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The composition of coexisting jarosite-group minerals and water from the Richmond mine, Iron Mountain, California
Heather E. Jamieson, Clare Robinson, Charles N. Alpers, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Alexei Poustovetov, Heather A. Lowers
2005, Canadian Mineralogist (43) 1225-1242
Jarosite-group minerals accumulate in the form of stalactites and fine-grained mud on massive pyrite in the D drift of the Richmond mine, Iron Mountain, California. Water samples were collected by placing beakers under the dripping stalactites and by extracting pore water from the mud using a centrifuge. The water is...
Influence of topographic complexity on solar insolation estimates for the Colorado River, Grand Canyon, AZ
M.D. Yard, G.E. Bennett, S.N. Mietz, L.G. Coggins Jr., L.E. Stevens, S. Hueftle, D.W. Blinn
2005, Ecological Modelling (183) 157-172
Rugged topography along the Colorado River in Glen and Grand Canyons, exemplifies features common to canyon-bound streams and rivers of the arid southwest. Physical relief influences regulated river systems, especially those that are altered, and have become partially reliant on aquatic primary production. We measured and modeled instantaneous solar flux...
Exposing extinction risk analysis to pathogens: Is disease just another form of density dependence?
Leah R. Gerber, Hamish McCallum, Kevin D. Lafferty, John L. Sabo, Andy Dobson
2005, Ecological Applications (15) 1402-1414
In the United States and several other countries, the development of population viability analyses (PVA) is a legal requirement of any species survival plan developed for threatened and endangered species. Despite the importance of pathogens in natural populations, little attention has been given to host-pathogen dynamics in PVA. To study...
Earthquake and ambient vibration monitoring of the steel-frame UCLA factor building
M.D. Kohler, P.M. Davis, E. Safak
2005, Earthquake Spectra (21) 715-736
Dynamic property measurements of the moment-resisting steel-frame University of California, Los Angeles, Factor building are being made to assess how forces are distributed over the building. Fourier amplitude spectra have been calculated from several intervals of ambient vibrations, a 24-hour period of strong winds, and from the 28 March 2003...
Numerical simulation of double‐diffusive finger convection
Joseph D. Hughes, Ward E. Sanford, H. Leonard Vacher
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
A hybrid finite element, integrated finite difference numerical model is developed for the simulation of double‐diffusive and multicomponent flow in two and three dimensions. The model is based on a multidimensional, density‐dependent, saturated‐unsaturated transport model (SUTRA), which uses one governing equation for fluid flow and another for solute transport. The...
Simulation of reactive transport of injected CO2 on the Colorado Plateau, Utah, USA
S.P. White, R.G. Allis, Jeff Moore, T. Chidsey, C. Morgan, W. Gwynn, M. Adams
2005, Chemical Geology (217) 387-405
This paper investigates injection of CO2 into non-dome-shaped geological structures that do not provide the traps traditionally deemed necessary for the development of artificial CO2 reservoirs. We have developed a conceptual and two numerical models of the geology and groundwater along a cross-section lying approximately NW-SE and in the vicinity...
Influence of sediment storage on downstream delivery of contaminated sediment
Daniel V. Malmon, Steven L. Reneau, Thomas Dunne, Danny Katzman, Paul G. Drakos
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
Sediment storage in alluvial valleys can strongly modulate the downstream migration of sediment and associated contaminants through landscapes. Traditional methods for routing contaminated sediment through valleys focus on in‐channel sediment transport but ignore the influence of sediment exchanges with temporary sediment storage reservoirs outside the channel, such as floodplains. In...
Responses of hybrid striped bass to waterborne and dietary copper in freshwater and saltwater
G.K. Bielmyer, D. Gatlin, J. Jeffery Isely, J. Tomasso, S.J. Klaine
2005, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C: Toxicology & Pharmacology (140) 131-137
Mechanisms of copper toxicity and consequences of exposure vary due to uptake route and ionoregulatory status. The goal of this research was to develop a model fish system to assess the influence of different Cu exposure routes (waterborne or dietary) on bioavailability, uptake, and effects in hybrid striped bass (Morone...
