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Page 2090, results 52226 - 52250

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Novel patterns of historical isolation, dispersal, and secondary contact across Baja California in the Rosy Boa (Lichanura trivirgata)
D.A. Wood, Robert N. Fisher, T.W. Reeder
2008, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution (46) 484-502
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation was examined in 131 individuals of the Rosy Boa (Lichanura trivirgata) from across the species range in southwestern North America. Bayesian inference and nested clade phylogeographic analyses (NCPA) were used to estimate relationships and infer evolutionary processes. These patterns were evaluated as they relate to...
Shallow landslide hazard map of Seattle, Washington
Edwin L. Harp, John A. Michael, William T. Laprade
2008, Reviews in Engineering Geology (20) 67-82
Landslides, particularly debris flows, have long been a significant cause of damage and destruction to people and property in the Puget Sound region. Following the years of 1996 and 1997, the Federal Emergency Management Agency designated Seattle as a “Project Impact” city with the goal of encouraging the city to...
Biomorphodynamics: Physical-biological feedbacks that shape landscapes
A.B. Murray, M.A.F. Knaapen, M. Tal, M. L. Kirwan
2008, Water Resources Research (44)
Plants and animals affect morphological evolution in many environments. The term "ecogeomorphology" describes studies that address such effects. In this opinion article we use the term "biomorphodynamics" to characterize a subset of ecogeomorphologic studies: those that investigate not only the effects of organisms on physical processes and morphology but also...
A study of methods to estimate debris flow velocity
A.B. Prochaska, P.M. Santi, J.D. Higgins, S.H. Cannon
2008, Landslides (5) 431-444
Debris flow velocities are commonly back-calculated from superelevation events which require subjective estimates of radii of curvature of bends in the debris flow channel or predicted using flow equations that require the selection of appropriate rheological models and material property inputs. This research investigated difficulties associated with the use of...
Low-Level detections of halogenated volatile organic compounds in groundwater: Use in vulnerability assessments
Niel Plummer, E. Busenberg, S. M. Eberts, L. M. Bexfield, C. J. Brown, L.S. Fahlquist, B. G. Katz, M.K. Landon
2008, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (13) 1049-1068
Concentrations of halogenated volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were determined by gas chromatography (GC) with an electron-capture detector (GC-ECD) and by gas chromatography with mass spectrometry (GC-MS) in 109 groundwater samples from five study areas in the United States. In each case, the untreated water sample was used...
Corticosterone stress response in tree swallows nesting near polychlorinated biphenyl- and dioxin-contaminated rivers
M.D. Franceschini, Christine M. Custer, T. W. Custer, J.M. Reed, L.M. Romero
2008, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (27) 2326-2331
We assayed baseline and stress-induced corticosterone concentrations from adult female and nestling tree swallows, Tachycineta bicolor, from New England, USA, sites with different levels of contamination with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD). Corticosterone was compared over 2 years from a highly contaminated PCB site along the Housatonic River (Berkshire...
Pesticide fate and transport throughout unsaturated zones in five agricultural settings, USA
T.C. Hancock, Mark W. Sandstrom, J. R. Vogel, R.M.T. Webb, E.R. Bayless, J.E. Barbash
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 1086-1100
Pesticide transport through the unsaturated zone is a function of chemical and soil characteristics, application, and water recharge rate. The fate and transport of 82 pesticides and degradates were investigated at five different agricultural sites. Atrazine and metolachlor, as well as several of the degradates of atrazine, metolachlor, acetochlor, and...
Eddy correlation measurements of submarine groundwater discharge
John Crusius, P. Berg, D.J. Koopmans, L. Erban
2008, Marine Chemistry (109) 77-85
This paper presents a new, non-invasive means of quantifying groundwater discharge into marine waters using an eddy correlation approach. The method takes advantage of the fact that, in virtually all aquatic environments, the dominant mode of vertical transport near the sediment–water interface is turbulent mixing. The technique thus relies on...
