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164426 results.

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Page 79, results 1951 - 1975

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The joint effect of changes in urbanization and climate on trends in floods: A comparison of panel and single-station quantile regression approaches
Thomas M. Over, Mackenzie K. Marti, Jaqueline Ortiz, Hannah Lee Podzorski
2025, Journal of Hydrology (648)
Estimates of annual maximum (peak) flow quantiles are needed for basins undergoing changes in both urbanization and climate. Most previous work on the effect of urbanization on peak flows has considered urbanization alone and only the spatial variation in flood quantiles...
Food-web dynamics of a floodplain mosaic overshadow the effects of engineered logjams for Pacific salmon and steelhead
James C. Paris, Colden V. Baxter, James R Bellmore, Joseph R. Benjamin
2025, Ecological Applications (35)
Food webs vary in space and time. The structure and spatial arrangement of food webs are theorized to mediate temporal dynamics of energy flow, but empirical corroboration in intermediate-scale landscapes is scarce. River-floodplain landscapes encompass a mosaic of aquatic habitat patches and food webs, supporting a variety of aquatic consumers...
Restoration treatments enhance tree growth and alter climatic constraints during extreme drought
Kyle C. Rodman, John B. Bradford, Alicia M. Formanack, Peter Z. Fulé, David W. Huffman, Thomas E. Kolb, Ana T. Miller-ter Kuile, Donald P. Normandin, Kiona Ogle, Rory J. Pederson, Daniel Rodolphe Schlaepfer, Michael T. Stoddard, Amy E.M. Waltz
2025, Ecological Applications (35)
The frequency and severity of drought events are predicted to increase due to anthropogenic climate change, with cascading effects across forested ecosystems. Management activities such as forest thinning and prescribed burning, which are often intended to mitigate fire hazard and restore ecosystem processes, may also help promote tree resistance to...
State shifts in the deep Critical Zone drive landscape evolution in volcanic terrains
Leif Karlstrom, Nathaniel Klema, Gordon E. Grant, Carol A. Finn, Pamela L. Sullivan, Sarah Cooley, Alex Simpson, Becky Fasth, Katherine Cashman, Ken Ferrier, Lyndsay B. Ball, Daniele McKay
2025, PNAS (122)
Understanding the near-surface environment where atmospheric and solid earth processes interact, often termed the “Critical Zone,” is important for assessing resources and building resilient societies. Here, we examine a volcanic landscape in the Oregon Cascade Range, an understudied Critical Zone setting that is host to major regional water resources, pervasive...
Deterministic, dynamic model forecasts of storm-driven coastal erosion
Jessica Frances Gorski, Joel C. Dietrich, Davina Passeri, Rangley C. Mickey, Rick A. Luettich Jr.
2025, Natural Hazards (121) 6257-6283
The U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coasts are vulnerable to storms, which can cause significant erosion of beaches and dunes that protect coastal communities. Real-time forecasts of storm-driven erosion are useful for decision support, but they are limited due to demands for computational resources and uncertainties in dynamic coastal...
Physical habitat is more than a sediment issue: A multi-dimensional habitat assessment indicates new approaches for river management
Matthew J. Cashman, Gina Lee, Leah Ellen Staub, Michelle P. Katoski, Kelly O. Maloney
2025, Journal of Environmental Management (371)
Degraded physical habitat is a common stressor affecting river ecosystems and typically addressed in the United States (US) through a regulatory focus on sediment. However, a narrow regulatory focus on sediment may overlook other aspects of physical habitat and the processes for its creation, maintenance, and degradation. In addition, there...
Constraining large magnitude event source and path effects using ground motion simulations
Xiaofeng Meng, Robert Graves, Christine A Goulet
2025, Conference Paper
The purpose of this study is to use ground motion simulations to investigate ways in which source and path effects for large magnitude events can be represented in non-ergodic GMMs. While we initially developed computation techniques using CyberShake simulations, the range of magnitudes and source-site combinations is not adequate to...
Structural setting and geothermal potential of northeastern Reese River Valley, north-central Nevada: Highly prospective detailed study site for the INGENIOUS project
James Faulds, Tait E. Earney, Jonathan M.G. Glen, John Queen, Jared R. Peacock, Nicole R. Hart-Wagoner, Kurt Kraal, Cary R. Lindsey, Quentin Burgess, Mary Hannah Giddens
2025, Conference Paper, Using the Earth to save the Earth
The northeastern part of the Reese River basin situated ~15 km southeast of Battle Mountain, Nevada, scored highly in the Nevada geothermal play fairway analysis (PFA) for hosting potential hidden geothermal systems. This site (also referred to as Argenta Rise) was therefore chosen for detailed study in the INGENIOUS project...
International data gaps at the Center for Engineering Strong Motion Data
Han Shao, Jeff Brody, Lisa Sue Schleicher, Kristin Marano, Jamison Haase Steidl, Eric M. Thompson, Mike Hearne, James Luke Blair
2025, Conference Paper
The Center for Engineering Strong Motion Data (CESMD) is utilized by seismologists, engineers, and disaster management professionals in the US and has historically achieved and distributed waveforms from across the globe for significant earthquakes. The increased access to the waveforms via Web API (Application Programming Interface) offers a unique opportunity...
