Persistence rates and detection probabilities of oiled king eider carcasses on St Paul Island, Alaska
A. C. Fowler, Paul L. Flint
1997, Marine Pollution Bulletin (34) 522-526
Following an oil spill off St Paul Island, Alaska in February 1996, persistence rates and detection probabilities of oiled king eider (Somateria spectabilis) carcasses were estimated using the Cormack-Jolly-Seber model. Carcass persistence rates varied by day, beach type and sex, while detection probabilities varied by day and beach type. Scavenging,...
Coseismic deformation during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and range-front thrusting along the southwestern margin of the Santa Clara Valley, California
V.E. Langenheim, K. M. Schmidt, R.C. Jachens
1997, Geology (25) 1091-1094
Damage patterns caused by the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake along the southwestern margin of the Santa Clara Valley, California, form three zones that coincide with mapped and inferred traces of range-front thrust faults northeast of the San Andreas fault. Damage in these zones was largely contractional, consistent with past displacement...
Southern California Permanent GPS Geodetic Array: Continuous measurements of regional crustal deformation between the 1992 Landers and 1994 Northridge earthquakes
Y. Bock, S. Wdowinski, P. Fang, Jiahua Zhang, S. Williams, H. Johnson, J. Behr, J. Genrich, J. Dean, M. Van Domselaar, D. Agnew, F. Wyatt, K. Stark, B. Oral, K. Hudnut, R. King, T. Herring, S. Dinardo, W. Young, D. Jackson, W. Gurtner
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 18013-18033
The southern California Permanent GPS Geodetic Array (PGGA) was established in 1990 across the Pacific-North America plate boundary to continuously monitor crustal deformation. We describe the development of the array and the time series of daily positions estimated for its first 10 sites in the 19-month period between the June...
Primitive magmas at five Cascade volcanic fields: Melts from hot, heterogeneous sub-arc mantle
C. R. Bacon, P. E. Bruggman, R.L. Christiansen, M.A. Clynne, J.M. Donnelly-Nolan, W. Hildreth
1997, Canadian Mineralogist (35) 397-423
Major and trace element concentrations, including REE by isotope dilution, and Sr, Nd, Pb, and O isotope ratios have been determined for 38 mafic lavas from the Mount Adams, Crater Lake, Mount Shasta, Medicine Lake, and Lassen volcanic fields, in the Cascade arc, northwestern part of the United States. Many...
Geochemical mass balances of major elements in Lake Baikal
E. Callender, L. Granina
1997, Limnology and Oceanography (42) 148-155
Major element mass balances for Lake Baikal are calculated with mostly previously published data for soluble fluxes and new, unpublished data for riverine suspended particulate matter chemistry. Physical transport seems to be the most important riverine process. The elements Ca, Mg, and Na seem to be very mobile in the...
Potential effects of climate change on freshwater ecosystems of the New England/Mid-Atlantic Region
M.V. Moore, M. L. Pace, J.R. Mather, Peter S. Murdoch, R. W. Howarth, C.L. Folt, C.-Y. Chen, Harold F. Hemond, P.A. Flebbe, C. T. Driscoll
1997, Hydrological Processes (11) 925-947
Numerous freshwater ecosystems, dense concentrations of humans along the eastern seaboard, extensive forests and a history of intensive land use distinguish the New England/Mid-Atlantic Region. Human population densities are forecast to increase in portions of the region at the same time that climate is expected to be changing. Consequently, the...
Potential effects of climate change on aquatic ecosystems of the Great Plains of North America
A.P. Covich, S.C. Fritz, P.J. Lamb, R.D. Marzolf, W.J. Matthews, K.A. Poiani, E.E. Prepas, M.B. Richman, T. C. Winter
1997, Hydrological Processes (11) 993-1021
The Great Plains landscape is less topographically complex than most other regions within North America, but diverse aquatic ecosystems, such as playas, pothole lakes, ox-bow lakes, springs, groundwater aquifers, intermittent and ephemeral streams, as well as large rivers and wetlands, are highly dynamic and responsive to extreme climatic fluctuations. We...
