The dynamics of subtidal poleward flows over a narrow continental shelf, Palos Verdes, CA
M.A. Noble, H. F. Ryan, P.L. Wiberg
2002, Continental Shelf Research (22) 923-944
The Palos Verdes peninsula is a short, very narrow (< 3 km) shelf in southern California that is bracketed by two large embayments. In May 1992, arrays of up to 4 moorings and 2 benthic tripods were deployed in a yearlong study of the circulation processes over this shelf and...
Imaging the mantle beneath Iceland using integrated seismological techniques
R. M. Allen, G. Nolet, W. J. Morgan, K. Vogfjord, B. H. Bergsson, P. Erlendsson, G.R. Foulger, S. Jakobsdottir, B.R. Julian, M. Pritchard, S. Ragnarsson, R. Stefansson
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (107) ESE 3-1-ESE 3-16
Using a combination of body wave and surface wave data sets to reveal the mantle plume and plume head, this study presents a tomographic image of the mantle structure beneath Iceland to 400 km depth. Data comes primarily from the PASSCAL-HOTSPOT deployment of 30 broadband instruments over a period of...
Evaluation of passive diffusion bag and dialysis samplers in selected wells at Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii, July 2001
Don A. Vroblesky, Tasha Pravecek
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4159
Field comparisons of chemical concentrations obtained from dialysis samplers, passive diffusion bag samplers, and low-flow samplers showed generally close agreement in most of the 13 wells tested during July 2001 at Hickam Air Force Base, Hawaii. The data for chloride, sulfate, iron, alkalinity, arsenic, and methane appear to show that...
Conflict of interest between a nematode and a trematode in an amphipod host: Test of the "sabotage" hypothesis
Frederic Thomas, Jerome Fauchier, Kevin D. Lafferty
2002, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology (51) 296-301
Microphallus papillorobustus is a manipulative trematode that induces strong behavioural alterations in the gamaridean amphipod Gammarus insensibilis, making the amphipod more vulnerable to predation by aquatic birds (definitive hosts). Conversely, the sympatric nematodeGammarinema gammari uses Gammarus insensibilis as a habitat and a...
Basalt-flow imaging using a high-resolution directional borehole radar
C.W. Moulton, D.L. Wright, S.R. Hutton, D.V.G. Smith, J.D. Abraham
2002, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
A new high-resolution directional borehole radar-logging tool (DBOR tool) was used to log three wells at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL). The radar system uses identical directional cavity-backed monopole transmitting and receiving antennas that can be mechanically rotated while the tool is stationary or moving slowly in...
Anaerobic oxidation of arsenite in Mono Lake water and by a facultative, arsenite-oxidizing chemoautotroph, strain MLHE-1
Ronald S. Oremland, S.E. Hoeft, J.M. Santini, N. Bano, R.A. Hollibaugh, J.T. Hollibaugh
2002, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (68) 4795-4802
Arsenite [As(III)]-enriched anoxic bottom water from Mono Lake, California, produced arsenate [As(V)] during incubation with either nitrate or nitrite. No such oxidation occurred in killed controls or in live samples incubated without added nitrate or nitrite. A small amount of biological As(III) oxidation...
Satellite-based detection of global urban heat-island temperature influence
K. P. Gallo, Jimmy O. Adegoke, T.W. Owen, C.D. Elvidge
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (107)
This study utilizes a satellite-based methodology to assess the urban heat-island influence during warm season months for over 4400 stations included in the Global Historical Climatology Network of climate stations. The methodology includes local and regional satellite retrievals of an indicator of the presence green photosynthetically active vegetation at and...
Estimating the sources and transport of nutrients in the Waikato River Basin, New Zealand
Richard B. Alexander, Alexander H. Elliott, Ude Shankar, Graham B. McBride
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 4-1-4-23
We calibrated SPARROW (Spatially Referenced Regression on Watershed Attributes) surface water‐quality models using measurements of total nitrogen and total phosphorus from 37 sites in the 13,900‐km2 Waikato River Basin, the largest watershed on the North Island of New Zealand. This first application of SPARROW outside of the United States included watersheds...
