Scaling uncertainties in estimating canopy foliar maintenance respiration for black spruce ecosystems in Alaska
X. Zhang, A. D. McGuire, Roger W. Ruess
2006, Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change (11) 147-174
A major challenge confronting the scientific community is to understand both patterns of and controls over spatial and temporal variability of carbon exchange between boreal forest ecosystems and the atmosphere. An understanding of the sources of variability of carbon processes at fine scales and how these contribute to uncertainties in...
Source apportionment modeling of volatile organic compounds in streams
J. F. Pankow, W.E. Asher, J.S. Zogorski
2006, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (25) 921-932
It often is of interest to understand the relative importance of the different sources contributing to the concentration cw of a contaminant in a stream; the portions related to sources 1, 2, 3, etc. are denoted cw,1, cw,2, cw,3, etc. Like c w, 'he fractions ??1, = cw,1/c w, ??2...
Characterization of unsaturated zone hydrogeologic units using matrix properties and depositional history in a complex volcanic environment
Lorraine E. Flint, David C. Buesch, Alan L. Flint
2006, Vadose Zone Journal (5) 480-492
Characterization of the physical and unsaturated hydrologic properties of subsurface materials is necessary to calculate flow and transport for land use practices and to evaluate subsurface processes such as perched water or lateral diversion of water, which are influenced by features such as faults, fractures, and abrupt changes in lithology....
Spatial structures of stream and hillslope drainage networks following gully erosion after wildfire
J. A. Moody, D.A. Kinner
2006, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (31) 319-337
The drainage networks of catchment areas burned by wildfire were analysed at several scales. The smallest scale (1-1000 m2) representative of hillslopes, and the small scale (1000 m2 to 1 km2), representative of small catchments, were characterized by the analysis of field measurements. The large scale (1-1000 km2), representative of...
U-Pb SHRIMP geochronology and trace-element geochemistry of coesite-bearing zircons, North-East Greenland Caledonides
W.C. McClelland, S.E. Power, J. A. Gilotti, F.K. Mazdab, B. Wopenka
2006, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 23-43
Obtaining reliable estimates for the timing of eclogite-facies metamorphism is critical to establishing models for the formation and exhumation of high-pressure and ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) metamorphic terranes in collisional orogens. The presence of pressure-dependent phases, such as coesite, included in metamorphic zircon is generally regarded as evidence that zircon growth occurred...
Population momentum: Implications for wildlife management
D. N. Koons, R.F. Rockwell, J.B. Grand
2006, Journal of Wildlife Management (70) 19-26
Maintenance of sustainable wildlife populations is one of the primary purposes of wildlife management. Thus, it is important to monitor and manage population growth over time. Sensitivity analysis of the long-term (i.e., asymptotic) population growth rate to changes in the vital rates is commonly used in management to identify the...
Factors determining Pochard nest predation along a wetland gradient
T. Albrecht, D. Horak, J. Kreisinger, K. Weidinger, P. Klvana, T.C. Michot
2006, Journal of Wildlife Management (70) 784-791
Waterfowl management on breeding grounds focuses on improving nest success, but few studies have compared waterfowl nest success and factors affecting nest survival along a wetland gradient and simultaneously identified nest predators. We monitored nests (n = 195) of common pochards (Aythya ferina) in Trebon Basin Biosphere Reserve, Czech...
A Lower Carboniferous two-stage extensional basin along the Avalon-Meguma terrane boundary: Evidence from southeastern Isle Madame, Nova Scotia
Eric R. Force, S. M. Barr
2006, Atlantic Geology (42) 53-68
Anomalously thick and coarse clastic sedimentary successions, including over 5000 m of conglomerate, are exposed on Isle Madame off the southern coast of Cape Breton island. Two steeply to moderately dipping stratigraphic packages are recognized: one involving Horton and lower Windsor groups (Tournasian–Visean); the other involving upper Windsor and Mabou...
