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Electrical resistance sensors record spring flow timing, Grand Canyon, Arizona
E.A. Adams, S. A. Monroe, Abraham E. Springer, K.W. Blasch, D. J. Bills
2006, Ground Water (44) 630-641
Springs along the south rim of the Grand Canyon, Arizona, are important ecological and cultural resources in Grand Canyon National Park and are discharge points for regional and local aquifers of the Coconino Plateau. This study evaluated the applicability of electrical resistance (ER) sensors for measuring diffuse, low-stage (<1.0 cm)...
A search for scale in sea-level studies
C.E. Larsen, I. Clark
2006, Journal of Coastal Research (22) 788-800
Many researchers assume a proportional relationship among the atmospheric CO2 concentration, temperature, and sea level. Thus, the rate of sea-level rise should increase in concert with the documented exponential increase in CO2. Although sea surface temperature has increased in places over the past century and short-term sea level rose abruptly...
Determining anisotropic transmissivity using a simplified Papadopulos method
V.M. Heilweil, P. A. Hsieh
2006, Ground Water (44) 749-753
The straight-line method presented by Papadopulos requires a minimum of three observation wells for determining the transmissivity tensor of a homogeneous and anisotropic aquifer. A simplification of this method was developed for fractured aquifers where the principal directions of the transmissivity tensor are known prior to implementation, such as when...
Two years at Meridiani Planum: Results from the Opportunity Rover
S. W. Squyres, A.H. Knoll, R. E. Arvidson, B. C. Clark, J.P. Grotzinger, B.L. Jolliff, S. M. McLennan, N. Tosca, J.F. Bell III, W. M. Calvin, W. H. Farrand, T.D. Glotch, M.P. Golombek, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff, J. R. Johnson, G. Klingelhofer, H.Y. McSween, A. S. Yen
2006, Science (313) 1403-1407
The Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has spent more than 2 years exploring Meridiani Planum, traveling ∼8 kilometers and detecting features that reveal ancient environmental conditions. These include well-developed festoon (trough) cross-lamination formed in flowing liquid water, strata with smaller and more abundant hematite-rich concretions than those seen previously, possible relict...
Phosphate oxygen isotope ratios as a tracer for sources and cycling of phosphate in North San Francisco Bay, California
K. McLaughlin, C. Kendall, S. R. Silva, M. Young, A. Paytan
2006, Journal of Geophysical Research G: Biogeosciences (111)
[1] A seasonal analysis assesing variations in the oxygen isotopic composition of dissolved inorganic phosphate (DIP) was conducted in the San Francisco Bay estuarine system, California. Isotopic fractionation of oxygen in DIP (exchange of oxygen between phosphate and environmental water) at surface water temperatures occurs only as...
Headward growth of chasmata by volatile outbursts, collapse, and drainage: Evidence from ganges chaos, Mars
J.A.P. Rodriguez, J. Kargel, D.A. Crown, L. F. Bleamaster III, K. L. Tanaka, V. Baker, H. Miyamoto, J. M. Dohm, S. Sasaki, G. Komatsu
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
The nature and significance of collapse processes in Capri, Eos, and Ganges Chasmata remain poorly understood. Using Ganges Chasma as a type locality, these chasmata are interpreted to be the result of clustering and assimilation of multiple chaotic terrains, which primarily formed by localized depressurization-induced or thermally-triggered dissociation of buried...
Relative contributions of transient and steady state infiltration during ephemeral streamflow
Kyle W. Blasch, Ty P.A. Ferré, John P. Hoffmann, John B. Fleming
2006, Water Resources Research (42)
Simulations of infiltration during three ephemeral streamflow events in a coarse‐grained alluvial channel overlying a less permeable basin‐fill layer were conducted to determine the relative contribution of transient infiltration at the onset of streamflow to cumulative infiltration for the event. Water content, temperature, and piezometric measurements from 2.5‐m vertical profiles...
Mountain hydrology of the western United States
Roger C. Bales, Noah P. Molotch, Thomas H. Painter, Michael D. Dettinger, Robert Rice, Jeff Dozier
2006, Water Resources Research (42)
Climate change and climate variability, population growth, and land use change drive the need for new hydrologic knowledge and understanding. In the mountainous West and other similar areas worldwide, three pressing hydrologic needs stand out: first, to better understand the processes controlling the partitioning of energy and water fluxes within...
