Distinguishing wild vs. stocked lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in Lake Ontario: Evidence from carbon and oxygen stable isotope values of otoliths
T. Schaner, W.P. Patterson, B.F. Lantry, R. O'Gorman
2007, Journal of Great Lakes Research (33) 912-916
We investigated the potential for using carbon and oxygen isotope values of otolith carbonate as a method to distinguish naturally produced (wild) lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) from hatchery-reared lake trout in Lake Ontario. We determined δ 13C(CaCO3) and δ 18O(CaCO3) values of otoliths from juvenile fish taken from two hatcheries, and of otoliths from...
Highstand fans in the California borderland: The overlooked deep-water depositional systems
Jacob A. Covault, William R. Normark, Brian W. Romans, Stephan A. Graham
2007, Geology (35) 783-786
Contrary to widely used sequence-stratigraphic models, lowstand fans are only part of the turbidite depositional record; our analysis reveals that a comparable volume of coarse-grained sediment has been deposited in California borderland deep-water basins regardless of sea level. Sedimentation rates and periods of...
Steeply dipping heaving bedrock, Colorado: Part 3 - Environmental controls and heaving processes
D.C. Noe, J.D. Higgins, H. W. Olsen
2007, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (13) 325-344
This paper examines the environmental processes and mechanisms that govern differential heaving in steeply dipping claystone bedrock near Denver, Colorado. Three potential heave mechanisms and causal processes were evaluated: (1) rebound expansion, from reduced overburden stress; (2) expansive gypsum-crystal precipitation, from oxidation of pyrite; and (3) swelling of clay minerals,...
Velafrons coahuilensis, a new labeosaurine haddrosaurid (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda) from the Late Campanian Cerro del Pueblo formation, Coahuila, Mexico
Terry A. Gates, Scott D. Sampson, Carlos R. Delgado de Jesus, Lindsay E. Zanno, David Eberth, Rene Hernandez-Rivera, Martha C. Aguillon-Martinez, James I. Kirkland
2007, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology (27) 917-930
A new lambeosaurine hadrosaurid, Velafrons coahuilensis, is described as the first lambeosaurine from the Cerro del Pueblo Formation of Coahuila, Mexico, and the first lambeosaurine genus to be named from North America in more than 70 years. Although the holotype specimen is a juvenile individual—as evidenced by its incomplete crest development...
Infection by a black spot-causing species of Uvulifer and associated opercular alterations in fishes from a high-desert stream in Wyoming
M.C. Quist, M.R. Bower, W.A. Hubert
2007, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (78) 129-136
Black spot is a common disease syndrome of freshwater fishes. This study provides information on the rank of density of the black spot agent and opercular bone alterations associated with at least one digenean, Uvulifer sp., infecting native and non-native catostomids and cyprinids of the Upper Colorado River Basin. We...
ADCP measurements of gravity currents in the Chicago River, Illinois
C.M. Garcia, K. Oberg, M.H. Garcia
2007, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (133) 1356-1366
A unique set of observations of stratified flow phenomena in the Chicago River was made using an upward-looking acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) during the period November 20, 2003 to February 1, 2004. Water density differences between the Chicago River and its North Branch (NB) seem to be responsible for...
Bed forms created by simulated waves and currents in a large flume
Jessica R. Lacy, David M. Rubin, Hiroshi Ikeda, Kuniyasu Mokudai, Daniel M. Hanes
2007, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (112)
The morphology and evolution of bed forms created by combinations of waves and currents were investigated using an oscillating plate in a 4-m-wide flume. Current speed ranged from 0 to 30 cm/s, maximum oscillatory velocity ranged from 20 to 48 cm/s, oscillation period was 8 s (except for one run...
Paleoenvironmental assessment of recent environmental changes in Florida Bay, USA: a biomarker based study
Y. Xu, C. W. Holmes, R. Jaffe
2007, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (73) 201-210
The extractable lipid compositions in four Florida Bay cores were determined in order to understand environmental changes over the last 160 years. The most significant environmental change was recorded by oscillations in the amplitude and frequency of biomarkers during the 20th century. Two seagrass molecular proxies (Paq and the C25/C27n-alkan-2-one...
