Paleomagnetism and geochronology of an Early Proterozoic quartz diorite in the southern Wind River Range, Wyoming, USA
S. S. Harlan, J.W. Geisman, W. R. Premo
2003, Tectonophysics (362) 105-122
We present geochronologic and paleomagnetic data from a north-trending quartz diorite intrusion that cuts Archean metasedimentary and metaigneous rocks of the South Pass Greenstone Belt of the Wyoming craton. The quartz diorite was previously thought to be either Archean or Early Proterozoic (?) in age and is cut by north...
Modeling flow and transport in unsaturated fractured rock: An evaluation of the continuum approach
H.-H. Liu, C.B. Haukwa, C.F. Ahlers, G.S. Bodvarsson, A. L. Flint, W.B. Guertal
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (62-63) 173-188
Because the continuum approach is relatively simple and straightforward to implement, it has been commonly used in modeling flow and transport in unsaturated fractured rock. However, the usefulness of this approach can be questioned in terms of its adequacy for representing fingering flow and transport in unsaturated fractured rock. The...
Estimating cougar predation rates from GPS location clusters
C.R. Anderson Jr., F.G. Lindzey
2003, Journal of Wildlife Management (67) 307-316
We examined cougar (Puma concolor) predation from Global Positioning System (GPS) location clusters (???2 locations within 200 m on the same or consecutive nights) of 11 cougars during September-May, 1999-2001. Location success of GPS averaged 2.4-5.0 of 6 location attempts/night/cougar. We surveyed potential predation sites during summer-fall 2000 and summer...
A gentle introduction to quantile regression for ecologists
B.S. Cade, B.R. Noon
2003, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (1) 412-420
Quantile regression is a way to estimate the conditional quantiles of a response variable distribution in the linear model that provides a more complete view of possible causal relationships between variables in ecological processes. Typically, all the factors that affect ecological processes are not measured and included in the statistical...
Survival of captive-reared Hispaniolan Parrots released in Parque Nacional del Este, Dominican Republic
J.A. Collazo, T.H. White Jr., F. J. Vilella, S.A. Guerrero
2003, Condor (105) 198-207
We report first-year survival rates of 49 captive-reared Hispaniolan Parrots (Amazona ventralis) released in Parque Nacional del Este, Dominican Republic. Our goal was to learn about factors affecting postrelease survival. Specifically, we tested if survival was related to movements and whether modifying prerelease protocols influenced survival rates. We also estimated...
Budgeting postglacial sedimentation history on the Santa Cruz, California mid-continental shelf
E. E. Grossman, S.L. Eittreim, D.M. Hanes, M.E. Field, B. D. Edwards, S.J. Fallon, R. J. Anima
2003, Conference Paper, Oceans Conference record
High-resolution seismic reflection profiling and surface texture mapping of the central California continental shelf, reveal a prominent subsurface reflector interpreted as a low stand erosion surface and an overlying mudbelt that covers 421 km2 of the mid-shelf in depths of 40-90 m. Radiometric and sedimentologic analyses of samples from vibracores...
Seasonal and spatial distribution of bacterial biomass and the percentage of viable cells in a reservoir of Alabama
T.E. Tietjen, R.G. Wetzel
2003, Journal of Plankton Research (25) 1521-1534
Spatial community dynamics of bacterioplankton were evaluated along the length of the former stream channel of Elledge Lake, a small reservoir in western Alabama. The reservoir was strongly stratified from April to October with up to a 10??C temperature difference across the 1 m deep metalimnion. Bacterial biomass was highest...
Fault trends on the seaward slope of the Aleutian Trench: Implications for a laterally changing stress field tied to a westward increase in oblique convergence
C. A. Mortera-Gutierrez, D.W. Scholl, R.L. Carlson
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
Normal faults along the seaward trench slope (STS) commonly strike parallel to the trench in response to bending of the oceanic plate into the subduction zone. This is not the circumstance for the Aleutian Trench, where the direction of convergence gradually changes westward, from normal to transform motion. GLORIA side-scan...