Shallow stratigraphy and sedimentation history during high-frequency sea-level changes on the central California shelf
E. E. Grossman, S.L. Eittreim, M.E. Field, F. L. Wong
2006, Continental Shelf Research (26) 1217-1239
Analyses of high-resolution seismic-reflection data and sediment cores indicate that an extensive sediment deposit on the central California continental shelf is comprised of several late-Pleistocene to Holocene age facies. Offshore of the littoral zone, in water depths of 30-90 m, a 3-6 m thick veneer of fine sediment referred to...
Flooding on California's Russian River: Role of atmospheric rivers
F.M. Ralph, P.J. Neiman, G.A. Wick, S.I. Gutman, M. D. Dettinger, D.R. Cayan, A.B. White
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
Experimental observations collected during meteorological field studies conducted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration near the Russian River of coastal northern California are combined with SSM/I satellite observations offshore to examine the role of landfalling atmospheric rivers in the creation of flooding. While recent studies have documented the characteristics...
Phosphorus geochemistry of recent sediments in the South Basin of Lake Winnipeg
T. Mayer, S. L. Simpson, L. Harvey Thorleifson, W.L. Lockhart, Philip M. Wilkinson
2006, Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management (9) 307-318
Lake Winnipeg supports the largest commercial fishery on Canadian Prairies. It has been influenced by a variety of environmental forces and anthropogenic activities. To gain a better understanding of recent changes in nutrient status of the lake, it is important to reconstruct its previous history from sedimentary records. Lacustrine sediments...
Leaf gas exchange characteristics of three neotropical mangrove species in response to varying hydroperiod
Ken W. Krauss, Robert R. Twilley, Thomas W. Doyle, Emile S. Gardiner
2006, Tree Physiology (26) 959-968
We determined how different hydroperiods affected leaf gas exchange characteristics of greenhouse-grown seedlings (2002) and saplings (2003) of the mangrove species Avicennia germinans (L.) Stearn., Laguncularia racemosa (L.) Gaertn. f., and Rhizophora mangle L. Hydroperiod treatments included no flooding (unflooded), intermittent flooding (intermittent), and permanent flooding (flooded). Plants in the intermittent treatment were measured under both...
Fertilizer-derived uranium and sulfur in rangeland soil and runoff: A case study in central Florida
R. A. Zielinski, W. H. Orem, K. R. Simmons, P.J. Bohlen
2006, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (176) 163-183
Fertilizer applications to rangeland and pastures in central Florida have potential impact on the nutrient-sensitive ecosystems of Lake Okeechobee and the Northern Everglades. To investigate the effects of fertilizer applications, three soil profiles from variably managed and improved rangeland, and four samples of surface runoff from both fertilized and unfertilized...
Hurricanes, submarine groundwater discharge, and Florida's red tides
C. Hu, F. E. Muller-Karger, P.W. Swarzenski
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
A Karenia brevis Harmful Algal Bloom affected coastal waters shallower than 50 m off west-central Florida from January 2005 through January 2006, showing a sustained anomaly of ???1 mg chlorophyll m-3 over an area of up to 67,500 km2. Red tides occur in the same area (approximately 26-29??N, 82-83??W) almost...
Branch length mediates flower production and inflorescence architecture of Fouquieria splendens (ocotillo)
Janice E. Bowers
2006, Plant Ecology (186) 87-95
The capacity of individual branches to store water and fix carbon can have profound effects on inflorescence size and architecture, thus on floral display, pollination, and fecundity. Mixed regression was used to investigate the relation between branch length, a proxy for plant resources, and floral display of Fouquieria splendens (ocotillo),...
Design of a computerized, temperature-controlled, recirculating aquaria system
A.M. Widmer, C.J. Carveth, J.W. Keffler, Scott A. Bonar
2006, Aquacultural Engineering (35) 152-160
We built a recirculating aquaria system with computerized temperature control to maintain static temperatures, increase temperatures 1 ??C/day, and maintain diel temperature fluctuations up to 10 ??C. A LabVIEW program compared the temperature recorded by thermocouples in fish tanks to a desired set temperature and then calculated the amount of...
Impact of eutrophication on shallow marine benthic foraminifers over the last 150 years in Osaka Bay, Japan
Akira Tsujimoto, Ritsuo Nomura, Moriaki Yasuhara, Hideo Yamazaki, Shusaku Yoshikawa
2006, Marine Micropaleontology (60) 258-268
High-resolution foraminiferal analysis was conducted on a short sediment core from the inner part of Osaka Bay, Japan. Changes in foraminiferal assemblages were associated with eutrophication, bottom water hypoxia, and changes in red tide-causing algae. Before the 1920s, the calcareous species Ammonia beccarii, and the agglutinated species Eggerella advena and...
