Spatial forecasting of disease risk and uncertainty
L. De Cola
2002, Cartography and Geographic Information Science (29) 363-380
Because maps typically represent the value of a single variable over 2-dimensional space, cartographers must simplify the display of multiscale complexity, temporal dynamics, and underlying uncertainty. A choropleth disease risk map based on data for polygonal regions might depict incidence (cases per 100,000 people) within each polygon for a year...
Generalized extreme gust wind speeds distributions
E. Cheng, C. Yeung
2002, Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial Aerodynamics (90) 1657-1669
Since summer 1996, the US wind engineers are using the extreme gust (or 3-s gust) as the basic wind speed to quantify the destruction of extreme winds. In order to better understand these destructive wind forces, it is important to know the appropriate representations of these extreme gust wind speeds....
AVHRR channel selection for land cover classification
S.K. Maxwell, R.M. Hoffer, P.L. Chapman
2002, International Journal of Remote Sensing (23) 5061-5073
Mapping land cover of large regions often requires processing of satellite images collected from several time periods at many spectral wavelength channels. However, manipulating and processing large amounts of image data increases the complexity and time, and hence the cost, that it takes to produce a land cover map. Very...
Use of an extensive radio receiver network to document Pacific lamprey (Lampetra tridentata) entrance efficiency at fishways in the Lower Columbia River, USA
M.L. Moser, A.L. Matter, L.C. Stuehrenberg, T.C. Bjornn
2002, Conference Paper, Hydrobiologia
We used an extensive network of more than 170 radio receiving stations to document fine-scale passage efficiency of adult anadromous Pacific lamprey at Bonneville and The Dalles Dams in the lower Columbia River in the northwestern U.S.A. Each spring from 1997 to 2000, we released 197-299 lamprey with surgically implanted...
Lag times of bank filtration at a well field, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
R. A. Sheets, R.A. Darner, B.L. Whitteberry
2002, Journal of Hydrology (266) 162-174
Wells placed next to surface-water bodies to induce infiltration have come under scrutiny because of the presence of the potential pathogens in surface water. Removal of pathogens and other contaminants by bank filtration is assumed, but regulatory agencies question the effectiveness of this process. To investigate transport processes of biological...
Landscape patterns as habitat predictors: Building and testing models for cavity-nesting birds in the Uinta Mountains of Utah, USA
J.J. Lawler, T.C. Edwards
2002, Landscape Ecology (17) 233-245
The ability to predict species occurrences quickly is often crucial for managers and conservation biologists with limited time and funds. We used measured associations with landscape patterns to build accurate predictive habitat models that were quickly and easily applied (i.e., required no additional data collection in the field to make...
Impacts of swine manure pits on groundwater quality
I.G. Krapac, W.S. Dey, William R. Roy, C.A. Smyth, E. Storment, S.L. Sargent, J.D. Steele
2002, Environmental Pollution (120) 475-492
Manure deep-pits are commonly used to store manure at confined animal feeding operations. However, previous to this study little information had been collected on the impacts of deep-pits on groundwater quality to provide science-based guidance in formulating regulations and waste management strategies that address risks to human health and the...
Statewide land cover derived from multiseasonal Landsat TM data: A retrospective of the WISCLAND project
H.M. Reese, T. M. Lillesand, D.E. Nagel, J.S. Stewart, R.A. Goldmann, T.E. Simmons, J.W. Chipman, P.A. Tessar
2002, Remote Sensing of Environment (82) 224-237
Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) data were the basis in production of a statewide land cover data set for Wisconsin, undertaken in partnership with U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) Gap Analysis Program (GAP). The data set contained seven classes comparable to Anderson Level I and 24 classes comparable to Anderson Level II/III....
Paleoseismic event dating and the conditional probability of large earthquakes on the southern San Andreas fault, California
G. P. Biasi, R.J. Weldon II, T. E. Fumal, G. G. Seitz
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 2761-2781
We introduce a quantitative approach to paleoearthquake dating and apply it to paleoseismic data from the Wrightwood and Pallett Creek sites on the southern San Andreas fault. We illustrate how stratigraphic ordering, sedimentological, and historical data can be used quantitatively in the process of estimating earthquake ages. Calibrated radiocarbon age...
