Colony attendance patterns by mated Forster's Terns Sterna forsteri using an automated data-logging receiver system
Jill D. Bluso-Demers, Joshua T. Ackerman, John Y. Takekawa
2010, Ardea (98) 59-65
In order to examine 24-hour colony attendance patterns by mated Forster's Terns Sterna forsteri in South San Francisco Bay, California, during incubation and chick-rearing stages, we radio-marked 10 individuals consisting of five pairs and recorded colony attendance using an automated data-logging receiver system. We calculated and analyzed five variables: the total attendance...
Serving ocean model data on the cloud
Michael Meisinger, Claudiu Farcas, Emilia Farcas, Charles Alexander, Matthew Arrott, Jeff de La Beaujardiere, Paul Hubbard, Roy Mendelssohn, Richard P. Signell
2010, Conference Paper, OCEANS 2009, MTS/IEEE Biloxi - Marine Technology for Our Future: Global and Local Challenges
The NOAA-led Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) and the NSF-funded Ocean Observatories Initiative Cyberinfrastructure Project (OOI-CI) are collaborating on a prototype data delivery system for numerical model output and other gridded data using cloud computing. The strategy is to take an existing distributed system for delivering gridded data and redeploy...
Computational modeling of bedform evolution in rivers with implications for predictions of flood stage and bed evolution
Jonathan M. Nelson, Yasuyuki Shimizu, Sanjay Giri, Richard R. McDonald
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 4th Federal Interagency Hydrologic Modeling Conference and the 9th Federal Interagency Sedimentation Conference
Uncertainties in flood stage prediction and bed evolution in rivers are frequently associated with the evolution of bedforms over a hydrograph. For the case of flood prediction, the evolution of the bedforms may alter the effective bed roughness, so predictions of stage and velocity based on assuming bedforms retain the...
Predicting regime shifts in flow of the Colorado River
Subhrendu Gangopadhyay, Gregory J. McCabe
2010, Geophysical Research Letters (37)
The effects of continued global warming on water resources are a concern for water managers and stake holders. In the western United States, where the combined climatic demand and consumptive use of water is equal to or greater than the natural supply of water for some locations, there is growing...
Modeling methods
Richard W. Healy
2010, Book chapter, Estimating groundwater recharge
Simulation models are widely used in all types of hydrologic studies, and many of these models can be used to estimate recharge. Models can provide important insight into the functioning of hydrologic systems by identifying factors that influence recharge. The predictive capability of models can be used to evaluate how...
Book review: Hollowed ground—Copper mining and community building on Lake Superior, 1840s–1990s
Klaus J. Schulz
2010, Economic Geology (105) 1351-1354
In 1843, six years before the Forty-niners headed west for the goldfields of California, the United States’ first great mineral rush began to a land that was, as Patrick Henry told Congress, “beyond the most distant wilderness and remote as the moon.” He was referring to the Keweenaw Peninsula of...
Complexities in barrier island response to sea level rise: Insights from numerical model experiments, North Carolina Outer Banks
Laura J. Moore, Jeffrey H. List, S. Jeffress Williams, David Stolper
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (115)
Using a morphological-behavior model to conduct sensitivity experiments, we investigate the sea level rise response of a complex coastal environment to changes in a variety of factors. Experiments reveal that substrate composition, followed in rank order by substrate slope, sea level rise rate, and sediment supply rate, are the most...
BRIDGES: Evolution of basic and applied linkages in benthic science
Nicholas G. Aumen, Martin E. Gurtz, Michael T. Barbour, Ashley Moerke
2010, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (29) 359-371
Growing awareness of environmental degradation resulted in stricter environmental regulations and laws for aquatic ecosystems. These regulations were followed by an increase in applied research and monitoring beginning in the early 1970s. The number of applied scientists who were members of the North American Benthological Society grew at a commensurate...
No evidence of trophic mismatch for caribou in Greenland
Dennis B. Griffith, Layne G. Adams, David C. Douglas, Christine Cuyler, Robert G. White, Anne Gunn, Donald E. Russell, Raymond D. Cameron
2010, Science
No abstract available....
