Use of chlorine-36 to determine regional-scale aquifer dispersivity, eastern Snake River Plain aquifer, Idaho/USA
L.D. Cecil, J.A. Welhan, J.R. Green, S.K. Grape, E.R. Sudicky
2000, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms (172) 679-687
Chlorine-36 (36Cl) derived from processed nuclear waste that was disposed at the US Department of Energy's Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL) through a deep injection well in 1958, was detected 24-28 yr later in groundwater monitoring wells approximately 26 km downgradient from the source. Groundwater samples covering the...
The use of mathematical models to predict beach behavior for U.S. coastal engineering: A critical review
E.R. Thieler, O.H. Pilkey Jr., R.S. Young, D. M. Bush, F. Chai
2000, Journal of Coastal Research (16) 48-70
A number of assumed empirical relationships (e.g., the Bruun Rule, the equilibrium shoreface profile, longshore transport rate equation, beach length: durability relationship, and the renourishment factor) and deterministic numerical models (e.g., GENESIS, SBEACH) have become important tools for investigating coastal processes and for coastal engineering design in the U.S. They...
Shallow subsurface storm flow in a forested headwater catchment: Observations and modeling using a modified TOPMODEL
Todd M. Scanlon, Jeff P. Raffensperger, George M. Hornberger, Roger B. Clapp
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 2575-2586
Transient, perched water tables in the shallow subsurface are observed at the South Fork Brokenback Run catchment in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia. Crest piezometers installed along a hillslope transect show that the development of saturated conditions in the upper 1.5 m of the subsurface is controlled by total precipitation and...
A comparison of solute-transport solution techniques based on inverse modelling results
S. Mehl, M. C. Hill
2000, Conference Paper, IAHS-AISH Publication
Five common numerical techniques (finite difference, predictor-corrector, total-variation-diminishing, method-of-characteristics, and modified-method-of-characteristics) were tested using simulations of a controlled conservative tracer-test experiment through a heterogeneous, two-dimensional sand tank. The experimental facility was constructed using randomly distributed homogeneous blocks of five sand types. This experimental model provides an outstanding opportunity to compare...
Predicting broad-scale occurrences of vertebrates in patchy landscapes
R.B. Boone, W.B. Krohn
2000, Landscape Ecology (15) 63-74
Spatially explicit landscape-scale models that predict species distributions, where patches of habitat are shown as having potential to be occupied or unoccupied, are increasingly common. To successfully use such data, one should understand how these predicted distributions are created and how their relative accuracies are assessed. Geographic ranges, defined upon...
Predicting the probability of detecting organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls in stream systems on the basis of land use in the Pacific Northwest, USA
R. W. Black, A.L. Haggland, F.D. Voss
2000, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (19) 1044-1054
We analyzed streambed sediment and fish tissue (Cottus sp.) at 30 sites in the Puget Sound and Willamette basins in Washington and Oregon, USA, respectively, for organochlorine pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The study was designed to determine the concentrations of organochlorine pesticides and PCBs in fish tissue and sediment...
Predicting red wolf release success in the southeastern United States
Frank T. van Manen, Barron A. Crawford, Joseph D. Clark
2000, Journal of Wildlife Management (64) 895-902
Although the red wolf (Canis rufus) was once found throughout the southeastern United States, indiscriminate killing and habitat destruction reduced its range to a small section of coastal Texas and Louisiana. Wolves trapped from 1973 to 1980 were taken to establish a captive breeding program that was used to repatriate...
Regoliths of the middle-Atlantic Piedmont and evolution of a polymorphic landscape
E.T. Cleaves
2000, Southeastern Geology (39) 199-222
The regolith overlying the alumino-silicate rocks of the middle-Atlantic Piedmont Province consists primarily of saprolite with a thin veneer of diamictons of colluvial origin. Thickness and distribution of the saprolite is related to landform and lithology. For example, on uplands isovolumetric weathering of the Loch Raven Schist produces saprolite averaging...