CPT site characterization for seismic hazards in the New Madrid seismic zone
T. Liao, P. W. Mayne, M.P. Tuttle, E.S. Schweig, R. B. Van Arsdale
2002, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering (22) 943-950
A series of cone penetration tests (CPTs) were conducted in the vicinity of the New Madrid seismic zone in central USA for quantifying seismic hazards, obtaining geotechnical soil properties, and conducting studies at liquefaction sites related to the 1811–1812 and prehistoric New Madrid earthquakes. The seismic piezocone provides four independent...
Comparison of methods for nutrient measurement in calcareous soils: Ion-exchange resin bag, capsule, membrane, and chemical extractions
S. K. Sherrod, J. Belnap, M. E. Miller
2002, Soil Science (167) 666-679
Four methods for measuring quantities of 12 plant-available nutrients were compared using three sandy soils in a series of three experiments. Three of the methods use different ion-exchange resin forms—bags, capsules, and membranes—and the fourth was conventional chemical extraction. The first experiment compared nutrient extraction data from a medium of...
Stream piracy in the Black Hills: A geomorphology lab exercise
Brent J. Zaprowski, Edward B. Evenson, Jack B. Epstein
2002, Journal of Geoscience Education (50) 380-388
The Black Hills of South Dakota exhibits many fine examples of stream piracy that are very suitable for teaching geomorphology lab exercises. This lab goes beyond standard topographic map interpretation by using geologic maps, well logs, gravel provenance and other types of data to teach students about stream piracy. Using...
Assessing state-wide biodiversity in the Florida Gap analysis project
L.G. Pearlstine, S. E. Smith, L.A. Brandt, Craig R. Allen, W.M. Kitchens, J. Stenberg
2002, Journal of Environmental Management (66) 127-144
The Florida Gap (FI-Gap) project provides an assessment of the degree to which native animal species and natural communities are or are not represented in existing conservation lands. Those species and communities not adequately represented in areas being managed for native species constitute 'gaps' in the existing network of conservation...
Use of regional climate model output for hydrologic simulations
L.E. Hay, M.P. Clark, R.L. Wilby, W.J. Gutowski, G.H. Leavesley, Z. Pan, R.W. Arritt, E.S. Takle
2002, Journal of Hydrometeorology (3) 571-590
Daily precipitation and maximum and minimum temperature time series from a regional climate model (RegCM2) configured using the continental United States as a domain and run on a 52-km (approximately) spatial resolution were used as input to a distributed hydrologic model for one rainfall-dominated basin (Alapaha River at Statenville, Georgia)...
Variability in form and growth of sediment waves on turbidite channel levees
W. R. Normark, D.J.W. Piper, H. Posamentier, C. Pirmez, S. Migeon
2002, Marine Geology (192) 23-58
Fine-grained sediment waves have been observed in many modern turbidite systems, generally restricted to the overbank depositional element. Sediment waves developed on six submarine fan systems are compared using high-resolution seismic-reflection profiles, sediment core samples (including ODP drilling), multibeam bathymetry, 3D seismic-reflection imaging (including examples of burried features), and direct...
Evaluation of unsaturated zone water fluxes in heterogeneous alluvium at a Mojave Basin Site
John R. Nimmo, Jeffrey A. Deason, John A. Izbicki, Peter Martin
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 33-1-33-13
Vertical and horizontal water fluxes in the unsaturated zone near intermittent streams critically affect ecosystems, water supply, and contaminant transport in arid and semiarid regions. The subsurface near the Oro Grande Wash is typical in having great textural diversity, pronounced layer contrasts, and extremely low hydraulic conductivities associated with nearly...
Presence of organoarsenicals used in cotton production in agricultural water and soil of the Southern United States
A.J. Bednar, J.R. Garbarino, J. F. Ranville, T.R. Wildeman
2002, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (50) 7340-7344
Arsenicals have been used extensively in agriculture in the United States as insecticides and herbicides. Mono- and disodium methylarsonate and dimethylarsinic acid are organoarsenicals used to control weeds in cotton fields and as defoliation agents applied prior to cotton harvesting. Because the toxicity of most organoarsenicals is less than that...
