Strange bedfellows - A deep-water hermatypic coral reef superimposed on a drowned barrier island; Southern Pulley Ridge, SW Florida platform margin
B. D. Jarrett, A. C. Hine, R. B. Halley, D. F. Naar, S. D. Locker, A.C. Neumann, D. Twichell, C. Hu, B.T. Donahue, W.C. Jaap, D. Palandro, K. Ciembronowicz
2005, Marine Geology (214) 295-307
The southeastern component of a subtle ridge feature extending over 200 km along the western ramped margin of the south Florida platform, known as Pulley Ridge, is composed largely of a non-reefal, coastal marine deposit. Modern biostromal reef growth caps southern Pulley Ridge (SPR), making it the deepest hermatypic reef...
Simulating the evolution of coastal morphology and stratigraphy with a new morphological-behaviour model (GEOMBEST)
D. Stolper, J. H. List, E.R. Thieler
2005, Marine Geology (218) 17-36
A new morphological-behaviour model is used to simulate evolution of coastal morphology associated with cross-shore translations of the shoreface, barrier, and estuary. The model encapsulates qualitative principles drawn from established geological concepts that are parameterized to provide quantitative predictions of morphological change on geological time scales (order 10 3 years),...
The World Coal Quality Inventory: A status report
S.J. Tewalt, J.C. Willett, R. B. Finkelman
2005, International Journal of Coal Geology (63) 190-194
National and international policy makers and industry require accurate information on coal, including coal quality data, to make informed decisions regarding international import needs and export opportunities, foreign policy, technology transfer policies, foreign investment prospects, environmental and health assessments, and byproduct use and disposal issues. Unfortunately, the information needed is...
Using cosmogenic nuclides to contrast rates of erosion and sediment yield in a semi-arid, arroyo-dominated landscape, Rio Puerco Basin, New Mexico
P.R. Bierman, J.M. Reuter, M. Pavich, A. C. Gellis, M.W. Caffee, J. Larsen
2005, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (30) 935-953
Analysis of in-situ-produced 10Be and 26Al in 52 fluvial sediment samples shows that millennial-scale rates of erosion vary widely (7 to 366 m Ma-1) through the lithologically and topographically complex Rio Puerco Basin of northern New Mexico. Using isotopic analysis of both headwater and downstream samples, we determined that the...
Wildlife as valuable natural resources vs. intolerable pests: A suburban wildlife management model
S. DeStefano, R.D. Deblinger
2005, Urban Ecosystems (8) 179-190
Management of wildlife in suburban environments involves a complex set of interactions between both human and wildlife populations. Managers need additional tools, such as models, that can help them assess the status of wildlife populations, devise and apply management programs, and convey this information to other professionals and the public....
Acute and chronic toxicity of lead in water and diet to the amphipod Hyalella azteca
J.M. Besser, W. G. Brumbaugh, E.L. Brunson, C.G. Ingersoll
2005, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (24) 1807-1815
We evaluated the influence of waterborne and dietary lead (Pb) exposure on the acute and chronic toxicity of Pb to the amphipod Hyalella azteca. Test solutions were generated by a modified diluter with an extended (24‐h) equilibration period. Acute (96‐h) toxicity of Pb varied with water hardness...
Specificity of a Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron marker for human feces
C.A. Carson, J.M. Christiansen, H. Yampara-Iquise, V.W. Benson, C. Baffaut, Jerri V. Davis, R.R. Broz, W.B. Kurtz, W.M. Rogers, W.H. Fales
2005, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (71) 4945-4949
A bacterial primer set, known to produce a 542-bp amplicon specific for Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, generated this product in PCR with 1 ng of extracted DNA from 92% of 25 human fecal samples, 100% of 20 sewage samples, and 16% of 31 dog fecal samples. The marker was not detected in...
