conditions is important to our understanding of future climate change and to the calibration of global climate models. Past greenhouse conditions, such as those of the Cretaceous, can be used to provide empirical data with which to evaluate climate models. Recent...
USGS: Science at the intersection of land and ocean
M.D. Myers
2009, Sea Technology (50) 18-21
The US Geological Survey (USGS) conducts an ongoing national assessment of coastal change hazards in order to help protect lives and support management of coastal infrastructure and resources. The research group rapidly gathers to investigate coastal changes along the Gulf Coast's sandy beaches after each hurricane to examine the magnitude...
A global map of rainfed cropland areas (GMRCA) at the end of last millennium using remote sensing
C.M. Biradar, P.S. Thenkabail, P. Noojipady, Y. Li, V. Dheeravath, H. Turral, M. Velpuri, M.K. Gumma, O.R.P. Gangalakunta, X.L. Cai, X. Xiao, M.A. Schull, R.D. Alankara, S. Gunasinghe, S. Mohideen
2009, International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation (11) 114-129
The overarching goal of this study was to produce a global map of rainfed cropland areas (GMRCA) and calculate country-by-country rainfed area statistics using remote sensing data. A suite of spatial datasets, methods and protocols for mapping GMRCA were described. These consist of: (a) data fusion and composition of multi-resolution...
Fragmentary evidence of great-earthquake subsidence during holocene emergence, Valdivia estuary, South Central Chile
A.R. Nelson, K. Kashima, L. A. Bradley
2009, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (99) 71-86
A reconnaissance of Holocene stratigraphy beneath fringing marshes of the Valdivia estuary, where an M 9.5 earthquake caused 1-2 m of regional coseismic subsidence in 1960, shows only fragmentary evidence of prehistoric coseismic subsidence. In most of the 150 hand-driven cores that were examined, a distinct unconformity separates 0.5-1.5 m...
Managing water to protect fish: A review of California's environmental water account, 2001-2005
L. R. Brown, W. Kimmerer, R. Brown
2009, Environmental Management (43) 357-368
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, the landward reach of the San Francisco Estuary, provides habitat for threatened delta smelt, endangered winter-run Chinook salmon, and other species of concern. It is also the location of huge freshwater diversion facilities that entrain large numbers of fish. Reducing the entrainment of listed fishes into...
Estimation of regional-scale groundwater flow properties in the Bengal Basin of India and Bangladesh
H.A. Michael, C.I. Voss
2009, Hydrogeology Journal (17) 1329-1346
Quantitative evaluation of management strategies for long-term supply of safe groundwater for drinking from the Bengal Basin aquifer (India and Bangladesh) requires estimation of the large-scale hydrogeologic properties that control flow. The Basin consists of a stratified, heterogeneous sequence of sediments with aquitards that may separate aquifers locally, but evidence...
Directed site exploration for permeable reactive barrier design
J. Lee, A.J. Graettinger, J. Moylan, H. W. Reeves
2009, Journal of Hazardous Materials (162) 222-229
Permeable reactive barriers (PRBs) are being employed for in situ site remediation of groundwater that is typically flowing under natural gradients. Site characterization is of critical importance to the success of a PRB. A design-specific site exploration approach called quantitatively directed exploration (QDE) is presented. The QDE approach employs three...
Late Pleistocene to Holocene sedimentation and hydrocarbon seeps on the continental shelf of a steep, tectonically active margin, southern California, USA
Amy E. Draut, Patrick E. Hart, T.D. Lorenson, Holly F. Ryan, Florence L. Wong, Ray W. Sliter, James E. Conrad
2009, Marine Geophysical Research (30) 193-206
Small, steep, uplifting coastal watersheds are prolific sediment producers that contribute significantly to the global marine sediment budget. This study illustrates how sedimentation evolves in one such system where the continental shelf is largely sediment-starved, with most terrestrial sediment bypassing the shelf in favor of deposition in deeper basins. The...
Selenium mass balance in the Great Salt Lake, Utah
X. Diaz, W.P. Johnson, D. L. Naftz
2009, Science of the Total Environment (407) 2333-2341
A mass balance for Se in the south arm of the Great Salt Lake was developed for September 2006 to August 2007 of monitoring for Se loads and removal flows. The combined removal flows (sedimentation and volatilization) totaled to a geometric mean value of 2079??kg Se/yr, with the estimated low...
Mercury isotopic composition of hydrothermal systems in the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field and Guaymas Basin sea-floor rift
L.S. Sherman, J.D. Blum, D. Kirk Nordstrom, R. Blaine McCleskey, T. Barkay, C. Vetriani
2009, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (279) 86-96
To characterize mercury (Hg) isotopes and isotopic fractionation in hydrothermal systems we analyzed fluid and precipitate samples from hot springs in the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field and vent chimney samples from the Guaymas Basin sea-floor rift. These samples provide an initial indication of the variability in Hg isotopic composition among...