Geophysical and isotopic constraints on crustal structure related to mineral trends in north-central Nevada and implications for tectonic history
V. J. S. Grauch, B. D. Rodriguez, J. L. Wooden
2003, Economic Geology (98) 269-286
We combined information from Sr and Pb isotope data and magnetotelluric models to develop a new magnetic and gravity interpretation of the crustal structure of north-central Nevada to better understand the origin of mineral trends. The new interpretation suggests a crustal structure that is composed of Precambrian continental crust, transitional crust, and primarily oceanic crust that are separated by northwest- and...
Potential effects of climate change on ground water in Lansing, Michigan
T.E. Croley II, C. L. Luukkonen
2003, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (39) 149-163
Computer simulations involving general circulation models, a hydrologic modeling system, and a ground water flow model indicate potential impacts of selected climate change projections on ground water levels in the Lansing, Michigan, area. General circulation models developed by the Canadian Climate Centre and the Hadley Centre generated meteorology estimates for...
Mapping vegetation in Yellowstone National Park using spectral feature analysis of AVIRIS data
Raymond F. Kokaly, Don G. Despain, Roger N. Clark, K. Eric Livo
2003, Remote Sensing of Environment (84) 437-456
Knowledge of the distribution of vegetation on the landscape can be used to investigate ecosystem functioning. The sizes and movements of animal populations can be linked to resources provided by different plant species. This paper demonstrates the application of imaging spectroscopy to the study...
Lithogeochemistry of Carlin-type gold mineralization in the Gold Bar district, Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, Nevada
O. Yigit, A. H. Hofstra
2003, Ore Geology Reviews (22) 201-224
The Gold Bar district contains five Carlin-type gold deposits and four resources for a combined gold endowment of 1.6 M oz [50 t]. The gold deposits are hosted in Devonian carbonate rocks below parautochthonous and allochthonous Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks emplaced during the Early Mississippian Antler orogeny. The district is in...
Groundwater flow associated with coalbed gas production, Ferron Sandstone, east-central Utah
L. O. Anna
2003, International Journal of Coal Geology (56) 69-95
The flow and distribution of water associated with coalbed gas production in the Ferron Sandstone was characterized utilizing a discrete fracture network model and a porous media model. A discrete fracture network model calculated fluid flux through volumes of various scales to determine scale effects, directional bulk permeability, and connectivity....
Volcano seismology
B. Chouet
2003, Pure and Applied Geophysics (160) 739-788
A fundamental goal of volcano seismology is to understand active magmatic systems, to characterize the configuration of such systems, and to determine the extent and evolution of source regions of magmatic energy. Such understanding is critical to our assessment of eruptive behavior and its hazardous impacts. With the emergence of...
Fault systems of the 1971 San Fernando and 1994 Northridge earthquakes, southern California: Relocated aftershocks and seismic images from LARSE II
G. S. Fuis, R.W. Clayton, P.M. Davis, T. Ryberg, W. J. Lutter, D. A. Okaya, E. Hauksson, C. Prodehl, J.M. Murphy, M.L. Benthien, S.A. Baher, M.D. Kohler, K. Thygesen, G. Simila, Gordon R. Keller
2003, Geology (31) 171-174
We have constructed a composite image of the fault systems of the M 6.7 San Fernando (1971) and Northridge (1994), California, earthquakes, using industry reflection and oil test well data in the upper few kilometers of the crust, relocated aftershocks in the seismogenic crust, and LARSE II (Los Angeles Region...
Crystallisation ages in coeval silicic magma bodies: 238U-230Th disequilibrium evidence from the Rotoiti and earthquake flat eruption deposits, Taupo volcanic zone, New Zealand
B. L. A. Charlier, D.W. Peate, C. J. N. Wilson, J. B. Lowenstern, M. Storey, S.J.A. Brown
2003, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (206) 441-457
The timescales over which moderate to large bodies of silicic magma are generated and stored are addressed here by studies of two geographically adjacent, successive eruption deposits in the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand. The earlier, caldera-forming Rotoiti eruption (>100 km3 magma) at Okataina volcano was followed, within months at...
Inferences on the hydrothermal system beneath the resurgent dome in Long Valley Caldera, east-central California, USA, from recent pumping tests and geochemical sampling
C. D. Farrar, M.L. Sorey, E. Roeloffs, D. L. Galloway, J. F. Howle, R. Jacobson
2003, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (127) 305-328
Quaternary volcanic unrest has provided heat for episodic hydrothermal circulation in the Long Valley caldera, including the present-day hydrothermal system, which has been active over the past 40 kyr. The most recent period of crustal unrest in this region of east-central California began around 1980 and has included periods of...