Seismic evidence for a mantle source for mid-Proterozoic anorthosites and implications for models of crustal growth
G. Musacchio, Walter D. Mooney
2002, Geological Society Special Publication (199) 125-134
Voluminous anorthosite intrusions are common in mid-Proterozoic crust. Historically, two end-member models have been proposed for the origin of these anorthosites. In the first model anorthosites derive from fractionation of a mantle source leaving a residue...
Using groundwater temperature data to constrain parameter estimation in a groundwater flow model of a wetland system
Hector R. Bravo, Feng Jiang, Randall J. Hunt
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 28-1-28-14
Parameter estimation is a powerful way to calibrate models. While head data alone are often insufficient to estimate unique parameters due to model nonuniqueness, flow‐and‐heat‐transport modeling can constrain estimation and allow simultaneous estimation of boundary fluxes and hydraulic conductivity. In this work, synthetic and field models that did not converge...
Toxicity assessment of sediments from the Grand Calumet River and Indiana Harbor Canal in northwestern Indiana, USA
C.G. Ingersoll, D.D. MacDonald, W. G. Brumbaugh, B. Thomas Johnson, N.E. Kemble, J.L. Kunz, T.W. May, N. Wang, J.R. Smith, D. W. Sparks, D.S. Ireland
2002, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (43) 156-167
The objective of this study was to evaluate the toxicity of sediments from the Grand Calumet River and Indiana Harbor Canal located in northwestern Indiana, USA. Toxicity tests used in this assessment included 10-day sediment exposures with the amphipod Hyalella azteca, 31-day sediment exposures with the oligochaete <i...
Estimating total human-caused mortality from reported mortality using data from radio-instrumented grizzly bears
S. Cherry, M.A. Haroldson, J. Robison-Cox, C.C. Schwartz
2002, Ursus (13) 175-184
Tracking mortality of the Yellowstone grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) is an essential issue of the recovery process. Problem bears removed by agencies are well documented. Deaths of radiocollared bears are known or, in many cases, can be reliably inferred. Additionally, the public reports an unknown proportion of deaths of uncollared bears....
Geologic and geophysical evidence for the influence of deep crustal structures on Paleozoic tectonics and the alignment of world-class gold deposits, north-central Nevada, USA
A.E.J. Crafford, V. J. S. Grauch
2002, Ore Geology Reviews (21) 157-184
Geologic data concur with geophysical and isotopic data that suggest the presence of deep crustal fault zones along the Battle Mountain-Eureka (BME) trend and elsewhere in Nevada. The fault zones may have originated during Proterozoic rifting of the continent and were likely substantially reactivated and modified during Paleozoic tectonism. Five...
Spatial patterns in the abundance of the coastal horned lizard
Robert N. Fisher, Andrew V. Suarez, Ted J. Case
2002, Conservation Biology (16) 205-215
Coastal horned lizards ( Phrynosoma coronatum) have undergone severe declines in southern California and are a candidate species for state and federal listing under the Endangered Species Act. Quantitative data on their habitat use, abundance, and distribution are lacking, however. We investigated the determinants of abundance for coastal horned lizards at...
AVHRR composite period selection for land cover classification
S.K. Maxwell, R.M. Hoffer, P.L. Chapman
2002, International Journal of Remote Sensing (23) 5043-5059
Multitemporal satellite image datasets provide valuable information on the phenological characteristics of vegetation, thereby significantly increasing the accuracy of cover type classifications compared to single date classifications. However, the processing of these datasets can become very complex when dealing with multitemporal data combined with multispectral data. Advanced Very High Resolution...
The mid-cretaceous water bearer: Isotope mass balance quantification of the Albian hydrologic cycle
David F. Ufnar, Luis A. Gonzalez, Greg A. Ludvigson, Richard L. Brenner, B.J. Witzke
2002, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (188) 51-71
A latitudinal gradient in meteoric ??18O compositions compiled from paleosol sphaerosiderites throughout the Cretaceous Western Interior Basin (KWIB) (34-75??N paleolatitude) exhibits a steeper, more depleted trend than modern (predicted) values (3.0??? [34??N latitude] to 9.7??? [75??N] lighter). Furthermore, the sphaerosiderite meteoric ??18O latitudinal gradient is significantly steeper and more depleted...