Survival rates of adult lake trout in northwestern Lake Michigan, 1983-1993
Mary C. Fabrizio, Mark E. Holey, Patrick C. McKee, Michael L. Toneys
1997, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 413-428
The restoration of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush in Lake Michigan has been an elusive goal of resource management agencies in the Great Lakes region. In this study, we estimated annual survival rates of adult lake trout from an area in northwestern Lake Michigan known as the Clay Banks refuge. We...
Volumetric analysis and hydrologic characterization of a modern debris flow near Yucca Mountain, Nevada
J. A. Coe, P.A. Glancy, J.W. Whitney
1997, Geomorphology (20) 11-28
On July 21 or 22, 1984, debris flows triggered by rainfall occurred on the southern hillslope of Jake Ridge, about 6 km east of the crest of Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Rain gages near Jake Ridge recorded 65 mm and 69 mm...
Avian cholera in ospreys: first occurrence and possible mode of transmission
L.J. Hindman, W.F. Harvey IV, G.R. Costanzo, K. A. Converse, George Stein Jr.
1997, Journal of Field Ornithology (68) 503-508
In 1994, six Ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) were recovered during the later stages of an epizootic of avian cholera (Pasteurella multocida) in diving ducks and seabirds on Chesapeake Bay in Maryland and Virginia. Pasteurella multocida was isolated from four Ospreys submitted for bacterial examination. This is believed to be the first...
XRD measurement of mean crystallite thickness of illite and illite/smectite: Reappraisal of the Kubler index and the Scherrer equation
Victor A. Drits, Jan Srodon, D. D. Eberl
1997, Clays and Clay Minerals (45) 461-475
The standard form of the Scherrer equation, which has been used to calculate the mean thickness of the coherent scattering domain (CSD) of illite crystals from X-ray diffraction (XRD) full width data at half maximum (FWHM) intensity, employs a constant, Ksh, of 0.89. Use of this constant is unjustified, even...
Testing prediction methods: Earthquake clustering versus the Poisson model
A.J. Michael
1997, Geophysical Research Letters (24) 1891-1894
Testing earthquake prediction methods requires statistical techniques that compare observed success to random chance. One technique is to produce simulated earthquake catalogs and measure the relative success of predicting real and simulated earthquakes. The accuracy of these tests depends on the validity of the statistical model...
Färoe-Iceland Ridge Experiment: 1. Crustal structure of northeastern Iceland
Robert K. Staples, Robert S. White, Bryndis Brandsdottir, William Menke, Peter K.H. Maguire, John H. McBride
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 7849-7866
Results from the Färoe-Iceland Ridge Experiment (FIRE) constrain the crustal thickness as 19 km under the Northern Volcanic Zone of Iceland and 35 km under older Tertiary areas of northeastern Iceland. The Moho is defined by strong P wave and S wave reflections. Synthetic seismogram modeling of the Moho reflection...
Slope failures in Northern Vermont, USA
F. T. Lee, J. K. Odum, J.D. Lee
1997, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (3) 161-182
Rockfalls and debris avalanches from steep hillslopes in northern Vermont are a continuing hazard for motorists, mountain climbers, and hikers. Huge blocks of massive schist and gneiss can reach the valley floor intact, whereas others may trigger debris avalanches on their downward travel. Block movement is facilitated by major joints...
Regional interpretation of water-quality monitoring data
Richard A. Smith, Gregory E. Schwarz, Richard B. Alexander
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 2781-2798
We describe a method for using spatially referenced regressions of contaminant transport on watershed attributes (SPARROW) in regional water-quality assessment. The method is designed to reduce the problems of data interpretation caused by sparse sampling, network bias, and basin heterogeneity. The regression equation relates measured transport rates in streams to...
A rop net and removable walkway used to quantitatively sample fishes over wetland surfaces in the dwarf mangrove of the Southern Everglades
J.J. Lorenz, C.C. McIvor, G.V.N. Powell, P. C. Frederick
1997, Wetlands (17) 346-359
We describe a 9 m2 drop net and removable walkways designed to quantify densities of small fishes in wetland habitats with low to moderate vegetation density. The method permits the collection of small, quantitative, discrete samples in ecologically sensitive areas by combining rapid net deployment from fixed sites with the carefully...
Permian deposition in the north central Brooks Range, Alaska: Constraints for tectonic reconstructions
K.E. Adams, C. G. Mull, R.K. Crowder
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 20727-20748
Two opposing tectonic models have been offered to explain the regional structural relations in the north central Brooks Range fold-thrust belt of northern Alaska. The first suggests that rocks of the northern Endicott Mountains were thrust from south to north over the area of the present Mount Doonerak high and...