Genetic evaluation of a Great Lakes lake trout hatchery program
K.S. Page, K.T. Scribner, D. Bast, M.E. Holey, M. K. Burnham-Curtis
2005, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (134) 872-891
Efforts over several decades to restore lake trout Salvelinus namaycush in U.S. waters of the upper Great Lakes have emphasized the stocking of juveniles from each of six hatchery broodstocks. Retention of genetic diversity across all offspring life history stages throughout the hatchery system has been an important component of...
Assembling an ignimbrite: Compositionally defined eruptive packages in the 1912 Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes ignimbrite, Alaska
J. Fierstein, C. J. N. Wilson
2005, Geological Society of America Bulletin (117) 1094-1107
The 1912 Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes (VTTS) ignimbrite was constructed from 9 compositionally distinct, sequentially emplaced packages, each with distinct proportions of rhyolite (R), dacite (D), and andesite (A) pumices that permit us to map package boundaries and flow paths from vent to distal extents. Changing pumice proportions and...
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...
Ecology and shell chemistry of Loxoconcha matagordensis
T. M. Cronin, T. Kamiya, G. S. Dwyer, H. Belkin, C.D. Vann, S. Schwede, R. Wagner
2005, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (225) 14-67
Studies of the seasonal ecology and shell chemistry of the ostracode Loxoconcha matagordensis and related species of Loxoconcha from regions off eastern North America reveal that shell size and trace elemental (Mg/Ca ratio) composition are useful in paleothermometry using fossil populations. Seasonal sampling of populations from Chesapeake Bay, augmented by...
Movements and home ranges of mountain plovers raising broods in three Colorado landscapes
V.J. Dreitz, Michael B. Wunder, F.L. Knopf
2005, The Wilson Bulletin (117) 128-132
We report movements and home-range sizes of adult Mountain Plovers (Charadrius montanus) with broods on rangeland, agricultural fields, and prairie dog habitats in eastern Colorado. Estimates of home range size (95% fixed kernel) were similar across the three habitats: rangeland (146.1 ha ± 101.5), agricultural fields (131.6 ha ± 74.4),...
Impact of longer-term modest climate shifts on architecture of high-frequency sequences (Cyclothems), Pennsylvanian of midcontinent U.S.A
H. R. Feldman, E. K. Franseen, R. M. Joeckel, P.H. Heckel
2005, Journal of Sedimentary Research (75) 350-368
Pennsylvanian glacioeustatic cyclothems exposed in Kansas and adjacent areas provide a unique opportunity to test models of the impact of relative sea level and climate on stratal architecture. A succession of eight of these high-frequency sequences, traced along dip for 500 km, reveal that modest climate shifts from relatively dry-seasonal...
Pliocene transpressional modification of depositional basins by convergent thrusting adjacent to the "Big Bend" of the San Andreas fault: An example from Lockwood Valley, southern California
K.S. Kellogg, S.A. Minor
2005, Tectonics (24) 1-12
The "Big Bend" of the San Andreas fault in the western Transverse Ranges of southern California is a left stepping flexure in the dextral fault system and has long been recognized as a zone of relatively high transpression compared to adjacent regions. The Lockwood Valley region, just south of the...
Progress in NTHMP Hazard Assessment
F.I. Gonzalez, V.V. Titov, H.O. Mofjeld, A.J. Venturato, R.S. Simmons, R. Hansen, Rodney Combellick, R.K. Eisner, D.F. Hoirup, B.S. Yanagi, S. Yong, M. Darienzo, G. R. Priest, G.L. Crawford, T. J. Walsh
2005, Natural Hazards (35) 89-110
The Hazard Assessment component of the U.S. National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program has completed 22 modeling efforts covering 113 coastal communities with an estimated population of 1.2 million residents that are at risk. Twenty-three evacuation maps have also been completed. Important improvements in organizational structure have been made with the...
Succession on subalpine placer mine spoil: Effects of revegetation with Alnus viridis, Alaska, U.S.A.
