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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
New U-series dates at the Caune de l'Arago, France
Christophe Falgueres, Y. Yokoyama, G. Shen, James L. Bischoff, T.-L. Ku, Henry de Lumley
2004, Journal of Archaeological Science (31) 941-952
In the beginning of the 1980s, the Caune de l'Arago was the focus of an interdisciplinary effort to establish the chronology of the Homo heidelbergensis (Preneandertals) fossils using a variety of techniques on bones and on speleothems. The result was a very large spread of dates particularly on bone samples....
A visual basic program to generate sediment grain-size statistics and to extrapolate particle distributions
L.J. Poppe, A.H. Eliason, M. E. Hastings
2004, Computers & Geosciences (30) 791-795
Measures that describe and summarize sediment grain-size distributions are important to geologists because of the large amount of information contained in textural data sets. Statistical methods are usually employed to simplify the necessary comparisons among samples and quantify the observed differences. The two statistical methods most commonly used by sedimentologists...
Swimming performance of upstream migrant fishes in open-channel flow: A new approach to predicting passage through velocity barriers
A. Haro, T. Castro-Santos, J. Noreika, M. Odeh
2004, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (61) 1590-1601
The ability to traverse barriers of high-velocity flow limits the distributions of many diadromous and other migratory fish species, yet very few data exist that quantify this ability. We provide a detailed analysis of sprint swimming ability of six migratory fish species (American shad (Alosa sapidissima), alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), blueback...
Effect of bird maneuver on frequency-domain helicopter EM response
D.V. Fitterman, C. Yin
2004, Geophysics (69) 1203-1215
Bird maneuver, the rotation of the coil-carrying instrument pod used for frequency-domain helicopter electromagnetic surveys, changes the nominal geometric relationship between the bird-coil system and the ground. These changes affect electromagnetic coupling and can introduce errors in helicopter electromagnetic, (HEM) data. We analyze these effects for a layered half-space for...
Comparing population size estimators for plethodontid salamanders
L.L. Bailey, T.R. Simons, K. H. Pollock
2004, Journal of Herpetology (38) 370-380
Despite concern over amphibian declines, few studies estimate absolute abundances because of logistic and economic constraints and previously poor estimator performance. Two estimation approaches recommended for amphibian studies are mark-recapture and depletion (or removal) sampling. We compared abundance estimation via various mark-recapture and depletion methods, using data from a three-year...
Predicting patterns of non-native plant invasions in Yosemite National Park, California, USA
E.C. Underwood, R. Klinger, P.E. Moore
2004, Diversity and Distributions (10) 447-459
One of the major issues confronting management of parks and reserves is the invasion of non-native plant species. Yosemite National Park is one of the largest and best-known parks in the United States, harbouring significant cultural and ecological resources. Effective management of non-natives would be greatly assisted by information on...
The effects of habitat resolution on models of avian diversity and distributions: A comparison of two land-cover classifications
Joshua J. Lawler, Raymond. J. O’Connor, Carolyn T. Hunsaker, K. Bruce Jones, Thomas R. Loveland, Denis White
2004, Landscape Ecology (19) 517-532
Quantifying patterns is a key element of landscape analysis. One aspect of this quantification of particular importance to landscape ecologists is the classification of continuous variables to produce categorical variables such as land-cover type or elevation stratum. Although landscape ecologists are fully aware of the importance of spatial resolution in...
Tectonic histories between Alba Patera and Syria Planum, Mars
R. C. Anderson, J. M. Dohm, A. F. C. Haldemann, T.M. Hare, V.R. Baker
2004, Icarus (171) 31-38
Syria Planum and Alba Patera are two of the most prominent features of magmatic-driven activity identified for the Tharsis region and perhaps for all of Mars. In this study, we have performed a Geographic Information System-based comparative investigation of their tectonic histories using published geologic map information and Mars Orbiter...
Importance of storm events in controlling ecosystem structure and function in a Florida Gulf Coast estuary
Stephen E Davis, J.E. Cable, D.L. Childers, C. Coronado-Molina, J.W. Day, C.D. Hittle, C.J. Madden, E. Reyes, D. Rudnick, F. Sklar
2004, Journal of Coastal Research (20) 1198-1208
From 8/95 to 2/01, we investigated the ecological effects of intra- and inter-annual variability in freshwater flow through Taylor Creek in southeastern Everglades National Park. Continuous monitoring and intensive sampling studies overlapped with an array of pulsed weather events that impacted physical, chemical, and biological attributes of this region. We...