Grassland bird response to harvesting switchgrass as a biomass energy crop
A.M. Roth, D. W. Sample, C. A. Ribic, L. Paine, D.J. Undersander, G.A. Bartelt
2005, Biomass and Bioenergy (28) 490-498
The combustion of perennial grass biomass to generate electricity may be a promising renewable energy option. Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) grown as a biofuel has the potential to provide a cash crop for farmers and quality nesting cover for grassland birds. In southwestern Wisconsin (near lat. 42??52???, long. 90??08???), we investigated...
An empirical model for estimating annual consumption by freshwater fish populations
H. Liao, C.L. Pierce, J. G. Larscheid
2005, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (25) 525-532
Population consumption is an important process linking predator populations to their prey resources. Simple tools are needed to enable fisheries managers to estimate population consumption. We assembled 74 individual estimates of annual consumption by freshwater fish populations and their mean annual population size, 41 of which also included estimates of...
Small-scale, hydrogen-oxidizing-denitrifying bioreactor for treatment of nitrate-contaminated drinking water
R. L. Smith, S.P. Buckwalter, D.A. Repert, D.N. Miller
2005, Water Research (39) 2014-2023
Nitrate removal by hydrogen-coupled denitrification was examined using flow-through, packed-bed bioreactors to develop a small-scale, cost effective system for treating nitrate-contaminated drinking-water supplies. Nitrate removal was accomplished using a Rhodocyclus sp., strain HOD 5, isolated from a sole-source drinking-water aquifer. The autotrophic capacity of the purple non-sulfur photosynthetic bacterium made...
Three-dimensional variable-density flow simulation of a coastal aquifer in southern Oahu, Hawaii, USA
S. B. Gingerich, C.I. Voss
2005, Hydrogeology Journal (13) 436-450
Three-dimensional modeling of groundwater flow and solute transport in the Pearl Harbor aquifer, southern Oahu, Hawaii, shows that the readjustment of the freshwater–saltwater transition zone takes a long time following changes in pumping, irrigation, or recharge in the aquifer system. It takes about 50 years for the transition zone to...
3H/3He age data in assessing the susceptibility of wells to contamination
Andrew H. Manning, D. Kip Solomon, Susan A. Thiros
2005, Ground Water (43) 353-367
Regulatory agencies are becoming increasingly interested in using young–ground water dating techniques, such as the 3H/3He method, in assessing the susceptibility of public supply wells (PSWs) to contamination. However, recent studies emphasize that ground water samples of mixed age may be the norm, particularly from long-screened PSWs, and tracer-based “apparent” ages...
Testing for evidence of maternal effects among individuals and populations of white crappie
D.B. Bunnell, M.A. Scantland, R.A. Stein
2005, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (134) 607-619
For an increasing number of species, maternal characteristics have been correlated with the characteristics of their eggs or larvae at the individual level. Documenting these maternal effects at the population level, however, is uncommon. For white crappies Pomoxis annularis, we evaluated whether individual maternal effects on eggs existed and then...
Nitrogen controls on ecosystem carbon sequestration: a model implementation and application to Saskatchewan, Canada
J. Liu, D.T. Price, J.M. Chen
2005, Ecological Modelling (186) 178-195
A plant–soil nitrogen (N) cycling model was developed and incorporated into the Integrated BIosphere Simulator (IBIS) of Foley et al. [Foley, J.A., Prentice, I.C., Ramankutty, N., Levis, S., Pollard, D., Sitch, S., Haxeltine, A., 1996. An integrated biosphere model of land surface process, terrestrial carbon balance and vegetation dynamics. Global...
Seasonal to interannual morphodynamics along a high-energy dissipative littoral cell
P. Ruggiero, G. M. Kaminsky, G. Gelfenbaum, B. Voigt
2005, Journal of Coastal Research (21) 553-578
A beach morphology monitoring program was initiated during summer 1997 along the Columbia River littoral cell (CRLC) on the coasts of northwest Oregon and southwest Washington, USA. This field program documents the seasonal through interannual morphological variability of these high-energy dissipative beaches over a variety of spatial scales. Following the...
