Comparison of mitochondrial DNA control region sequence and microsatellite DNA analyses in estimating population structure and gene flow rates in Atlantic sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus
I. Wirgin, J. Waldman, J. Stabile, B. Lubinski, T. King
2002, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (18) 313-319
Atlantic sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus is large, long-lived, and anadromous with subspecies distributed along the Atlantic (A. oxyrinchus oxyrinchus) and Gulf of Mexico (A. o. desotoi) coasts of North America. Although it is not certain if extirpation of some population units has occurred, because of anthropogenic influences abundances of all populations...
Snow, topography, and the diurnal cycle in streamflow
J.D. Lundquist, N. Knowles, M. Dettinger, D. Cayan
2002, Conference Paper, Proceedings of The Western Snow Conference
Because snowmelt processes are spatially complex, point measurements, particularly in mountainous regions, are often inadequate to resolve basin-scale characteristics. Satellite measurements provide good spatial sampling but are often infrequent in time, particularly during cloudy weather. Fortunately, hourly measurements of river discharge provide another widely available, but as yet underutilized, source...
Assemblages of breeding birds as indicators of grassland condition
S.F. Browder, Douglas H. Johnson, I.J. Ball
2002, Ecological Indicators (2) 257-270
We developed a measure of biological integrity for grasslands (GI) based on the most influential habitat types in the Prairie Pothole Region of North Dakota. GI is based on proportions of habitat types and the relationships of these habitat types to breeding birds. Habitat types were identified by digital aerial...
High-resolution characterization of chemical heterogeneity in an alluvial aquifer
M.K. Schulmeister, J.M. Healey, G.W. McCall, S. Birk, J.J. Butler
2002, Acta Universitatis Carolinae, Geologica (46) 353-355
The high-resolution capabilities of direct-push technology were exploited to develop new insights into the hydrochemistry at the margin of an alluvial aquifer. Hydrostratigraphic controls on groundwater flow and contaminant loading were revealed through the combined use of direct-push electrical conductivity (EC) logging and geochemical profiling. Vertical and lateral variations in...
Potential nontarget effects of Metarhizium anisopliae (Deuteromycetes) used for biological control of ticks (Acari: Ixodidae)
Howard S. Ginsberg, Roger A. LeBrun, Klaus Heyer, Elyes Zhioua
2002, Environmental Entomology (31) 1191-1196
The potential for nontarget effects of the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium anisopliae (Metschnikoff) Sorokin, when used for biological control of ticks, was assessed in laboratory trials. Fungal pathogenicity was studied against convergent ladybird beetles, Hippodamia convergens Guérin-Méneville, house crickets, Acheta domesticus (L.), and the milkweed bugs Oncopeltus fasciatus (Dallas)....
Long lead statistical forecasts of area burned in western U.S. wildfires by ecosystem province
A.L. Westerling, A. Gershunov, D.R. Cayan, T.P. Barnett
2002, Conference Paper, International Journal of Wildland Fire
A statistical forecast methodology exploits large-scale patterns in monthly U.S. Climatological Division Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI) values over a wide region and several seasons to predict area burned in western U.S. wildfires by ecosystem province a season in advance. The forecast model, which is based on canonical correlations, indicates...
Comparison of shear-wave slowness profiles at 10 strong-motion sites from noninvasive SASW measurements and measurements made in boreholes
L.T. Brown, D.M. Boore, K.H. Stokoe II
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 3116-3133
The spectral-analysis-of-surface-waves (SASW) method is a relatively new in situ method for determining shear-wave slownesses. All measurements are made on the ground surface, making it much less costly than methods that require boreholes. The SASW method uses a number of active sources (ranging from a commercial Vibroseis truck to a...
