Nonlinear refraction and reflection travel time tomography
Jiahua Zhang, Uri S. ten Brink, M.N. Toksoz
1998, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (103) 29743-29757
We develop a rapid nonlinear travel time tomography method that simultaneously inverts refraction and reflection travel times on a regular velocity grid. For travel time and ray path calculations, we apply a wave front method employing graph theory. The first-arrival refraction travel times are calculated on the basis of cell...
Real-time monitoring of bluff stability at Woodway, Washington, USA
R.L. Baum, E. L. Harp, W.J. Likos, P. S. Powers, R.G. LaHusen
Evangelista A.Picarelli L.Evangelista A.Picarelli L., editor(s)
1998, Conference Paper, The geotechnics of hard soils - soft rocks. Proceedings of the second international symopsium on hard soils-soft rocks, Naples, October 1998. (Two volumes).
On January 15, 1997, a landslide of approximately 100,000-m3 from a coastal bluff swept five cars of a freight train into Puget Sound at Woodway, Washington, USA, 25 km north of downtown Seattle. The landslide resulted from failure of a sequence of dense sands and hard silts of glacial and...
Tritium-helium 3 dating under complex conditions in hydraulically stressed areas of a buried-valley aquifer
Stephanie Dunkle Shapiro, Gary L. Rowe, Peter Schlosser, Andrea Ludin, Martin Stute
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 1165-1180
The 3H-3He dating method is applied in a buried-valley aquifer near Dayton, Ohio. The study area is large, not all sampling locations lie along well-defined flow paths, and existing wells with variable screen lengths and diameters are used. Reliable use of the method at this site requires addressing several complications: (1)...
Birds of the Indigirka River Delta, Russia: Historical and biogeographic comparisons
John M. Pearce, Daniel Esler, Andrei G. Degtyarev
1998, Arctic (51) 361-370
We documented the breeding status and relative abundance of all avian species on the coastal portion of the Indigirka River Delta during spring and summer 1993-95. Data on avifaunal composition were then compared to data from adjacent areas from Eastern Siberia to the Chukotka Peninsula to evaluate how species composition...
Salinity trends in surface waters of the Upper Colorado River Basin, Colorado
N.J. Bauch, N.E. Spahr
1998, Journal of Environmental Quality (27) 640-655
Dissolved-solids data collected in the Upper Colorado River Basin upstream from Cameo, Colorado, and in the Gunnison River Basin were analyzed for trends in flow-adjusted dissolved-solids concentrations and loads for water years 1970 to 1993, 1980 to 1993, and 1986 to 1993. Trend results for flow-adjusted...
A nonlinear model for analysis of slug-test data
C.D. McElwee, M.A. Zenner
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 55-66
While doing slug tests in high-permeability aquifers, we have consistently seen deviations from the expected response of linear theoretical models. Normalized curves do not coincide for various initial heads, as would be predicted by linear theories, and are shifted to larger times for higher initial heads. We have developed a...
Meteoric sphaerosiderite lines and their use for paleohydrology and paleoclimatology
Greg A. Ludvigson, Luis A. Gonzalez, R.A. Metzger, B.J. Witzke, Richard L. Brenner, A.P. Murillo, T. S. White
1998, Geology (26) 1039-1042
Sphaerosiderite, a morphologically distinct millimeter-scale spherulitic siderite (FeCO3), forms predominantly in wetland soils and sediments, and is common in the geologic record. Ancient sphaerosiderites are found in paleosol horizons within coal-bearing stratigraphic intervals and, like their modern counterparts, are interpreted as having formed...
Black shale source rocks and oil generation in the Cambrian and Ordovician of the central Appalachian Basin, USA
Robert T. Ryder, Robert C Burruss, Joseph R. Hatch
1998, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (82) 412-441
Nearly 600 million bbl of oil (MMBO) and 1 to 1.5 trillion ft3 (tcf) of gas have been produced from Cambrian and Ordovician reservoirs (carbonate and sandstone) in the Ohio part of the Appalachian basin and on adjoining arches in Ohio, Indiana, and Ontario, Canada. Most of the oil and gas...
