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Page 1883, results 47051 - 47075

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Evolution of a natural debris flow: In situ measurements of flow dynamics, video imagery, and terrestrial laser scanning
S.W. McCoy, J. W. Kean, J. A. Coe, D.M. Staley, T.A. Wasklewicz, G.E. Tucker
2010, Geology (38) 735-738
Many theoretical and laboratory studies have been undertaken to understand debris-flow processes and their associated hazards. However, complete and quantitative data sets from natural debris flows needed for confirmation of these results are limited. We used a novel combination of in situ measurements of debris-flow dynamics, video imagery, and pre-...
Latitudinal variations in Titan's methane and haze from Cassini VIMS observations
P.F. Penteado, C.A. Griffith, M.G. Tomasko, S. Engel, C. See, L. Doose, K. H. Baines, R. H. Brown, B. J. Buratti, R. Clark, P. Nicholson, Christophe Sotin
2010, Icarus (206) 352-365
We analyze observations taken with Cassini's Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS), to determine the current methane and haze latitudinal distribution between 60??S and 40??N. The methane variation was measured primarily from its absorption band at 0.61 ??m, which is optically thin enough to be sensitive to the methane abundance...
Impacts of hikers on aquatic invertebrates in the North Fork of the Virgin River, Utah
A.M. Caires, M.R. Vinson, A.M.D. Brasher
2010, Southwestern Naturalist (55) 551-557
Effects of in-stream hiking on benthic standing stocks and drifting aquatic invertebrates and on organic matter were examined in the North Fork of the Virgin River, Zion National Park, Washington County, Utah. Densities of drifting aquatic invertebrates and organic matter increased with increasing numbers of hikers and reached a threshold...
Ecological hierarchies and self-organisation - Pattern analysis, modelling and process integration across scales
H. Reuter, F. Jopp, J. M. Blanco-Moreno, C. Damgaard, Y. Matsinos, D.L. DeAngelis
2010, Basic and Applied Ecology (11) 572-581
A continuing discussion in applied and theoretical ecology focuses on the relationship of different organisational levels and on how ecological systems interact across scales. We address principal approaches to cope with complex across-level issues in ecology by applying elements of hierarchy theory and the theory of complex adaptive systems. A...
Seismic hazard of the Enriquillog-Plantain Garden fault in Haiti inferred from palaeoseismology
C.S. Prentice, P. Mann, A. J. Crone, R.D. Gold, K.W. Hudnut, R.W. Briggs, R.D. Koehler, P. Jean
2010, Nature Geoscience (3) 789-793
The Enriquillog-Plantain Garden fault zone is recognized as one of the primary plate-bounding fault systems in Haiti. The strike-slip fault runs adjacent to the city of Port-au-Prince and was initially thought to be the source of the 12 January 2010, M w 7.0 earthquake. Haiti experienced significant earthquakes in 1751...
Influence of organic carbon loading, sediment associated metal oxide content and sediment grain size distributions upon Cryptosporidium parvum removal during riverbank filtration operations, Sonoma County, CA
D.W. Metge, R.W. Harvey, G. R. Aiken, R. Anders, G. Lincoln, James Jasperse
2010, Water Research (44) 1126-1137
This study assessed the efficacy for removing Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts of poorly sorted, Fe- and Al-rich, subsurface sediments collected from 0.9 to 4.9 and 1.7–13.9 m below land surface at an operating riverbank filtration (RBF) site (Russian River, Sonoma County, CA). Both formaldehyde-killed oocysts and oocyst-sized (3 μm) microspheres were employed in sediment-packed flow-through...
Paleobiogeography, high-resolution stratigraphy, and the future of Paleozoic biostratigraphy: Fine-scale diachroneity of the Wenlock (Silurian) conodont Kockelella walliseri
Bradley D. Cramer, Mark A. Kleffner, Carlton E. Brett, P.I. McLaughlin, Lennart Jeppsson, Axel Munnecke, Christian Samtleben
2010, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (294) 232-241
The Wenlock Epoch of the Silurian Period has become one of the chronostratigraphically best-constrained intervals of the Paleozoic. The integration of multiple chronostratigraphic tools, such as conodont and graptolite biostratigraphy, sequence stratigraphy, and ??13Ccarb chemostratigraphy, has greatly improved global chronostratigraphic correlation and portions of the Wenlock can now be correlated...