The complete genome sequence of Splendidofilaria pectoralis (Onchocercidae, Rhabditida, Chromadorea, Nematoda)
Andrew D. Sweet, Robert Wilson, Jack Reakoff, Sarah A. Sonsthagen, Colleen Hurst, Stacy Pirro
2025, Biodiversity Genomes
We present the complete genome sequence of Splendidofilaria pectoralis, a nematode parasite of grouse (Aves: Galliformes: Tetraonini). Illumina paired-end reads were assembled by a de novo method followed by a finishing step. The raw and assembled data are publicly available via GenBank: Sequence Read Archive (SRR28509439) and assembled genome (JBFSWT000000000)....
The influence of pre-existing structures on geothermal springs: Inferences from potential field mapping in Surprise Valley, CA and other sites In the northwestern Great Basin
Jonathan M.G. Glen, Tait E. Earney
2025, Conference Paper, Using the Earth to save the Earth
Surprise Valley, located in the northwestern Great Basin, is an asymmetric extensional basin that marks a major tectonic transition between the relatively un-extended volcanic Modoc Plateau to the west, and the Basin and Range to the east that has undergone 10-15% extension. In addition, it sits just north of...
Chapter 6: Climate change, wildlife, and wildlife habitats in the Oregon Coast Range
Todd M. Wilson, Lindsey Thurman, Erik A. Beever, Peter H Singleton, Deanna H. Olson, Deanna Williams, Douglas A. Glavich
Jessica E. Halofsky, David L. Peterson, Rebecca Gravenmier, editor(s)
2025, General Technical Report PNW-GTR-1024-6
Climate change is likely to have profound effects on wildlife species within the Oregon Coast Adaptation Partnership (OCAP) assessment area, although the direction and magnitude of effects are likely to vary across species. Increased mean and extreme temperatures, especially during summer, may cause shifts in plant and animal species ranges,...
Cross-shore hydrodynamics and morphodynamics modeling of an erosive event in the inner surf zone
Jiaye Zhang, Benjamin Tsai, Yashar Rafati, Tian-Jian Hsu, Jack A. Puleo
2025, Coastal Engineering (196)
The phase-averaged and depth-integrated coastal morphodynamic model, XBeach-Surfbeat, was investigated for its capability of predicting the cross-shore hydrodynamics and morphodynamics in the inner surf zone by simulating the storm-induced berm erosion, sediment transport, and subsequent sand bar formation. By utilizing a comprehensive hydrodynamic and morphodynamic dataset measured in a large...
Predicted exposure of communities in southeastern United States to climate-related coastal hazards
Patrick L. Barnard, Peter W Swarzenski
2025, Nature Climate Change (15) 25-26
A rigorous analysis of 21st Century multi-hazard exposure for U.S. Southeast Atlantic coastal communities indicates that up to 70% of residents will be exposed daily to shallow and emerging groundwater by ~2100, 15 times higher than from surficial flooding alone. This threat further exacerbates other coastal stressors, such as flooding,...
Identifying priority science information needs for managing public lands
Sarah K. Carter, Travis Haby, Ella M. Samuel, Alison C. Foster, Jennifer K. Meineke, Laine E. McCall, Malia Burton, Chris Domschke, Leigh Espy, Megan A. Gilbert
2025, Environmental Management (75) 444-463
Public lands worldwide provide diverse resources, uses, and values, ranging from wilderness to extractive uses. Decision-making on public lands is complex as a result and is required by law to be informed by science. However, public land managers may not always have the science they need. We developed a methodology...
Establishment of a cell culture from Daphnia magna as an in vitro model for (eco)toxicology assays: Case study using Bisphenol A as a representative cytotoxic and endocrine disrupting chemical
Sreevidya CP, Manoj Kumar TM, Soumya Balakrishnana, Suresh Kunjiramana, Manomi Sarasan, Jason Tyler Magnuson, Jayesh Puthumana
2025, Aquatic Toxicology (278) 107173
Bisphenol A (BPA) is a widely used industrial compound found in polycarbonate plastics, epoxy resin, and various polymer materials, leading to its ubiquitous presence in the environment. The toxicity of BPA to aquatic organisms has been well documented following in vivo exposure scenarios, with known cytotoxic and endocrine-disrupting effects. As such, BPA...
Combining past and contemporary species occurrences with ordinal species distribution modeling to investigate responses to climate change
Erik A. Beever, Marie L. Westover, Adam B. Smith, Francis D. Gerraty, Peter D. Billman, Felisa A. Smith
2025, Ecography (2025)
Many organisms leave evidence of their former occurrence, such as scat, abandoned burrows, middens, ancient eDNA or fossils, which indicate areas from which a species has since disappeared. However, combining this evidence with contemporary occurrences within a single modeling framework remains challenging. Traditional binary species-distribution modeling reduces occurrence to two...