Chlorine toxicity to early life stages of freshwater mussels (Bivalvia: Unionidae)
T.W. Valenti, D.S. Cherry, R.J. Currie, R. J. Neves, J. W. Jones, R. Mair, C.M. Kane
2006, Conference Paper, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Chlorine (Cl) is a highly toxic, widely used halogen disinfectant that is present in point-source pollution discharges from wastewater treatment plants and industrial facilities. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency freshwater criteria for Cl are 19 ??g total residual Cl (TRC)/L as a maximum 1-h average concentration and 11 ??g TRC/L...
Macroinvertebrate abundance, water chemistry, and wetland characteristics affect use of wetlands by avian species in Maine
J. R. Longcore, D.G. McAuley, G.W. Pendelton, C. R. Bennatti, T.M. Mingo, K. L. Stromborg
2006, Hydrobiologia (567) 143-167
Our objective was to determine use by avian species (e.g., piscivores, marsh birds, waterfowl, selected passerines) of 29 wetlands in areas with low (<200 μeq l−1) acid-neutralizing capacity (ANC) in southeastern Maine. We documented bird, pair, and brood use during 1982–1984 and in 1982 we sampled 10 wetlands with a sweep net...
Nitrogen dynamics in sediment during water level manipulation on the Upper Mississippi River
Jennifer C. Cavanaugh, William B. Richardson, Eric A. Strauss, Lynn Bartsch
2006, River Research and Applications (22) 651-666
Nitrogen (N) has been linked to increasing eutrophication in the Gulf of Mexico and as a result there is increased interest in managing and improving water quality in the Mississippi River system. Water level reductions, or 'drawdowns', are being used more frequently in large river impoundments to improve vegetation growth...
A ubiquitous thermoacidophilic archaeon from deep-sea hydrothermal vents
A.-L. Reysenbach, Yajing Liu, A.B. Banta, T.J. Beveridge, J. D. Kirshtein, S. Schouten, M.K. Tivey, Karen L. Von Damm, M.A. Voytek
2006, Nature (442) 444-447
Deep-sea hydrothermal vents are important in global biogeochemical cycles, providing biological oases at the sea floor that are supported by the thermal and chemical flux from the Earth's interior. As hot, acidic and reduced hydrothermal fluids mix with cold, alkaline and oxygenated sea water, minerals precipitate to form porous sulphide-sulphate...
Oil-generation kinetics for organic facies with Type-II and -IIS kerogen in the Menilite Shales of the Polish Carpathians
M. D. Lewan, M.J. Kotarba, John B. Curtis, D. Wieclaw, P. Kosakowski
2006, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (70) 3351-3368
The Menilite Shales (Oligocene) of the Polish Carpathians are the source of low-sulfur oils in the thrust belt and some high-sulfur oils in the Carpathian Foredeep. These oil occurrences indicate that the high-sulfur oils in the Foredeep were generated and expelled before major thrusting and the low-sulfur oils in the...
Does life history predict risk-taking behavior of wintering dabbling ducks?
Joshua T. Ackerman, J.M. Eadie, T.G. Moore
2006, Condor (108) 530-546
Life-history theory predicts that longer-lived, less fecund species should take fewer risks when exposed to predation than shorter-lived, more fecund species. We tested this prediction for seven species of dabbling ducks (Anas) by measuring the approach behavior (behavior of ducks when approaching potential landing sites) of 1099 duck flocks during...
Evaluating uncertainty in predicting spatially variable representative elementary scales in fractured aquifers, with application to Turkey Creek Basin, Colorado
Tristan P. Wellman, Eileen P. Poeter
2006, Water Resources Research (42)
Computational limitations and sparse field data often mandate use of continuum representation for modeling hydrologic processes in large‐scale fractured aquifers. Selecting appropriate element size is of primary importance because continuum approximation is not valid for all scales. The traditional approach is to select elements by identifying a single representative elementary...
A survey of chemical constituents in National Fish Hatchery fish feed
Alec G. Maule, Ann Gannam, Jay Davis
2006, Report
Recent studies have demonstrated that various fish feeds contain significant concentrations of contaminants, many of which can bioaccumulate and bioconcentrate in fish. It appears that numerous organochlorine (OC) contaminants are present in the fish oils and fish meals used in feed manufacture, and some researchers speculate that all fish feeds...