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Page 2020, results 50476 - 50500

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Complex faulting associated with the 22 December 2003 Mw 6.5 San Simeon California, earthquake, aftershocks and postseismic surface deformation
Marcia K. McLaren, Jeanne L. Hardebeck, Nicholas van der Elst, Jeffrey R. Unruh, Gerald W. Bawden, J. Luke Blair
2008, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (98) 1659-1680
We use data from two seismic networks and satellite interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) imagery to characterize the 22 December 2003 Mw 6.5 San Simeon earthquake sequence. Absolute locations for the mainshock and nearly 10,000 aftershocks were determined using a new three-dimensional (3D) seismic velocity model; relative locations were obtained using...
Precipitation rates and atmospheric heat transport during the Cenomanian greenhouse warming in North America: Estimates from a stable isotope mass-balance model
David F. Ufnar, Greg A. Ludvigson, L. Gonzalez, D.R. Grocke
2008, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (266) 28-38
Stable isotope mass-balance modeling results of meteoric ??18O values from the Cenomanian Stage of the Cretaceous Western Interior Basin (KWIB) suggest that precipitation and evaporation fluxes were greater than that of the present and significantly different from simulations of Albian KWIB paleohydrology. Sphaerosiderite meteoric ??18O values have been compiled from...
Pre-1991 sulfur transfer between mafic injections and dacite magma in the Mt. Pinatubo reservoir
Muro A. Di, John S. Pallister, B. Villemant, Chris Newhall, M. Semet, M. Martinez, C. Mariet
2008, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (175) 517-540
Before the 1991–1992 activity, a large andesite lava dome belonging to the penultimate Pinatubo eruptive period (Buag ∼ 500 BP) formed the volcano summit. Buag porphyritic andesite contains abundant amphibole-bearing microgranular enclaves of basaltic–andesite composition. Buag enclaves have lower K2O and incompatible trace element (LREE,...
Calibrating and testing a gap model for simulating forest management in the Oregon Coast Range
R.J. Pabst, M.N. Goslin, S.L. Garman, T.A. Spies
2008, Forest Ecology and Management (256) 958-972
The complex mix of economic and ecological objectives facing today's forest managers necessitates the development of growth models with a capacity for simulating a wide range of forest conditions while producing outputs useful for economic analyses. We calibrated the gap model ZELIG to simulate stand-level forest development in the Oregon...
Phase shift from a coral to a corallimorph-dominated reef associated with a shipwreck on Palmyra atoll
Thierry M. Work, G.S. Aeby, J.E. Maragos
2008, PLoS ONE (3)
Coral reefs can undergo relatively rapid changes in the dominant biota, a phenomenon referred to as phase shift. Various reasons have been proposed to explain this phenomenon including increased human disturbance, pollution, or changes in coral reef biota that serve a major ecological function such as depletion of grazers. However,...
Agreement evaluation of AVHRR and MODIS 16-day composite NDVI data sets
Lei Ji, Kevin P. Gallo, Jeffery C. Eidenshink, John L. Dwyer
2008, International Journal of Remote Sensing (29) 4839-4861
Satellite-derived normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data have been used extensively to detect and monitor vegetation conditions at regional and global levels. A combination of NDVI data sets derived from AVHRR and MODIS can be used to construct a long NDVI time series that may also be extended to VIIRS....
Spatial patterns and movements of red king and Tanner crabs: Implications for the design of marine protected areas
S. James Taggart, Jennifer Mondragon, A.G. Andrews, J.K. Nielsen
2008, Marine Ecology Progress Series (365) 151-163
Most examples of positive population responses to marine protected areas (MPAs) have been documented for tropical reef species with very small home ranges; the utility of MPAs for commercially harvested temperate species that have large movement patterns remains poorly tested. We measured the distribution and abundance of red king Paralithodes...
The roles of fractional crystallization, magma mixing, crystal mush remobilization and volatile-melt interactions in the genesis of a young basalt-peralkaline rhyolite suite, the greater Olkaria volcanic complex, Kenya Rift valley
R. Macdonald, H. E. Belkin, J.G. Fitton, N.W. Rogers, K. Nejbert, A.G. Tindle, A.S. Marshall
2008, Journal of Petrology (49) 1515-1547
The Greater Olkaria Volcanic Complex is a young (???20 ka) multi-centred lava and dome field dominated by the eruption of peralkaline rhyolites. Basaltic and trachytic magmas have been erupted peripherally to the complex and also form, with mugearites and benmoreites, an extensive suite of magmatic inclusions in the rhyolites. The...
