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Page 1107, results 27651 - 27675

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Biological structure and dynamics of fish assemblages in tributaries of eastern Lake Ontario
James E. McKenna Jr.
M. Munawar, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, State of Lake Ontario: past, present and future
Interest in effective management of Great Lakes natural resources and restoration of native populations has stimulated interest in the conditions and ecological role of tributaries in the Great Lakes ecosystem. Rivers of Lake Ontario's eastern basin provide an excellent opportunity to examine important tributaries and their relationship to Lake...
Multiple seismogenic processes for high-frequency earthquakes at Katmai National Park, Alaska: Evidence from stress tensor inversions of fault-plane solutions
Seth C. Moran
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 94-108
The volcanological significance of seismicity within Katmai National Park has been debated since the first seismograph was installed in 1963, in part because Katmai seismicity consists almost entirely of high-frequency earthquakes that can be caused by a wide range of processes. I investigate this issue by determining 140 well-constrained first-motion...
The Mw 7.7 Bhuj earthquake: Global lessons for earthquake hazard in intra-plate regions
E. Schweig, J. Gomberg, Mark D. Petersen, M. Ellis, P. Bodin, L. Mayrose, B.K. Rastogi
2003, Journal of the Geological Society of India (61) 277-282
The Mw 7.7 Bhuj earthquake occurred in the Kachchh District of the State of Gujarat, India on 26 January 2001, and was one of the most damaging intraplate earthquakes ever recorded. This earthquake is in many ways similar to the three great New Madrid earthquakes that occurred in the central...
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...
Characterization and diagenesis of strong-acid carboxyl groups in humic substances
J.A. Leenheer, R.L. Wershaw, G.K. Brown, M.M. Reddy
2003, Applied Geochemistry (18) 471-482
A small fraction of carboxylic acid functional groups in humic substances are exceptionally acidic with pKa values as low as 0.5. A review of acid-group theory eliminated most models and explanations for these exceptionally acidic carboxyl groups. These acidic carboxyl groups in Suwannee River fulvic acid were enriched by a...
Isotopic composition of carbon dioxide from a boreal forest fire: Inferring carbon loss from measurements and modeling
E.A.G. Schuur, S.E. Trumbore, M.C. Mack, J.W. Harden
2003, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (17)
 Fire is an important pathway for carbon (C) loss from boreal forest ecosystems and has a strong effect on ecosystem C balance. Fires can range widely in severity, defined as the amount of vegetation and forest floor consumed by fire, depending on local fuel and climatic conditions. Here we...
Benefits and costs of increased levels of corticosterone in seabird chicks
A.S. Kitaysky, E.V. Kitaiskaia, John F. Piatt, J.C. Wingfield
2003, Hormones and Behavior (43) 140-149
Seabird chicks respond to food shortages by increasing corticosterone (cort) secretion, which is probably associated with fitness benefits and costs. To examine this, we experimentally increased levels of circulating cort in captive black-legged kittiwake chicks fed ad libitum. We found that cort-implanted chicks begged more frequently and were more aggressive...
Signatures of the seismic source in EMD-based characterization of the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake recordings
R.R. Zhang, S. Ma, S. Hartzell
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 501-518
In this article we use empirical mode decomposition (EMD) to characterize the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake records and investigate the signatures carried over from the source rupture process. Comparison of the current study results with existing source inverse solutions that use traditional data processing suggests that the EMD-based characterization contains...
Mapping the spatial distribution and time evolution of snow water equivalent with passive microwave measurements
J. Guo, L. Tsang, E.G. Josberger, A.W. Wood, J.-N. Hwang, D.P. Lettenmaier
2003, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (41) 612-621
This paper presents an algorithm that estimates the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of snow water equivalent and snow depth based on passive remote sensing measurements. It combines the inversion of passive microwave remote sensing measurements via dense media radiative transfer modeling results with snow accumulation and melt model predictions...
Interdecadal change in the deep Puget sound benthos
F.H. Nichols
2003, Hydrobiologia (493) 95-114
Data from quantitative samples of the benthos at a 200-m site in central Puget Sound, collected twice yearly in most years between 1963 and 1992, were evaluated to determine the extent to which species composition in a continental-shelf depth community exhibits long-term persistence. Study results showed that the most abundant...
Gold deposits in metamorphic belts: Overview of current understanding, outstanding problems, future research, and exploration significance
D.I. Groves, R.J. Goldfarb, F. Robert, C.J.R. Hart
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1-29
Metamorphic belts are complex regions where accretion or collision has added to, or thickened, continental crust. Gold-rich deposits can be formed at all stages of orogen evolution, so that evolving metamorphic belts contain diverse gold deposit types that may be juxtaposed or overprint each other. This partly explains the high...
Conjunctive-management models for sustained yield of stream-aquifer systems
P. M. Barlow, D.P. Ahlfeld, D.C. Dickerman
2003, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (129) 35-48
Conjunctive-management models that couple numerical simulation with linear optimization were developed to evaluate trade-offs between groundwater withdrawals and streamflow depletions for alluvial-valley stream-aquifer systems representative of those of the northeastern United States. A conjunctive-management model developed for a hypothetical stream-aquifer system was used to assess the effect of interannual hydrologic...
Serpentinization of abyssal peridotites from the MARK area, Mid-Atlantic Ridge: Sulfur geochemistry and reaction modeling
J.C. Alt, Wayne C. Shanks III
2003, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (67) 641-653
The opaque mineralogy and the contents and isotope compositions of sulfur in serpentinized peridotites from the MARK (Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Kane Fracture Zone) area were examined to understand the conditions of serpentinization and evaluate this process as a sink for seawater sulfur. The serpentinites contain a sulfur-rich secondary mineral assemblage and...