Chlorofluorocarbon dating of herbicide-containing well waters in Fresno and Tulare counties, California
F. Spurlock, K. Burow, N. Dubrovsky
2000, Journal of Environmental Quality (29) 474-483
Simazine, diuron, and bromacil are the most frequently detected currently registered pesticides in California groundwater. These herbicides have been used for several decades in Fresno and Tulare counties, California; however, previous data are inadequate to determine whether the detections are a result of recent or historical applications (i.e., within the...
USGS National Seismic Hazard Maps
A.D. Frankel, C.S. Mueller, T. P. Barnhard, E. V. Leyendecker, R. L. Wesson, S. C. Harmsen, F. W. Klein, D. M. Perkins, N.C. Dickman, S.L. Hanson, M. G. Hopper
2000, Earthquake Spectra (16) 1-19
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) recently completed new probabilistic seismic hazard maps for the United States, including Alaska and Hawaii. These hazard maps form the basis of the probabilistic component of the design maps used in the 1997 edition of the NEHRP Recommended Provisions for Seismic Regulations for New Buildings and...
Use of isotopically labeled fertilizer to trace nitrogen fertilizer contributions to surface, soil, and ground water
D.H. Wilkison, D. W. Blevins, S. R. Silva
2000, Journal of Environmental Hydrology (8)
The fate and transport of a single N fertilizer application through plants, soil, runoff, and the unsaturated and saturated zones was determined for four years at a field site under continuous corn (Zea mays L.) management. Claypan soils, which underlie the site, were hypothesized to restrict the movement of agrichemicals...
A log-normal distribution model for the molecular weight of aquatic fulvic acids
S.E. Cabaniss, Q. Zhou, P.A. Maurice, Y.-P. Chin, G. R. Aiken
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 1103-1109
The molecular weight of humic substances influences their proton and metal binding, organic pollutant partitioning, adsorption onto minerals and activated carbon, and behavior during water treatment. We propose a lognormal model for the molecular weight distribution in aquatic fulvic acids to provide a conceptual framework for studying these size effects....
An unstructured grid, three-dimensional model based on the shallow water equations
V. Casulli, R. A. Walters
2000, International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids (32) 331-348
A semi-implicit finite difference model based on the three-dimensional shallow water equations is modified to use unstructured grids. There are obvious advantages in using unstructured grids in problems with a complicated geometry. In this development, the concept of unstructured orthogonal grids is introduced and applied to this model. The governing...
A diurnal animation of thermal images from a day-night pair
K. Watson
2000, Remote Sensing of Environment (72) 237-243
Interpretation of thermal images is often complicated because the physical property information is contained in both the spatial and temporal variations of the data and thermal models are necessary to extract and display this information. A linearized radiative transfer solution to the surface flux has been used to derive a...
Crustal deformation associated with glacial fluctuations in the eastern Chugach Mountains, Alaska
Jeanne Sauber, George Plafker, Bruce F. Molnia, Mark A. Bryant
2000, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (105) 8055-8077
The changes of the solid Earth in south central Alaska in response to two major glacial fluctuations on different temporal and spatial scales have been estimated and we evaluated their influence on the stress state and ongoing tectonic deformation of the region. During the recent (1993–1995) Bering Glacier surge, a...
Nitrogen flux and sources in the Mississippi River Basin
D. A. Goolsby, W.A. Battaglin, Brent T. Aulenbach, R. P. Hooper
2000, Science of Total Environment (248) 75-86
Nitrogen from the Mississippi River Basin is believed to be at least partly responsible for the large zone of oxygen-depleted water that develops in the Gulf of Mexico each summer. Historical data show that concentrations of nitrate in the Mississippi River and some of...
