Volcano monitoring using GPS: Developing data analysis strategies based on the June 2007 Kīlauea Volcano intrusion and eruption
Kristine M. Larson, Michael Poland, Asta Miklius
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (115) B07406
The global positioning system (GPS) is one of the most common techniques, and the current state of the art, used to monitor volcano deformation. In addition to slow (several centimeters per year) displacement rates, GPS can be used to study eruptions and intrusions that result in much larger (tens of...
Ground surface deformation patterns, magma supply, and magma storage at Okmok volcano, Alaska, from InSAR analysis: 1. Intereruption deformation, 1997–2008
Zhong Lu, Daniel Dzurisin, Juliet Biggs, Charles Wicks Jr., Steve McNutt
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research (115)
Starting soon after the 1997 eruption at Okmok volcano and continuing until the start of the 2008 eruption, magma accumulated in a storage zone centered ~3.5 km beneath the caldera floor at a rate that varied with time. A Mogi-type point pressure source or finite sphere with a radius of...
Remotely triggered microearthquakes and tremor in central California following the 2010 Mw 8.8 Chile earthquake
Zhigang Peng, David P. Hill, David R. Shelly, Chastity Aiken
2010, Geophysical Research Letters (37)
We examine remotely triggered microearthquakes and tectonic tremor in central California following the 2010 Mw 8.8 Chile earthquake. Several microearthquakes near the Coso Geothermal Field were apparently triggered, with the largest earthquake (Ml 3.5) occurring during the large-amplitude Love surface waves. The Chile mainshock also triggered numerous tremor bursts near...
Slow slip event at Kilauea Volcano
Michael P. Poland, Asta Miklius, J. David Wilson, Paul G. Okubo, Emily Montgomery-Brown, Paul Segall, Benjamin Brooks, James Foster, Cecily Wolfe, Ellen Syracuse, Clifford Thurbe
2010, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (91) 118-118
Early in the morning of 1 February 2010 (UTC; early afternoon 31 January 2010 local time), continuous Global Positioning System (GPS) and tilt instruments detected a slow slip event (SSE) on the south flank of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii. The SSE lasted at least 36 hours and resulted in a maximum...
Slow slip phenomena in Cascadia from 2007 and beyond: a review
Joan Gomberg, Cascadia 2007 and Beyond Working Group
2010, GSA Bulletin (122) 963-978
Recent technological advances combined with more detailed analyses of seismologic and geodetic observations have fundamentally changed our understanding of the ways in which tectonic stresses arising from plate motions are accommodated by slip on faults. The traditional view that relative plate motions are accommodated by a simple cycle of stress...
Mount St. Helens: A 30-year legacy of volcanism
James W. Vallance, Cynthia A. Gardner, William E. Scott, Richard M. Iverson, Thomas C. Pierson
2010, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (91) 169-171
The spectacular eruption of Mount St. Helens on 18 May 1980 electrified scientists and the public. Photodocumentation of the colossal landslide, directed blast, and ensuing eruption column—which reached as high as 25 kilometers in altitude and lasted for nearly 9 hours—made news worldwide. Reconnaissance of the devastation spurred efforts to...
Field evaluation of a two-dimensinal hydrodynamic model near boulders for habitat calculation
Terry Waddle
2010, River Research and Applications (26) 730-741
Two-dimensional hydrodynamic models are now widely used in aquatic habitat studies. To test the sensitivity of calculated habitat outcomes to limitations of such a model and of typical field data, bathymetry, depth and velocity data were collected for three discharges in the vicinity of two large boulders in the South...
Wind-enhanced resuspension in the shallow waters of South San Francisco Bay: Mechanisms and potential implications for cohesive sediment transport
Andreas Brand, Jessica R. Lacy, Kevin Hsu, Daniel Hoover, Steve Gladding, Mark T. Stacey
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (115)
We investigated the driving forces of sediment dynamics at the shoals in South San Francisco Bay. Two stations were deployed along a line perpendicular to a 14 m deep channel, 1000 and 2000 m from the middle of the channel. Station depths were 2.59 and 2.19 m below mean lower...