A comparative study of modern and fossil cone scales and seeds of conifers: A geochemical approach
Stankiewicz B. Artur, Maria Mastalerz, M.A. Kruge, P. F. Van Bergen, A. Sadowska
1997, New Phytologist (135) 375-393
Modern cone scales and seeds of Pinus strobus and Sequoia sempervirens, and their fossil (Upper Miocene, c. 6 Mar) counterparts Pinus leitzii and Sequoia langsdorfi have been studied using pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS), electron-microprobe and scanning electron microscopy. Microscopic observations revealed only minor microbial activity and high-quality structural preservation of...
The origin and distribution of HAPs elements in relation to maceral composition of the A1 lignite bed (Paleocene, Calvert Bluff Formation, Wilcox Group), Calvert mine area, east-central Texas
Sharon S. Crowley, Peter D. Warwick, Leslie F. Ruppert, James Pontolillo
1997, International Journal of Coal Geology (34) 327-343
The origin and distribution of twelve potentially Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAPs; As, Be, Cd, Cr, Co, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb, Sb, Se, and U) identified in the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments were examined in relation to the maceral composition of the A1 bed (Paleocene, Calvert Bluff Formation, Wilcox Group)...
The 1995 revision of the joint US/UK geomagnetic field models - I. Secular variation
S. Macmillan, D.R. Barraclough, J.M. Quinn, R.J. Coleman
1997, Earth, Planets and Space (49) 229-243
We present the methods used to derive mathematical models of global secular variation of the main geomagnetic field for the period 1985 to 2000. These secular-variation models are used in the construction of the candidate US/UK models for the Definitive Geomagnetic Reference Field at 1990, the International Geomagnetic Reference Field...
Transform push, oblique subduction resistance, and intraplate stress of the Juan de Fuca plate
K. Wang, J. He, E.E. Davis
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (102) 661-674
The Juan de Fuca plate is a small oceanic plate between the Pacific and North America plates. In the southernmost region, referred to as the Gorda deformation zone, the maximum compressive stress σ1 constrained by earthquake focal mechanisms is N-S. Off Oregon, and possibly off Washington, NW trending left-lateral faults cutting...
Latitudinal distribution of O2on ganymede: Observations with the hubble space telescope
W. M. Calvin, J.R. Spencer
1997, Icarus (130) 505-516
To help constrain the spatial variation of oxygen on Jupiter's satellite Ganymede, and hence have more clues to its mode of production and stability, we have obtained spectral data from the Faint Object Spectrograph (FOS) for a single pole-to-pole latitudinal strip, along with several Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2)...
A three component model to estimate sensible heat flux over sparse shrubs in Nevada
A. Chehbouni, W. D. Nichols, E.G. Njoku, J. Qi, Y.H. Kerr, F. Cabot
1997, Remote Sensing Reviews (15) 99-112
It is now recognized that accurate partitioning of available energy into sensible and latent heat flux is crucial to understanding surface‐atmosphere interactions. This issue is more complicated in arid and semi‐arid regions where the relative contribution to surface fluxes from the soil and vegetation may vary significantly throughout the day...
A mechanism for high wall-rock velocities in rockbursts
Art McGarr
1997, Pure and Applied Geophysics (150) 381-391
Considerable evidence has been reported for wall-rock velocities during rockbursts in deep gold mines that are substantially greater than ground velocities associated with the primary seismic events. Whereas varied evidence suggests that slip across a fault at the source of an event generates nearby particle velocities of, at most, several...
Geochronologic and paleomagnetic evidence defining the relationship between the Miocene Hiko and Racer Canyon tuffs, eccentric outflow lobes from the Caliente caldera complex, southeastern Great Basin, USA
S. Gromme, A.M. Deino, M. G. Best, M.R. Hudson
1997, Bulletin of Volcanology (59) 21-35
Outflow sheets of the Hiko tuff and the Racer Canyon tuff, which together extend over approximately 16 000 km2 around the Caliente caldera complex in southeastern Nevada, have long been considered to be products of simultaneous or near-simultaneous eruptions from inset calderas in the west and east ends,...