Testing the effectiveness of an aquatic hazing device on waterbirds in the San Francisco Bay estuary of California
Desley A. Whisson, John Y. Takekawa
2000, Waterbirds (23) 56-63
Aquatic hazing devices recently have been developed as a possible means of deterring waterbirds from oil spills, thereby reducing casualties. However, the effectiveness of these devices has not been examined with rigorous statistical tests. We conducted a study in the San Francisco Bay estuary to develop a design for testing...
Life history plasticity and population regulation in sea otters
Daniel H. Monson, James A. Estes, James L. Bodkin, Donald B. Siniff
2000, Oikos (90) 457-468
We contrasted body condition, and age-specific reproduction and mortality between a growing population of sea otters (Enhydralutris) at Kodiak Island and a high-density near-equilibrium population at Amchitka Island, Alaska. We obtained data from marked individuals, population surveys, and collections of beach-cast carcasses. Mass:length ratios indicated that females (but not males)...
Preliminary observations of the behavior of male, flat-tailed horned lizards before and after an off-highway vehicle race in California
N.C. Nicolai, Jeffrey E. Lovich
2000, California Fish and Game (86) 208-212
Animal movements are influenced by many factors, including he need for food and other resources necessary for survival; searching for mates or nest and brood sites; and response to stress, including escape from predators and environmental extremes. Although it is often difficult to determine the exact cause for particular movements...
Mode of occurrence of arsenic in four US coals
A. Kolker, Frank E. Huggins, C.A. Palmer, N. Shah, S.S. Crowley, G.P. Huffman, R. B. Finkelman
2000, Fuel Processing Technology (63) 167-178
An integrated analytical approach has been used to determine the mode of occurrence of arsenic in samples of four widely used US coals: the Pittsburgh, Illinois #6, Elkhorn/Hazard, and Wyodak. Results from selective leaching, X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy, and electron microprobe analysis show that pyrite is the principal...
Geochemical variations in Peoria Loess of western Iowa indicate paleowinds of midcontinental North America during last glaciation
D.R. Muhs, E. Arthur Bettis III
2000, Quaternary Research (53) 49-61
Peoria Loess deposited in western Iowa during the last glacial maximum (LGM) shows distinct geochemical and particle-size variations as a function of both depth and distance east of the Missouri River. Geochemical and particle-size data indicate that Peoria Loess in western Iowa probably had two sources: the Missouri River valley,...
The genetics of amphibian decline: population substructure and molecular differentiation in the Yosemite toad, Bufo canorus (Anura, Bufonidae) based on single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis (SSCP) and mitochondrial DNA sequence data
H. Bradley Shaffer, Gary M. Fellers, Allison Magee, S. Randal Voss
2000, Molecular Ecology (9) 245-257
We present a comprehensive survey of genetic variation across the range of the narrowly distributed endemic Yosemite toad Bufo canorus, a declining amphibian restricted to the Sierra Nevada of California. Based on 322 bp of mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence data, we found limited support for the monophyly of B. canorus and...
Variability in winter mass balance of Northern Hemisphere glaciers and relations with atmospheric circulation
G.J. McCabe, A. G. Fountain, M. Dyurgerov
2000, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (32) 64-72
An analysis of variability in the winter mass balance (WMB) of 22 glaciers in the Northern Hemisphere indicates two primary modes of variability that explain 46% of the variability among all glaciers. The first mode of variability characterizes WMB variability in Northern and Central Europe and the second mode primarily...
Mode of occurrence of chromium in four US coals
Frank E. Huggins, N. Shah, G.P. Huffman, A. Kolker, S. Crowley, C.A. Palmer, R. B. Finkelman
2000, Fuel Processing Technology (63) 79-92
The mode of occurrence of chromium in three US bituminous coals and one US subbituminous has been examined using both X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy and a selective leaching protocol supplemented by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and electron microprobe measurements. A synthesis of results from both methods indicates that...
A provisional model for smooth brome managemen in degraded tallgrass prairie
G.D. Willson, J. Stubbendieck
2000, Ecological Restoration (18) 34-38
[No abstract available]...