Crustal structure and relocated earthquakes in the Puget Lowland, Washington, from high-resolution seismic tomography
T. M. Van Wagoner, R. S. Crosson, K. C. Creager, G. Medema, L. Preston, N. P. Symons, T.M. Brocher
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (107) ESE 22-1-ESE 22-23
The availability of regional earthquake data from the Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network (PNSN), together with active source data from the Seismic Hazards Investigation in Puget Sound (SHIPS) seismic experiments, has allowed us to construct a new high-resolution 3-D, P wave velocity model of the crust to a depth of about...
Experience gained in testing a theory for modelling groundwater flow in heterogeneous media
S. Christensen, R.L. Cooley
2002, IAHS-AISH Publication 22-27
Usually, small-scale model error is present in groundwater modelling because the model only represents average system characteristics having the same form as the drift, and small-scale variability is neglected. These errors cause the true errors of a regression model to be correlated. Theory and an example show that the errors...
Future petroleum energy resources of the world
Thomas S. Ahlbrandt
2002, International Geology Review (44) 1092-1104
Is the world running out of oil? Where will future oil and gas supplies come from? To help answer these questions, in 2000 the U.S. Geological Survey completed a new world assessment, exclusive of the United States, of the undiscovered conventional oil and gas resources and potential additions to reserves...
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...
A Geothermal GIS for Nevada: Defining Regional Controls and Favorable Exploration Terrains for Extensional Geothermal Systems
M.F. Coolbaugh, J. V. Taranik, G. L. Raines, L.A. Shevenell, D. L. Sawatzky, R. Bedell, T.B. Minor
2002, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Spatial analysis with a GIS was used to evaluate geothermal systems in Nevada using digital maps of geology, heat flow, young faults, young volcanism, depth to groundwater, groundwater geochemistry, earthquakes, and gravity. High-temperature (>160??C) extensional geothermal systems are preferentially associated with northeast-striking late Pleistocene and younger faults, caused by crustal...
Weathering reactions and hyporheic exchange controls on stream water chemistry in a glacial meltwater stream in the McMurdo Dry Valleys
Michael N. Gooseff, Diane M. McKnight, W. Berry Lyons, Alex E. Blum
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 15-1-15-17
In the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica, dilute glacial meltwater flows down well‐established streambeds to closed basin lakes during the austral summer. During the 6–12 week flow season, a hyporheic zone develops in the saturated sediment adjacent to the streams. Longer Dry Valley streams have higher concentrations of major ions than...
Layered, massive and thin sediments on Mars: Possible Late Noachian to Late Amazonian tephra?
M. G. Chapman
2002, Geological Society Special Publication 273-293
Data from instruments on the currently orbiting Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) suggest that as an alternative interpretation to lacustrine deposits, widespread sediments on Mars may be tephra deposits of variable age, formed in part by volcano-ice interactions. The materials are often associated with outcrops of mapped geological units that have...
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...
Nitrate stable isotopes: Tools for determining nitrate sources among different land uses in the Mississippi River Basin
Cecily C.Y. Chang, C. Kendall, S. R. Silva, W.A. Battaglin, K. Campbell
2002, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (59) 1874-1885
A study was conducted to determine whether NO3 stable isotopes (δ15N and δ18O), at natural abundance levels, could discriminate among NO3 sources from sites with different land uses at the basin scale. Water samples were collected from 24 sites in the Mississippi River Basin...
Elevations of water-worn features on Mars: Implications for circulation of groundwater
M. H. Carr
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (107) 14-1-14-11
Central to the model of the evolution of the martian hydrosphere by Clifford and Parker [2001] is a permanent freezing of the planet at the end of the Noachian and recharge of the global groundwater system by basal melting of ice-rich polar deposits. Acquisition of MOLA data by Mars Global Surveyor provides a...
The 1999 eruption of Shishaldin Volcano, Alaska: Monitoring a distant eruption
C.J. Nye, T. E. C. Keith, J.C. Eichelberger, T. P. Miller, S.R. McNutt, S. Moran, D.J. Schneider, J. Dehn, J.R. Schaefer
2002, Bulletin of Volcanology (64) 507-519
Shishaldin Volcano, in the central Aleutian volcanic arc, became seismically restless during the summer of 1998. Increasing unrest was monitored using a newly installed seismic network, weather satellites, and rare local visual observations. The unrest culminated in large eruptions on 19 April and 22-23 April 1999. The opening phase of...