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...
Differences in attenuation among the stable continental regions
W. H. Bakun, Art McGarr
2002, Geophysical Research Letters (29) 36-1-36-4
There are systematic differences in the attenuation of damaging earthquake ground motions between different stable continental regions (SCRs). Seismic intensity and weak-motion data show that the attenuation in seismic waves for eastern North America (ENA) is less than for India, Africa, Australia, and northwest Europe. If ENA ground-motion attenuation relations...
Effects of subcutaneous transmitters on reproduction, incubation behavior, and annual return rates of female wood ducks
Gary R. Hepp, T.H. Folk, Kevin M. Hartke
2002, Wildlife Society Bulletin (30) 1208-1214
Radiotransmitters attached externally to breeding waterfowl can have a variety of negative effects. Implanted transmitters can reduce potential deleterious effects; abdominal implants are used most commonly in waterfowl. Methods also have been developed to implant transmitters subcutaneously, but effects of subcutaneous implants on adult ducks have not been evaluated. In...
A palynological biozonation for the Maastrichtian Stage (Upper Cretaceous) of South Carolina, USA
R. A. Christopher, D.C. Prowell
2002, Cretaceous Research (23) 639-669
Three palynological biozones are proposed for the Maastrichtian Stage of South Carolina. In ascending stratigraphic order, the biozones are the Carolinapollis triangularis (Ct) Interval Biozone, the Holkopollenites chemardensis (Hc) Interval Biozone, and the Sparganiaceaepollenites uniformis (Su) Interval Biozone. Integration of the biostratigraphy with lithologic and geophysical log data suggests that...
Plotting equation for Gaussian percentiles and a spreadsheet program for generating probability plots
J. H. Balsillie, Joseph F. Donoghue, K. M. Butler, J. L. Koch
2002, Journal of Sedimentary Research (72) 929-933
Two-dimensional plotting tools can be of invaluable assistance in analytical scientific pursuits, and have been widely used in the analysis and interpretation of sedimentologic data. We consider, in this work, the use of arithmetic probability paper (APP). Most statistical computer applications do not allow for the generation of APP plots,...
Using an electronic compass to determine telemetry azimuths
R. R. Cox Jr., J.D. Scalf, B.E. Jamison, R.S. Lutz
2002, Wildlife Society Bulletin (30) 1039-1043
Researchers typically collect azimuths from known locations to estimate locations of radiomarked animals. Mobile, vehicle-mounted telemetry receiving systems frequently are used to gather azimuth data. Use of mobile systems typically involves estimating the vehicle's orientation to grid north (vehicle azimuth), recording an azimuth to the transmitter relative to the vehicle...
Puente Hills blind-thrust system, Los Angeles, California
J.H. Shaw, A. Plesch, J.F. Dolan, T. L. Pratt, P. Fiore
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 2946-2960
We describe the three-dimensional geometry and Quaternary slip history of the Puente Hills blind-thrust system (PHT) using seismic reflection profiles, petroleum well data, and precisely located seismicity. The PHT generated the 1987 Whittier Narrows (moment magnitude [Mw] 6.0) earthquake and extends for more than 40 km along strike beneath the...
A bilinear source-scaling model for M-log a observations of continental earthquakes
Thomas C. Hanks, W. H. Bakun
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 1841-1846
The Wells and Coppersmith (1994) M-log A data set for continental earthquakes (where M is moment magnitude and A is fault area) and the regression lines derived from it are widely used in seismic hazard analysis for estimating M, given A. Their relations are well determined, whether for the full...
Annual emissions of mercury to the atmosphere from natural sources in Nevada and California
M.F. Coolbaugh, M.S. Gustin, J. J. Rytuba
2002, Environmental Geology (42) 338-349
The impact of natural source emissions on atmospheric mercury concentrations and the biogeochemical cycle of mercury is not known. To begin to assess this impact, mercury emissions to the atmosphere were scaled up for three areas naturally enriched in mercury: the Steamboat Springs geothermal area, Nevada, the New Idria mercury...