Brittle structures and their role in controlling porosity and permeability in a complex Precambrian crystalline-rock aquifer system in the Colorado Rocky Mountain front range
Jonathan S. Caine, S.R.A. Tomusiak
2003, Geological Society of America Bulletin (115) 1410-1424
Expansion of the Denver metropolitan area has resulted in substantial residential development in the foothills of the Rocky Mountain Front Range. This type of sub-urban growth, characteristic of much of the semiarid intermountain west, often relies on groundwater from individual domestic wells and is exemplified in the Turkey Creek watershed....
Evacuation of Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT) Tags from Northern Pikeminnow Consuming Tagged Juvenile Chinook Salmon
J.H. Petersen, C.A. Barfoot
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 1265-1270
Prey fish implanted with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags can be used in predation studies if the timing of tag evacuation from the predators is understood. Laboratory experiments were conducted to determine how PIT tags in juvenile Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha that were consumed by northern pikeminnow Ptychocheilus oregonensis were...
Modeling radium and radon transport through soil and vegetation
J.A. Kozak, H. W. Reeves, B.A. Lewis
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (66) 179-200
A one-dimensional flow and transport model was developed to describe the movement of two fluid phases, gas and water, within a porous medium and the transport of 226Ra and 222Rn within and between these two phases. Included in this model is the vegetative uptake of water and aqueous 226Ra and...
The typological approach to submarine groundwater discharge (SGD)
H. Bokuniewicz, R. Buddemeier, B. Maxwell, C. Smith
2003, Biogeochemistry (66) 145-158
Coastal zone managers need to factor submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) in their integration. SGD provides a pathway for the transfer of freshwater, and its dissolved chemical burden, from the land to the coastal ocean. SGD reduces salinities and provides nutrients to specialized coastal habitats. It also can be a pollutant...
A 16,000 14C yr B.P. packrat midden series from the USA-Mexico Borderlands
C.A. Holmgren, M.C. Penalba, K.A. Rylander, J.L. Betancourt
2003, Quaternary Research (60) 319-329
A new packrat midden chronology from Playas Valley, southwestern New Mexico, is the first installment of an ongoing effort to reconstruct paleovegetation and paleoclimate in the U.S.A.-Mexico Borderlands. Playas Valley and neighboring basins supported pluvial lakes during full and/or late glacial times. Plant macrofossil and pollen assemblages from nine middens...
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...
Wetlands: Crop freezes and land-use change in Florida
C. H. Marshall, R.A. Pielke Sr., L. T. Steyaert
2003, Nature (426) 29-30
South Florida experienced a significant change in land usage during the twentieth century, including the conversion of natural wetlands into agricultural land for the cultivation of winter vegetable, sugar cane and citrus crops. This movement of agriculture from more northerly areas was intended partly...
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....
Rockfall hazard and risk assessment in the Yosemite Valley, California, USA
F. Guzzetti, P. Reichenbach, G. F. Wieczorek
2003, Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (3) 491-503
Rock slides and rock falls are the most frequent types of slope movements in Yosemite National Park, California. In historical time (1857-2002) 392 rock falls and rock slides have been documented in the valley, and some of them have been mapped in detail. We present the results of an attempt...
Influence of landscape structure and climate variability on a late holocene plant migration
M.E. Lyford, S.T. Jackson, J.L. Betancourt, S.T. Gray
2003, Ecological Monographs (73) 567-583
We analyzed and radiocarbon-dated 205 fossil woodrat middens from 14 sites in central and northern Wyoming and adjacent Utah and Montana to document spatiotemporal patterns of Holocene invasion by Utah juniper (Juniperus osteosperma). Holocene migration into central and northern Wyoming and southern Montana from the south proceeded by a series...
Feedback-driven response to multidecadal climatic variability at an alpine treeline
K.J. Alftine, G.P. Malanson, D.B. Fagre
2003, Physical Geography (24) 520-535
The Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) has significant climatological and ecological effects in northwestern North America. Its possible effects and their modification by feedbacks are examined in the forest-tundra ecotone in Glacier National Park, Montana, USA. Tree ring samples were collected to estimate establishment dates in 10...
Use of statistically and dynamically downscaled atmospheric model output for hydrologic simulations in three mountainous basins in the western United States
L.E. Hay, M.P. Clark
2003, Journal of Hydrology (282) 56-75
This paper examines the hydrologic model performance in three snowmelt-dominated basins in the western United States to dynamically- and statistically downscaled output from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction/National Center for Atmospheric Research Reanalysis (NCEP). Runoff produced using a distributed hydrologic model is compared using daily precipitation and maximum and...
Transport and cycling of iron and hydrogen peroxide in a freshwater stream: Influence of organic acids
Durelle T. Scott, Robert L. Runkel, Diane M. McKnight, Bettina M. Voelker, Briant A. Kimball, Elizabeth R. Carraway
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 1-14
An in‐stream injection of two dissolved organic acids (phthalic and aspartic acids) was performed in an acidic mountain stream to assess the effects of organic acids on Fe photoreduction and H2O2 cycling. Results indicate that the fate of Fe is dependent on a net balance of oxidative and reductive processes, which...
Fault slip and seismic moment of the 1700 Cascadia earthquake inferred from Japanese tsunami descriptions
K. Satake, K. Wang, B.F. Atwater
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
The 1700 Cascadia earthquake attained moment magnitude 9 according to new estimates based on effects of its tsunami in Japan, computed coseismic seafloor deformation for hypothetical ruptures in Cascadia, and tsunami modeling in the Pacific Ocean. Reports of damage and flooding show that the 1700 Casscadia tsunami reached 1-5 m...