Annual layers revealed by GPR in the subsurface of a prograding coastal barrier, southwest Washington, U.S.A
L. J. Moore, H.M. Jol, S. Kruse, S. Vanderburgh, G. M. Kaminsky
2004, Journal of Sedimentary Research (74) 690-696
The southwest Washington coastline has experienced extremely high rates of progradation during the late Holocene. Subsurface stratigraphy, preserved because of progradation and interpreted using ground-penetrating radar (GPR), has previously been used successfully to document coastal response to prehistoric storm and earthquake events. New GPR data collected at Ocean Shores, Washington,...
Habitat restoration across large areas: Assessing wildlife responses in the Clearwater basin, Idaho
L.K. Scanvara, G. Servheen, W. Melquist, D. Davis, J. M. Scott
2004, Western Journal of Applied Forestry (19) 123-132
Over the past century, fire suppression and prevention have altered disturbance regimes across the Pacific Northwest, resulting in a significant divergence of historical and current conditions in forested habitats. To address this continuing trend in habitat changes and begin restoring historical patterns of disturbance, the Clearwater Basin Elk Habitat Initiative...
A resampling procedure for generating conditioned daily weather sequences
Martyn P. Clark, Subhrendu Gangopadhyay, David Brandon, Kevin Werner, Lauren E. Hay, Balaji Rajagopalan, David Yates
2004, Water Resources Research (40)
A method is introduced to generate conditioned daily precipitation and temperature time series at multiple stations. The method resamples data from the historical record “nens” times for the period of interest (nens = number of ensemble members) and reorders the ensemble members to reconstruct the observed spatial (intersite) and temporal...
Autumn migration and wintering areas of Peregrine Falcons Falco peregrinus nesting on the Kola Peninsula, northern Russia
S.A. Ganusevich, T.L. Maechtle, W.S. Seegar, M.A. Yates, M.J. McGrady, M. Fuller, L. Schueck, J. Dayton, Charles J. Henny
2004, Ibis (146) 291-297
Four female Peregrine Falcons Falco peregrinus breeding on the Kola Peninsula, Russia, were fitted with satellite-received transmitters in 1994. Their breeding home ranges averaged 1175 (sd = ±714) km2, and overlapped considerably. All left their breeding grounds in September and migrated generally south-west along the Baltic Sea. The mean travel rate for three...
Composition, dynamics, and fate of leached dissolved organic matter in terrestrial ecosystems: Results from a decomposition experiment
C.C. Cleveland, J. C. Neff, A.R. Townsend, E. Hood
2004, Ecosystems (7) 275-285
Fluxes of dissolved organic matter (DOM) are an important vector for the movement of carbon (C) and nutrients both within and between ecosystems. However, although DOM fluxes from throughfall and through litterfall can be large, little is known about the fate of DOM leached from plant canopies, or from the...
Upper crustal structure from the Santa Monica Mountains to the Sierra Nevada, Southern California: Tomographic results from the Los Angeles Regional Seismic Experiment, Phase II (LARSE II)
W. J. Lutter, G. S. Fuis, T. Ryberg, D. A. Okaya, R.W. Clayton, P.M. Davis, C. Prodehl, J.M. Murphy, V.E. Langenheim, M.L. Benthien, N. J. Godfrey, N.I. Christensen, K. Thygesen, C.H. Thurber, G. Simila, Gordon R. Keller
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 619-632
In 1999, the U.S. Geological Survey and the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) collected refraction and low-fold reflection data along a 150-km-long corridor extending from the Santa Monica Mountains northward to the Sierra Nevada. This profile was part of the second phase of the Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment (LARSE...
Investigating the Macrodispersion Experiment (MADE) site in Columbus, Mississippi, using a three‐dimensional inverse flow and transport model
Heidi Christiansen Barlebo, Mary C. Hill, Dan Rosbjerg
2004, Water Resources Research (40)
Flowmeter‐measured hydraulic conductivities from the heterogeneous MADE site have been used predictively in advection‐dispersion models. Resulting simulated concentrations failed to reproduce even major plume characteristics and some have concluded that other mechanisms, such as dual porosity, are important. Here an alternative possibility is investigated: that the small‐scale flowmeter measurements are...