Wave propagation and site response in the Santa Clara Valley
Joe B. Fletcher, J. Boatwright, A.G. Lindh
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 480-500
Forty-two portable digital instruments were deployed across the Santa Clara Valley from June until early November 1998; this array recorded 14 small and moderate local events and 7 large teleseismic events. We analyze the ground motion from these events to determine station delays...
Oxygen-18 concentrations in recent precipitation and ice cores on the Tibetan Plateau
L. Tian, T. Yao, P. F. Schuster, J.W.C. White, K. Ichiyanagi, Elise Pendall, J. Pu, W. Yu
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (108)
 A detailed study of the climatic significance of δ18O in precipitation was completed on a 1500 km southwest-northeast transect of the Tibetan Plateau in central Asia. Precipitation samples were collected at four meteorological stations for up to 9 years. This study shows that the gradual impact of monsoon precipitation...
Modern, Sangamon and Yarmouth soil development in loess of unglaciated southwestern Illinois
D.A. Grimley, L.R. Follmer, R.E. Hughes, P.A. Solheid
2003, Quaternary Science Reviews (22) 225-244
The Thebes Section in unglaciated southwestern Illinois contains a well preserved ??? 500 kyr loess-paleosol sequence with four loesses and three interglacial soils. Various magnetic, mineralogical, and elemental properties were analyzed and compared over the thickness of soil sola. These proxies for soil] development intensity have the following trend: Yarmouth...
Initiation of deformation of the Eastern California Shear Zone: Constraints from Garlock fault geometry and GPS observations
Weijun Gan, P. Zhang, Z.-K. Shen, W.H. Prescott, J. L. Svarc
2003, Geophysical Research Letters (30) 3-1
We suggest a 2-stage deformation model for the Eastern California Shear Zone (ECSZ) to explain the geometry of the Garlock fault trace. We assume the Garlock fault was originally straight and then was gradually curved by right-lateral shear deformation across the ECSZ. In our 2-stage deformation model, the first stage...
Effects of crustal stresses on fluid transport in fractured rock: Case studies from northeastern and southwestern USA
R. H. Morin, W. Z. Savage
2003, Hydrogeology Journal (11) 100-112
The link between stress and hydrologic properties was examined at two sites that are distinguished by different rock types and different stress states. This investigation is based upon the analysis and interpretation of geophysical logs obtained in water wells at the two locations. At the northeast site (Newark Basin),...
Comparative ontogenetic behavior and migration of kaluga, Huso dauricus, and Amur sturgeon, Acipenser schrenckii, from the Amur River
P. Zhuang, B. Kynard, L. Zhang, T. Zhang, W. Cao
2003, Environmental Biology of Fishes (66) 37-48
We conducted laboratory experiments with kaluga, Huso dauricus, and Amur sturgeon, Acipenser schrenckii, to develop a conceptual model of early behavior. We daily observed embryos (first life phase after hatching) and larvae (period initiating exogenous feeding) to day-30 (late larvae) for preference of bright habitat and cover, swimming distance above...
Modeling carbon dynamics in vegetation and soil under the impact of soil erosion and deposition
S. Liu, N. Bliss, E. Sundquist, T.G. Huntington
2003, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (17)
Soil erosion and deposition may play important roles in balancing the global atmospheric carbon budget through their impacts on the net exchange of carbon between terrestrial ecosystem and the atmosphere. Few models and studies have been designed to assess these impacts. In this study, we developed a general ecosystem model,...
The Hula Valley subsurface structure inferred from gravity data
M. Rybakov, L. Fleischer, Uri S. ten Brink
2003, Israel Journal of Earth Sciences (52) 113-122
We use the 3-D gravity inversion technique to model the shape of the Hula basin, a pull-apart basin along the Dead Sea Transform. The interpretation was constrained using the Notera-3-well density logs and current geological knowledge. The model obtained by inversion shows a rhomb-shaped graben filled with approximately 4 km...
Inversion of high frequency surface waves with fundamental and higher modes
J. Xia, R. D. Miller, C.B. Park, G. Tian
2003, Journal of Applied Geophysics (52) 45-57
The phase velocity of Rayleigh-waves of a layered earth model is a function of frequency and four groups of earth parameters: compressional (P)-wave velocity, shear (S)-wave velocity, density, and thickness of layers. For the fundamental mode of Rayleigh waves, analysis of the Jacobian matrix for high frequencies (2-40 Hz) provides...
Magnitude and variability of Holocene sediment accumulation in Santa Monica Bay, California
C.K. Sommerfield, H.J. Lee
2003, Marine Environmental Research (56) 151-176
The spatial variability of Holocene (past 10,000 years) sediment accumulation in Santa Monica Bay (California) was examined to identify controls sediment trapping in a bathymetrically complex coastal embayment and to provide geologic context for the post-industrial sedimentary record and associated pollution gradients. Sediment chronologies based on downcore AMS 14C dates...
Volcanic debris flows in developing countries - The extreme need for public education and awareness of debris-flow hazards
J. J. Major, S. P. Schilling, C.R. Pullinger
Rickenmann D.Chen C.L., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation: Mechanics, Prediction, and Assessment, Proceedings
In many developing countries, volcanic debris flows pose a significant societal risk owing to the distribution of dense populations that commonly live on or near a volcano. At many volcanoes, modest volume (up to 500,000 m 3) debris flows are relatively common (multiple times per century) and typically flow at...