Rate of formation and dissolution of mercury sulfide nanoparticles: The dual role of natural organic matter
Aaron J. Slowey
2010, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (74) 4693-4708
Mercury is a global contaminant of concern due to its transformation by microorganisms to form methylmercury, a toxic species that accumulates in biological tissues. The effect of dissolved organic matter (DOM) isolated from natural waters on reactions between mercury(II) (Hg) and sulfide (S(-II)) to form HgS(s) nanoparticles across a range...
SHRIMP U-Pb dating of recurrent Cryogenian and Late Cambrian-Early Ordovician alkalic magmatism in central Idaho: Implications for Rodinian rift tectonics
K. Lund, J. N. Aleinikoff, K. V. Evans, E. A. duBray, E.H. deWitt, D.M. Unruh
2010, Geological Society of America Bulletin (122) 430-453
Composite alkalic plutonic suites and tuffaceous diamictite, although discontinuously exposed across central Idaho in roof pendants and inliers within the Idaho batholith and Challis volcanic-plutonic complex, define the >200-km-long northwest-aligned Big Creek-Beaverhead belt. Sensitive highresolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) U-Pb zircon dates on these igneous rocks provide direct evidence for the...
Hematology of southern Beaufort Sea polar bears (2005-2007): Biomarker for an arctic ecosystem health sentinel
Cassandra M. Kirk, Steven C. Amstrup, Rhonda Swor, Darce Holcomb, T. M. O'Hara
2010, EcoHealth (7) 307-320
Declines in sea-ice habitats have resulted in declining stature, productivity, and survival of polar bears in some regions. With continuing sea-ice declines, negative population effects are projected to expand throughout the polar bear's range. Precise causes of diminished polar bear life history performance are unknown, however, climate and sea-ice condition...
Estimating length of avian incubation and nestling stages in afrotropical forest birds from interval-censored nest records
T.R. Stanley, W.D. Newmark
2010, The Auk (127) 79-85
In the East Usambara Mountains in northeast Tanzania, research on the effects of forest fragmentation and disturbance on nest survival in understory birds resulted in the accumulation of 1,002 nest records between 2003 and 2008 for 8 poorly studied species. Because information on the length of the incubation and nestling...
Monitoring on-orbit calibration stability of the Terra MODIS and Landsat 7 ETM+ sensors using pseudo-invariant test sites
G. Chander, X. Xiong, T. Choi, A. Angal
2010, Remote Sensing of Environment (114) 925-939
The ability to detect and quantify changes in the Earth's environment depends on sensors that can provide calibrated, consistent measurements of the Earth's surface features through time. A critical step in this process is to put image data from different sensors onto a common radiometric scale. This work focuses on...
Relative vulnerability of public supply wells to VOC contamination in hydrologically distinct regional aquifers
Leon J. Kauffman, Francis H. Chapelle
2010, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (30) 54-63
A process-based methodology was used to compare the vulnerability of public supply wells tapping seven study areas in four hydrologically distinct regional aquifers to volatile organic compound (VOC) contamination. This method considers (1) contributing areas and travel times of groundwater flowpaths converging at individual supply wells, (2) the oxic and/or...
Distribution and mode of occurrence of radionuclides in phosphogypsum derived from Aqaba and Eshidiya Fertilizer Industry, South Jordan
M. S. Al-Hwaiti, R. A. Zielinski, J.R. Bundham, J. F. Ranville, P.E. Ross
2010, Chinese Journal of Geochemistry (29) 261-269
Phosphogypsum (PG) is a by-product of the chemical reaction called the "wet process" whereby sulphuric acid reacts with phosphate rock (PR) to produce phosphoric acid, needed for fertilizer production. Through the wet process, some impurities naturally present in the PR become incorporated in PG, including U decay-series radionuclides, are the...
Multistate modeling of habitat dynamics: Factors affecting Florida scrub transition probabilities
D.R. Breininger, J.D. Nichols, B.W. Duncan, Eric D. Stolen, G.M. Carter, D.K. Hunt, J.H. Drese
2010, Ecology (91) 3354-3364
Many ecosystems are influenced by disturbances that create specific successional states and habitat structures that species need to persist. Estimating transition probabilities between habitat states and modeling the factors that influence such transitions have many applications for investigating and managing disturbance-prone ecosystems. We identify the correspondence between multistate capture-recapture models...