Multi-site evaluation of IKONOS data for classification of tropical coral reef environments
S. Andrefouet, Philip Kramer, D. Torres-Pulliza, K.E. Joyce, E.J. Hochberg, R. Garza-Perez, P.J. Mumby, Bernhard Riegl, H. Yamano, W. H. White, M. Zubia, J. C. Brock, S.R. Phinn, A. Naseer, B.G. Hatcher, F. E. Muller-Karger
2003, Remote Sensing of Environment (88) 128-143
Ten IKONOS images of different coral reef sites distributed around the world were processed to assess the potential of 4-m resolution multispectral data for coral reef habitat mapping. Complexity of reef environments, established by field observation, ranged from 3 to 15 classes of benthic habitats containing various combinations of sediments,...
The fate of wastewater-derived nitrate in the subsurface of the Florida Keys: Key Colony Beach, Florida
E.M. Griggs, L.R. Kump, J.K. Böhlke
2003, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (58) 517-539
Shallow injection is the predominant mode of wastewater disposal for most tourist-oriented facilities and some residential communities in the US Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. Concern has been expressed that wastewater nutrients may be escaping from the saline groundwater system into canals and surrounding coastal waters and perhaps to the...
Geology and geochemistry of the Reocín zinc-lead deposit, Basque-Cantabrian Basin, Northern Spain
Francisco Velasco, Jose Miguel Herrero, Inaki Yusta, Jose Antonio Alonso, Ignacio Seebold, David Leach
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1371-1396
The Reocín Zn-Pb deposit, 30 km southwest of Santander, Spain, occurs within Lower Cretaceous dolomitized Urgonian limestones on the southern flank of the Santillana syncline. The Reocín deposit is one of the largest known strata-bound, carbonate-hosted, zinc-lead deposits in Europe. The total metal endowment of the deposit, including past production and remaining reserves, is 62 Mt of ore grading 8.7...
Erosion of an ancient mountain range, the Great Smoky Mountains, North Carolina and Tennessee
A. Matmon, P.R. Bierman, J. Larsen, S. Southworth, M. Pavich, R. Finkel, M. Caffee
2003, American Journal of Science (303) 817-855
Analysis of 10Be and 26Al in bedrock (n=10), colluvium (n=5 including grain size splits), and alluvial sediments (n=59 including grain size splits), coupled with field observations and GIS analysis, suggest that erosion rates in the Great Smoky Mountains are controlled by subsurface bedrock erosion and diffusive slope processes. The results indicate...
Interglacial extension of the boreal forest limit in the Noatak Valley, northwest Alaska: Evidence from an exhumed river-cut bluff and debris apron
M. E. Edwards, T. D. Hamilton, S. A. Elias, N.H. Bigelow, A.P. Krumhardt
2003, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (35) 460-468
Numerous exposures of Pleistocene sediments occur in the Noatak basin, which extends for 130 km along the Noatak River in northwestern Alaska. Nk-37, an extensive bluff exposure near the west end of the basin, contains a record of at least three glacial advances separated by interglacial and interstadial deposits. An...
Impacts of Daily Bag Limit Reductions on Angler Effort in Wisconsin Walleye Lakes
T.D. Beard Jr., S.P. Cox, S.R. Carpenter
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 1283-1293
Angler effort is an important factor affecting recreational fisheries. However, angler responses are rarely incorporated into recreational fisheries regulations or predictions. Few have attempted to examine how daily bag limit regulations affect total angling pressure and subsequent stock densities. Our paper develops a theoretical basis for predicting angler effort and...
Fracture network of the Ferron Sandstone Member of the Mancos Shale, east-central Utah, USA
S. M. Condon
2003, International Journal of Coal Geology (56) 111-139
The fracture network at the outcrop of the Ferron Sandstone Member of the Mancos Shale was studied to gain an understanding of the tectonic history of the region and to contribute data to studies of gas and water transmissivity related to the occurrence and production of coal-bed methane. About 1900...
Test of a Power Transfer Model for Standardized Electrofishing
L.E. Miranda, C.R. Dolan
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 1179-1185
Standardization of electrofishing in waters with differing conductivities is critical when monitoring temporal and spatial differences in fish assemblages. We tested a model that can help improve the consistency of electrofishing by allowing control over the amount of power that is transferred to the fish. The primary objective was to...
Icelandic-type crust
G.R. Foulger, Z. Du, B.R. Julian
2003, Geophysical Journal International (155) 567-590
Numerous seismic studies, in particular using receiver functions and explosion seismology, have provided a detailed picture of the structure and thickness of the crust beneath the Iceland transverse ridge. We review the results and propose a structural model that is consistent with all the observations. The upper crust is typically...
Dynamics of peat accumulation and marl flat formation in a calcareous fen, midwestern United States
J.J. Miner, D.B. Ketterling
2003, Wetlands (23) 950-960
The age and sequence of peat accumulation were investigated at a calcareous fen in northeastern Illinois, USA. The purpose of this study was to identify the processes that form and sustain marl flats, which are areas of marl or tufa substrate within the fen that contain numerous rare plant species....
Automated calibration of a stream solute transport model: Implications for interpretation of biogeochemical parameters
D.T. Scott, M.N. Gooseff, K.E. Bencala, R.L. Runkel
2003, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (22) 492-510
The hydrologic processes of advection, dispersion, and transient storage are the primary physical mechanisms affecting solute transport in streams. The estimation of parameters for a conservative solute transport model is an essential step to characterize transient storage and other physical features that cannot be directly measured, and often is a...