Crustal P-wave velocity structure from Altyn Tagh to Longmen mountains along the Taiwan-Altay geoscience transect
Y.-X. Wang, Walter D. Mooney, G.-H. Han, X.-C. Yuan, M. Jiang
2005, Chinese Journal of Geophysics (Acta Geophysica Sinica) (48) 98-106
Based upon the seismic experiments along Geoscience Transect from the Altyn Tagh to the Longmen Mountains, the crustal P-wave velocity structure was derived to outline the characteristics of the crust in the eastern margin of Tibetan Plateau. The section shows a few significant features. The crustal thickness varies dramatically, and...
Mercury in Eastern Kentucky coals: Geologic aspects and possible reduction strategies
J.C. Hower, C.F. Eble, J.C. Quick
2005, International Journal of Coal Geology (62) 223-236
Mercury emissions from US coal-fired power plants will be regulated by the US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) before the end of the decade. Because of this, the control of Hg in coal is important. Control is fundamentally based on the knowledge of the amounts of Hg in mined, beneficiated, and...
Parameter and observation importance in modelling virus transport in saturated porous media - Investigations in a homogenous system
Gilbert R. Barth, M. C. Hill
2005, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (80) 107-129
This paper evaluates the importance of seven types of parameters to virus transport: hydraulic conductivity, porosity, dispersivity, sorption rate and distribution coefficient (representing physical-chemical filtration), and in-solution and adsorbed inactivation (representing virus inactivation). The first three parameters relate to subsurface transport in general while the last four, the sorption rate,...
Helminth records from eleven species of Emoia (Sauria: Scincidae) from Oceania
S.R. Goldberg, C.R. Bursey, Robert N. Fisher
2005, Pacific Science (59) 609-614
As part of an ongoing study of the biogeography of helminth parasites of lizards from Oceania, 53 specimens of Emoia (11 species) were examined, as follows: E. atrocostata, E. boettgeri, E. caerulocauda, E. cyanogaster, E. cyanura, E. impar, E. nigra, E. nigromarginata, E. ponapea, E. sanfordi, E. trossula. One species...
Population structure of Columbia spotted frogs (Rana luteiventris) is strongly affected by the landscape
W.C. Funk, M.S. Blouin, P.S. Corn, B.A. Maxell, D. S. Pilliod, S. Amish, F.W. Allendorf
2005, Molecular Ecology (14) 483-496
Landscape features such as mountains, rivers, and ecological gradients may strongly affect patterns of dispersal and gene flow among populations and thereby shape population dynamics and evolutionary trajectories. The landscape may have a particularly strong effect on patterns of dispersal and gene flow in amphibians because amphibians are thought to...
Testing the generality of a trophic-cascade model for plague
S.K. Collinge, W.C. Johnson, C. Ray, R. Matchett, J. Grensten, J.F. Cully Jr., K.L. Gage, M.Y. Kosoy, J.E. Loye, A.P. Martin
2005, EcoHealth (2) 102-112
Climate may affect the dynamics of infectious diseases by shifting pathogen, vector, or host species abundance, population dynamics, or community interactions. Black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) are highly susceptible to plague, yet little is known about factors that influence the dynamics of plague epizootics in prairie dogs. We investigated temporal...
Vertical cross contamination of trichloroethylene in a borehole in fractured sandstone
S.N. Sterling, B.L. Parker, J. A. Cherry, J.H. Williams, J.W. Lane Jr., F.P. Haeni
2005, Ground Water (43) 557-573
Boreholes drilled through contaminated zones in fractured rock create the potential for vertical movement of contaminated ground water between fractures. The usual assumption is that purging eliminates cross contamination; however, the results of a field study conducted in a trichloroethylene (TCE) plume in fractured sandstone with...
A porous silica rock ("tripoli") in the footwall of the Jurassic Úrkút manganese deposit, Hungary: composition, and origin through carbonate dissolution
Marta Polgari, Zoltan Szabo, Magda Szabo-Drubina, James R. Hein, Hsueh-Wen Yeh
2005, Sedimentary Geology (177) 87-96
The mineralogical, chemical, and isotopic compositions were determined for a white tripoli from the footwall of the Jurassic Úrkút Mn-oxide ore deposit in the Bakony Mountains, Hungary. The tripoli consists of quartz and chalcedony, with SiO2 contents up to 100 wt.%; consequently, trace-element contents are very low. Oxygen isotopes and quartz...