Hydrogen and oxygen isotope fractionation between brucite and aqueous NaCl solutions from 250 to 450°C
Peter J. Saccocia, Jeffrey S. Seewald, Wayne C. Shanks III
1998, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (62) 485-492
Hydrogen and oxygen isotope fractionation factors between brucite and aqueous NaCl solutions (1000lnαbr-sw) have been calibrated by experiment from 250 to 450°C at 0.5 Kb. For D/H fractionation, 1000lnα br-sw values are as follows: −32 ± 6‰ (250°C, 3.2 wt% NaCl), −21 ± 2‰ (350°C, 10.0 wt% NaCl), and −22 ± 2‰...
Regional characterization of land cover using multiple sources of data
James E. Vogelmann, Terry L. Sohl, Stephen M. Howard
1998, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (64) 45-57
Many organizations require accurate intermediate-scale land-cover information for many applications, including modeling nutrient and pesticide runoff, understanding spatial patterns of biodiversity, land-use planning, and policy development. While many techniques have been successfully used to classify land cover in relatively small regions, there are substantial obstacles in applying these methods to...
Fish community changes in the St. Louis River estuary, Lake Superior, 1989-1996: Is it ruffe or population dynamics?
Charles R. Bronte, Lori M. Evrard, William P. Brown, Kathleen R. Mayo, Andrew J. Edwards
1998, Journal of Great Lakes Research (24) 309-318
Ruffe (Gymnocephalus cernuus) have been implicated in density declines of native species through egg predation and competition for food in some European waters where they were introduced. Density estimates for ruffe and principal native fishes in the St. Louis River estuary (western Lake Superior) were developed for 1989 to 1996...
Airborne volcanic plume measurements using a FTIR spectrometer, Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
K.A. McGee, T.M. Gerlach
1998, Geophysical Research Letters (25) 615-618
A prototype closed-path Fourier transform infrared spectrometer system (FTIR), operating from battery power and with a Stirling engine microcooler for detector cooling, was successfully used for airborne measurements of sulfur dioxide at Kilauea volcano. Airborne profiles of the volcanic plume emanating from the erupting Pu′u′O′o vent...
Chemistry of unsaturated zone gases sampled in open boreholes at the crest of Yucca Mountain, Nevada: Data and basic concepts of chemical and physical processes in the mountain
Donald C. Thorstenson, Edwin P. Weeks, Herbert Haas, Eurybiades Busenberg, Niel Plummer, Charles A. Peters
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 1507-1529
Boreholes open to the unsaturated zone at the crest of Yucca Mountain, Nevada, were variously sampled for CO2 (including 13C and 14C), CH4, N2, O2, Ar, CFC-11, CFC-12, and CFC-113 from 1986 to 1993. Air enters the mountain in outcrops, principally on the eastern slope, is enriched in CO2by mixing with soil gas,...
Multi-level slug tests in highly permeable formations: 2. Hydraulic conductivity identification, method verification, and field applications
V.A. Zlotnik, V. L. McGuire
1998, Journal of Hydrology (204) 283-296
Using the developed theory and modified Springer-Gelhar (SG) model, an identification method is proposed for estimating hydraulic conductivity from multi-level slug tests. The computerized algorithm calculates hydraulic conductivity from both monotonic and oscillatory well responses obtained using a double-packer system. Field verification of the method was performed at a specially...
Structural control of coalbed methane production in Alabama
J.C. Pashin, R.H. Groshong Jr.
1998, International Journal of Coal Geology (38) 89-113
Thin-skinned structures are distributed throughout the Alabama coalbed methane fields, and these structures affect the production of gas and water from coal-bearing strata. Extensional structures in Deerlick Creek and Cedar Cove fields include normal faults and hanging-wall rollovers, and area balancing indicates that these structures are detached in the Pottsville...
Paleomagnetism, paleogeographic origins, and uplift history of the Coast Range ophiolite at Mount Diablo, California
J.T. Hagstrum, D. L. Jones
1998, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (103) 597-603
Divergent paleogeographic origins have been proposed for the Coast Range ophiolite of western California which are testable using paleomagnetic methods. Paleomagnetic data for Middle Jurassic pillow lavas and diabase sills of the Coast Range ophiolite at Mount Diablo, northern California, indicate that they contain two components of remanent magnetization. The...
