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Page 1866, results 46626 - 46650

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Discovery of ammocrypta clara (western sand darter) in the Upper Ohio River of West Virginia
Dan A. Cincotta, Stuart A. Welsh
2010, American Midland Naturalist (163) 318-325
Ammocrypta clara Jordan and Meek (western sand darter) occurs primarily in the western portions of Mississippi River system, but also has been reported from a Lake Michigan drainage and a few eastern Texas Gulf Slope rivers. Additional range records depict a semi-disjunct distribution within the Ohio River drainage, including collections from...
Climate change threatens polar bear populations: A stochastic demographic analysis
C.M. Hunter, H. Caswell, M.C. Runge, E.V. Regehr, Steven C. Amstrup, I. Stirling
2010, Ecology (91) 2883-2897
The polar bear (Ursus maritimus) depends on sea ice for feeding, breeding, and movement. Significant reductions in Arctic sea ice are forecast to continue because of climate warming. We evaluated the impacts of climate change on polar bears in the southern Beaufort Sea by means of a demographic analysis, combining...
Assessing macroinvertebrate biodiversity in freshwater ecosystems: Advances and challenges in dna-based approaches
M.E. Pfrender, L.C. Ferrington Jr., C.P. Hawkins, P.L. Hartzell, M. Bagley, S. Jackson, G.W. Courtney, D. P. Larsen, B.R. Creutzburg, C.A. Levesque, J.H. Epler, J.C. Morse, S. Fend, M.J. Petersen, D. Ruiter, D. Schindel, M. Whiting
2010, The Quarterly Review of Biology (85) 319-340
Assessing the biodiversity of macroinvertebrate fauna in freshwater ecosystems is an essential component of both basic ecological inquiry and applied ecological assessments. Aspects of taxonomic diversity and composition in freshwater communities are widely used to quantify water quality and measure the efficacy of remediation and restoration efforts. The accuracy and...
Changes in agriculture and abundance of snow geese affect carrying capacity of sandhill cranes in Nebraska
A.T. Pearse, Gary L. Krapu, D.A. Brandt, P.J. Kinzel
2010, Journal of Wildlife Management (74) 479-488
The central Platte River valley (CPRV) in Nebraska, USA, is a key spring-staging area for approximately 80 of the midcontinent population of sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis; hereafter cranes). Evidence that staging cranes acquired less lipid reserves during the 1990s compared to the late 1970s and increases in use of the...
Grid-size dependence of Cauchy boundary conditions used to simulate stream-aquifer interactions
S. Mehl, M. C. Hill
2010, Advances in Water Resources (33) 430-442
This work examines the simulation of stream–aquifer interactions as grids are refined vertically and horizontally and suggests that traditional methods for calculating conductance can produce inappropriate values when the grid size is changed. Instead, different grid resolutions require different estimated values. Grid refinement strategies considered include global refinement of the...
Fine gravel controls hydrologic and erodibility responses to trampling disturbance for coarse-textured soils with weak cyanobacterial crusts
J. E. Herrick, J. W. Van Zee, J. Belnap, J.R. Johansen, M. Remmenga
2010, Catena (83) 119-126
We compared short-term effects of lug-soled boot trampling disturbance on water infiltration and soil erodibility on coarse-textured soils covered by a mixture of fine gravel and coarse sand over weak cyanobacterially-dominated biological soil crusts. Trampling significantly reduced final infiltration rate and total infiltration and increased sediment generation from small (0.5m2)...
Tropical shoreline ice in the late Cambrian: Implications for earth's climate between the Cambrian Explosion and the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event
Anthony C. Runkel, T.J. MacKey, Clinton A. Cowan, David L. Fox
2010, GSA Today (20) 4-10
Middle to late Cambrian time (ca. 513 to 488 Ma) is characterized by an unstable plateau in biodiversity, when depauperate shelf faunas suffered repeated extinctions. This poorly understood interval separates the Cambrian Explosion from the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event and is generally regarded as a time of sustained greenhouse conditions....
Landscape characteristics affecting streams in urbanizing regions of the Delaware River Basin (New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania, U.S.)
K. Riva-Murray, R. Riemann, P. Murdoch, J.M. Fischer, R. Brightbill
2010, Landscape Ecology (25) 1489-1503
Widespread and increasing urbanization has resulted in the need to assess, monitor, and understand its effects on stream water quality. Identifying relations between stream ecological condition and urban intensity indicators such as impervious surface provides important, but insufficient information to effectively address planning and management needs in such areas. In...