The potential of combining ion trap/MS/MS and TOF/MS for identification of emerging contaminants
I. Ferrer, E. T. Furlong, C.E. Heine, E.M. Thurman
2002, Conference Paper, Proceedings 50th ASMS Conference on Mass Spectrmetry and Allied Topics
The use of a method combining ion trap tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) and time of flight mass spectrometry (TOF/MS) for identification of emerging contaminates was discussed. The two tools together complemented each other in sensitivity, fragmentation and accurate mass determination. Liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization/ion-trap tandem mass spectrometry (LC/ESI/MS/MS), in positive ion...
Detrital zircon provenance analysis of the Great Valley Group, California: Evolution of an arc-forearc system
K. DeGraaff-Surpless, S.A. Graham, J. L. Wooden, M.O. McWilliams
2002, Geological Society of America Bulletin (114) 1564-1580
The improved resolution of sediment provenance from detrital zircon analysis of Great Valley stratigraphy enables recognition of previously undocumented arc magmatism and the evolution of regional drainage systems within the Cretaceous arc-forearc system related to uplift, magmatism, and structure in the arc. Great Valley detrital zircon age data confirm previous...
Topographic stress perturbations in southern Davis Mountains, west Texas 1. Polarity reversal of principal stresses
W. Z. Savage, R. H. Morin
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (107) ETG 5-1-ETC 5-15
We have applied a previously developed analytical stress model to interpret subsurface stress conditions inferred from acoustic televiewer logs obtained in two municipal water wells located in a valley in the southern Davis Mountains near Alpine, Texas. The appearance of stress-induced breakouts with orientations that shift by 90° at two...
Supporting user-defined granularities in a spatiotemporal conceptual model
V. Khatri, S. Ram, R.T. Snodgrass, G. M. O’Brien
2002, Conference Paper, Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence
Granularities are integral to spatial and temporal data. A large number of applications require storage of facts along with their temporal and spatial context, which needs to be expressed in terms of appropriate granularities. For many real-world applications, a single granularity in the database is insufficient. In order to support...
Statistical characteristics of xenoliths in the Antioch kimberlite pipe, Marshall County, northeastern Kansas
S. Kotov, Pieter Berendsen
2002, Natural Resources Research (11) 289-297
Geometrical characteristics of xenoliths in the Antioch kimberlite pipe have been considered in statistical terms. A method of conversion of 2D intersections to 3D dimensions was used. It has been shown that the Rosin-Rammler distribution of mass leads to the Weibull distribution of sizes, whereas a fractal distribution of sizes...
A multiisotope C and N modeling analysis of soil organic matter turnover and transport as a function of soil depth in a California annual grassland soil chronosequence
W.T. Baisden, Ronald Amundson, D.L. Brenner, A.C. Cook, C. Kendall, J.W. Harden
2002, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (16) 82-1-82-26
We examine soil organic matter (SOM) turnover and transport using C and N isotopes in soil profiles sampled circa 1949, 1978, and 1998 (a period spanning pulse thermonuclear 14C enrichment of the atmosphere) along a 3‐million‐year annual grassland soil chronosequence. Temporal differences in soil Δ14C profiles indicate that inputs of recently...
Modified Biot-Gassmann theory for calculating elastic velocities for unconsolidated and consolidated sediments
Myung W. Lee
2002, Marine Geophysical Research (23) 403-412
The classical Biot-Gassmann theory (BGT) generally overestimates shear-wave velocities of water-saturated sediments. To overcome this problem, a new theory is developed based on BGT and on the velocity ratio as a function of G(1−φ)n, where φ is porosity and n and G are constants. Based on laboratory data measured at ultrasonic frequencies, parameters for the...