Atmospheric contribution of gas emissions from Augustine volcano, Alaska during the 2006 eruption
K.A. McGee, M.P. Doukas, R. G. McGimsey, C.A. Neal, R.L. Wessels
2008, Geophysical Research Letters (35)
Airborne surveillance of gas emissions from Augustine for SO2, CO2 and H2S showed no evidence of anomalous degassing from 1990 through May 2005. By December 20, 2005, Augustine was degassing 660 td−1 of SO2, and ten times that by January 4, 2006. The highest SO2 emission rate measured during the 2006 eruption was...
A second look at western Sinai seif dunes and their lateral migration
D. M. Rubin, H. Tsoar, D.G. Blumberg
2008, Geomorphology (93) 335-342
Tsoar et al. [Tsoar, H., Blumberg, D.G., Stoler, Y., 2004. Elongation and migration of sand dunes. Geomorphology 57, 293-302.] reported that seif dunes in the western Sinai Desert did not migrate laterally between 1973 and 1999. If the planform sinuosities of the dunes are removed by filtering, spatial averaging, or...
Distribution of icy particles across Enceladus' surface as derived from Cassini-VIMS measurements
R. Jaumann, K. Stephan, G. B. Hansen, R. N. Clark, B. J. Buratti, R. H. Brown, K. H. Baines, S.F. Newman, G. Bellucci, G. Filacchione, A. Coradini, D. P. Cruikshank, C.A. Griffith, C. A. Hibbitts, T. B. McCord, R.M. Nelson, P. D. Nicholson, Christophe Sotin, R. Wagner
2008, Icarus (193) 407-419
The surface of Enceladus consists almost completely of water ice. As the band depths of water ice absorptions are sensitive to the size of particles, absorptions can be used to map variations of icy particles across the surface. The Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) observed Enceladus with a high...
Distribution of tsunami interevent times
E.L. Geist, T. Parsons
2008, Geophysical Research Letters (35)
The distribution of tsunami interevent times is analyzed using global and site-specific (Hilo, Hawaii) tsunami catalogs. An empirical probability density distribution is determined by binning the observed interevent times during a period in which the observation rate is approximately constant. The empirical distributions for both catalogs exhibit non-Poissonian behavior in...
Mercury and drought along the lower Carson River, Nevada: II. Snowy egret and black-crowned night-heron reproduction on Lahontan Reservoir, 1997-2006
Elwood F. Hill, Charles J. Henry, Robert A. Grove
2008, Ecotoxicology (17) 117-131
Mercury concentrations in the floodplain of the Carson River Basin in northwestern Nevada are some of the highest ever reported in a natural system. Thus, a portion of the basin including Lahontan Reservoir was placed on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Natural Priorities List for research and cleanup. Preliminary studies...
Population genetic structure in Atlantic and Pacific Ocean common murres (Uria aalge): Natural replicate tests of post-Pleistocene evolution
J. A. Morris-Pocock, S.A. Taylor, T.P. Birt, M. Damus, John F. Piatt, K.I. Warheit, Vicki L. Friesen
2008, Molecular Ecology (17) 4859-4873
Understanding the factors that influence population differentiation in temperate taxa can be difficult because the signatures of both historic and contemporary demographics are often reflected in population genetic patterns. Fortunately, analyses based on coalescent theory can help untangle the relative influence of these historic and contemporary factors. Common murres (Uria...
Natural gas geochemistry of sediments drilled on the 2005 Gulf of Mexico JIP cruise
T.D. Lorenson, George E. Claypool, J.A. Dougherty
2008, Marine and Petroleum Geology (25) 873-883
In April and May 2005, cores were acquired and sub-sampled for gases in lease blocks Atwater Valley 13 and 14 and Keathley Canyon 151 during deep subseafloor drilling conducted as part of the JIP study of gas hydrates in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Sample types included sediment headspace gas,...