Roseann V. Densmore
2005, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (37) 297-303
Alnus viridis seedlings were planted on placer mine spoil in an Alaskan subalpine watershed to bypass a seedling establishment bottleneck for A. viridis, and to evaluate the interaction between A. viridis and the dominant riparian woody plants, Salix alaxensis and Populus balsamifera. The study area was divided into 11 replicate...
Estimation of regional material yield from coastal landslides based on historical digital terrain modelling
C.J. Hapke
2005, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (30) 679-697
High-resolution historical (1942) and recent (1994) digital terrain models were derived from aerial photographs along the Big Sur coastline in central California to measure the long-term volume of material that enters the nearshore environment. During the 52-year measurement time period, an average of 21 000 ?? 3100 m3 km-1 a-1...
Loss estimates for a Puente Hills blind-thrust earthquake in Los Angeles, California
E. H. Field, H.A. Seligson, N. Gupta, V. Gupta, T.H. Jordan, K.W. Campbell
2005, Earthquake Spectra (21) 329-338
Based on OpenSHA and HAZUS-MH, we present loss estimates for an earthquake rupture on the recently identified Puente Hills blind-thrust fault beneath Los Angeles. Given a range of possible magnitudes and ground motion models, and presuming a full fault rupture, we estimate the total economic loss to be between $82...
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...
A modified beam-to-earth transformation to measure short-wavelength internal waves with an acoustic Doppler current profiler
A. Scotti, B. Butman, R.C. Beardsley, P. S. Alexander, S. Anderson
2005, Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology (22) 583-591
The algorithm used to transform velocity signals from beam coordinates to earth coordinates in an acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) relies on the assumption that the currents are uniform over the horizontal distance separating the beams. This condition may be violated by (nonlinear) internal waves, which can have wavelengths as...
Annual survival and site fidelity of northern pintails banded on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
Christopher A. Nicolai, Paul L. Flint, Michael L. Wege
2005, Journal of Wildlife Management (69) 1202-1210
We banded northern pintails (Anas acuta; n = 13,645) at a single site on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (YKD), Alaska, USA, from 1990 to 2001. We used recaptures from our site in combination with hunter recoveries to model annual survival, recovery rates, and fidelity to our capture location. Most recoveries (>90%)...
Survival and selection of migrating salmon from capture-recapture models with individual traits
Richard Zabel, Tyler Wagner, James Congleton, Steven G. Smith, John G. Williams
2005, Ecological Applications (15) 1427-1439
Capture–recapture studies are powerful tools for studying animal population dynamics, providing information on population abundance, survival rates, population growth rates, and selection for phenotypic traits. In these studies, the probability of observing a tagged individual reflects both the probability of the individual surviving to the time of recapture and the...
Factors controlling tungsten concentrations in ground water, Carson Desert, Nevada
R. L. Seiler, K.G. Stollenwerk, J.R. Garbarino
2005, Applied Geochemistry (20) 423-441
n investigation of a childhood leukemia cluster by US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that residents of the Carson Desert, Nevada, are exposed to high levels of W and this prompted an investigation of W in aquifers used as drinking water sources. Tungsten concentrations in 100 ground water...
Laboratory studies on the vulnerability of young white sturgeon to predation
D.M. Gadomski, M.J. Parsley
2005, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (25) 667-674
Despite evidence of annual spawning by white sturgeon Acipenser transmontanus in rivers of the northwestern United States and Canada, in some years and locations little or no recruitment of age-0 white sturgeon has been observed. We examined the vulnerability of white sturgeon larvae and juveniles to predation to further understand...
Isotopic compositions of the elements, 2001
J.K. Böhlke, J. R. De Laeter, P. De Bievre, H. Hidaka, H.S. Peiser, K.J.R. Rosman, P.D.P. Taylor
2005, Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data (34) 57-67
The Commission on Atomic Weights and Isotopic Abundances of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry completed its last review of the isotopic compositions of the elements as determined by isotope-ratio mass spectrometry in 2001. That review involved a critical evaluation of the published literature, element by element, and...