Mercury contamination chronologies from Connecticut wetlands and Long Island Sound sediments
J.C. Varekamp, B. Kreulen, Marilyn R. Buchholtz ten Brink, E.L. Mecray
2003, Conference Paper, Environmental Geology
Sediment cores were used to investigate the mercury deposition histories of Connecticut and Long Island Sound. Most cores show background (pre-1800s) concentrations (50–100 ppb Hg) below 30–50 cm depth, strong enrichments up to 500 ppb Hg in the core tops with lower Hg concentrations in the surface sediments (200–300 ppb Hg). A sediment core...
Measured temperature and pressure dependence of compressional (Vp) and shear (Vs) wave speeds in compacted, polycrystalline ice lh
M.B. Helgerud, W.F. Waite, S. H. Kirby, A. Nur
2003, Canadian Journal of Physics (81) 81-87
We report on laboratory measurements of compressional- and shear-wave speeds in a compacted, polycrystalline ice-Ih sample. The sample was made from triply distilled water that had been frozen into single crystal ice, ground into small grains, and sieved to extract the 180250 µm diameter fraction. Porosity was eliminated from the sample...
Interactions between dissolved organic matter and mercury in the Florida Everglades
G. Aiken, M. Haitzer, J. N. Ryan, K. Nagy, George Aiken
Boutron C.Ferrari C., editor(s)
2003, Journal De Physique. IV : JP (107) 29-32
Experiments were conducted using organic matter isolated from various surface waters in the Florida Everglades to study the interactions between dissolved organic matter (DOM) and Hg (II). Conditional distribution coefficients ( ), obtained using an equilibriurn dialysis ligand exchange method, were strongly affected by...
Hankin and Reeves' approach to estimating fish abundance in small streams: Limitations and alternatives
W.L. Thompson
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 69-75
Hankin and Reeves' (1988) approach to estimating fish abundance in small streams has been applied in stream fish studies across North America. However, their population estimator relies on two key assumptions: (1) removal estimates are equal to the true numbers of fish, and (2) removal estimates are highly correlated with...
The mechanics of unrest at Long Valley caldera, California: 1. Modeling the geometry of the source using GPS, leveling and two-color EDM data
Maurizio Battaglia, P. Segall, J. Murray, Peter Cervelli, J. Langbein
2003, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (127) 195-217
We surveyed 44 existing leveling monuments in Long Valley caldera in July 1999, using dual frequency global positioning system (GPS) receivers. We have been able to tie GPS and leveling to a common reference frame in the Long Valley area and computed the vertical deformation by differencing GPS-based and leveled...
Cold cratonic roots and thermal blankets: How continents affect mantle convection
V.P. Trubitsyn, Walter D. Mooney, D.H. Abbott
2003, International Geology Review (45) 479-492
Two-dimensional convection models with moving continents show that continents profoundly affect the pattern of mantle convection. If the continents are wider than the wavelength of the convection cells (-3000 km, the thickness of the mantle), they cause neighboring deep mantle thermal upwellings to coalesce into a single focused upwelling. This focused upwelling zone will have a potential temperature anomaly of about 200°C, much higher than the 100°C temperature...
Earthquake occurrence modeling for evaluating seismic risks to roadway systems
D. Perkins, C. Taylor
Beavers J.E., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, Technical Council on Lifeline Earthquake Engineering Monograph
The results of the application of a variety of techniques, which included bootstrap sampling, the use of antithetic values, the use of Latin squares sampling, use of control functions, a compound Poisson approach, and importance sampling, were presented. It was found that extremely large reductions in the number of simulations...
The petrographic microscope: Evolution of a mineralogical research instrument
D. E. Kile
2003, Mineralogical Record (1) 5-39
The petrographic microscope, designed to observe and measure the optical properties of minerals as a means of identifying them, has provided a foundation for mineralogical and petrological research for more than 120 years. Much of what is known today in these fields is attributable to this instrument, the development of...