Environmental occurrence of the enterococcal surface protein (esp) gene is an unreliable indicator of human fecal contamination
M.N. Byappanahalli, K. Przybyla-Kelly, D.A. Shively, R.L. Whitman
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 8014-8020
The enterococcal surface protein (esp) gene found in Enterococcus faecalis and E. faecium has recently been explored as a marker of sewage pollution in recreational waters but its occurrence and distribution in environmental enterococci has not been well-documented. If the esp gene is found in environmental samples, there are potential...
In vivo virus growth competition assays demonstrate equal fitness of fish rhabdovirus strains that co-circulate in aquaculture
R.M. Troyer, K.A. Garver, J. C. Ranson, A. R. Wargo, Gael Kurath
2008, Virus Research (137) 179-188
A novel virus growth competition assay for determining relative fitness of RNA virus variants in vivo has been developed using the fish rhabdovirus, Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV), in juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). We have conducted assays with IHNV isolates designated B, C, and D, representing the three most...
Dike orientations in the late jurassic independence dike swarm and implications for vertical-axis tectonic rotations in eastern California
R.F. Hopson, John W. Hillhouse, K. A. Howard
2008, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 481-498
Analysis of the strikes of 3841 dikes in 47 domains in the 500-km-long Late Jurassic Independence dike swarm indicates a distribution that is skewed clockwise from the dominant northwest strike. Independence dike swarm azimuths tend to cluster near 325?? ?? 30??, consistent with initial subparallel intrusion along much of the...
The influence of alewife year-class strength on prey selection and abundance of age-1 Chinook salmon in Lake Michigan
D.M. Warner, C.S. Kiley, R.M. Claramunt, D.F. Clapp
2008, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (137) 1683-1700
We used growth and diet data from a fishery-independent survey of Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, acoustic estimates of prey density and biomass, and statistical catch-at-age modeling to study the influence of the year-class strength of alewife Alosa pseudoharengus on the prey selection and abundance of age-1 Chinook salmon in Lake...
The importance of hydrology in restoration of bottomland hardwood wetland functions
R.G. Hunter, S.P. Faulkner, K.A. Gibson
2008, Wetlands (28) 605-615
Bottomland hardwood (BLH) forests have important biogeochemical functions and it is well known that certain structural components, including pulsed hydrology, hydric soils, and hydrophytic vegetation, enhance these functions. It is unclear, however, how functions of restored BLH wetlands compare to mature, undisturbed wetlands. We measured a suite of structural and...
Increasing maturity of kerogen type II reflected by alkylbenzene distribution from pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
G.P. Lis, Maria Mastalerz, A. Schimmelmann
2008, Organic Geochemistry (39) 440-449
A series of Late Devonian to Early Mississippian type II kerogens with vitrinite reflectance values Ro 0.29-2.41% were analyzed using py-GC-MS. In addition, a low maturity kerogen with Ro 0.44% was separated into fractions via density gradient centrifugation, followed by py-GC-MS of the alginite and amorphinite maceral concentrates. Alkylbenzenes and...
A characterization of non-biotic environmental features of prairies hosting the Dakota Skipper (Hesperia dacotae, Hesperiidae) across its remaining U.S. range
R.A. Royer, R.A. McKenney, W.E. Newton
2008, Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society (62) 1-17
Within the United States, the Dakota Skipper now occurs only in Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota. In these states it has been associated with margins of glacial lakes and calcareous mesic prairies that host warm-season native grasses. Preliminary geographic information system (GIS) analysis in North Dakota has indicated a...
Isotopic variations of dissolved copper and zinc in stream waters affected by historical mining
David M. Borrok, David Nimick, Richard B. Wanty, William I. Ridley
2008, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (72) 329-344
Zinc and Cu play important roles in the biogeochemistry of natural systems, and it is likely that these interactions result in mass-dependent fractionations of their stable isotopes. In this study, we examine the relative abundances of dissolved Zn and Cu isotopes in a variety of stream waters draining six historical...