EMMMA: A web-based system for environmental mercury mapping, modeling, and analysis
Hearn Jr., Stephen P. Wente, David I. Donato, John J. Aguinaldo
2006, Open-File Report 2006-1086
Mercury in our environment - in our air, water, soil, and especially our food - poses significant hazards to human health, particularly for developing fetuses and young children. Because of the importance of this issue and the length of time it has been studied, large and complex data sets of...
Hydrogeology and simulation of ground-water flow in the Silurian-Devonian aquifer system, Johnson County, Iowa
Patrick Tucci, Robert M. McKay
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5266
Bedrock of Silurian and Devonian age (termed the “Silurian-Devonian aquifer system”) is the primary source of ground water for Johnson County in east-central Iowa. Population growth within municipal and suburban areas of the county has resulted in increased amounts of water withdrawn from this aquifer and water-level declines in some...
Revised geologic cross sections of parts of the Colorado, White River, and Death Valley regional groundwater flow systems, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona
William R. Page, Daniel S. Scheirer, Victoria E. Langenheim, Mary A. Berger
2006, Open-File Report 2006-1040
This report presents revisions to parts of seven of the ten cross sections originally published in U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2006-1040. The revisions were necessary to correct errors in some of the original cross sections, and to show new parts of several sections that were extended and (or) appended...
Water resources of Monroe County, New York, water years 2000-02: Atmospheric deposition, ground water, streamflow, trends in water quality, and chemical loads in streams
Donald A. Sherwood
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5107
This report, the fifth in a series that presents analyses of the hydrologic data collected in Monroe County since 1984, interprets data from four surface-water-monitoring sites in the Irondequoit Creek basin (Irondequoit Creek at Railroad Mills, East Branch Allen Creek at Pittsford, Allen Creek near Rochester, and Irondequoit Creek above...
County-level estimates of nutrient inputs to the land surface of the conterminous United States, 1982-2001
Barbara C. Ruddy, David L. Lorenz, David K. Mueller
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5012
Nutrient input data for fertilizer use, livestock manure, and atmospheric deposition from various sources were estimated and allocated to counties in the conterminous United States for the years 1982 through 2001. These nationally consistent nutrient input data are needed by the National Water-Quality Assessment Program for investigations of stream- and...
Low-flow analysis and selected flow statistics representative of 1930-2002 for streamflow-gaging stations in or near West Virginia
Jeffrey B. Wiley
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5002
Five time periods between 1930 and 2002 are identified as having distinct patterns of annual minimum daily mean flows (minimum flows). Average minimum flows increased around 1970 at many streamflow-gaging stations in West Virginia. Before 1930, however, there might have been a period of minimum flows greater than any period...
A cyclostratigraphic and borehole-geophysical approach to development of a three-dimensional conceptual hydrogeologic model of the karstic Biscayne aquifer, southeastern Florida
Kevin J. Cunningham, Michael A. Wacker, Edward Robinson, Joann F. Dixon, G. Lynn Wingard
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5235
A fundamental problem in the simulation of karst ground-water flow and solute transport is how best to represent aquifer heterogeneity as defined by the spatial distribution of porosity, permeability, and storage. Combined analyses of cyclostratigraphy, including lithofacies and depositional environments, and borehole-geophysical logs, has improved the conceptualization of porosity, permeability, and...
Confirmation and calibration of computer modeling of tsunamis produced by Augustine volcano, Alaska
James E. Beget, Zygmunt Kowalik
2006, Science of Tsunami Hazards (24) 257-266
Numerical modeling has been used to calculate the characteristics of a tsunami generated by a landslide into Cook Inlet from Augustine Volcano. The modeling predicts travel times of ca. 50-75 minutes to the nearest populated areas, and indicates that significant wave amplification occurs near Mt. Iliamna on the western...
Experimental West Nile virus infection in Eastern Screech Owls (Megascops asio)
Nicole M Nemeth, D. Caldwell Hahn, D. H. Gould, R. A. Bowen
2006, Avian Diseases (50) 252-258
This study evaluated the potential effects of different concentrations of bleached/unbleached kraft mill effluent (B/UKME) on several reproductive endpoints in adult largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides). The kraft mill studied produces a 50/50 mix of bleached/unbleached market pulp with an estimated release of 36 million gal of effluent/day. Bleaching sequences were...