Lagrangian sampling for emerging contaminants through an urban stream corridor in Colorado
J.B. Brown, W.A. Battaglin, R.E. Zuellig
2009, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (45) 68-82
Recent national concerns regarding the environmental occurrence of emerging contaminants (ECs) have catalyzed a series of recent studies. Many ECs are released into the environment through discharges from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) and other sources. In 2005, the U.S. Geological Survey and the City of Longmont initiated an investigation of...
Geochemistry and petrology of selected coal samples from Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, and Papua, Indonesia
H. E. Belkin, S.J. Tewalt, J.C. Hower, J.D. Stucker, J.M.K. O’Keefe
2009, International Journal of Coal Geology (77) 260-268
Indonesia has become the world's largest exporter of thermal coal and is a major supplier to the Asian coal market, particularly as the People's Republic of China is now (2007) and perhaps may remain a net importer of coal. Indonesia has had a long history of coal production, mainly in...
Hydrograph separation for karst watersheds using a two-domain rainfall-discharge model
Andrew J. Long
2009, Journal of Hydrology (364) 249-256
Highly parameterized, physically based models may be no more effective at simulating the relations between rainfall and outflow from karst watersheds than are simpler models. Here an antecedent rainfall and convolution model was used to separate a karst watershed hydrograph into two outflow components: one originating from focused recharge in...
Zooplankton assemblages in montane lakes and ponds of Mount Rainier National Park, Washington State, USA
G.L. Larson, R. Hoffman, C. D. McIntire, G. Lienkaemper, B. Samora
2009, Journal of Plankton Research (31) 273-285
Water quality and zooplankton samples were collected during the ice-free periods between 1988 and 2005 from 103 oligotrophic montane lakes and ponds located in low forest to alpine vegetation zones in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington State, USA. Collectively, 45 rotifer and 44 crustacean taxa were identified. Most of the...
Emissions from the copper-nickel industry on the Kola Peninsula and at Noril'sk, Russia
Ron Boyd, S.-J. Barnes, P. De Caritat, V.A. Chekushin, V.A. Melezhik, C. Reimann, M. L. Zientek
2009, Atmospheric Environment (43) 1474-1480
Published estimates for base metal emissions from the copper-nickel industry on the Kola Peninsula are re-examined in the light of (a) chemical data on the composition of the ores; (b) official emission figures for 1994; and (c) modelled emissions based on dry and wet deposition estimates derived from data for...
Paleomagnetism and environmental magnetism of GLAD800 sediment cores from Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho
C.W. Heil Jr., J.W. King, J. G. Rosenbaum, R. L. Reynolds, Steven M. Colman
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 291-310
A ???220,000-year record recovered in a 120-m-long sediment core from Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho, provides an opportunity to reconstruct climate change in the Great Basin and compare it with global climate records. Paleomagnetic data exhibit a geomagnetic feature that possibly occurred during the Laschamp excursion (ca. 40 ka). Although...
Species richness, equitability, and abundance of ants in disturbed landscapes
J.H. Graham, A.J. Krzysik, D.A. Kovacic, J.J. Duda, D.C. Freeman, J.M. Emlen, J.C. Zak, W.R. Long, M.P. Wallace, C. Chamberlin-Graham, J.P. Nutter, H.E. Balbach
2009, Ecological Indicators (9) 866-877
Ants are used as indicators of environmental change in disturbed landscapes, often without adequate understanding of their response to disturbance. Ant communities in the southeastern United States displayed a hump-backed species richness curve against an index of landscape disturbance. Forty sites at Fort Benning, in west-central Georgia, covered a spectrum...
The Eocene-Oligocene sedimentary record in the Chesapeake Bay impact structure: Implications for climate and sea-level changes on the western Atlantic margin
P. Schulte, B.S. Wade, A. Kontny, Jean Self-Trail
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (458) 839-865
A multidisciplinary investigation of the Eocene-Oligocene transition in the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP)-U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Eyreville core from the Chesapeake Bay impact basin was conducted in order to document environmental changes and sequence stratigraphic setting. Planktonic foraminifera and calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy indicate that the Eyreville core includes...
Can pelagic forage fish and spawning cisco (Coregonus artedi) biomass in the western arm of Lake Superior be assessed with a single summer survey?
D.L. Yule, J.D. Stockwell, D.R. Schreiner, L.M. Evrard, M. Balge, T.R. Hrabik
2009, Fisheries Research (96) 39-50
Management efforts to rehabilitate lake trout Salvelinus namaycush in Lake Superior have been successful and the recent increase in their numbers has led to interest in measuring biomass of pelagic prey fish species important to these predators. Lake Superior cisco Coregonus artedi currently support roe fisheries and determining the sustainability...
Landscape planning for agricultural nonpoint source pollution reduction III: Assessing phosphorus and sediment reduction potential
M.W. Diebel, J.T. Maxted, Dale M. Robertson, S. Han, M. J. Vander Zanden
2009, Environmental Management (43) 69-83
Riparian buffers have the potential to improve stream water quality in agricultural landscapes. This potential may vary in response to landscape characteristics such as soils, topography, land use, and human activities, including legacies of historical land management. We built a predictive model to estimate the sediment and phosphorus load reduction...