Arsenic(III) fuels anoxygenic photosynthesis in hot spring biofilms from Mono Lake, California
T.R. Kulp, S.E. Hoeft, M. Asao, M.T. Madigan, J.T. Hollibaugh, J.C. Fisher, J.F. Stolz, C.W. Culbertson, L.G. Miller, R.S. Oremland
2008, Science (321) 967-970
Phylogenetic analysis indicates that microbial arsenic metabolism is ancient and probably extends back to the primordial Earth. In microbial biofilms growing on the rock surfaces of anoxic brine pools fed by hot springs containing arsenite and sulfide at high concentrations, we discovered light-dependent oxidation of arsenite [As(III)] to arsenate [As(V)]...
Interaction between urbanization and climate variability amplifies watershed nitrate export in Maryland
S.S. Kaushal, P.M. Groffman, L.E. Band, C.A. Shields, R.P. Morgan, Margaret A. Palmer, K.T. Belt, C.M. Swan, S.E.G. Findlay, G. T. Fisher
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 5872-5878
We investigated regional effects of urbanization and land use change on nitrate concentrations in approximately 1,000 small streams in Maryland during record drought and wet years in 2001-2003. We also investigated changes in nitrate-N export during the same time period in 8 intensively monitored small watersheds across an urbanization gradient...
Spatial dynamics of overbank sedimentation in floodplain systems
Aaron R. Pierce, S.L. King
2008, Geomorphology (100) 256-268
Floodplains provide valuable social and ecological functions, and understanding the rates and patterns of overbank sedimentation is critical for river basin management and rehabilitation. Channelization of alluvial systems throughout the world has altered hydrological and sedimentation processes within floodplain ecosystems. In the loess belt region of the Lower Mississippi Alluvial...
Landscape complexity and soil moisture variation in south Georgia, USA, for remote sensing applications
M.A. Giraldo, D. Bosch, M. Madden, L. Usery, Craig Kvien
2008, Journal of Hydrology (357) 405-420
This research addressed the temporal and spatial variation of soil moisture (SM) in a heterogeneous landscape. The research objective was to investigate soil moisture variation in eight homogeneous 30 by 30 m plots, similar to the pixel size of a Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) or Enhanced Thematic Mapper plus (ETM+)...
Evidence for an eolian origin for the silt-enriched soil mantles on the glaciated uplands of eastern Upper Michigan, USA
R.J. Schaetzl, W.L. Loope
2008, Geomorphology (100) 285-295
We provide textural, geochemical, and mineralogical data on a thin, silty deposit that unconformably mantles glaciated uplands in the eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Previous research on this deposit, which we hypothesize to be loess, is nonexistent. The uplands were islands or narrow peninsulas within one or more glacial lakes....
Warming of the Indian Ocean threatens eastern and southern African food security but could be mitigated by agricultural development
Chris C. Funk, Michael D. Dettinger, Joel C. Michaelsen, James P. Verdin, Molly E. Brown, Mathew Barlow, Andrew Hoell
2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (105) 11081-11086
Since 1980, the number of undernourished people in eastern and southern Africa has more than doubled. Rural development stalled and rural poverty expanded during the 1990s. Population growth remains very high, and declining per-capita agricultural capacity retards progress toward Millennium Development goals. Analyses of in situ station data and satellite...
Changes in dissolved organic material determine exposure of stream benthic communities to UV-B radiation and heavy metals: Implications for climate change
W.H. Clements, M.L. Brooks, D.R. Kashian, R.E. Zuellig
2008, Global Change Biology (14) 2201-2214
Changes in regional climate in the Rocky Mountains over the next 100 years are expected to have significant effects on biogeochemical cycles and hydrological processes. In particular, decreased discharge and lower stream depth during summer when ultraviolet radiation (UVR) is the highest combined with greater photo-oxidation of dissolved organic materials...
Evaluation of morphological indices and total body electrical conductivity to assess body composition in big brown bats
R.D. Pearce, T. J. O'Shea, B.A. Wunder
2008, Acta Chiropterologica (10) 153-159
Bat researchers have used both morphological indices and total body electric conductivity (TOBEC) as proxies for body condition in a variety of studies, but have typically not validated these indices against direct measurement of body composition. We quantified body composition (total carcass lipids) to determine if morphological indices were useful...
Allowing macroalgae growth forms to emerge: Use of an agent-based model to understand the growth and spread of macroalgae in Florida coral reefs, with emphasis on Halimeda tuna
A.T. Yniguez, J.W. McManus, D.L. DeAngelis
2008, Ecological Modelling (216) 60-74
The growth patterns of macroalgae in three-dimensional space can provide important information regarding the environments in which they live, and insights into changes that may occur when those environments change due to anthropogenic and/or natural causes. To decipher these patterns and their attendant mechanisms and influencing factors, a spatially explicit...
