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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Precarious rock and overturned transformer evidence for ground shaking in the Ms 7.7 Kern County earthquake: An analog for disastrous shaking from a major thrust fault in the Los Angeles basin
J.N. Brune, A. Anooshehpoor, B. Shi, Yen Zheng
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 1993-2003
Precariously balanced rocks and overturned transformers in the vicinity of the White Wolf fault provide constraints on ground motion during the 1952 Ms 7.7 Kern County earthquake, a possible analog for an anticipated large earthquake in the Los Angeles basin (Shaw et al., 2002; Dolan et al., 2003). On the...
Geophysical data reveal the crustal structure of the Alaska Range orogen within the aftershock zone of the Mw 7.9 Denali fault earthquake
M. A. Fisher, N. A. Ratchkovski, W. J. Nokleberg, L. Pellerin, J.M.G. Glen
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) S107-S131
Geophysical information, including deep-crustal seismic reflection, magnetotelluric (MT), gravity, and magnetic data, cross the aftershock zone of the 3 November 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali fault earthquake. These data and aftershock seismicity, jointly interpreted, reveal the crustal structure of the right-lateral-slip Denali fault and the eastern Alaska Range orogen, as well...
Comparison of geodetic and glaciological mass-balance techniques, Gulkana Glacier, Alaska, U.S.A
L.H. Cox, R.S. March
2004, Journal of Glaciology (50) 363-370
The net mass balance on Gulkana Glacier, Alaska, U.S.A., has been measured since 1966 by the glaciological method, in which seasonal balances are measured at three index sites and extrapolated over large areas of the glacier. Systematic errors can accumulate linearly with time in this method. Therefore, the geodetic balance,...
Triggered deformation and seismic activity under Mammoth Mountain in Long Valley caldera by the 3 November 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali fault earthquake
M.J.S. Johnston, S. G. Prejean, D.P. Hill
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) S360-S369
The 3 November 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali fault earthquake triggered deformational offsets and microseismicity under Mammoth Mountain (MM) on the rim of Long Valley caldera, California, some 3460 km from the earthquake. Such strain offsets and microseismicity were not recorded at other borehole strain sites along the San Andreas fault...
Emissions pathways, climate change, and impacts on California
K. Hayhoe, D. Cayan, C.B. Field, P.C. Frumhoff, E.P. Maurer, N.L. Miller, S.C. Moser, S.H. Schneider, K.N. Cahill, E.E. Cleland, L. Dale, R. Drapek, R.M. Hanemann, L.S. Kalkstein, J. Lenihan, C.K. Lunch, R.P. Neilson, S.C. Sheridan, J.H. Verville
2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (101) 12422-12427
The magnitude of future climate change depends substantially on the greenhouse gas emission pathways we choose. Here we explore the implications of the highest and lowest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emissions pathways for climate change and associated impacts in California. Based on climate projections from two state-of-the-art climate models...
Evaluation of ultrastructure and random effects band recovery models for estimating relationships between survival and harvest rates in exploited populations
David L. Otis, Gary C. White
2004, Animal Biodiversity and Conservation (27) 157-173
Increased population survival rate after an episode of seasonal exploitation is considered a type of compensatory population response. Lack of an increase is interpreted as evidence that exploitation results in added annual mortality in the population. Despite its importance to management of exploited species, there are limited statistical techniques for...
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,...
Simulating the dynamics of linear forests in Great Plains agroecosystems under changing climates
Q. Guo, J. Brandle, M. Schoeneberger, D. Buettner
2004, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (34) 2564-2572
Most forest growth models are not suitable for the highly fragmented, linear (or linearly shaped) forests in the Great Plains agroecosystems (e.g., windbreaks, riparian forest buffers), where such forests are a minor but ecologically important component of the land mosaics. This study used SEEDSCAPE, a recently modified gap model designed...
The effects of wavelet compression on Digital Elevation Models (DEMs)
M. J. Oimoen
2004, Conference Paper, 2004 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium proceedings
This paper investigates the effects of lossy compression on floating-point digital elevation models using the discrete wavelet transform. The compression of elevation data poses a different set of problems and concerns than does the compression of images. Most notably, the usefulness of DEMs depends largely in the quality of their...
