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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Estimating functional connectivity of wildlife habitat and its relevance to ecological risk assessment
A.R. Johnson, Craig R. Allen, K.A.N. Simpson
Lawrence Kapustka, Gregory R. Biddinger, Matthew Luxon, Hector Galbraith, editor(s)
2004, ASTM Selected Technical Papers STP1458
Habitat fragmentation is a major threat to the viability of wildlife populations and the maintenance of biodiversity. Fragmentation relates to the sub-division of habitat into disjunct patches. Usually coincident with fragmentation per se is loss of habitat, a reduction in the size of the remnant patches, and increasing distance between patches. Natural...
JuxtaView - A tool for interactive visualization of large imagery on scalable tiled displays
N. K. Krishnaprasad, V. Vishwanath, S. Venkataraman, A. G. Rao, L. Renambot, J. Leigh, A.E. Johnson, B. Davis
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings - IEEE International Conference on Cluster Computing, ICCC
JuxtaView is a cluster-based application for viewing ultra-high-resolution images on scalable tiled displays. We present in JuxtaView, a new parallel computing and distributed memory approach for out-of-core montage visualization, using LambdaRAM, a software-based network-level cache system. The ultimate goal of JuxtaView is to enable a user to interactively roam through...
Toward a scientifically rigorous basis for developing mapped ecological regions.
G. McMahon, E.B. Wiken, D.A. Gauthier
2004, Environmental Management (34) S111-S124
Despite the wide use of ecological regions in conservation and resource-management evaluations and assessments, a commonly accepted theoretical basis for ecological regionalization does not exist. This fact, along with the paucity of focus on ecological regionalization by professional associations, journals, and faculties, has inhibited the advancement of a broadly acceptable...
Influence of management history and landscape variables on soil organic carbon and soil redistribution
E.R. Venteris, G.W. McCarty, J.C. Ritchie, T. Gish
2004, Soil Science (169) 787-795
Controlled studies to investigate the interaction between crop growth, soil properties, hydrology, and management practices are common in agronomy. These sites (much as with real world farmland) often have complex management histories and topographic variability that must be considered. In 1993 an interdisiplinary study was started for a 20-ha site...
Geologic map and digital database of the Yucaipa 7.5’ quadrangle, San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, California
Jonathan C. Matti, D. M. Morton, B. F. Cox, S. E. Carson, T. J. Yetter, P. M. Cossette, M. C. Wright, S. A. Kennedy, M. L. Dawson, R. M. Hauser
2003, Open-File Report 2003-301
IntroductionThis geologic database of the Yucaipa 7.5' quadrangle was prepared by the Southern California Areal Mapping Project (SCAMP), a regional geologic-mapping project sponsored jointly by the U.S. Geological Survey and the California Geological Survey. The database was developed as a contribution to the National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program's National Geologic...
An integrated analysis of the effects of past land use on forest herb colonization at the landscape scale
K. Verheyen, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, B. Biesbrouck, M. Hermy
2003, Journal of Ecology (91) 731-742
A framework that summarizes the direct and indirect effects of past land use on forest herb recolonization is proposed, and used to analyse the colonization patterns of forest understorey herbaceous species in a 360-ha mixed forest, grassland and arable landscape in the Dijle river valley (central Belgium).Fine-scale distribution maps were...
USGS National Assessment of Oil and Gas Online (NOGA Online)
L. H. Biewick
2003, Fact Sheet 098-03
The Central Energy Resources Team (CERT) of the U.S. Geological Survey is providing results of the USGS National Assessment of Oil and Gas online (NOGA Online). In addition to providing resource estimates and geologic reports, NOGA Online includes an internet map application that allows interactive viewing and analysis of assessment...
Forest Types in the Lower Suwannee River Floodplain, Florida?-A Report and Interactive Map
M. R. Darst, H.M. Light, L.J. Lewis, A.A. Sepulveda
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4008
A map of forest types in the lower Suwannee River floodplain, Florida, was created during a study conducted from 1996 to 2000 by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Suwannee River Water Management District. The map is presented with this report on a compact disc with interactive viewing...