Characteristics, extent and origin of hydrothermal alteration at Mount Rainier Volcano, Cascades Arc, USA: Implications for debris-flow hazards and mineral deposits
D. A. John, T. W. Sisson, G. N. Breit, R. O. Rye, J.W. Vallance
2008, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (175) 289-314
Hydrothermal alteration at Mount Rainier waxed and waned over the 500,000-year episodic growth of the edifice. Hydrothermal minerals and their stable-isotope compositions in samples collected from outcrop and as clasts from Holocene debris-flow deposits identify three distinct hypogene argillic/advanced argillic hydrothermal environments: magmatic-hydrothermal, steam-heated, and magmatic steam (fumarolic), with minor...
Phyllosilicate diversity and past aqueous activity revealed at Mawrth Vallis, Mars
J.L. Bishop, E.Z.N. Dobrea, N.K. McKeown, M. Parente, B.L. Ehlmann, J.R. Michalski, R.E. Milliken, F. Poulet, G.A. Swayze, J.F. Mustard, S.L. Murchie, J.-P. Bibring
2008, Science (321) 830-833
Observations by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter/Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars in the Mawrth Vallis region show several phyllosilicate species, indicating a wide range of past aqueous activity. Iron/magnesium (Fe/Mg)-smectite is observed in light-toned outcrops that probably formed via aqueous alteration of basalt of the ancient cratered terrain. This unit...
Hydrologic models of modern and fossil geothermal systems in the Great Basin: Genetic implications for epithermal Au-Ag and Carlin-type gold deposits
M. Person, A. Banerjee, A. Hofstra, D. Sweetkind, Y. Gao
2008, Geosphere (4) 888-917
The Great Basin region in the western United States contains active geothermal systems, large epithermal Au-Ag deposits, and world-class Carlin-type gold deposits. Temperature profiles, fluid inclusion studies, and isotopic evidence suggest that modern and fossil hydrothermal systems associated with gold mineralization share many common features, including the absence of a...
Biomedical and veterinary science can increase our understanding of coral disease
Thierry M. Work, Laurie L. Richardson, T. L. Reynolds, Bette L. Willis
2008, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology (362) 63-70
A balanced approach to coral disease investigation is critical for understanding the global decline of corals. Such an approach should involve the proper use of biomedical concepts, tools, and terminology to address confusion and promote clarity in the coral disease literature. Investigating disease in corals should follow a logical series...
An introduced and a native vertebrate hybridize to form a genetic bridge to a second native species
D.B. McDonald, T.L. Parchman, M.R. Bower, W.A. Hubert, F.J. Rahel
2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (105) 10837-10842
The genetic impacts of hybridization between native and introduced species are of considerable conservation concern, while the possibility of reticulate evolution affects our basic understanding of how species arise and shapes how we use genetic data to understand evolutionary diversification. By using mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 (ND2) sequences and...
Evidence for an apical Na-Cl cotransporter involved in ion uptake in a teleost fish
J. Hiroi, S. Yasumasu, S. D. McCormick, P.-P. Hwang, T. Kaneko
2008, Journal of Experimental Biology (211) 2584-2599
Cation-chloride cotransporters, such as the Na+/K +/2Cl- cotransporter (NKCC) and Na+/Cl - cotransporter (NCC), are localized to the apical or basolateral plasma membranes of epithelial cells and are involved in active ion absorption or secretion. The objectives of this study were to clone and identify 'freshwater-type' and 'seawater-type' cation-chloride cotransporters...
In situ arsenic removal in an alkaline clastic aquifer
A. H. Welch, K.G. Stollenwerk, A.P. Paul, D. K. Maurer, K. J. Halford
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 2477-2495
In situ removal of As from ground water used for water supply has been accomplished elsewhere in circum-neutral ground water containing high dissolved Fe(II) concentrations. The objective of this study was to evaluate in situ As ground-water treatment approaches in alkaline ground-water (pH > 8)...
Mallard harvest distributions in the Mississippi and Central Flyways
A.W. Green, D.G. Krementz
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 1328-1334
The mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) is the most harvested duck in North America. A topic of debate among hunters, especially those in Arkansas, USA, is whether wintering distributions of mallards have changed in recent years. We examined distributions of mallards in the Mississippi (MF) and Central Flyways during hunting seasons 1980-2003...