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Seismic evidence for rock damage and healing on the San Andreas fault associated with the 2004 M 6.0 Parkfield earthquake
Y.-G. Li, P. Chen, E.S. Cochran, J.E. Vidale, T. Burdette
2006, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (96)
We deployed a dense linear array of 45 seismometers across and along the San Andreas fault near Parkfield a week after the M 6.0 Parkfield earthquake on 28 September 2004 to record fault-zone seismic waves generated by aftershocks and explosions. Seismic stations and explosions were co-sited with our previous experiment...
Integrating field research, modeling and remote sensing to quantify morphodynamics in a high-energy coastal setting, ocean beach, San Francisco, California
P.L. Barnard, D.M. Hanes
2006, Conference Paper, Coastal Dynamics 2005 - Proceedings of the Fifth Coastal Dynamics International Conference
Wave and coastal circulation modeling are combined with multibeam bathymetry, high-resolution beach surveys, cross-shore Personal Water Craft surveys, digital bed sediment camera surveys, and real-time video monitoring to quantify morphological change and nearshore processes at Ocean Beach, San Francisco. Initial SWAN (Simulating Waves Nearshore) wave modeling results show a focusing...
Mercury in water and biomass of microbial communities in hot springs of Yellowstone National Park, USA
S.A. King, S. Behnke, K. Slack, D. P. Krabbenhoft, D. Kirk Nordstrom, M.D. Burr, Robert G. Striegl
2006, Applied Geochemistry (21) 1868-1879
Ultra-clean sampling methods and approaches typically used in pristine environments were applied to quantify concentrations of Hg species in water and microbial biomass from hot springs of Yellowstone National Park, features that are geologically enriched with Hg. Microbial populations of chemically-diverse hot springs were also characterized using modern methods in...
Eco-informatics and natural resource management
J.B. Cushing, T. Wilson, A. Borning, L. Delcambre, G. Bowker, Mike Frame, J. Schnase, W. Sonntag, J. Fulop, C. Hert, E. Hovy, J. Jones, E. Landis, C. Schweik, L. Brandt, V. Gregg, S. Spengler
2006, Conference Paper, ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
This project highlight reports on the 2004 workshop [1], as well as follow-up activities in 2005 and 2006, regarding how informatics tools can help manage natural resources and decide policy. The workshop was sponsored jointly by sponsored by the NSF, NBII, NASA, and EPA, and attended by practitioners from government...
Holocene environmental and parasequence development of the St. Jones Estuary, Delaware (USA): Foraminiferal proxies of natural climatic and anthropogenic change
E. Leorri, R. Martin, P. McLaughlin
2006, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (241) 590-607
The benthic foraminiferal record of marshes located along western Delaware Bay (St. Jones Estuary, USA) reflects the response of estuaries to sea-level and paleoclimate change during the Holocene. System tracts are recognized and within them parasequences based on sedimentological and foraminiferal assemblages identification. The parasequences defined by foraminiferal assemblages appear...
Prediction of broadband ground-motion time histories: Hybrid low/high-frequency method with correlated random source parameters
P. Liu, R.J. Archuleta, S.H. Hartzell
2006, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (96) 2118-2130
We present a new method for calculating broadband time histories of ground motion based on a hybrid low-frequency/high-frequency approach with correlated source parameters. Using a finite-difference method we calculate low- frequency synthetics (< ∼1 Hz) in a 3D velocity structure. We also compute broadband synthetics in a 1D velocity model...
Prediction of resource volumes at untested locations using simple local prediction models
Emil D. Attanasi, Timothy C. Coburn, Philip A. Freeman
2006, Natural Resources Research (15) 223-239
This paper shows how local spatial nonparametric prediction models can be applied to estimate volumes of recoverable gas resources at individual undrilled sites, at multiple sites on a regional scale, and to compute confidence bounds for regional volumes based on the distribution of those estimates. An approach that combines cross-validation,...
Stability of landsat-4 thematic mapper outgassing models
E. Micijevic, G. Chander
2006, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Oscillations in radiometric gains of the short wave infrared (SWIR) bands in Landsat-4 (L4) and Landsat-5 (L5) Thematic Mappers (TMs) are observed through an analysis of detector responses to the Internal Calibrator (IC) pulses. The oscillations are believed to be caused by an interference effect due to a contaminant film...