Debris-flow hazards caused by hydrologic events at Mount Rainier, Washington
James W. Vallance, Michelle L. Cunico, Steve P. Schilling
2003, Open-File Report 2003-368
At 4393 m, ice-clad Mount Rainier has great potential for debris flows owing to its precipitous slopes and incised steep valleys, the large volume of water stored in its glaciers, and a mantle of loose debris on its slopes. In the past 10,000 years, more than sixty Holocene lahars have...
Ground-water flow and ground- and surface-water interaction at McBaine Bottoms, Columbia, Missouri-2000-02
Brenda J. Smith
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4234
McBaine Bottoms southwest of Columbia, Missouri, is the site of 4,269 acres of the Eagle Bluffs Conservation Area operated by the Missouri Department of Conservation, about 130 acres of the city of Columbia wastewater-treat-ment wetlands, and the city of Columbia munici-pal-supply well field. The city of Columbia wastewater-treatment wetlands supply treated...
Hydrogeology of a Biosolids-Application Site Near Deer Trail, Colorado, 1993-99
Tracy J.B. Yager, L. Rick Arnold
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4209
This report presents hydrogeology data and interpretations resulting from two studies related to biosolids applications at the Metro Wastewater Reclamation District property near Deer Trail, Colorado, done by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Metro Wastewater Reclamation District: (1) a 1993-99 study of hydrology and water quality for...
The Role of Geoscience Information in Reducing Catastrophic Loss Using a Web-Based Economics Experiment
Richard L. Bernknopf, David S. Brookshire, Philip T. Ganderton
2003, Professional Paper 1683
What role can geoscience information play in the assessment of risk and the value of insurance, especially for natural hazard type risks? In an earlier, related paper Ganderton and others (2000) provided subjects with relatively simple geoscience information concerning natural hazard-type risks. Their research looked at how subjects purchase insurance...
Geologic map and digital database of the Redlands 7.5' quadrangle, San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, California
Jonathan C. Matti, Douglas M. Morton, Brett F. Cox, Katherine J. Kendrick, Pamela M. Cossette, Bradley Jones, Stephen A. Kennedy
2003, Open-File Report 2003-302
This geologic database of the Redlands 7.5' quadrangle was prepared by the Southern California Areal Mapping Project (SCAMP), a regional geologic-mapping project sponsored jointly by the U.S. Geological Survey and the California Geological Survey. The database was developed as a contribution to the National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program's National Geologic...
Hydrogeologic factors that influence ground water movement in the desert southwest United States
Frank C. Chuang, Edwin H. McKee, Keith A. Howard
2003, Open-File Report 2003-294
A project to study ground-water and surface-water interactions in the desert southwestern United States was initiated in 2001 by the Tucson, Arizona office of the Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). One of the goals of the Southwest Ground-water Resources Project was to develop a regional synthesis that includes...
Water Resources of the Ground-Water System in the Unconsolidated Deposits of the Colville River Watershed, Stevens County, Washington
Sue C. Kahle, Claire I. Longpre, Raymond R. Smith, Steve S. Sumioka, Anni M. Watkins, David L. Kresch
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4128
A study of the water resources of the ground-water system in the unconsolidated deposits of the Colville River Watershed provided the Colville River Watershed Planning Team with an assessment of the hydrogeologic framework, preliminary determinations of how the shallow and deeper parts of the ground-water system interact with each other...
Effects of landscape characteristics on land-cover class accuracy
Jonathan H. Smith, Stephen V. Stehman, James D. Wickham, Limin Yang
2003, Remote Sensing of Environment (84) 342-349
The effects of patch size and land-cover heterogeneity on classification accuracy were evaluated using reference data collected for the National Land-Cover Data (NLCD) set accuracy assessment. Logistic regression models quantified the relationship between classification accuracy and these landscape variables for each land-cover class at both the Anderson Levels I and...