Hydrothermal heat discharge in the Cascade Range, northwestern United States
S. E. Ingebritsen, Robert H. Mariner
2010, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (196) 208-218
Hydrothermal heat discharge in the Cascade Range includes the heat discharged by thermal springs, by "slightly thermal" springs that are only a few degrees warmer than ambient temperature, and by fumaroles. Thermal-spring heat discharge is calculated on the basis of chloride-flux measurements and geothermometer temperatures and totals ~ 240 MW...
A simple physical model for deep moonquake occurrence times
R.C. Weber, B.G. Bills, C.L. Johnson
2010, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (182) 152-160
The physical process that results in moonquakes is not yet fully understood. The periodic occurrence times of events from individual clusters are clearly related to tidal stress, but also exhibit departures from the temporal regularity this relationship would seem to imply. Even simplified models that capture some of the relevant...
Chemical and nanometer-scale structure of kerogen and its change during thermal maturation investigated by advanced solid-state 13C NMR spectroscopy
J. Mao, X. Fang, Y. Lan, A. Schimmelmann, Maria Mastalerz, L. Xu, K. Schmidt-Rohr
2010, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (74) 2110-2127
We have used advanced and quantitative solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques to investigate structural changes in a series of type II kerogen samples from the New Albany Shale across a range of maturity (vitrinite reflectance R0 from 0.29% to 1.27%). Specific functional groups such as CH3, CH2, alkyl CH,...
Yield responses of ruderal plants to sucrose in invasive-dominated sagebrush steppe of the northern Great Basin
Jessi Brunson, David A. Pyke, Steven S. Perakis
2010, Restoration Ecology (18) 304-312
Restoration of sagebrush-steppe plant communities dominated by the invasive ruderals Bromus tectorum (cheatgrass) and Taeniatherum caput-medusae (medusahead) can be facilitated by adding carbon (C) to the soil, stimulating microbes to immobilize nitrogen (N) and limit inorganic N availability. Our objectives were to determine responses in (1) cheatgrass and medusahead biomass...
Determining sources of dissolved organic carbon and disinfection byproduct precursors to the McKenzie River, Oregon
Tamara E.C. Kraus, Chauncey W. Anderson, Karl Morgenstern, Bryan D. Downing, Brian A. Pellerin, Brian A. Bergamaschi
2010, Journal of Environmental Quality (39) 2100-2112
This study was conducted to determine the main sources of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and disinfection byproduct (DBP) precursors to the McKenzie River, Oregon (USA). Water samples collected from the mainstem, tributaries, and reservoir outflows were analyzed for DOC concentration and DBP formation potentials (trihalomethanes [THMFPs] and haloacetic acids [HAAFPs])....
Using multiple chemical indicators to characterize and determine the age of groundwater from selected vents of the silver springs group, Central Florida, USA
L. Knowles Jr., B. G. Katz, D. J. Toth
2010, Hydrogeology Journal (18) 1825-1838
The Silver Springs Group, Florida (USA), forms the headwaters of the Silver River and supports a diverse ecosystem. The 30 headwater springs divide into five subgroups based on chemistry. Five selected spring vents were sampled in 2007 to better understand the contaminant sources and groundwater flow system. Elevated nitrate-N concentrations...
The Middle Jurassic basinal deposits of the Surmeh Formation in the Central Zagros Mountains, southwest Iran: Facies, sequence stratigraphy, and controls
Y. Lasemi, A.H. Jalilian
2010, Carbonates and Evaporites (25) 283-295
The lower part of the Lower to Upper Jurassic Surmeh Formation consists of a succession of shallow marine carbonates (Toarcian-Aalenian) overlain by a deep marine basinal succession (Aalenian-Bajocian) that grades upward to Middle to Upper Jurassic platform carbonates. The termination of shallow marine carbonate deposition of the lower part of...
Seismic imaging of a fractured gas hydrate system in the Krishna-Godavari Basin offshore India
M. Riedel, T. S. Collett, P. Kumar, A.V. Sathe, A. Cook
2010, Marine and Petroleum Geology (27) 1476-1493
Gas hydrate was discovered in the Krishna-Godavari (KG) Basin during the India National Gas Hydrate Program (NGHP) Expedition 1 at Site NGHP-01-10 within a fractured clay-dominated sedimentary system. Logging-while-drilling (LWD), coring, and wire-line logging confirmed gas hydrate dominantly in fractures at four borehole sites spanning a 500m transect. Three-dimensional (3D)...