Landscape scale measures of steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) bioenergetic growth rate potential in Lake Michigan and comparison with angler catch rates
T.O. Hook, E.S. Rutherford, Shannon J. Brines, C. A. Geddes, D.M. Mason, D.J. Schwab, G.W. Fleischer
2004, Journal of Great Lakes Research (30) 545-556
The relative quality of a habitat can influence fish consumption, growth, mortality, and production. In order to quantify habitat quality, several authors have combined bioenergetic and foraging models to generate spatially explicit estimates of fish growth rate potential (GRP). However, the capacity of GRP to reflect the spatial distributions of...
Winter orographic precipitation ratios in the Sierra Nevada: Large-scale atmospheric circulations and hydrologic consequences
M. Dettinger, K. Redmond, D. Cayan
2004, Journal of Hydrometeorology (5) 1102-1116
The extent to which winter precipitation is orographically enhanced within the Sierra Nevada of California varies from storm to storm, and season to season, from occasions when precipitation rates at low and high altitudes are almost the same to instances when precipitation rates at middle elevations (considered...
The global short-period wavefield modelled with a Monte Carlo seismic phonon method
Peter M. Shearer, Paul S. Earle
2004, Geophysical Journal International (158) 1103-1117
At high frequencies (∼1 Hz), much of the seismic energy arriving at teleseismic distances is not found in the main phases (e.g. P, PP, S, etc.) but is contained in the extended coda that follows these arrivals. This coda results from scattering off small-scale velocity and density perturbations within the...
Spatial partitioning and asymmetric hybridization among sympatric coastal steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus), coastal cutthroat trout (O. clarki clarki) and interspecific hybrids
C.O. Ostberg, S.L. Slatton, R. J. Rodriguez
2004, Molecular Ecology (13) 2773-2788
Hybridization between sympatric species provides unique opportunities to examine the contrast between mechanisms that promote hybridization and maintain species integrity. We surveyed hybridization between sympatric coastal steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus) and coastal cutthroat trout (O. clarki clarki) from two streams in Washington State, Olsen Creek (256 individuals sampled) and Jansen...
Three-dimensional local grid refinement for block-centered finite-difference groundwater models using iteratively coupled shared nodes: A new method of interpolation and analysis of errors
S. Mehl, M. C. Hill
2004, Advances in Water Resources (27) 899-912
This paper describes work that extends to three dimensions the two-dimensional local-grid refinement method for block-centered finite-difference groundwater models of Mehl and Hill [Development and evaluation of a local grid refinement method for block-centered finite-difference groundwater models using shared nodes. Adv Water Resour 2002;25(5):497-511]. In this approach, the (parent) finite-difference...
Canada lynx Lynx canadensis habitat and forest succession in northern Maine, USA
C.L. Hoving, D.J. Harrison, W.B. Krohn, W.J. Jakubas, M.A. McCollough
2004, Wildlife Biology (10) 285-294
The contiguous United States population of Canada lynx Lynx canadensis was listed as threatened in 2000. The long-term viability of lynx populations at the southern edge of their geographic range has been hypothesized to be dependent on old growth forests; however, lynx are a specialist predator on snowshoe hare Lepus...
Dynamic rupture modeling of the transition from thrust to strike-slip motion in the 2002 Denali fault earthquake, Alaska
Brad T. Aagaard, G. Anderson, K.W. Hudnut
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) S190-S201
We use three-dimensional dynamic (spontaneous) rupture models to investigate the nearly simultaneous ruptures of the Susitna Glacier thrust fault and the Denali strike-slip fault. With the 1957 Mw 8.3 Gobi-Altay, Mongolia, earthquake as the only other well-documented case of significant, nearly simultaneous rupture of both thrust and strike-slip faults, this...
Exposure to perchlorate induces the formation of macrophage aggregates in the trunk kidney of zebrafish and mosquitofish
T. Capps, S. Mukhi, J.J. Rinchard, C.W. Theodorakis, V. S. Blazer, R. Patino
2004, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (16) 145-151
Environmental contamination of ground and surface waters by perchlorate, derived from ammonium perchlorate (AP) and other perchlorate salts, is of increasing concern. Exposure to perchlorate can impair the thyroid endocrine system, which is thought to modulate renal and immune function in vertebrates. This study with zebrafish Danio rerio and eastern...