The water table
Thomas L. Holzer
2010, Ground Water (48) 171-173
The water table is a fundamental concept in hydrogeology, yet it is frequently incorrectly defined. For example, both the NGWA (2003) and AGI (Neuendorf et al. 2005) glossaries define the water table as the atmospheric pressure surface that is coincident with the top of the zone of saturation. This definition...
Coherence of Mach fronts during heterogeneous supershear earthquake rupture propagation: Simulations and comparison with observations
A. Bizzarri, Eric M. Dunham, P. Spudich
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (115) B08301
We study how heterogeneous rupture propagation affects the coherence of shear and Rayleigh Mach wavefronts radiated by supershear earthquakes. We address this question using numerical simulations of ruptures on a planar, vertical strike-slip fault embedded in a three-dimensional, homogeneous, linear elastic half-space. Ruptures propagate spontaneously in accordance with a linear...
Comparison of sap flux, moisture flux tower and MODIS enhanced vegetation index methods for estimating riparian evapotranspiration
Pamela L. Nagler, Edward P. Glenn, Kiyomi Morino
Christopher M.U Neale, Michael H. Cosh, editor(s)
2010, Conference Paper, Remote sensing and hydrology
Riparian evapotranspiration (ET) was measured on a salt cedar (Tamarix spp.) dominated river terrace on the Lower Colorado River from 2007 to 2009 using tissue-heat-balance sap flux sensors at six sites representing very dense, medium dense, and sparse stands of plants. Salt cedar ET varied markedly across sites, and sap...
Decline of shortjaw cisco in Lake Superior: the role of overfishing and risk of extinction
Charles R. Bronte, Michael H. Hoff, Owen T. Gorman, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Philip J. Schneeberger, Thomas N. Todd
2010, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (139) 735-748
Recent reviews have further documented the decline of the shortjaw cisco Coregonus zenithicus in Lake Superior. This fish was the most abundant deepwater cisco species in Lake Superior in the early 1920s but presently makes up less than 1% of all deepwater ciscoes (i.e., including shortjaw cisco, bloater C. hoyi,...
Sexual difference in PCB concentrations of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) from Lake Ontario
Charles P. Madenjian, Michael J. Keir, D. Michael Whittle, George E. Noguchi
2010, Science of the Total Environment (408) 1725-1730
We determined polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) concentrations in 61 female lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and 71 male lake trout from Lake Ontario (Ontario, Canada and New York, United States). To estimate the expected change in PCB concentration due to spawning, PCB concentrations in gonads and in somatic tissue of lake trout...
Scientific drilling into the San Andreas Fault Zone
Mark Zoback, Stephen Hickman, William Ellsworth
2010, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (91) 197-199
This year, the world has faced energetic and destructive earthquakes almost every month. In January, an M = 7.0 event rocked Haiti, killing an estimated 230,000 people. In February, an M = 8.8 earthquake and tsunami claimed over 500 lives and caused billions of dollars of damage in Chile. Fatal...
Analysis of nonvolcanic tremor on the San Andreas Fault near Parkfield, CA using U.S. Geological Survey Parkfield Seismic Array
Jon B. Fletcher, Lawrence M. Baker
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (115)
Reports by Nadeau and Dolenc (2005) that tremor had been detected near Cholame Valley spawned an effort to use UPSAR (U. S. Geological Survey Parkfield Seismic Array) to study characteristics of tremor. UPSAR was modified to record three channels of velocity at 40–50 sps continuously in January 2005 and ran...
Quasi-periodic recurrence of large earthquakes on the southern San Andreas fault
Katherine M. Scharer, Glenn P. Biasi, Ray J. Weldon II, Tom E. Fumal
2010, Geology (38) 555-558
It has been 153 yr since the last large earthquake on the southern San Andreas fault (California, United States), but the average interseismic interval is only ~100 yr. If the recurrence of large earthquakes is periodic, rather than random or clustered, the length of this period is notable and would...
The North American upper mantle: Density, composition, and evolution
Walter D. Mooney, Mikhail K. Kaban
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (115)
The upper mantle of North America has been well studied using various seismic methods. Here we investigate the density structure of the North American (NA) upper mantle based on the integrative use of the gravity field and seismic data. The basis of our study is the removal of the gravitational...