Test of a habitat suitability index for black bears in the southern Appalachians
M.S. Mitchell, J.W. Zimmerman, R. A. Powell
2002, Wildlife Society Bulletin (30) 794-808
We present a habitat suitability index (HSI) model for black bears (Ursus americanus) living in the southern Appalachians that was developed a priori from the literature, then tested using location and home range data collected in the Pisgah Bear Sanctuary, North Carolina, over a 12-year period. The HSI was developed...
Surface and downhole shear wave seismic methods for thick soil site investigations
J. A. Hunter, B. Benjumea, J. B. Harris, R. D. Miller, S. E. Pullan, R. A. Burns, R. L. Good
2002, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering (22) 931-941
Shear wave velocity–depth information is required for predicting the ground motion response to earthquakes in areas where significant soil cover exists over firm bedrock. Rather than estimating this critical parameter, it can be reliably measured using a suite of surface (non-invasive) and downhole (invasive) seismic methods. Shear wave velocities from...
Survival models for harvest management of mourning dove populations
David L. Otis
2002, Journal of Wildlife Management (66) 1052-1063
Quantitative models of the relationship between annual survival and harvest rate of migratory game-bird populations are essential to science-based harvest management strategies. I used the best available band-recovery and harvest data for mourning doves (Zenaida macroura) to build a set of models based on different assumptions about compensatory harvest mortality....
Comparison of subyearling fall chinook salmon's use of riprap revetments and unaltered habitats in Lake Wallula of the Columbia river
R.D. Garland, K.F. Tiffan, D.W. Rondorf, L.O. Clark
2002, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (22) 1283-1289
Subyearling fall chinook salmon's Oncorhynchus tshawytscha use of unaltered and riprap habitats in Lake Wallula of the Columbia River was determined with point abundance data collected by electrofishing in May 1994 and 1995. We documented the presence or absence of subyearlings at 277 sample sites and collected physical habitat information...
Small-mammal data on early and middle Holocene climates and biotic communities in the Bonneville Basin, USA
D.N. Schmitt, D.B. Madsen, K.D. Lupo
2002, Quaternary Research (58) 255-260
Archaeological investigations in Camels Back Cave, western Utah, recovered a series of small-mammal bone assemblages from stratified deposits dating between ca. 12,000 and 500 14C yr B.P. The cave's early Holocene fauna includes a number of species adapted to montane or mesic habitats containing grasses and/or sagebrush (e.g., Lepus townsendii,...
Mid-Holocene hydrologic model of the Shingobee watershed, Minnesota
S.K. Filby, Sharon M. Locke, M.A. Person, T. C. Winter, D.O. Rosenberry, J.L. Nieber, W.J. Gutowski, E. Ito
2002, Quaternary Research (58) 246-254
A hydrologifc model of the Shingobee Watershed in north-central Minnesota was developed to reconstruct mid-Holocene paleo-lake levels for Williams Lake, a surface-water body located in the southern portion of the watershed. Hydrologic parameters for the model were first estimated in a calibration exercise using a 9-yr historical record (1990-1998) of...
Genetic structure of Columbia River redband trout populations in the Kootenai River drainage, Montana, revealed by microsatellite and allozyme loci
Kathy L. Knudsen, Clint C. Muhlfeld, George K. Sage, Robb F. Leary
2002, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (131) 1093-1105
We describe the genetic divergence among 10 populations of redband trout Oncorhynchus mykiss gairdneri from the upper Columbia River drainage. Resident redband trout from two watersheds in the Kootenai River drainage and hatchery stocks of migratory Kamloops redband trout from Kootenay Lake, British Columbia, were analyzed using allele frequency data...
Groundwater contamination downstream of a contaminant penetration site. II. Horizontal penetration of the contaminant plume
H. Rubin, R. W. Buddemeier
2002, Journal of Environmental Science and Health - Part A Toxic/Hazardous Substances and Environmental Engineering (37) 1813-1839
Part I of this study (Rubin, H.; Buddemeier, R.W. Groundwater Contamination Downstream of a Contaminant Penetration Site Part 1: Extension-Expansion of the Contaminant Plume. J. of Environmental Science and Health Part A (in press).) addressed cases, in which a comparatively thin contaminated region represented by boundary layers (BLs) developed within...