Oblique contraction along the fastest ocean-continent transform plate boundary focuses rock uplift west of the Fairweather fault, southeast Alaska
Robert C. Witter, Harvey M. Kelsey, Richard O. Lease, Adrian Bender, Katherine M. Scharer, Peter J. Haeussler, Daniel S. Brothers
Natalia A. Ruppert, M. Jadamec, Jeffery T. Freymueller, editor(s)
2025, Book chapter, Tectonics and seismic structure of Alaska and northwestern Canada: EarthScope and beyond
Contraction along the Yakutat–North America plate boundary drives 4.6–9.0 mm/year Holocene rock uplift rates along Earth's fastest slipping (≥49 mm/year) ocean–continent transform fault, the Fairweather Fault. Between Icy Point and Lituya Bay, the near-vertical Fairweather fault focuses rock uplift and rapid right-lateral slip by accommodating both vertical and fault-parallel strain during oblique-slip...
Constraining the earthquake recording threshold of intraslab earthquakes with turbidites in southcentral Alaska’s lakes and fjords
Drake Moore Singleton, Daniel S. Brothers, Peter J. Haeussler, Robert C. Witter, Jenna C. Hill
Natalia A. Ruppert, M. Jadamec, Jeffrey T. Freymueller, editor(s)
2025, Book chapter, Tectonics and seismic structure of Alaska and northwestern Canada: EarthScope and beyond
Strong ground motion from intraslab earthquakes, which do not produce primary paleoseismic evidence, may initiate gravity-driven turbidity flows in subaqueous basins. The resulting deposits (turbidites) can provide a paleoseismic proxy if the conditions that initiate these flows are known. To better constrain the initiating conditions, we use two recent intraslab...
Tectonic tremor observations across Alaska
Aaron Wech
Natalia A. Ruppert, M. Jadamec, Jeffery T. Freymueller, editor(s)
2025, Book chapter, Tectonics and seismic structure of Alaska and northwestern Canada: EarthScope and beyond
Tectonic tremor is a semicontinuous, low-frequency seismic signal associated with stable fault motion at major plate boundaries worldwide. In subduction zones, tremor often coincides with geodetic transients that indicate discrete slow slip on the subducting plate interface. Because tremor epicenters offer better spatial and temporal resolution than geodetic inversions of...
Perspectives on transportable array Alaska background noise levels
Adam T. Ringler, Kasey Aderhold, Robert E. Anthony, Robert W. Busby, Andy Frassetto, Toshiro Tanimoto, David C. Wilson
Natalia A. Ruppert, M. Jadamec, Jeffery T. Freymueller, editor(s)
2025, Book chapter, Tectonics and seismic structure of Alaska and northwestern Canada: EarthScope and beyond
Background seismic noise fundamentally sets a lower bound on our ability to record signals arising from earthquakes. The background noise spectrum at a station is a combination of cultural noise, ocean-generated microseism noise, intrinsic instrument self-noise, and the sensitivity of the instrument to nonseismic noise sources. The USArray-Transportable Array Alaska...
Evaluation of the gap intercept method to measure rangeland connectivity
Sarah E. McCord, Joseph R. Brehm, Lea A. Condon, Leah Dreesmann, Lisa M. Ellsworth, Matthew J. Germino, Jeffrey E. Herrick, Brian K. Howard, Emily Kachergis, Jason W. Karl, Anna C. Knight, Savannah Meadors, Aleta Nafus, Beth A. Newingham, Peter J. Olsoy, Nicole Pietrasiak, David S. Pilliod, Anthony Schaefer, Nicholas P. Webb, Brandi E. Wheeler, C. Jason Williams, Kristina E. Young
2025, Rangeland Ecology & Management (98) 297-315
Characterizing the connectivity of materials, organisms, and energy on rangelands is critical to understanding and managing ecosystem response to disturbances. For over twenty years, scientists and rangeland managers have used the gap intercept method to monitor connectivity. However, using gap intercept measurements to infer ecosystem processes or inform management actions...
U.S. Geological Survey research and assessments supporting carbon dioxide removal
Peter D. Warwick, Madalyn S. Blondes, Judith Z. Drexler, Kevin D. Kroeger, Zhiliang Zhu
2025, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 17th Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies Conference (GHGT-17)
Both carbon capture and storage (CCS) and carbon dioxide removal (CDR) are methods to limit future global temperature rise and ocean acidification. CCS sequesters (stores) carbon dioxide (CO2) captured from industrial sources thereby preventing the CO2 from reaching the atmosphere. The captured CO2 is injected into underground geologic reservoirs or...
The ghost plume phenomenon and its impact on zenith-facing remote sensing measurements of volcanic SO2 emission rates
D.S. Kushner, T.M. Lopez, Christoph Kern, Santiago Arellano, Nemesio M. Perez, J Barrancos
2025, Journal of Volcanology and Goethermal Research (457)
A large source of error in SO2 emission rates derived from mobile Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (DOAS) of volcanic gas plumes is the uncertainty in atmospheric light paths between the sun and the instrument, particularly under non-ideal atmospheric conditions, such as the presence of low clouds. DOAS instruments measure the SO2 column...