An evaluation of traditional and emerging remote sensing technologies for the detection of fugitive contamination at selected Superfund hazardous waste sites
E. Terrence Slonecker, Gary B. Fisher
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1050
This report represents a remote sensing research effort conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for the EPA Office of Inspector General. The objective of this investigation was to explore the efficacy of remote sensing as a technology for postclosure monitoring of...
Use of multidimensional modeling to evaluate a channel restoration design for the Kootenai River, Idaho
B.L. Logan, R. R. McDonald, J. M. Nelson, P.J. Kinzel, G. J. Barton
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5213
River channel construction projects aimed at restoring or improving degraded waterways have become common but have been variously successful. In this report a methodology is proposed to evaluate channel designs before channels are built by using multidimensional modeling and analysis. This approach allows detailed analysis of water-surface profiles, sediment transport,...
Required number of records for ASCE/SEI 7 ground-motion scaling procedure
Juan C. Reyes, Erol Kalkan
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1083
The procedures and criteria in 2006 IBC (International Council of Building Officials, 2006) and 2007 CBC (International Council of Building Officials, 2007) for the selection and scaling ground-motions for use in nonlinear response history analysis (RHA) of structures are based on ASCE/SEI 7 provisions (ASCE, 2005, 2010). According to ASCE/SEI...
Amphibian monitoring in the Atchafalaya Basin
Hardin Waddle
2011, Fact Sheet 2011-3056
Amphibians are a diverse group of animals that includes frogs, toads, and salamanders. They are adapted to living in a variety of habitats, but most require water for at least one life stage. Amphibians have recently become a worldwide conservation concern because of declines and extinctions even in remote protected...
Tectonic and metallogenic model for northeast Asia
Leonid M. Parfenov, Warren J. Nokleberg, Nikolai A. Berzin, Gombosuren Badarch, Sergy I. Dril, Ochir Gerel, Nikolai A. Goryachev, Alexander I. Khanchuk, Mikhail I. Obolenskiy Kuz’min Obolenskiy, Alexander A., Andrei V. Prokopiev, Vladimir V. Ratkin, Sergey M. Rodionov, Christopher R. Scotese, Vladimir I. Shpikerman, Vladimir F. Timofeev, Onongin Tomurtogoo, Hongquan Yan
Warren J. Nokleberg, editor(s)
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1026
This document describes the digital files in this report that contains a tectonic and metallogenic model for Northeast Asia. The report also contains background materials. This tectonic and metallogenic model and other materials on this report are derived from (1) an extensive USGS Professional Paper, 1765, on the metallogenesis and...
U.S. Geological Survey protocol for sample collection in response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, Gulf of Mexico, 2010: Sampling methods for water, sediment, benthic invertebrates, and microorganisms in coastal environments
Franceska D. Wilde, Stanley C. Skrobialowski
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1098
No abstract available....
Estimated probabilities and volumes of postwildfire debris flows, a prewildfire evaluation for the upper Blue River watershed, Summit County, Colorado
John G. Elliott, Jennifer L. Flynn, Clifford R. Bossong, Stephen J. Char
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5039
Debris flows resulting from rainfall on recently burned, rugged, forested areas create potential hazards to life, property, infrastructure, and water resources. The location, extent, and severity of wildfire and the subsequent rainfall intensity and duration cannot be known in advance. However, hypothetical scenarios based on empirical debris-flow models are useful...
Widespread plant species: natives vs. aliens in our changing world
Thomas J. Stohlgren, Petr Pyšek, John Kartesz, Misako Nishino, Anibal Pauchard, Marten Winter, Joan Pino, David M. Richardson, John R.U. Wilson, Brad R. Murray, Megan L. Phillips, Li Ming-yang, Laura Celesti-Grapow, Xavier Font
2011, Biological Invasions (13) 1931-1944
Estimates of the level of invasion for a region are traditionally based on relative numbers of native and alien species. However, alien species differ dramatically in the size of their invasive ranges. Here we present the first study to quantify the level of invasion for several regions of the world...
