The behaviour of 39 pesticides in surface waters as a function of scale
P. D. Capel, S.J. Larson, T. A. Winterstein
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1251-1269
A portion of applied pesticides runs off agricultural fields and is transported through surface waters. In this study, the behaviour of 39 pesticides is examined as a function of scale across 14 orders of magnitude from the field to the ocean. Data on pesticide loads in streams from two US...
Effects of nonlethal sea lamprey attack on the blood chemistry of lake trout
Carol Cotant Edsall, William D. Swink
2001, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (13) 51-55
A laboratory study examined changes in the blood chemistry of field-caught and hatchery-reared lake trout Salvelinus namaycush subjected to a nonlethal attack by sea lampreys Petromyzon marinus. We measured glucose, total protein, amylase, alkaline phosphatase (ALKP), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), creatine kinase, calcium, magnesium, triglycerides, sodium, and potassium with a Kodak Ektachem...
The national stream quality accounting network: A flux-basedapproach to monitoring the water quality of large rivers
R. P. Hooper, Brent T. Aulenbach, V.J. Kelly
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1089-1106
Estimating the annual mass flux at a network of fixed stations is one approach to characterizing water quality of large rivers. The interpretive context provided by annual flux includes identifying source and sink areas for constituents and estimating the loadings to receiving waters, such as reservoirs or the ocean. Since...
Lethality of sea lamprey attacks on lake trout in relation to location on the body surface
Roger A. Bergstedt, Clifford P. Schneider, Robert O’Gorman
2001, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (130) 336-340
We compared the locations of healed attack marks of the sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus on live lake trout Salvelinus namaycush with those of unhealed attack marks on dead lake trout to determine if the lethality of a sea lamprey attack was related to attack location. Lake trout were collected from Lake Ontario, live fish...
Regional variations in provenance and abundance of ice-rafted clasts in Arctic Ocean sediments: Implications for the configuration of late Quaternary oceanic and atmospheric circulation in the Arctic
R. L. Phillips, A. Grantz
2001, Marine Geology (172) 91-115
The composition and distribution of ice-rafted glacial erratics in late Quaternary sediments define the major current systems of the Arctic Ocean and identify two distinct continental sources for the erratics. In the southern Amerasia basin up to 70% of the erratics are dolostones and limestones (the Amerasia suite) that originated...
Timescales for nitrate contamination of spring waters, northern Florida, USA
B. G. Katz, J.K. Böhlke, H.D. Hornsby
2001, Chemical Geology (179) 167-186
Residence times of groundwater, discharging from springs in the middle Suwannee River Basin, were estimated using chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), tritium (3H), and tritium/helium-3 (3H/3He) age-dating methods to assess the chronology of nitrate contamination of spring waters in northern Florida. During base-flow conditions for the Suwannee River in 1997–1999, 17 water samples...
A functional relation for field-scale nonaqueous phase liquid dissolution developed using a pore network model
L.A. Dillard, H.I. Essaid, M.J. Blunt
2001, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (48) 89-119
A pore network model with cubic chambers and rectangular tubes was used to estimate the nonaqueous phase liquid (NAPL) dissolution rate coefficient, Kdissai, and NAPL/water total specific interfacial area, ai. Kdissai was computed as a function of modified Peclet number(Pe′) for various NAPL saturations (SN) and ai during drainage and imbibition and during dissolution without displacement. The largest contributor to ai was the interfacial area in...
Droughts, epic droughts and droughty centuries - lessons from a California paleoclimatic record: a PACLIM 2001 meeting report
M. D. Dettinger
2001, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (14) 51-53
During the early 1990s (but echoing studies by S.T. Harding at the University of California, from as early as the 1930s), several lines of paleoclimate evidence in and around the Sierra Nevada Range have provided the water community in California with some real horror stories. By studying ancient tree stumps...