Albedo of the south pole on Mars determined by topographic forcing of atmosphere dynamics
Anthony Colaprete, Jeffrey R. Barnes, Robert M. Haberle, Jeffery L. Hollingsworth, Hugh H. Kieffer, Timothy N. Titus
2005, Nature (435) 184-188
The nature of the martian south polar cap has remained enigmatic since the first spacecraft observations. In particular, the presence of a perennial carbon dioxide ice cap, the formation of a vast area of black ‘slab ice’ known as the Cryptic region and the asymmetric springtime retreat of the cap...
Investigating surface water-well interaction using stable isotope ratios of water
R. J. Hunt, T.B. Coplen, N.L. Haas, D. A. Saad, M. A. Borchardt
2005, Journal of Hydrology (302) 154-172
Because surface water can be a source of undesirable water quality in a drinking water well, an understanding of the amount of surface water and its travel time to the well is needed to assess a well's vulnerability. Stable <a title="Learn more about isotope ratios"...
Centrarchid assemblages in Mississippi state-operated fishing lakes
J.A. Olive, L.E. Miranda, W.D. Hubbard
2005, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (25) 7-15
We evaluated electrofishing catch per effort in 27 state-operated fishing lakes in Mississippi to identify patterns of centrarchid community composition and to determine whether those patterns were related to selected environmental characteristics and to artificial nutrient enrichment. Ordination with detrended correspondence analysis recognized two major axes accounting for 77% of...
The controlling effect of viscous dissipation on magma flow in silicic conduits
L.G. Mastin
2005, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (143) 17-28
Nearly all volcanic conduit models assume that flow is Newtonian and isothermal. Such models predict that, during high-flux silicic eruptions, gradients in pressure with depth increase upward as magma accelerates and becomes more viscous, leading to extremely low pressure and fragmentation at a depth of kilometers below the surface. In...
Reserve growth in oil fields of the North Sea
T. R. Klett, D. L. Gautier
2005, Petroleum Geoscience (11) 179-190
The assessment of petroleum resources of the North Sea, as well as other areas of the world, requires a viable means to forecast the amount of growth of reserve estimates (reserve growth) for discovered fields and to predict the potential fully developed sizes of undiscovered fields. This study investigates the...
Seismic precursory patterns before a cliff collapse and critical point phenomena
D. Amitrano, J.-R. Grasso, G. Senfaute
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-5
We analyse the statistical pattern of seismicity before a 1-2 103 m3 chalk cliff collapse on the Normandie ocean shore, Western France. We show that a power law acceleration of seismicity rate and energy in both 40 Hz-1.5 kHz and 2 Hz-10kHz frequency range, is defined on 3 orders of...
Experimental and geochemical evidence for derivation of the El Capitan Granite, California, by partial melting of hydrous gabbroic lower crust
K. Ratajeski, T. W. Sisson, A. F. Glazner
2005, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (149) 713-734
Partial melting of mafic intrusions recently emplaced into the lower crust can produce voluminous silicic magmas with isotopic ratios similar to their mafic sources. Low-temperature (825 and 850°C) partial melts synthesized at 700 MPa in biotite-hornblende gabbros from the central Sierra Nevada batholith (Sisson et al. in Contrib Mineral Petrol 148:635–661,...
Numerical modeling of an estuary: A comprehensive skill assessment
J.C. Warner, W.R. Geyer, J.A. Lerczak
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (110) 1-13
Numerical simulations of the Hudson River estuary using a terrain-following, three-dimensional model (Regional Ocean Modeling System (ROMS)) are compared with an extensive set of time series and spatially resolved measurements over a 43 day period with large variations in tidal forcing and river discharge. The model is particularly effective at...
Habitat restoration as a means of controlling non-native fish in a Mojave desert Oasis
G.G. Scoppettone, P.H. Rissler, C. Gourley, C. Martinez
2005, Restoration Ecology (13) 247-256
Non-native fish generally cause native fish decline, and once non-natives are established, control or elimination is usually problematic. Because non-native fish colonization has been greatest in anthropogenically altered habitats, restoring habitat similar to predisturbance conditions may offer a viable means of non-native fish control. In this investigation we identified habitats...