Coupled hydrology and biogeochemistry of Paleocene–Eocene coal beds, northern Gulf of Mexico
Jennifer C. McIntosh, Peter D. Warwick, Anna M. Martini, Stephen G. Osborn
2010, GSA Bulletin (122) 1248-1264
Thirty-six formation waters, gas, and microbial samples were collected and analyzed from natural gas and oil wells producing from the Paleocene to Eocene Wilcox Group coal beds and adjacent sandstones in north-central Louisiana, USA, to investigate the role hydrology plays on the generation and distribution of microbial methane. Major ion...
Shaded seafloor relief, backscatter strength, and surficial geology; German Bank, Scotian Shelf, offshore Nova Scotia
B.J. Todd, Page C. Valentine
2010, Open File 6124
This map is part of a three-map series of German Bank, located on the Scotian Shelf off southern Nova Scotia. This map is the product of a number of surveys (1997-2003) that used a multibeam sonar system to map 5321 km2 of the seafloor. Other surveys collected geological data for...
Variation in detection among passive infrared triggered-cameras used in wildlife research
Philip E. Damm, J. Barry Grand, Steven W. Barnett
2010, Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (64) 125-130
Precise and accurate estimates of demographics such as age structure, productivity, and density are necessary in determining habitat and harvest management strategies for wildlife populations. Surveys using automated cameras are becoming an increasingly popular tool for estimating these parameters. However, most camera studies fail to incorporate detection probabilities, leading to...
Geophysical framework of the northern San Francisco Bay region, California
Victoria E. Langenheim, Russell W. Graymer, Robert C. Jachens, Robert J. McLaughlin, D.L. Wagner, Donald S. Sweetkind
2010, Geosphere (6) 594-620
We use geophysical data to examine the structural framework of the northern San Francisco Bay region, an area that hosts the northward continuation of the East Bay fault system. Although this fault system has accommodated ∼175 km of right-lateral offset since 12 Ma, how this offset is partitioned north of...
Distribution and habitat use by the critically endangered Stout Iguana (Cyclura pinguis) on Guana Island, British Virgin Islands
Wesley M. Anderson, Grant E. Sorensen, Jenny D. Lloyd-Strovas, Renaldo J. Arroyo, J. Alan Sosa, Sarah J. Wulff, Brent D. Bibles, Clint W. Boal, Gad Perry
2010, IRCF Reptiles & Amphibians (17) 158-165
No abstract available....
The cleaning of burned and contaminated archaeological maize prior to 87Sr/86Sr analysis
Larry V. Benson, Howard E. Taylor, Terry I. Plowman, David A. Roth, Ronald C. Antweiler
2010, Journal of Archaeological Science (37) 84-91
Accurate trace-metal and strontium-isotope analyses of archaeological corn cobs require that metal contaminants be removed prior to chemical analysis. Archaeological cobs are often coated with construction debris, dust, or soil which contains mineral particles. In addition, most archaeological cobs are partially or completely burned and the burned parts incorporate mineral...
In vitro studies evaluating leaching of mercury from mine waste calcine using simulated human body fluids
John E. Gray, Geoffrey S. Plumlee, Suzette A. Morman, Pablo L. Higueras, James G. Crock, Heather A. Lowers, Mark L. Witten
2010, Environmental Science & Technology (44) 4782-4788
In vitro bioaccessibility (IVBA) studies were carried out on samples of mercury (Hg) mine-waste calcine (roasted Hg ore) by leaching with simulated human body fluids. The objective was to estimate potential human exposure to Hg due to inhalation of airborne calcine particulates and hand-to-mouth ingestion of Hg-bearing calcines. Mine waste...
How vegetation and sediment transport feedbacks drive landscape change in the Everglades and wetlands worldwide
Laurel G. Larsen, Judson W. Harvey
2010, American Naturalist (176) E66-E79
Mechanisms reported to promote landscape self‐organization cannot explain vegetation patterning oriented parallel to flow. Recent catastrophic shifts in Everglades landscape pattern and ecological function highlight the need to understand the feedbacks governing these ecosystems. We modeled feedback between vegetation, hydrology, and sediment transport on the basis of a decade of...