The bioeconomic impact of different management regulations on the Chesapeake Bay blue crab fishery
David B. Bunnell, Douglas W. Lipton, Thomas J. Miller
2010, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (30) 1505-1521
The harvest of blue crabs Callinectes sapidus in Chesapeake Bay declined 46% between 1993 and 2001 and remained low through 2008. Because the total market value of this fishery has declined by an average of US $ 3.3 million per year since 1993, the commercial fishery has been challenged to...
Rapid middle Miocene extension and unroofing of the southern Ruby Mountains, Nevada
Joseph P. Colgan, Keith A. Howard, Robert J. Fleck, Joseph L. Wooden
2010, Tectonics (29)
Paleozoic rocks in the northern Ruby Mountains were metamorphosed during Mesozoic crustal shortening and Cenozoic magmatism, but equivalent strata in the southern Ruby Mountains were never buried deeper than stratigraphic depths prior to exhumation in the footwall of a west dipping brittle normal fault. In the southern Ruby Mountains, Miocene...
Geophysical Research Letters: New policies improve top-cited geosciences journal
Eric Calais, Noah Diffenbaugh, Paolo D'Odorico, Ruth Harris, Wolfgang Knorr, Benoit Lavraud, Anne Mueller, William Peterson, Eric Rignot, Meric Srokosz, Peter Strutton, Geoff Tyndall, Michael Wysession, Paul Williams
2010, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (91) 337-337
Geophysical Research Letters (GRL) is the American Geophysical Union's premier journal of fast, groundbreaking communication. It rapidly publishes high- impact,letter-length articles, and it is the top-cited multidisciplinary geosciences journal over the past 10 years, with an impact factor that increased again in 2009, to 3.204. For manuscripts submitted to GRL,...
The perfect debris flow? Aggregated results from 28 large-scale experiments
Richard M. Iverson, Matthew Logan, Richard G. LaHusen, Matteo Berti
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (115) F03005
Aggregation of data collected in 28 controlled experiments reveals reproducible debris-flow behavior that provides a clear target for model tests. In each experiment ∼10 m3 of unsorted, water-saturated sediment composed mostly of sand and gravel discharged from behind a gate, descended a steep, 95-m flume, and formed a deposit on...
Coulomb stress interactions among M≥5.9 earthquakes in the Gorda deformation zone and on the Mendocino Fracture Zone, Cascadia megathrust, and northern San Andreas fault
John C. Rollins, Ross S. Stein
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (115)
The Gorda deformation zone, a 50,000 km2 area of diffuse shear and rotation offshore northernmost California, has been the site of 20 M ≥ 5.9 earthquakes on four different fault orientations since 1976, including four M ≥ 7 shocks. This is the highest rate of large earthquakes in the contiguous...
Thiamine status and culture of rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) from Owasco Lake, New York
Marc A. Chalupnicki, H. George Ketola, Micheal H. Zehfus, Jonathan R. Crosswait, Jacques Rinchard, James E. McKenna Jr.
2010, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (25) 211-217
In 2005, 2008, and 2009, eggs were collected for analysis of total thiamine fiom 2, 58, and 30 gravid rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) captured in Edgewater Creek, Owasco Lake, New York, respectively. Mean egg thiamine concentrations (nmollg i standard error) in 2005, 2008, and 2009 were 6.0 ± 1.8, 13.3...
Vegetation monitoring for Guatemala: a comparison between simulated VIIRS and MODIS satellite data
Vijendra K. Boken, Gregory L. Easson, James Rowland
2010, Geocarto International (25) 617-627
The advanced very high resolution radiometer (AVHRR) and moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) data are being widely used for vegetation monitoring across the globe. However, sensors will discontinue collecting these data in the near future. National Aeronautics and Space Administration is planning to launch a new sensor, visible infrared imaging...
CORSSA: The Community Online Resource for Statistical Seismicity Analysis
Andrew J. Michael, Stefan Wiemer
2010, Community Online Resource for Statistical Seismicity Analysis (1) 1-13
Statistical seismology is the application of rigorous statistical methods to earthquake science with the goal of improving our knowledge of how the earth works. Within statistical seismology there is a strong emphasis on the analysis of seismicity data in order to improve our scientific understanding of earthquakes and to improve...