Long-term dynamics of production, respiration, and net CO2 exchange in two sagebrush-steppe ecosystems
T.G. Gilmanov, T.J. Svejcar, D.A. Johnson, R.F. Angell, Nicanor Z. Saliendra, B.K. Wylie
2006, Rangeland Ecology and Management (59) 585-599
We present a synthesis of long-term measurements of CO2 exchange in 2 US Intermountain West sagebrush-steppe ecosystems. The locations near Burns, Oregon (1995–2001), and Dubois, Idaho (1996–2001), are part of the AgriFlux Network of the Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Measurements of net ecosystem CO2 exchange (Fc)...
River-aquifer interactions, geologic heterogeneity, and low-flow management
J.H. Fleckenstein, R.G. Niswonger, G.E. Fogg
2006, Conference Paper, Ground Water
Low river flows are commonly controlled by river-aquifer exchange, the magnitude of which is governed by hydraulic properties of both aquifer and aquitard materials beneath the river. Low flows are often important ecologically. Numerical simulations were used to assess how textural heterogeneity of an alluvial system influences river seepage and...
Joint analysis of refractions with surface waves: An inverse solution to the refraction-traveltime problem
J. Ivanov, R. D. Miller, J. Xia, D. Steeples, C.B. Park
2006, Geophysics (71)
We describe a possible solution to the inverse refraction-traveltime problem (IRTP) that reduces the range of possible solutions (nonuniqueness). This approach uses a reference model, derived from surface-wave shear-wave velocity estimates, as a constraint. The application of the joint analysis of refractions with surface waves (JARS) method provided a more...
Translating CFC-based piston ages into probability density functions of ground-water age in karst
Andrew J. Long, L.D. Putnam
2006, Journal of Hydrology (330) 735-747
Temporal age distributions are equivalent to probability density functions (PDFs) of transit time. The type and shape of a PDF provides important information related to ground-water mixing at the well or spring and the complex nature of flow networks in karst aquifers. Chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) concentrations measured for samples from 12...
Seed dispersal in fens
B. Middleton, R. Van Diggelen, K. Jensen
2006, Conference Paper, Applied Vegetation Science
Question: How does seed dispersal reduce fen isolation and contribute to biodiversity? Location: European and North American fens. Methods: This paper reviews the literature on seed dispersal to fens. Results: Landscape fragmentation may reduce dispersal opportunities thereby isolating fens and reducing genetic exchange. Species in fragmented wetlands may have lower...
Water quality in relation to vegetative buffers around sinkholes in karst terrain
A. Petersen, B. Vondracek
2006, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (61) 380-390
There are approximately 8,340 mapped sinkholes in karst terrain of southeast Minnesota. Most sinkholes are adjacent to row crops that likely contribute pollutants to surface waters and aquifers. Vegetated buffers can improve water quality by reducing sediment, fertilizers, pesticides, and other potential contaminants from runoff, and may benefit water quality...
Mourning dove hunting regulation strategy based on annual harvest statistics and banding data
David L. Otis
2006, Journal of Wildlife Management (70) 1302-1307
Although managers should strive to base game bird harvest management strategies on mechanistic population models, monitoring programs required to build and continuously update these models may not be in place. Alternatively, If estimates of total harvest and harvest rates are available, then population estimates derived from these harvest data can...
CO2 and CH4 exchanges between land ecosystems and the atmosphere in northern high latitudes over the 21st century
Q. Zhuang, J. M. Melillo, M.C. Sarofim, D. W. Kicklighter, A. D. McGuire, B.S. Felzer, A. Sokolov, R.G. Prinn, P.A. Steudler, S. Hu
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
Terrestrial ecosystems of the northern high latitudes (above 50??N) exchange large amounts of CO2 and CH4 with the atmosphere each year. Here we use a process-based model to estimate the budget of CO 2 and CH4 of the region for current climate conditions and for future scenarios by considering effects...
Wildfires threaten mercury stocks in northern soils
M.R. Turetsky, J.W. Harden, H.R. Friedli, M. Flannigan, N. Payne, J. Crock, L. Radke
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
With climate change rapidly affecting northern forests and wetlands, mercury reserves once protected in cold, wet soils are being exposed to burning, likely triggering large releases of mercury to the atmosphere. We quantify organic soil mercury stocks and burn areas across western, boreal Canada for use in fire emission models...