An alternative approach to detection of length-related biases in standard weight equations
K.G. Gerow, W.A. Hubert, R. C. Anderson-Sprecher
2004, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (24) 903-910
We propose a new method for assessing length-related biases in standard weight (Ws) equations computed by the regression-line-percentile method. We evaluated the performance of the new method relative to two previous methods for assessing length-related biases using 15 data sets from which W s equations have been computed. The new...
Optimizing correlation techniques for improved earthquake location
David P. Schaff, G. H. R. Bokelmann, William L. Ellsworth, E. Zanzerkia, Felix Waldhauser, Gregory C. Beroza
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 705-721
Earthquake location using relative arrival time measurements can lead to dramatically reduced location errors and a view of fault-zone processes with unprecedented detail. There are two principal reasons why this approach reduces location errors. The first is that the use of differenced arrival times to solve for the vector separation...
Hydrochemical tracers in the middle Rio Grande Basin, USA: 1. Conceptualization of groundwater flow
Niel Plummer, L. M. Bexfield, S. K. Anderholm, W. E. Sanford, E. Busenberg
2004, Hydrogeology Journal (12) 359-388
Chemical and isotopic data for groundwater from throughout the Middle Rio Grande Basin, central New Mexico, USA, were used to identify and map groundwater flow from 12 sources of water to the basin, evaluate radiocarbon ages, and refine the conceptual model of the Santa Fe Group aquifer system.Hydrochemical...
A teleseismic study of the 2002 Denali fault, Alaska, earthquake and implications for rapid strong-motion estimation
C. Ji, D.V. Helmberger, D.J. Wald
2004, Earthquake Spectra (20) 617-637
Slip histories for the 2002 M7.9 Denali fault, Alaska, earthquake are derived rapidly from global teleseismic waveform data. In phases, three models improve matching waveform data and recovery of rupture details. In the first model (Phase I), analogous to an automated solution, a simple fault plane is fixed based on...
Geophysical modeling of the northern Appalachian Brompton-Cameron, Central Maine, and Avalon terranes under the New Jersey Coastal Plain
T.J. Maguire, R. E. Sheridan, R.A. Volkert
2004, Journal of Geodynamics (37) 457-485
A regional terrane map of the New Jersey Coastal Plain basement was constructed using seismic, drilling, gravity and magnetic data. The Brompton-Cameron and Central Maine terranes were coalesced as one volcanic island arc terrane before obducting onto Laurentian, Grenville age, continental crust in the Taconian orogeny [Rankin, D.W., 1994. Continental...
Movements and habitat use by PIT-tagged Atlantic salmon parr in early winter: The influence of anchor ice
J.-M. Roussel, R.A. Cunjak, R. Newbury, D. Caissie, A. Haro
2004, Freshwater Biology (49) 1026-1035
1. Movements and habitat use by Atlantic salmon parr in Catamaran Brook, New Brunswick, were studied using Passive Integrated Transponder technology. The fish were tagged in the summer of 1999, and a portable reading system was used to collect data on individual positions within a riffle-pool sequence in the early...
An evaluation of the individual components and accuracies associated with the determination of impervious area
E.T. Slonecker, J.S. Tilley
2004, GIScience and Remote Sensing (41) 165-184
The percentage of impervious surface area in a watershed has been widely recognized as a key indicator of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem condition. Although the use of the impervious indicator is widespread, there is currently no consistent or mutually accepted method of computing impervious area and the approach of various...
An automated approach to mapping corn from Landsat imagery
S.K. Maxwell, J.R. Nuckols, M.H. Ward, R.M. Hoffer
2004, Computers and Electronics in Agriculture (43) 43-54
Most land cover maps generated from Landsat imagery involve classification of a wide variety of land cover types, whereas some studies may only need spatial information on a single cover type. For example, we required a map of corn in order to estimate exposure to agricultural chemicals for an environmental...
Spatial variations in the frequency-magnitude distribution of earthquakes at Mount Pinatubo volcano
J.J. Sanchez, S.R. McNutt, J.A. Power, M. Wyss
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 430-438
The frequency-magnitude distribution of earthquakes measured by the b-value is mapped in two and three dimensions at Mount Pinatubo, Philippines, to a depth of 14 km below the summit. We analyzed 1406 well-located earthquakes with magnitudes MD ???0.73, recorded from late June through August 1991, using the maximum likelihood method....