Chemistry of thermally altered high volatile bituminous coals from southern Indiana
R. Walker, Maria Mastalerz, S. Brassell, E. Elswick, J.C. Hower, A. Schimmelmann
2007, International Journal of Coal Geology (71) 2-14
The optical properties and chemical characteristics of two thermally altered Pennsylvanian high volatile bituminous coals, the non-coking Danville Coal Member (Ro = 0.55%) and the coking Lower Block Coal Member (Ro = 0.56%) were investigated with the purpose of understanding differences in their coking behavior. Samples of the coals were...
Comparison of earthquake source spectra and attenuation in eastern North America and southeastern Australia
T.I. Allen, G. M. Atkinson
2007, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (97) 1350-1354
The paucity of ground-motion data in stable continental regions (SCRs) remains a key limitation when developing relations that seek to predict effects of strong ground shaking from large damaging earthquakes. It is desirable to combine data from more than one SCR to increase database size, but this raises questions as...
Ore controls in the Charters Towers goldfield, NE Australia: Constraints from geological, geophysical and numerical analyses
O.P. Kreuzer, T.G. Blenkinsop, R.J. Morrison, S. G. Peters
2007, Ore Geology Reviews (32) 37-80
The approach taken in this paper, namely synthesising a wealth of previous information with new data and a genetic model, in combination with integrated numerical analyses, led to new insights into the geological controls on the localisation of auriferous veins and residual prospectivity of the Charters Towers goldfield, NE Australia....
Geology and complex collapse mechanisms of the 3.72 Ma Hannegan caldera, North Cascades, Washington, USA
David S. Tucker, Wes Hildreth, Tom Ullrich, Richard M. Friedman
2007, Geological Society of America Bulletin (119) 329-342
Contiguous ring faults of the 8 × 3.5 km Hannegan caldera enclose the Hannegan volcanics in the Cascade arc of northern Washington. The caldera collapsed in two phases, which each erupted rhyolitic ignimbrite (72.3%–75.2% SiO2). The first collapse phase, probably trap-door style, erupted...
Management of fluid mud in estuaries, bays, and lakes. II: Measurement, modeling, and management
W.H. McAnally, A. Teeter, David H. Schoellhamer, C. Friedrichs, D. Hamilton, E. Hayter, P. Shrestha, H. Rodriguez, A. Sheremet, R. Kirby
2007, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (133) 23-38
Techniques for measurement, modeling, and management of fluid mud are available, but research is needed to improve them. Fluid mud can be difficult to detect, measure, or sample, which has led to new instruments and new ways of using existing instruments. Multifrequency acoustic fathometers sense neither density...
Estimating fishing mortality, natural mortality, and selectivity using recoveries from tagging young fish
H. Jiang, C. Brownie, J.E. Hightower, K. H. Pollock
2007, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (27) 773-781
Current methods for estimation of age- and year-specific instantaneous mortality rates based on multiyear, multiple-age tagging studies assume that it is feasible to tag fish in a wide range of ages. For some species, however, only the youngest one or two age-classes are readily available for tagging. Given the practical...
Effect of relative volume on radio transmitter expulsion in subadult common carp
C.R. Penne, N.L. Ahrens, R.C. Summerfelt, C.L. Pierce
2007, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (27) 986-991
Expulsion of surgically implanted radio transmitters is a problem in some fish telemetry studies. We conducted a 109-d experiment to test the hypothesis that variation in relative volume of transmitters surgically implanted in subadult common carp Cyprinus carpio would affect transmitter expulsion. We also necropsied fish at the end of...
Post-breeding season habitat use and movements of eastern meadowlarks in southwestern Wisconsin
Michael J. Guzy, C. A. Ribic
2007, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (119) 198-204
We used radio telemetry to study post-breeding movements of adult female and juvenile Eastern Meadowlarks (Sturnella magna) in southwestern Wisconsin in 2002-2004. Twenty-one adult females were found 58% of the time in their nest field regardless of nest fate. Three adult females were not found outside of the field where...
Estimated variability of National Atmospheric Deposition Program/Mercury Deposition Network measurements using collocated samplers
G.A. Wetherbee, D.A. Gay, R.C. Brunette, C.W. Sweet
2007, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (131) 49-69
The National Atmospheric Deposition Program/Mercury Deposition Network (MDN) provides long-term, quality-assured records of mercury in wet deposition in the USA and Canada. Interpretation of spatial and temporal trends in the MDN data requires quantification of the variability of the MDN measurements. Variability is quantified for MDN data from collocated samplers...