The effect of bandwidth limitations on the inference of earthquake slip-weakening distance from seismograms
P. Spudich, Mariagiovanna Guatteri
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 2028-2036
Numerous researchers have obtained estimates of slip-weakening distance, Dc, and fracture energy for recent earthquakes. Dc, is often observed to be a significant fraction of the total slip and tends to correlate with total slip. Although these observations may well be true of real earthquakes, we show that low-pass filtering...
Landsat-5 Thematic Mapper outgassing effects
D. L. Helder, E. Micijevic
2004, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (42) 2717-2729
A periodic 3% to 5% variation in detector response affecting both image and internal calibrator (IC) data has been observed in bands 5 and 7 of the Landsat-5 Thematic Mapper. The source for this variation is thought to be an interference effect due to buildup of an ice-like contaminant film...
Bioenergetics-based modeling of individual PCB congeners in nestling tree swallows from two contaminated sites on the Upper Hudson River, New York
John W. Nichols, Kathy R. Echols, Donald E. Tillitt, Anne L. Secord, John P. McCarty
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 6234-6239
A bioenergetics-based model was used to simulate the accumulation of total PCBs and 20 PCB congeners by nestling tree swallows at two contaminated sites on the Upper Hudson River, New York. PCB concentrations in birds were calculated as the sum of inherited residues and those acquired through consumption of contaminated...
Ship Shoal as a prospective borrow site for barrier island restoration, coastal south-central Louisiana, Usa: Numerical wave modeling and field measurements of hydrodynamics and sediment transport
G.W. Stone, D.A. Pepper, Jingping Xu, X. Zhang
2004, Journal of Coastal Research (20) 70-88
Ship Shoal, a transgressive sand body located at the 10 m isobath off south-central Louisiana, is deemed a potential sand source for restoration along the rapidly eroding Isles Dernieres barrier chain and possibly other sites in Louisiana. Through numerical wave modeling we evaluate the potential response of mining...
Influence of multiple water-quality characteristics on copper toxicity to fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas)
K.L. Sciera, J. Jeffery Isely, J.R. Tomasso Jr., S.J. Klaine
2004, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (23) 2900-2905
Water quality influences the bioavailability and toxicity of copper to aquatic organisms. Understanding the relationships between water-quality parameters and copper toxicity may facilitate the development of site-specific criteria for water quality and result in better protection of aquatic biota. Many studies have examined the influence of a single water-quality parameter...
Preparation and certification of Re-Os dating reference materials: Molybdenites HLP and JDC
A. Du, S. Wu, D. Sun, Shaoming Wang, W. Qu, R. Markey, H. Stain, J. Morgan, D. Malinovskiy
2004, Geostandards and Geoanalytical Research (28) 41-52
Two Re-Os dating reference material molybdenites were prepared. Molybdenite JDC and molybdenite HLP are from a carbonate vein-type molybdenum-(lead)-uranium deposit in the Jinduicheng-Huanglongpu area of Shaanxi province, China. The samples proved to be homogeneous, based on the coefficient of variation of analytical results and an analysis of variance test. The...
Simulation of ventilation efficiency, and pre-closure temperatures in emplacement drifts at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, using Monte Carlo and composite thermal-pulse methods
J.B. Case, D.C. Buesch
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the ASME Heat Transfer/Fluids Engineering Summer Conference 2004, HT/FED 2004
Predictions of waste canister and repository driftwall temperatures as functions of space and time are important to evaluate pre-closure performance of the proposed repository for spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Variations in the lithostratigraphic features in densely welded and crystallized rocks of the 12.8-million-year-old...
The 87Sr/86Sr ratios of lacustrine carbonates and lake-level history of the Bonneville paleolake system
W.S. Hart, Jay Quade, D.B. Madsen, D. S. Kaufman, Charles G. Oviatt
2004, Geological Society of America Bulletin (116) 1107-1119
Lakes in the Bonneville basin have fluctuated dramatically in response to changes in rainfall, temperature, and drainage diversion during the Quaternary. We analyzed tufas and shells from shorelines of known ages in order to develop a relation between 87Sr/86Sr ratio of carbonates and lake level, which then can be used...