An efficient algorithm for double-difference tomography and location in heterogeneous media, with an application to the Kilauea volcano
V. Monteiller, J.-L. Got, J. Virieux, P. Okubo
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-22
Improving our understanding of crustal processes requires a better knowledge of the geometry and the position of geological bodies. In this study we have designed a method based upon double-difference relocation and tomography to image, as accurately as possible, a heterogeneous medium containing seismogenic objects. Our approach consisted not only...
Uncertainty and research needs for supplementing wild populations of anadromous Pacific salmon
R.R. Reisenbichler
2005, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2005) 263-275
Substantial disagreement and uncertainty attend the question of whether the benefits from supplementing wild populations of anadromous salmonids with hatchery fish outweigh the risks. Prudent decisions about supplementation are most likely when the suite of potential benefits and hazards and the various sources of uncertainty are explicitly identified. Models help...
Estimation of groundwater consumption by phreatophytes using diurnal water table fluctuations: A saturated‐unsaturated flow assessment
Steven P. Loheide II, James J. Butler Jr., Steven M. Gorelick
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
Groundwater consumption by phreatophytes is a difficult‐to‐measure but important component of the water budget in many arid and semiarid environments. Over the past 70 years the consumptive use of groundwater by phreatophytes has been estimated using a method that analyzes diurnal trends in hydrographs from wells that are screened across...
Seismic architecture and lithofacies of turbidites in Lake Mead (Arizona and Nevada, U.S.A.), an analogue for topographically complex basins
D.C. Twichell, V.A. Cross, A.D. Hanson, B.J. Buck, J.G. Zybala, M.J. Rudin
2005, Journal of Sedimentary Research (75) 134-148
Turbidites, which have accumulated in Lake Mead since completion of the Hoover Dam in 1935, have been mapped using high-resolution seismic and coring techniques. This lake is an exceptional natural laboratory for studying fine-grained turbidite systems in complex topographic settings. The lake comprises four relatively broad basins separated by narrow...
Analyzing indicators of stream health for Minnesota streams
U. Singh, M. Kocian, B. Wilson, A. Bolton, J. Nieber, B. Vondracek, J. Perry, J. Magner
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 3rd Conference on Watershed Management to Meet Water Quality Standards and Emerging TMDL
Recent research has emphasized the importance of using physical, chemical, and biological indicators of stream health for diagnosing impaired watersheds and their receiving water bodies. A multidisciplinary team at the University of Minnesota is carrying out research to develop a stream classification system for Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) assessment....
3H/3He age data in assessing the susceptibility of wells to contamination
Andrew H. Manning, D. Kip Solomon, Susan A. Thiros
2005, Ground Water (43) 353-367
Regulatory agencies are becoming increasingly interested in using young–ground water dating techniques, such as the 3H/3He method, in assessing the susceptibility of public supply wells (PSWs) to contamination. However, recent studies emphasize that ground water samples of mixed age may be the norm, particularly from long-screened PSWs, and tracer-based “apparent” ages...
Voluminous granitic magmas from common basaltic sources
T. W. Sisson, K. Ratajeski, W.B. Hankins, A. F. Glazner
2005, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (148) 635-661
Granitic-rhyolitic liquids were produced experimentally from moderately hydrous (1.7-2.3 wt% H2O) medium-to-high K basaltic compositions at 700 MPa and f O2 controlled from Ni-NiO -1.3 to +4. Amount and composition of evolved liquids and coexisting mineral assemblages vary with fO2 and temperature, with melt being more evolved at higher fO2s,...
Surface water acidification responses and critical loads of sulfur and nitrogen deposition in Loch Vale watershed, Colorado
T.J. Sullivan, B.J. Cosby, K.A. Tonnessen, D. W. Clow
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
We evaluated the sensitivity of The Loch, a subalpine lake in Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado, to acidification in response to increased atmospheric loading of sulfur (S) and nitrogen (N) using the Model of Acidification of Groundwater in Catchments (MAGIC). Lake water acid‐base chemistry was moderately sensitive to changes...