Transient electromagnetic mapping of clay units in the San Luis Valley, Colorado
David V. Fitterman, V. J. S. Grauch
2010, Conference Paper, Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2010
Transient electromagnetic soundings were used to obtain information needed to refine hydrologic models of the San Luis Valley, Colorado. The soundings were able to map an aquitard called the blue clay that separates an unconfined surface aquifer from a deeper confined aquifer. The blue clay forms a conductor with an average...
Estimating groundwater recharge
Richard W. Healy
2010, Book
Understanding groundwater recharge is essential for successful management of water resources and modeling fluid and contaminant transport within the subsurface. This book provides a critical evaluation of the theory and assumptions that underlie methods for estimating rates of groundwater recharge. Detailed explanations of the methods are provided - allowing readers...
Using airborne geophysical surveys to improve groundwater resource management models
Jared D. Abraham, James C. Cannia, Steven M. Peterson, Bruce D. Smith, Burke J. Minsley, Paul A. Bedrosian
2010, Conference Paper, Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2010
Increasingly, groundwater management requires more accurate hydrogeologic frameworks for groundwater models. These complex issues have created the demand for innovative approaches to data collection. In complicated terrains, groundwater modelers benefit from continuous high‐resolution geologic maps and their related hydrogeologic‐parameter estimates. The USGS and its partners have collaborated to use airborne...
Phenological classification of the United States: A geographic framework for extending multi-sensor time-series data
Yingxin Gu, Jesslyn F. Brown, Tomoaki Miura, Willem van Leeuwen, Bradley C. Reed
2010, Remote Sensing (2) 526-544
This study introduces a new geographic framework, phenological classification, for the conterminous United States based on Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) time-series data and a digital elevation model. The resulting pheno-class map is comprised of 40 pheno-classes, each having unique phenological and topographic characteristics. Cross-comparison...
Aminostratigraphy of surface and subsurface Quaternary sediments, North Carolina coastal plain, USA
John F. Wehmiller, E. Robert Thieler, Dick Miller, V. Pellerito, Keeney V. Bakeman, S.R. Riggs, S. Culver, D. Mallinson, K.M. Farrell, L.L. York, J. Pierson, P.R. Parham
2010, Quaternary Geochronology (4) 459-492
The Quaternary stratigraphy and geochronology of the Albemarle Embayment of the North Carolina (NC) Coastal Plain is examined using amino acid racemization (AAR) in marine mollusks, in combination with geophysical, lithologic, and biostratigraphic analysis of 28 rotasonic cores drilled between 2002 and 2006. The Albemarle Embayment is bounded by structural...
Tree-ring dated landslide movements and seismic events in southwestern Montana, USA
Paul E. Carrara, J. Michael O’Neill
2010, Book chapter, Tree rings and natural hazards; Volume 41 of the series Advances in global change research
Because many tree species can live for several centuries or longer (Brown 1996), tree-ring analysis can be a valuable tool to date geomorphic events such as landslides, earthquakes, and avalanches in regions lacking long historical records. Typically, a catastrophic landslide will destroy all trees on the landslide, but trees on...
Comment on “Two statistics for evaluating parameter identifiability and error reduction” by John Doherty and Randall J. Hunt
Mary C. Hill
2010, Journal of Hydrology (380) 481-488
Doherty and Hunt (2009) present important ideas for first-order-second moment sensitivity analysis, but five issues are discussed in this comment. First, considering the composite-scaled sensitivity (CSS) jointly with parameter correlation coefficients (PCC) in a CSS/PCC analysis addresses the difficulties with CSS mentioned in the introduction. Second, their new parameter identifiability statistic...
It's not just about climate change - What about soils?
Martin B. Goldhaber
2010, Elements (6) 359-359
Vladimir Vernadsky was one of the giants of geochemistry. Considered the founder of the fi eld of biogeochemistry and a true pioneer in “whole Earth” studies, he realized by 1945 that “Man under our very eyes is becoming a mighty and ever-growing geological force.” In the intervening 65 years, his...