Potential contributions of asphalt and coal tar to black carbon quantification in urban dust, soils, and sediments
Y. Yang, B.J. Mahler, P. C. Van Metre, B. Ligouis, C.J. Werth
2010, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (74) 6830-6840
Measurements of black carbon (BC) using either chemical or thermal oxidation methods are generally thought to indicate the amount of char and/or soot present in a sample. In urban environments, however, asphalt and coal-tar particles worn from pavement are ubiquitous and, because of their pyrogenic origin, could contribute to measurements...
Phytochemistry of the fossilized-cuticle frond Macroneuropteris macrophylla (Pennsylvanian seed fern, Canada)
E.L. Zodrow, J. A. D’Angelo, Maria Mastalerz, C.J. Cleal, D. Keefe
2010, International Journal of Coal Geology (84) 71-82
In Canada's Sydney Coalfield, specimens of the extinct Carboniferous seed fern Macroneuropteris macrophylla (Brongniart) invariably show preservation stages intermediate between compression and fossilized-cuticle, even concerning a single pinnule. In this interdisciplinary approach, we study a ca. 300 to 350 mm long fossilized-cuticle-preserved frond section of M. macrophylla (Brongniart) that represents...
Greenhouse gas mitigation can reduce sea-ice loss and increase polar bear persistence
Steven C. Amstrup, E.T. Deweaver, David C. Douglas, B.G. Marcot, George M. Durner, C.M. Bitz, D.A. Bailey
2010, Nature (468) 955-958
On the basis of projected losses of their essential sea-ice habitats, a United States Geological Survey research team concluded in 2007 that two-thirds of the worlds polar bears (Ursus maritimus) could disappear by mid-century if business-as-usual greenhouse gas emissions continue. That projection, however, did not consider the possible benefits of...
Site-occupancy distribution modeling to correct population-trend estimates derived from opportunistic observations
M. Kery, J. Andrew Royle, Hans Schmid, M. Schaub, B. Volet, G. Hafliger, N. Zbinden
2010, Conservation Biology (24) 1388-1397
Species' assessments must frequently be derived from opportunistic observations made by volunteers (i.e., citizen scientists). Interpretation of the resulting data to estimate population trends is plagued with problems, including teasing apart genuine population trends from variations in observation effort. We devised a way to correct for annual variation in effort...
Precise estimation of repeating earthquake moment: Example from parkfield, california
J.L. Rubinstein, W.L. Ellsworth
2010, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (100) 1952-1961
We offer a new method for estimating the relative size of repeating earthquakes using the singular value decomposition (SVD). This method takes advantage of the highly coherent waveforms of repeating earthquakes and arrives at far more precise and accurate descriptions of earthquake size than standard catalog techniques allow. We demonstrate...
Surface-wave potential for triggering tectonic (nonvolcanic) tremor
D.P. Hill
2010, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (100) 1859-1878
Source processes commonly posed to explain instances of remote dynamic triggering of tectonic (nonvolcanic) tremor by surface waves include frictional failure and various modes of fluid activation. The relative potential for Love- and Rayleigh-wave dynamic stresses to trigger tectonic tremor through failure on critically stressed thrust and vertical strike-slip faults...
Sage-grouse habitat selection during winter in Alberta
Jennifer L. Carpenter, Cameron L. Aldridge, Mark S. Boyce
2010, Journal of Wildlife Management (74) 1806-1814
Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) are dependent on sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) for food and shelter during winter, yet few studies have assessed winter habitat selection, particularly at scales applicable to conservation planning. Small changes to availability of winter habitats have caused drastic reductions in some sage-grouse populations. We modeled winter habitat...
Short baseline variations in site response and wave-propagation effects and their structural causes: Four examples in and around the santa clara valley, California
S. Hartzell, L. Ramirez-Guzman, D. Carver, P. Liu
2010, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (100) 2264-2286
Ground motion records of local and regional events from a portable array are used to investigate the structural causes of variations in ground motion over distances of a few hundred meters to a few kilometers in the sedimentary basin environment of the Santa Clara Valley, California, and its margins. Arrays...
Generation and emplacement of fine-grained ejecta in planetary impacts
R.R. Ghent, V. Gupta, B.A. Campbell, S.A. Ferguson, J.C.W. Brown, R.L. Fergason, L.M. Carter
2010, Icarus (209) 818-835
We report here on a survey of distal fine-grained ejecta deposits on the Moon, Mars, and Venus. On all three planets, fine-grained ejecta form circular haloes that extend beyond the continuous ejecta and other types of distal deposits such as run-out lobes or ramparts. Using Earth-based radar images, we find...