Thermodynamic calculations in the system CH4-H2O and methane hydrate phase equilibria
S. Circone, S. H. Kirby, L.A. Stern
2006, Journal of Physical Chemistry B (110) 8232-8239
Using the Gibbs function of reaction, equilibrium pressure, temperature conditions for the formation of methane clathrate hydrate have been calculated from the thermodynamic properties of phases in the system CH4-H 2O. The thermodynamic model accurately reproduces the published phase-equilibria data to within ??2 K of the observed equilibrium boundaries in...
Flow convergence caused by a salinity minimum in a tidal channel
John C. Warner, David H. Schoellhamer, Jon R. Burau, S. Geoffrey Schladow
2006, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (4) 91-102
Residence times of dissolved substances and sedimentation rates in tidal channels are affected by residual (tidally averaged) circulation patterns. One influence on these circulation patterns is the longitudinal density gradient. In most estuaries the longitudinal density gradient typically maintains a constant direction. However, a junction of tidal channels can create...
Cumulative uncertainty in measured streamflow and water quality data for small watersheds
R. D. Harmel, R.J. Cooper, R.M. Slade, R.L. Haney, J.G. Arnold
2006, Transactions of the ASABE (49) 689-701
The scientific community has not established an adequate understanding of the uncertainty inherent in measured water quality data, which is introduced by four procedural categories: streamflow measurement, sample collection, sample preservation/storage, and laboratory analysis. Although previous research has produced valuable information on relative differences in procedures within these categories, little...
Distribution of stress drop, stiffness, and fracture energy over earthquake rupture zones
Joe B. Fletcher, Art McGarr
2006, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (111)
Using information provided by slip models and the methodology of McGarr and Fletcher (2002), we map static stress drop, stiffness (k = ????/u, where ???? is static stress drop and u is slip), and fracture energy over the slip surface to investigate the earthquake rupture process and energy budget. For...
Basic concepts for the linear model of ground water level recession
A. T. Rutledge
2006, Ground Water (44) 483-487
Basic concepts are illustrated for the display of ground water level recession as a linear plot on a semilog graph, as first described by Rorabaugh. This exponential decay function can be achieved if there is a definable outflow boundary such as a lake or river and if water levels are...
Channel formation by flow stripping: large-scale scour features along the Monterey East Channel and their relation to sediment waves
A. Fildani, W. R. Normark, S. Kostic, G. Parker
2006, Sedimentology (53) 1265-1287
The Monterey East system is formed by large-scale sediment waves deposited as a result of flows stripped from the deeply incised Monterey fan valley (Monterey Channel) at the apex of the Shepard Meander. The system is dissected by a linear series of steps that take the form of scour-shaped depressions...
Large rock avalanches triggered by the M 7.9 Denali Fault, Alaska, earthquake of 3 November 2002
R.W. Jibson, E. L. Harp, W. Schulz, D. K. Keefer
2006, Engineering Geology (83) 144-160
The moment magnitude (M) 7.9 Denali Fault, Alaska, earthquake of 3 November 2002 triggered thousands of landslides, primarily rock falls and rock slides, that ranged in volume from rock falls of a few cubic meters to rock avalanches having volumes as great as 20 ?? 106 m3. The pattern of...
Real-time monitoring and massive inversion of source parameters of very long period seismic signals: An application to Stromboli Volcano, Italy
E. Auger, L. D’Auria, M. Martini, B. Chouet, P. Dawson
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
We present a comprehensive processing tool for the real‐time analysis of the source mechanism of very long period (VLP) seismic data based on waveform inversions performed in the frequency domain for a point source. A search for the source providing the best‐fitting solution is conducted over a three‐dimensional grid of...
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...
Modelling river discharge and precipitation from estuarine salinity in the northern Chesapeake Bay: Application to Holocene palaeoclimate
C. Saenger, T. Cronin, R. Thunell, C. Vann
2006, Holocene (16) 467-477
Long-term chronologies of precipitation can provide a baseline against which twentieth-century trends in rainfall can be evaluated in terms of natural variability and anthropogenic influence. However, there are relatively few methods to quantitatively reconstruct palaeoprecipitation and river discharge compared with proxies of other climatic factors, such as temperature. We developed...