Estimation of bed-material transport in the lower Chetco River, Oregon, water years 2009-2010
J. Rose Wallick, Jim E. O'Connor
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1123
This assessment of bed-material transport uses methods developed in a previous study (Wallick and others, 2010) to estimate bed-material flux at the USGS Chetco River streamflow gaging station located at flood-plain kilometer 15 (14400000). On the basis of regressions between daily mean flow and transport capacity, daily bed-material flux was...
Geochemical and stable isotopic data on barren and mineralized drill core in the Devonian Popovich Formation, Screamer sector of the Betze-Post gold deposit, northern Carlin trend, Nevada
William D. Christiansen, Albert H. Hofstra, Pamela B. Zohar, Gilles Tousignant
2011, Open-File Report 2010-1077
The Devonian Popovich Formation is the major host for Carlin-type gold deposits in the northern Carlin trend of Nevada. The Popovich is composed of gray to black, thin-bedded, calcareous to dolomitic mudstone and limestone deposited near the carbonate platform margin. Carlin-type gold deposits are Eocene, disseminated, auriferous pyrite deposits characterized...
Computational considerations for collecting and using data in the equidistant cylindrical map projection and the bounds of sampling geographic data at progressively higher resolution
Kevin M. Foley
2011, Techniques and Methods 2-H1
The Equidistant Cylindrical Map projection is popular with digital modelers and others for storing and processing worldwide data sets because of the simple association of latitude and longitude to cell values or pixels in the resulting grid. This projection does not accurately display area, and the diminished geographic area represented...
Rapid estimation of the economic consequences of global earthquakes
Kishor Jaiswal, David J. Wald
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1116
The U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response (PAGER) system, operational since mid 2007, rapidly estimates the most affected locations and the population exposure at different levels of shaking intensities. The PAGER system has significantly improved the way aid agencies determine the scale of response needed...
Global multi-resolution terrain elevation data 2010 (GMTED2010)
Jeffrey J. Danielson, Dean B. Gesch
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1073
In 1996, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) developed a global topographic elevation model designated as GTOPO30 at a horizontal resolution of 30 arc-seconds for the entire Earth. Because no single source of topographic information covered the entire land surface, GTOPO30 was derived from eight raster and vector sources that included...
Well log characterization of natural gas hydrates
Timothy S. Collett, Myung W. Lee
2011, Conference Paper, SPWLA 52nd Annual Logging Symposium
In the last 25 years we have seen significant advancements in the use of downhole well logging tools to acquire detailed information on the occurrence of gas hydrate in nature: From an early start of using wireline electrical resistivity and acoustic logs to identify gas hydrate occurrences in wells drilled...
Recent (2008-10) concentrations and isotopic compositions of nitrate and concentrations of wastewater compounds in the Barton Springs zone, south-central Texas, and their potential relation to urban development in the contributing zone
Barbara Mahler, MaryLynn Musgrove, Chris Herrington, Thomas L. Sample
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5018
During 2008–10, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the City of Austin, the City of Dripping Springs, the Barton Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation District, the Lower Colorado River Authority, Hays County, and Travis County, collected and analyzed water samples from five streams (Barton, Williamson, Slaughter, Bear, and Onion Creeks), two...
Gulkana Glacier, Alaska-Mass balance, meteorology, and water measurements-1997-2001
Rod S. March, Shad O’Neel
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5046
The measured winter snow, maximum winter snow, net, and annual balances for 1997-2001 in the Gulkana Glacier basin are determined at specific points and over the entire glacier area using the meteorological, hydrological, and glaciological data. We provide descriptions of glacier geometry to aid in estimation of conventional and reference...
Digital geologic map and Landsat image map of parts of Loralai, Sibi, Quetta, and Khuzar Divisions, Balochistan Province, west-central Pakistan
Florian Maldonado, Jan Mohammad Menga, Shabid Hasan Khan, Jean-Claude Thomas
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1093
This generalized digital geologic map of west-central Pakistan is a product of the Balochistan Coal-Basin Synthesis Study, which was part of a cooperative program of the Geological Survey of Pakistan and the United States Geological Survey. The original nondigital map was published by Maldonado and others (1998). Funding was provided...