The Hayward fault
Doris Sloan, D. Wells, Glenn Borchardt, John Caulfield, D.M. Doolin, J. Eidinger, Lind Gee, Russell W. Graymer, Peggy Hellweg, Alan L. Kropp, James Lienkaemper, Charles Rabamad, N. Sitar, Heidi D. Stenner, Stephen Tobriner, David Tsztoo, M.L. Zoback
2006, GSA Field Guides (7) 273-331
This field guide consists of eleven stops at sites that illustrate the geological, geophysical, geographic, and engineering aspects of the Hayward fault in the East Bay. Section I (Stops 1–4) consists of stops that are part of the University of California at Berkeley (UC-Berkeley), including research facilities, retrofit of campus...
Hurricane-induced landslide activity on an alluvial fan along Meadow Run, Shenandoah Valley, Virginia (eastern USA)
Gerald F. Wieczorek, L. Scott Eaton, Thomas M. Yanosky, Eric Turner
2006, Landslides (3) 95-106
Although intense rainfall and localized flooding occurred as Hurricane Isabel tracked inland northwestardly across the Blue Ridge Mountains of central Virginia on September 18–19, 2003, few landslides occurred. However, the hurricane reactivated a dormant landslide along a bluff of an incised alluvial fan along Meadow Run on the western flanks...
Geology of Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, New Jersey-Pennsylvania
Jack B. Epstein
2006, GSA Field Guides (8) 47-63
Many of the parks within the National Park System owe their uniqueness to their geologic framework. Their scenery is the result of diverse natural processes acting upon a variety of rocks that were deposited in varied environments in the geologic past. The Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area (DEWA) contains...
Paleozoic tectonic and metallogenetic evolution of pericratonic terranes in Yukon, northern British Columbia and eastern Alaska
JoAnne L. Nelson, Maurice Colpron, Stephen Piercey, Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, Donald Murphy, Charlie Roots
2006, Special Paper - Geological Association of Canada (45) 323-360
No abstract available....
Paleozoic tectonic and metallogenic evolution of the pericratonic rocks of east-central Alaska and adjacent Yukon Territory
JoAnne L. Nelson, Maurice Colpron, Stephen Piercey, Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, Donald Murphy, Charlie Roots
2006, Special Paper - Geological Association of Canada (45) 25-74
No abstract available....
Sri Lanka field survey after the December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
James Goff, Philip L-F. Liu, Bretwood Higman, Robert Morton, Bruce E. Jaffe, Haindra Fernando, Patrick Lynett, Hermann Fritz, Costas Synolakis, Starin Fernando
2006, Earthquake Spectra (22) 155-172
An International Tsunami Survey Team (ITST) consisting of scientists from the United States, New Zealand, and Sri Lanka evaluated the impacts of the 26 December 2004 transoceanic tsunami in Sri Lanka two weeks after the event. Tsunami runup height, inundation distance, morphological changes, and sedimentary characteristics of deposits were recorded...
A field guide to the central, creeping section of the San Andreas fault and the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth
Michael J. Rymer, Stephen H. Hickman, Philip W. Stoffer
Carol S. Prentice, Judith G. Scotchmoor, Eldridge M. Moores, Jon P. Kiland, editor(s)
2006, Book chapter, 1906 San Francisco earthquake centennial field guides: Field trips associated with the 100th Anniversary Conference, 18–23 April 2006, San Francisco, California
This field trip is along the central section of the San Andreas fault and consists of eight stops that illustrate surface evidence of faulting, in general, and features associated with active fault creep, in particular. Fault creep is slippage along a fault that occurs either in association with small-magnitude earthquakes...
Field responses of Prunus serotina and Asclepias syriaca to ozone around southern Lake Michigan
J. P. Bennett, E.A. Jepsen, J.A. Roth
2006, Environmental Pollution (142) 354-366
Higher ozone concentrations east of southern Lake Michigan compared to west of the lake were used to test hypotheses about injury and growth effects on two plant species. We measured approximately 1000 black cherry trees and over 3000 milkweed stems from 1999 to 2001 for this purpose. Black cherry branch...
Can hunting of translocated nuisance Canada geese reduce local conflicts?