Disruptions of stream sediment size and stability by lakes in mountain watersheds: Potential effects on periphyton biomass
A.K. Myers, A.M. Marcarelli, C.D. Arp, M. A. Baker, W.A. Wurtsbaugh
2007, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (26) 390-400
The location of a stream reach relative to other landforms in a watershed is an important attribute. We hypothesized that lakes disrupt the frequency of finer, more mobile sediments and thereby change sediment transport processes such that benthic substrates are more stable (i.e., less mobile) below lakes than above lakes....
The chemical response of particle-associated contaminants in aquatic sediments to urbanization in New England, U.S.A.
A.T. Chalmers, P. C. Van Metre, E. Callender
2007, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (91) 4-25
Relations between urbanization and particle-associated contaminants in New England were evaluated using a combination of samples from sediment cores, streambed sediments, and suspended stream sediments. Concentrations of PAHs, PCBs, DDT, and seven trace metals (Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Ni, Pb, Zn) were correlated strongly with urbanization, with the strongest relations...
High-resolution sequence stratigraphy of lower Paleozoic sheet sandstones in central North America: The role of special conditions of cratonic interiors in development of stratal architecture
Anthony C. Runkel, J.F. Miller, R.M. McKay, A. R. Palmer, John F. Taylor
2007, Geological Society of America Bulletin (119) 860-881
Well-known difficulties in applying sequence stratigraphic concepts to deposits that accumulated across slowly subsiding cratonic interior regions have limited our ability to interpret the history of continental-scale tectonism, oceanographic dynamics of epeiric seas, and eustasy. We used a multi-disciplinary approach to construct a high-resolution stratigraphic framework for lower Paleozoic strata...
A multidisciplinary study of the Lower Cretaceous Cedar Mountain Formation, Mussentuchit Wash, Utah: a determination of the paleoenvironment and paleoecology of the Eolambia caroljonesa dinosaur quarry
J.R. Garrison Jr., D. Brinkman, D. J. Nichols, P. Layer, D. Burge, D. Thayn
2007, Cretaceous Research (28) 461-494
A quarry within the Cedar Mountain Formation in Mussentuchit Wash, Emery County, Utah, produced a fossil assemblage containing the remains of at least eight juvenile iguanodontid dinosaurs (Eolambia caroljonesa). The Cedar Mountain Formation lies stratigraphically between the Tithonian-Berriasian (Upper Jurassic) Brushy Basin Member of the Morrison Formation and the Cenomanian...
Depredation of common eider, Somateria mollissima, nests on a central Beaufort Sea barrier island: A case where no one wins
John A. Reed, Deborah L. Lacroix, Paul L. Flint
2007, Canadian Field-Naturalist (121) 308-312
Along the central Beaufort Sea, Pacific Common Eiders (Somateria mollissima v-nigra) nest on unvegetated, barrier islands; often near nesting Glaucous Gulls (Larus hyperboreus). Nest-site choice likely reflects a strategy of predator avoidance: nesting on islands to avoid mammalian predators and near territorial gulls to avoid other avian predators. We observed...
Subaqueous geology and a filling model for Crater Lake, Oregon
M. Nathenson, C. R. Bacon, D.W. Ramsey
2007, Hydrobiologia (574) 13-27
Results of a detailed bathymetric survey of Crater Lake conducted in 2000, combined with previous results of submersible and dredge sampling, form the basis for a geologic map of the lake floor and a model for the filling of Crater Lake with water. The most prominent landforms beneath the surface...
The importance of subsurface geology for water source and vegetation communities in Cherokee Marsh, Wisconsin
A.M. Kurtz, J.M. Bahr, Q. J. Carpenter, Randal J. Hunt
2007, Wetlands (27) 189-202
Restoration of disturbed wetland systems is an important component of wetland mitigation, yet uncertainty remains about how hydrologic processes affect biologic processes and wetlands patterns. To design more effective restoration strategies and re-establish native plant communities in disturbed wetlands, it is imperative to understand undisturbed systems. A site within Cherokee...
A comparison of protocols and observer precision for measuring physical stream attributes
H.W. Whitacre, B.B. Roper, J. L. Kershner
2007, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (43) 923-937
Stream monitoring programs commonly measure physical attributes to assess the effect of land management on stream habitat. Variability associated with the measurement of these attributes has been linked to a number of factors, but few studies have evaluated variability due to differences in protocols. We compared six protocols, five used...