Characterization of pyroclastic deposits and pre-eruptive soils following the 2008 eruption of Kasatochi Island Volcano, Alaska
B. Wang, G. Michaelson, C.-L. Ping, G. Plumlee, P. Hageman
2010, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (42) 276-284
The 78 August 2008 eruption of Kasatochi Island volcano blanketed the island in newly generated pyroclastic deposits and deposited ash into the ocean and onto nearby islands. Concentrations of water soluble Fe, Cu, and Zn determined from a 1:20 deionized water leachate of the ash were sufficient to provide short-term...
Fate of trace organic compounds during vadose zone soil treatment in an onsite wastewater system
K.E. Conn, R.L. Siegrist, Larry B. Barber, Michael T. Meyer
2010, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (29) 285-293
During onsite wastewater treatment, trace organic compounds are often present in the effluents applied to subsurface soils for advanced treatment during vadose zone percolation and groundwater recharge. The fate of the endocrine-disrupting surfactant metabolites 4-nonylphenol (NP), 4-nonylphenolmonoethoxylate (NP1EO), and 4-nonylphenolmonoethoxycarboxylate (NP1EC), metal-chelating agents ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA),...
Hierarchical spatial models for predicting pygmy rabbit distribution and relative abundance
T.L. Wilson, J.B. Odei, M.B. Hooten, T.C. Edwards Jr.
2010, Journal of Applied Ecology (47) 401-409
Conservationists routinely use species distribution models to plan conservation, restoration and development actions, while ecologists use them to infer process from pattern. These models tend to work well for common or easily observable species, but are of limited utility for rare and cryptic species. This may be because honest accounting...
Migration of northern yellowstone elk: Implications of spatial structuring
P.J. White, K.M. Proffitt, L.D. Mech, S.B. Evans, J.A. Cunningham, K.L. Hamlin
2010, Journal of Mammalogy (91) 827-837
Migration can enhance survival and recruitment of mammals by increasing access to higher-quality forage or reducing predation risk, or both. We used telemetry locations collected from 140 adult female elk during 20002003 and 20072008 to identify factors influencing the migration of northern Yellowstone elk. Elk wintered in 2 semidistinct herd...
Using Gambusia affinis growth and condition to assess estuarine habitat quality: A comparison of indices
Bryan P. Piazza, M.K. La Peyre
2010, Marine Ecology Progress Series (412) 231-245
Numerous indices have been used to estimate fish growth and condition however, differences in sensitivity and reliability of the methods have hampered efforts to identify appropriate indicators for routine evaluation of habitat quality in the field. We compared common morphometric (length, weight, somatic growth, length-weight condition) and biochemical (RNA:DNA ratio,...
Detecting the spatial and temporal variability of chlorophyll-a concentration and total suspended solids in Apalachicola Bay, Florida using MODIS imagery
Hongqing Wang, C.M. Hladik, W. Huang, K. Milla, L. Edmiston, M.A. Harwell, J.F. Schalles
2010, International Journal of Remote Sensing (31) 439-453
Apalachicola Bay, Florida, accounts for 90% of Florida's and 10% of the nation's eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) harvesting. Chlorophyll-a concentration and total suspended solids (TSS) are two important water quality variables, among other environmental factors such as salinity, for eastern oyster production in Apalachicola Bay. In this research,...
Linking ecosystems, food webs, and fish production: subsidies in salmonid watersheds
Mark S. Wipfli, Colden V. Baxter
2010, Fisheries (35) 373-387
Physical characteristics of riverine habitats, such as large wood abundance, pool geometry and abundance, riparian vegetation cover, and surface flow conditions, have traditionally been thought to constrain fish production in these ecosystems. Conversely, the role of food resources (quantity and quality) in controlling fish production has received far less attention...
Biologic origin of iron nodules in a marine terrace chronosequence, Santa Cruz, California
M. S. Schulz, D. Vivit, C. Schulz, J. Fitzpatrick, A. White
2010, Soil Science Society of America Journal (74) 550-564
The distribution, chemistry, and morphology of Fe nodules were studied in a marine terrace soil chronosequence northwest of Santa Cruz, California. The Fe nodules are found at depths <1 m on all terraces. The nodules consisted of soil mineral grains cemented by Fe oxides. The nodules varied in size from...