Analysis of ground-measured and passive-microwave-derived snow depth variations in midwinter across the Northern Great Plains
A.T.C. Chang, R.E.J. Kelly, E.G. Josberger, R.L. Armstrong, J.L. Foster, N. M. Mognard
2005, Journal of Hydrometeorology (6) 20-33
Accurate estimation of snow mass is important for the characterization of the hydrological cycle at different space and time scales. For effective water resources management, accurate estimation of snow storage is needed. Conventionally, snow depth is measured at a point, and in order to monitor snow depth in a temporally...
Hydratools, a MATLAB® based data processing package for Sontek Hydra data
M. Martini, F. L. Lightsom, C. R. Sherwood, J. Xu, J.R. Lacy, A. Ramsey, R. Horwitz
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the IEEE Working Conference on Current Measurement Technology
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has developed a set of MATLAB tools to process and convert data collected by Sontek Hydra instruments to netCDF, which is a format used by the USGS to process and archive oceanographic time-series data. The USGS makes high-resolution current measurements within 1.5 meters of the...
Coupled inverse modeling of vadose zone water, heat, and solute transport: Calibration constraints, parameter nonuniqueness, and predictive uncertainty
M.J. Friedel
2005, Journal of Hydrology (312) 148-175
In this study, an inverse methodology is presented and used to evaluate the effect that calibration of a synthetic artificial recharge model, constrained by different combinations of measurements (pressure head, temperature, and concentration), has on estimated vadose zone model parameter-value nonuniqueness and predictive water, heat, and solute transport uncertainty. Several...
Optical properties of pseudovitrinite; implications for its origin
Maria Mastalerz, A. Drobniak
2005, International Journal of Coal Geology (62) 250-258
A set of Pennsylvanian coals from the North American coal basins, ranging in vitrinite reflectance from 0.65% to 1.75%, was examined, with special emphasis on the optical properties of pseudovitrinite. The results suggest that pseudovitrinite originates from the same material as telocollinite. Slits in the pseudovitrinite seem to have originated...
Freshwater mussel shells as environmental chronicles: Geochemical and taphonomic signatures of mercury-related extirpations in the North Fork Holston River, Virginia
M.E. Brown, M. Kowalewski, R. J. Neves, D.S. Cherry, M.E. Schreiber
2005, Environmental Science & Technology (39) 1455-1462
This study utilized freshwater mussel shells to assess mercury (Hg) contamination in the North Fork Holston River that extirpated (caused local extinctions of) a diverse mussel fauna. Shells (n = 366) were collected from five sites situated upstream (two sites), just below (one site), and downstream (two sites) of the...
Predator avoidance as a function of flocking in the sexually dichromatic Hawaii akepa
P.J. Hart, L.A. Freed
2005, Journal of Ethology (23) 29-33
Hypotheses for joining a mixed-species bird flock consider each species as a single unit. In sexually dichromatic birds, differential conspicuousness between the sexes may result in differences in vigilance for predators. Aspects of the predator avoidance and foraging enhancement hypotheses for the selective value of joining a mixed-species flock were...
Male Texas Horned Lizards increase daily movements and area covered in spring: A mate searching strategy?
Richard C. Stark, S. F. Fox, David Leslie
2005, Journal of Herpetology (39) 169-173
Texas Horned Lizards, Phrynosoma cornutum, were tracked using fluorescent powder to determine exact daily movements. Daily linear movements and daily space use were compared between adult males and females. Lizards that traveled the greatest linear distances also covered the largest areas. In Oklahoma, adults emerge from hibernation in late April...
Lake Michigan wetlands: classification, concerns, and management opportunities
Douglas A. Wilcox
T. Edsall, M. Munawar, editor(s)
2005, Book chapter, State of Lake Michigan: Ecology, Health, and Management
The wetlands that border Lake Michigan are an extremely important component of the lake ecosystem. In this paper, I will review the status of wetland classifications used for Lake Michigan and the other Great Lakes, as well as the major management concerns and opportunities presented by Lake Michigan wetlands....
A whole image approach using field measurements for transforming EO1 Hyperion hyperspectral data into canopy reflectance spectra
Elijah W. Ramsey III, G. Nelson
2005, International Journal of Remote Sensing (26) 1589-1610
To maximize the spectral distinctiveness (information) of the canopy reflectance, an atmospheric correction strategy was implemented to provide accurate estimates of the intrinsic reflectance from the Earth Observing 1 (EO1) satellite Hyperion sensor signal. In rendering the canopy reflectance, an estimate of optical depth derived from a measurement of downwelling...