Source parameters for the 1952 Kern County earthquake, California: A joint inversion of leveling and triangulation observations
G.W. Bawden
2001, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (106) 771-785
Coseismic leveling and triangulation observations are used to determine the faulting geometry and slip distribution of the July 21, 1952, Mw 7.3 Kern County earthquake on the White Wolf fault. A singular value decomposition inversion is used to assess the ability of the geodetic network to resolve slip along a multisegment fault...
Effect of storm trajectories on snowfall chemistry in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado
G.P. Ingersoll, K.A. Tonnessen, K. Campbell, B.R. Glass, A.O. Torizzo
2001, Conference Paper, Proceedings of The Western Snow Conference
Snowfall samples from snowstorms lasting 1 to 4 days were collected near the Bear Lake snow telemetry (SnoTel) site in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado (ROMO), during the 1998-99 snowfall season to determine if storms moving in from different directions affect the chemistry of precipitation in the park. Storm pathways...
A note on contact stress and closure in models of rock joints and faults
N.M. Beeler, S.H. Hickman
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 607-610
We have re-examined asperity deformation predicted by joint closure models based on Greenwood and Williamson [1966] which use a statistical representation of loaded, rough surfaces. Although such models assume small elastic strains within contacting asperities (Hertzian contact) and well predict the observed dependence of closure on normal stress, large elastic...
Dynamics of diffuse pollution from US southern watersheds
J.D. Schreiber, R.A. Rebich, C.M. Cooper
2001, Water Research (35) 2534-2542
To understand the effects of diffuse pollution information on the source of pollutants, quantities in transport, mode of transport, transient nature of the pollution event, and most importantly, a consideration of remediation efforts need to be known. For example, water quality research in the Yazoo Basin uplands in Mississippi has...
Biomonitoring for deposited sediment using benthic invertebrates: A test on 4 Missouri streams
L.D. Zweig, Charles F. Rabeni
2001, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (20) 643-657
The response of stream benthic invertebrates to surficially deposited fine sediment was investigated in 4 Missouri streams. Twenty to 24 sampling sites in each stream were selected based on similarities of substrate particle-size distributions, depths, and current velocities but for differences in amounts of deposited sediment, which ranged from 0...
Effects of Land-Cover Change, Floods, and Stream Position on Geomorphic Processes - Implications for Restoration Activities
F. A. Fitzpatrick
Hayes D.F.Hayes D.F., editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2001 Wetlands Engineering and River Restoration Conference
A geomorphic study for North Fish Creek, a northern Wisconsin tributary to Lake Superior was analyzed to determine the hydrologic and geomorphic changes caused by clear-cut logging and agricultural activity. Discharge magnitude estimated with HEC-2 for full-channel capacities indicate that modern full-channel discharges are about twice as large as pre-1946...
Transient storage assessments of dye-tracer injections in rivers of the Willamette Basin, Oregon
A. Laenen, K.E. Bencala
2001, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (37) 367-377
Rhodamine WT dye-tracer injections in rivers of the Willamette Basin yield concentration-time curves with characteristically long recession times suggestive of active transient storage processes. The scale of drainage areas contributing to the stream reaches studied in the Willamette Basin ranges from 10 to 12,000 km2. A transient storage assessment of...
Hellas as a possible site of ancient ice-covered lakes on Mars
Johnnie N. Moore, D.E. Wilhelms
2001, Icarus (154) 258-276
Based on topographic, morphologic, and stratigraphic evidence, we propose that ancient water-laid sediment is the dominant component of deposits within Hellas Planitia, Mars. Multiple-layered sediment is manifested by alternating benches and scarps visible in Mars orbiting camera narrow-angle (MOC NA) images. Viking Orbiter camera and MOC NA images were used...
Oblique sinistral transpression in the Arabian shield: The timing and kinematics of a Neoproterozoic suture zone
P.R. Johnson, F. Kattan
2001, Precambrian Research (107) 117-138
The Hulayfah-Ad Dafinah-Ruwah fault zone is a belt of highly strained rocks that extends in a broad curve across the northeastern Arabian shield. It is a subvertical shear zone, 5-30 km wide and over 600 km long, and is interpreted as a zone of oblique sinistral transpression that forms the...