Suspended-sediment and suspended-sand concentrations and loads for selected streams in the Mississippi River Basin, 1940-2009
David C. Heimann, Teri L. Cline, Lori M. Glaspie
2011, Data Series 593
This report presents suspended-sediment concentration and streamflow data, describes load-estimation techniques used in the computation of annual suspended-sediment loads, and presents annual suspended-sediment loads for 48 streamgaging stations within the Mississippi River Basin. Available published, unpublished, and computed annual total suspended-sediment and suspended-sand loads are presented for water years 1940...
Sedimentation and occurrence and trends of selected nutrients, other chemical constituents, and cyanobacteria in bottom sediment, Clinton Lake, northeast Kansas, 1977-2009
Kyle E. Juracek
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5037
A combination of available bathymetric-survey information and bottom-sediment coring was used to investigate sedimentation and the occurrence of selected nutrients (total nitrogen and total phosphorus), organic and total carbon, 25 trace elements, cyanobacterial akinetes, and the radionuclide cesium-137 in the bottom sediment of Clinton Lake, northeast Kansas. The total estimated...
Nitrate concentrations and potential sources in the Barton Springs segment of the Edwards aquifer and its contributing zone, Central Texas
Barbara Mahler, MaryLynn Musgrove, Chris Herrington
2011, Fact Sheet 2011-3035
The area contributing recharge to Barton Springs is undergoing rapid growth, accompanied by increased generation of wastewater. This study found that nitrate, a major component of wastewater and a nutrient that can degrade water quality, has increased in Barton Springs and the creeks that provide its recharge....
Using models for the optimization of hydrologic monitoring
Michael N. Fienen, Randall J. Hunt, John E. Doherty, Howard W. Reeves
2011, Fact Sheet 2011-3014
Hydrologists are often asked what kind of monitoring network can most effectively support science-based water-resources management decisions. Currently (2011), hydrologic monitoring locations often are selected by addressing observation gaps in the existing network or non-science issues such as site access. A model might then be calibrated to available data and...
Seeing the forest and the trees: USGS scientist links local changes to global scale
Jim Wilson, Craig D. Allen
2011, Report
The recent recipient of two major awards, Craig D. Allen, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey Fort Collins Science Center, has loved trees since childhood. He is now considered an expert of world renown on the twin phenomena of forest changes and tree mortality resulting from climate warming...
Distribution of Fecal Indicator Bacteria along the Malibu, California, Coastline
John Izbicki
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1091
Each year, over 550 million people visit California's public beaches. To protect beach-goers from exposure to waterborne disease, California state law requires water-quality monitoring for fecal indicator bacteria (FIB), such as enterococci and Escherichia coli (E. coli), at beaches having more than 50,000 yearly visitors. FIB are used to assess...
Fire as an evolutionary pressure shaping plant traits
Jon E. Keeley, Juli G. Pausas, Philip W. Rundel, William J. Bond, Ross A. Bradstock
2011, Trends in Plant Science (16) 406-411
Traits, such as resprouting, serotiny and germination by heat and smoke, are adaptive in fire-prone environments. However, plants are not adapted to fire per se but to fire regimes. Species can be threatened when humans alter the regime, often by increasing or decreasing fire frequency. Fire-adaptive traits are potentially the result of...
The dynamics of fine-grain sediment dredged from Santa Cruz Harbor
Curt D. Storlazzi, Christopher H. Conaway, M. Katherine Presto, Joshua B. Logan, Katherine Cronin, Maarten van Ormondt, Jamie Lescinski, E. Lynne Harden, Jessica R. Lacy, Pieter K. Tonnon
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1045
In the fall and early winter of 2009, a demonstration project was done at Santa Cruz Harbor, California, to determine if 450 m3/day of predominantly (71 percent) mud-sized sediment could be dredged from the inner portion of the harbor and discharged to the coastal ocean without significant impacts to the...