Mapping mine wastes and analyzing areas affected by selenium-rich water runoff in southeast Idaho using AVIRIS imagery and digital elevation data
J.C. Mars, J.K. Crowley
2003, Remote Sensing of Environment (84) 422-436
Remotely sensed hyperspectral and digital elevation data from southeastern Idaho are combined in a new method to assess mine waste contamination. Waste rock from phosphorite mining in the area contains selenium, cadmium, vanadium, and other metals. Toxic concentrations of selenium have been found in plants and soils near some mine...
Gravity and magnetic expression of the San Leandro gabbro with implications for the geometry and evolution of the Hayward Fault zone, northern California
D. A. Ponce, T.G. Hildenbrand, R.C. Jachens
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 14-26
The Hayward Fault, one of the most hazardous faults in northern California, trends north-northwest and extends for about 90 km along the eastern San Francisco Bay region. At numerous locations along its length, distinct and elongate gravity and magnetic anomalies correlate with mapped mafic and ultramafic rocks. The most prominent...
Late Holocene estuarine-inner shelf interactions; is there evidence of an estuarine retreat path for Tampa Bay, Florida?
B.T. Donahue, A. C. Hine, S. Tebbens, S. D. Locker, D.C. Twichell
2003, Marine Geology (200) 219-241
The purpose of this study was to determine if and how a large, modern estuarine system, situated in the middle of an ancient carbonate platform, has affected its adjacent inner shelf both in the past during the last, post-glacial sea-level rise and during the present. An additional purpose was to...
Wolves: Behavior, ecology, and conservation
L. David Mech, Luigi Boitani, editor(s)
2003, Book
Wolves are some of the world's most charismatic and controversial animals, capturing the imaginations of their friends and foes alike. Highly intelligent and adaptable, they hunt and play together in close-knit packs, sometimes roaming over hundreds of square miles in search of food. Once teetering on the brink of extinction...
Beaver herbivory of willow under two flow regimes: A comparative study on the Green and Yampa rivers
Stewart W. Breck, Kenneth R. Wilson, Douglas C. Andersen
2003, Western North American Naturalist (63) 463-471
The effect of flow regulation on plant-herbivore ecology has received very little attention, despite the fact that flow regulation can alter both plant and animal abundance and environmental factors that mediate interactions between them. To determine how regulated flows have impacted beaver (Castor canadensis) and sandbar willow (Salix exigua) ecology,...
Controls on intrusion of near-trench magmas of the Sanak-Baranof Belt, Alaska, during Paleogene ridge subduction, and consequences for forearc evolution
Timothy M. Kusky, Dwight Bradley, D. Thomas Donely, David Rowley, Peter J. Haeussler
2003, Geological Society of America Special Papers (371) 269-292
A belt of Paleogene near-trench plutons known as the Sanak-Baranof belt intruded the southern Alaska convergent margin. A compilation of isotopic ages of these plutons shows that they range in age from 61 Ma in the west to ca. 50 Ma in the east. This migrating pulse of magmatism along...
Ostracode-based reconstruction from 23,300 to about 20,250 cal yr BP of climate, and paleohydrology of a groundwater-fed pond near St. Louis, Missouri
B. Curry, D. Delorme
2003, Journal of Paleolimnology (29) 199-207
The water chemistry of a groundwater-fed sinkhole-pond near St. Louis, Missouri, and its associated climate during the last glaciation are reconstructed by comparison with autecological data of modern ostracodes from about 5,500 sites in Canada. A 4.8-m succession of fossiliferous sediment yielded ostracode assemblages that collectively are generally found today...
Geographic analysis and monitoring at the United States Geological Survey
J. Findley
2003, Cartography and Geographic Information Science (30) 203-210
The Geographic Analysis and Monitoring (GAM) Program of the U.S. Geological Survey assesses the Nation's land surface at a variety of spatial and temporal scales to understand the rates, causes, and consequences of natural and human-induced processes and their interactions that affect the landscape over time. The program plays an...