The Cretaceous Tetori biota in Japan and its evolutionary significance for terrestrial ecosystems in Asia
M. Matsukawa, M. Ito, N. Nishida, K. Koarai, M.G. Lockley, D. J. Nichols
2006, Cretaceous Research (27) 199-225
Cretaceous nonmarine deposits are widely distributed on the Asian continent and include various kinds of zoo- and phyto-assemblages. The Tetori Group is one of the most important Mesozoic terrestrial deposits in East Asia, and for this reason its geology, stratigraphy, and biota have been studied intensively by our group for...
Inflation model of Uzon caldera, Kamchatka, constrained by satellite radar interferometry observations
Paul Lundgren, Zhong Lu
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
We analyzed RADARSAT-1 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data to compute interferometric SAR (InSAR) images of surface deformation at Uzon caldera, Kamchatka, Russia. From 2000 to 2003 approximately 0.15 m of inflation occurred at Uzon caldera, extending beneath adjacent Kikhpinych volcano. This contrasts with InSAR data showing no significant deformation during...
Containing arsenic-enriched groundwater tracing lead isotopic compositions of common arsenical pesticides in a coastal Maine watershed
Robert A. Ayuso, Nora K. Foley, Glipin R. Robinson Jr., A.S. Colvin, G. Lipfert, A.S. Reeve
2006, Conference Paper, Association for Environmental Health and Sciences - 21st Annual International Conference on Contaminated Soils, Sediments and Water
Arsenical pesticides and herbicides were extensively used on apple, blueberry, and potato crops in New England during the first half of the twentieth century. Lead arsenate was the most heavily used arsenical pesticide until it was officially banned. Lead arsenate, calcium arsenate, and sodium arsenate have similar Pb isotope compositions:...
Evidence for preferential flow through sandstone aquifers in Southern Wisconsin
S.K. Swanson, J.M. Bahr, K. R. Bradbury, K.M. Anderson
2006, Sedimentary Geology (184) 331-342
Sandstones often escape extensive hydrogeologic characterization due to their high primary porosity and perceived homogeneity of permeability. This study provides evidence for laterally extensive, high permeability zones in the Tunnel City Group, an undeformed, Cambrian-aged sandstone unit that exists in the subsurface throughout much of central and southern Wisconsin, USA....
Wild bird mortality and West Nile virus surveillance: Biases associated with detection, reporting, and carcass persistence
M.R. Ward, D.E. Stallknecht, J. Willis, M.J. Conroy, W.R. Davidson
2006, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (42) 92-106
Surveillance targeting dead wild birds, in particular American crows (Corvus brachyrhynchos), plays a critical role in West Nile virus (WNV) surveillance in the United States. Using crow decoy surrogates, detection and reporting of crow carcasses within urban and rural environments of DeKalb County, Georgia were assessed for potential biases that...
Quaternary fans and terraces in the Khumbu Himal south of Mount Everest: their characteristics, age and formation
P.L. Barnard, L.A. Owen, R.C. Finkel
2006, Journal of the Geological Society (163) 383-399
Large fans and terraces are frequent in the Khumbu Himal within the high Himalayan valleys south of Mt. Everest. These features are composed of massive matrix- and clast-supported diamicts that were formed from both hyperconcentrated flows and coarse-grained debris flows. Cosmogenic radionuclide (CRN) exposure ages for boulders on fans and...
Bromus tectorum invasion alters nitrogen dynamics in an undisturbed arid grassland ecosystem
L.J. Sperry, Jayne Belnap, R.D. Evans
2006, Ecology (87) 603-615
The nonnative annual grass Bromus tectorum has successfully replaced native vegetation in many arid and semiarid ecosystems. Initial introductions accompanied grazing and agriculture, making it difficult to separate the effects of invasion from physical disturbance. This study examined N dynamics in two recently invaded, undisturbed vegetation associations...