Evaluation of methods to estimate lake herring spawner abundance in Lake Superior
D.L. Yule, J.D. Stockwell, G.A. Cholwek, L.M. Evrard, S. Schram, M. Seider, M. Symbal
2006, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (135) 680-694
Historically, commercial fishers harvested Lake Superior lake herring Coregonus artedi for their flesh, but recently operators have targeted lake herring for roe. Because no surveys have estimated spawning female abundance, direct estimates of fishing mortality are lacking. The primary objective of this study was to determine the feasibility of using acoustic techniques...
Statistical modeling of storm-level Kp occurrences
K.J. Remick, Jeffrey J. Love
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
We consider the statistical modeling of the occurrence in time of large Kp magnetic storms as a Poisson process, testing whether or not relatively rare, large Kp events can be considered to arise from a stochastic, sequential, and memoryless process. For a Poisson process, the wait times between successive events...
Spawning habitat associations and selection by fishes in a flow-regulated prairie river
S.K. Brewer, D. M. Papoulias, C.F. Rabeni
2006, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (135) 763-778
We used histological features to identify the spawning chronologies of river-dwelling populations of slenderhead darter Percina phoxocephala, suckermouth minnow Phenacobius mirabilis, stonecat Noturus flavus, and red shiner Cyprinella lutrensis and to relate their reproductive status to microhabitat associations. We identified spawning and nonspawning differences in habitat associations resulting from I...
Migration depths of juvenile Chinook salmon and steelhead relative to total dissolved gas supersaturation in a Columbia River reservoir
J.W. Beeman, A.G. Maule
2006, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (135) 584-594
The in situ depths of juvenile salmonids Oncorhynchus spp. were studied to determine whether hydrostatic compensation was sufficient to protect them from gas bubble disease (GBD) during exposure to total dissolved gas (TDG) supersaturation from a regional program of spill at dams meant to improve salmonid passage survival. Yearling Chinook...
Combined time-series resistivity and geochemical tracer techniques to examine submarine groundwater discharge at Dor Beach, Israel
P.W. Swarzenski, W. C. Burnett, W.J. Greenwood, B. Herut, R. Peterson, N. Dimova, Y. Shalem, Y. Yechieli, Y. Weinstein
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
A high-resolution, stationary geophysical and geochemical survey was conducted at Dor Beach, Israel, to examine the shallow coastal hydrogeology and its control on the exchange of submarine groundwater with the shallow Mediterranean Sea. Time-series resistivity profiles using a new 56 electrode (112-m long) marine cable produced detailed profiles of the...
Erosion rates at the Mars Exploration Rover landing sites and long-term climate change on Mars
M.P. Golombek, J. A. Grant, L.S. Crumpler, R. Greeley, R. E. Arvidson, J.F. Bell III, C.M. Weitz, R.J. Sullivan, P. R. Christensen, L.A. Soderblom, S. W. Squyres
2006, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (111)
Erosion rates derived from the Gusev cratered plains and the erosion of weak sulfates by saltating sand at Meridiani Planum are so slow that they argue that the present dry and desiccating environment has persisted since the Early Hesperian. In contrast, sedimentary rocks at Meridiani formed in the presence of...
Developing a bubble number-density paleoclimatic indicator for glacier ice
M. K. Spencer, R. B. Alley, J. J. Fitzpatrick
2006, Journal of Glaciology (52) 358-364
Past accumulation rate can be estimated from the measured number-density of bubbles in an ice core and the reconstructed paleotemperature, using a new technique. Density increase and grain growth in polar firn are both controlled by temperature and accumulation rate, and the integrated effects are recorded in the number-density of...
The Model Parameter Estimation Experiment (MOPEX): Its structure, connection to other international initiatives and future directions
T. Wagener, T. Hogue, J. Schaake, Q. Duan, H. Gupta, V. Andreassian, A. Hall, G. Leavesley
2006, IAHS-AISH Publication 339-346
The Model Parameter Estimation Experiment (MOPEX) is an international project aimed at developing enhanced techniques for the a priori estimation of parameters in hydrological models and in land surface parameterization schemes connected to atmospheric models. The MOPEX science strategy involves: database creation, a priori parameter estimation methodology development, parameter refinement...