Mapping the Gulf of Maine with side-scan sonar: A new bottom-type classification for complex seafloors
W. A. Barnhardt, J. T. Kelley, S.M. Dickson, D. F. Belknap
1998, Journal of Coastal Research (14) 646-659
The bedrock-framed seafloor in the northwestern Gulf of Maine is characterized by extreme changes in bathymetric relief and covered with a wide variety of surficial materials. Traditional methods of mapping cannot accurately represent the great heterogeneity of such a glaciated region. A new mapping scheme for complex seafloors, based primarily...
Detecting influential observations in nonlinear regression modeling of groundwater flow
Richard M. Yager
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 1623-1633
Nonlinear regression is used to estimate optimal parameter values in models of groundwater flow to ensure that differences between predicted and observed heads and flows do not result from nonoptimal parameter values. Parameter estimates can be affected, however, by observations that disproportionately influence the regression, such as outliers that exert...
Data from selected U.S. Geological Survey National Stream Water Quality Monitoring Networks
Richard B. Alexander, James R. Slack, Amy S. Ludtke, Kathleen K. Fitzgerald, Terry L. Schertz
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 2401-2405
A nationally consistent and well-documented collection of water quality and quantity data compiled during the past 30 years for streams and rivers in the United States is now available on CD-ROM and accessible over the World Wide Web. The data include measurements from two U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) national networks...
Analysis of transient storage subject to unsteady flow: Diel flow variation in an Antarctic stream
R.L. Runkel, Diane M. McKnight, E.D. Andrews
1998, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (17) 143-154
Transport of dissolved material in streams and small rivers may be characterized using tracer-dilution methods and solute transport models. Recent studies have quantified stream/substream interactions using models of transient storage. These studies are based on tracer-dilution data obtained during periods of steady flow. We present...
Shallow velocity structure of Stromboli Volcano, Italy, derived from small-aperture array measurements of Strombolian tremor
B. Chouet, G. De Luca, G. Milana, P. Dawson, M. Martini, R. Scarpa
1998, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (88) 653-666
The properties of the tremor wave field at Stromboli are analyzed using data from small-aperture arrays of short-period seismometers deployed on the north flank of the volcano. The seismometers are configured in two semi-circular arrays with radii of 60 and 150 m and...
Effect of calcium carbonate saturation of seawater on coral calcification
J.-P. Gattuso, M. Frankignoulle, I. Bourge, S. Romaine, R. W. Buddemeier
1998, Global and Planetary Change (18) 37-46
The carbonate chemistry of seawater is usually not considered to be an important factor influencing calcium-carbonate-precipitation by corals because surface seawater is supersaturated with respect to aragonite. Recent reports, however, suggest that it could play a major role in the evolution and biogeography of recent corals. We investigated the calcification...
Estimation of density of mongooses with capture-recapture and distance sampling
J.L. Corn, M.J. Conroy
1998, Journal of Mammalogy (79) 1009-1015
We captured mongooses (Herpestes javanicus) in live traps arranged in trapping webs in Antigua, West Indies, and used capture-recapture and distance sampling to estimate density. Distance estimation and program DISTANCE were used to provide estimates of density from the trapping-web data. Mean density based on trapping webs was 9.5 mongooses/ha...
Evidence that local land use practices influence regional climate, vegetation, and stream flow patterns in adjacent natural areas
T.J. Stohlgren, T.N. Chase, R.A. Pielke Sr., T.G.F. Kittel, Jill Baron
1998, Global Change Biology (4) 495-504
We present evidence that land use practices in the plains of Colorado influence regional climate and vegetation in adjacent natural areas in the Rocky Mountains in predictable ways. Mesoscale climate model simulations using the Colorado State University Regional Atmospheric Modelling System (RAMS) projected that modifications to natural vegetation in the...
Late Quaternary slip on the Santa Cruz Island fault, California
N. Pinter, S.B. Lueddecke, E.A. Keller, K. R. Simmons
1998, Geological Society of America Bulletin (110) 711-722
The style, timing, and pattern of slip on the Santa Cruz Island fault were investigated by trenching the fault and by analysis of offset late Quaternary landforms. A trench excavated across the fault at Christi Beach, on the western coast of the island,...