A rule-based model for mapping potential exotic plant distribution
Don G. Despain, T. Weaver, R.J. Aspinall
2001, Western North American Naturalist (61) 428-433
Wildland managers need a method to predict which portions of the lands under their stewardship are susceptible to invasion by exotic plants. We combined a database listing exotic plant species known to occur in major environmental types (habitat types) throughout the northern Rocky Mountains with a digital vegetation map of...
Toward a national fuels mapping strategy: Lessons from selected mapping programs
Thomas R. Loveland
2001, International Journal of Wildland Fire (10) 289-299
The establishment of a robust national fuels mapping program must be based on pertinent lessons from relevant national mapping programs. Many large-area mapping programs are under way in numerous Federal agencies. Each of these programs follows unique strategies to achieve mapping goals and objectives. Implementation approaches range from highly centralized...
Interactive visualization of vegetation dynamics
B. C. Reed, D. Swets, L. Bard, J. Brown, James Rowland
2001, Conference Paper, International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
Satellite imagery provides a mechanism for observing seasonal dynamics of the landscape that have implications for near real-time monitoring of agriculture, forest, and range resources. This study illustrates a technique for visualizing timely information on key events during the growing season (e.g., onset, peak, duration, and end of growing season),...
Visible/near-infrared spectra and two-layer modeling of palagonite-coated Basalts
J. R. Johnson, W.M. Grundy
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 2101-2104
Fine-grained dust coatings on Martian rocks and soils obscure underlying surfaces and hinder mineralogic interpretations of both remote sensing and in-situ observations. We investigate laboratory visible/near-infrared spectra of various thicknesses of palagonite coatings on basalt substrates. We develop a two-layer Hapke scattering model incorporating porosity, grain size, and derived absorption...
Stable isotopes in seafloor hydrothermal systems: Vent fluids, hydrothermal deposits, hydrothermal alteration, and microbial processes
Wayne C. Shanks III
2001, Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry (43) 468-525
The recognition of abundant and widespread hydrothermal activity and associated unique life-forms on the ocean floor is one of the great scientific discoveries of the latter half of the twentieth century. Studies of seafloor hydrothermal processes have led to revolutions in understanding fluid convection and the cooling of the ocean...
Seasonal subsidence and rebound in Las Vegas Valley, Nevada, observed by Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry
Jorn Hoffmann, Howard A. Zebker, Devin L. Galloway, Falk Amelung
2001, Water Resources Research (37) 1551-1566
Analyses of areal variations in the subsidence and rebound occurring over stressed aquifer systems, in conjunction with measurements of the hydraulic head fluctuations causing these displacements, can yield valuable information about the compressibility and storage properties of the aquifer system. Historically, stress‐strain relationships have been derived from paired extensometer/piezometer installations,...
Historical effects of El Nino and La Nina events on the seasonal evolution of the montane snowpack in the Columbia and Colorado River Basins
Martyn P. Clark, Mark C. Serreze, Gregory J. McCabe
2001, Water Resources Research (37) 741-757
Snow‐water equivalent (SWE) data measured at several hundred montane sites in the western United States are used to examine the historic effects of El Nino and La Nina events on seasonal snowpack evolution in the major subbasins in the Columbia and Colorado River systems. Results are used to predict annual...
Measurement of 224Ra and 226Ra activities in natural waters using a radon-in-air monitor
G. Kim, W. C. Burnett, H. Dulaiova, P.W. Swarzenski, W.S. Moore
2001, Environmental Science & Technology (35) 4680-4683
We report a simple new technique for measuring low-level radium isotopes (224Ra and 226Ra) in natural waters. The radium present in natural waters is first preconcentrated onto MnO2-coated acrylic fiber (Mn fiber) in a column mode. The radon produced from the adsorbed radium is then circulated through a closed air-loop...