R.A. Holevinski, R.A. Malecki, Paul D. Curtis
2006, Wildlife Society Bulletin (34) 845-849
Resident Canada geese (Branta canadensis) nest or reside in the temperate latitudes of North America. In past years, translocation-the capture and subsequent release of geese at distant locations-has been used to establish resident goose populations and to reduce nuisance problems. However, with new special hunting seasons designed to target resident...
Phylogeography and genetic identification of the newly-discovered populations of torrent salamanders (Rhyacotriton cascade and R. variegatus) in the central Cascades (USA)
R.S. Wagner, Mark P. Miller, Susan M. Haig
2006, Herpetologica (62) 63-70
Newly discovered populations of Rhyacotritonidae were investigated for taxonomic identity, hybridization, and sympatry. Species in the genus Rhyacotriton have been historically difficult to identify using morphological characters. Mitochondrial (mtDNA) 16S ribosomal RNA sequences (491 bp) and allozymes (6 loci) were used to identify the distribution of populations occurring intermediate between the...
Flow-specific trends in river-water quality resulting from the effects of the clean air act in three mesoscale, forested river basins in the northeastern United States through 2002
Peter S. Murdoch, J. B. Shanley
2006, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (120) 1-25
Two new methods for assessing temporal trends in stream-solute concentrations at specific streamflow ranges were applied to long (40 to 50-year) but sparse (bi-weekly to quarterly sampling) stream-water quality data collected at three forested mesoscale basins along an atmospheric deposition gradient in the northeastern United States (one in north-central Pennsylvania,...
Emplacement of subaerial pahoehoe lava sheet flows into water: 1990 Kūpaianaha flow of Kilauea volcano at Kaimū Bay, Hawai`i
Susumu Umino, Miyuki Nonaka, James P. Kauahikaua
2006, Bulletin of Volcanology (69) 125-139
Episode 48 of the ongoing eruption of Kilauea, Hawai`i, began in July 1986 and continuously extruded lava for the next 5.5 years from a low shield, Kūpaianaha. The flows in March 1990 headed for Kalapana and inundated the entire town under 15–25 m of lava by the end of August. As the...
A 16-year record of eolian dust in Southern Nevada and California, USA: Controls on dust generation and accumulation
M.C. Reheis
2006, Journal of Arid Environments (67) 487-520
An ongoing project monitors modern dust accumulation in the arid southwestern United States to (1) determine the rate and composition of dust inputs to soils and (2) relate dust accumulation to weather patterns to help predict the effects of climate change on dust production and accumulation. The 16-year records of...
Modeling movement and fidelity of American black ducks
N.L. Zimpfer, M.J. Conroy
2006, Journal of Wildlife Management (70) 1770-1777
Spatial relationships among stocks of breeding waterfowl can be an important component of harvest management. Prediction and optimal harvest management under adaptive harvest management (AHM) requires information on the spatial relationships among breeding populations (fidelity and inter-year exchange), as well as rates of movements from breeding to harvest regions. We...
Isolation of viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus from muskellunge, Esox masquinongy (Mitchill), in Lake St Clair, Michigan, USA reveals a new sublineage of the North American genotype
E. Elsayed, M. Faisal, M. Thomas, G. Whelan, W. Batts, J. Winton
2006, Journal of Fish Diseases (29) 611-619
Viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus (VHSV) was isolated from muskellunge, Esox masquinongy (Mitchill), caught from the NW portion of Lake St Clair, Michigan, USA in 2003. Affected fish exhibited congestion of internal organs; the inner wall of the swim bladder was thickened and contained numerous budding, fluid-filled vesicles. A virus was...
Development of spatially diverse and complex dune-field patterns: Gran Desierto Dune Field, Sonora, Mexico
C. Beveridge, G. Kocurek, R.C. Ewing, N. Lancaster, P. Morthekai, A.K. Singhvi, S. A. Mahan
2006, Sedimentology (53) 1391-1409
The pattern of dunes within the Gran Desierto of Sonora, Mexico, is both spatially diverse and complex. Identification of the pattern components from remote-sensing images, combined with statistical analysis of their measured parameters demonstrate that the composite pattern consists of separate populations of simple dune patterns. Age-bracketing by optically stimulated...