Effect of acidity and elevated PCO2 on acid. Neutralization within pulsed limestone bed reactors receiving coal mine drainage
B.J. Watten, P.L. Sibrell, M.F. Schwartz
2004, Environmental Engineering Science (21) 786-802
Limestone has potential for reducing reagent costs and sludge volume associated with the treatment of acid mine drainage (AMD), but its use has been restricted by slow dissolution rates and sensitivity to scale forming reactions that retard transport of H+ at the solid-liquid interface. We evaluated a pulsed limestone bed...
Enhancing fecal coliform total maximum daily load models through bacterial source tracking
K.E. Hyer, D. L. Moyer
2004, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (40) 1511-1526
Surface water impairment by fecal coliform bacteria is a water quality issue of national scope and importance. In Virginia, more than 400 stream and river segments are on the Commonwealth's 2002 303(d) list because of fecal coliform impairment. Total maximum daily loads (TMDLs) will be developed for most of these...
Mineral matter and potentially hazardous trace elements in coals from Qianxi Fault Depression Area in southwestern Guizhou, China
Jiahua Zhang, D. Ren, Y. Zhu, C. L. Chou, R. Zeng, B. Zheng
2004, International Journal of Coal Geology (57) 49-61
Mineralogy, coal chemistry and 21 potentially hazardous trace elements (PHTEs) of 44 coal samples from the Qianxi Fault Depression Area (QFDA) in southwestern Guizhou province, China have been systematically studied. The major minerals in coals studied are quartz, kaolinite, illite, pyrite, calcite, smectite, marcasite and accessory minerals, including rutile, dolomite,...
Three-dimensional local grid refinement for block-centered finite-difference groundwater models using iteratively coupled shared nodes: A new method of interpolation and analysis of errors
S. Mehl, M. C. Hill
2004, Advances in Water Resources (27) 899-912
This paper describes work that extends to three dimensions the two-dimensional local-grid refinement method for block-centered finite-difference groundwater models of Mehl and Hill [Development and evaluation of a local grid refinement method for block-centered finite-difference groundwater models using shared nodes. Adv Water Resour 2002;25(5):497-511]. In this approach, the (parent) finite-difference...
Spatial partitioning and asymmetric hybridization among sympatric coastal steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus), coastal cutthroat trout (O. clarki clarki) and interspecific hybrids
C.O. Ostberg, S.L. Slatton, R. J. Rodriguez
2004, Molecular Ecology (13) 2773-2788
Hybridization between sympatric species provides unique opportunities to examine the contrast between mechanisms that promote hybridization and maintain species integrity. We surveyed hybridization between sympatric coastal steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss irideus) and coastal cutthroat trout (O. clarki clarki) from two streams in Washington State, Olsen Creek (256 individuals sampled) and Jansen...
Genetic structure of cougar populations across the Wyoming basin: Metapopulation or megapopulation
C.R. Anderson Jr., F.G. Lindzey, D.B. McDonald
2004, Journal of Mammalogy (85) 1207-1214
We examined the genetic structure of 5 Wyoming cougar (Puma concolor) populations surrounding the Wyoming Basin, as well as a population from southwestern Colorado. When using 9 microsatellite DNA loci, observed heterozygosity was similar among populations (HO = 0.49-0.59) and intermediate to that of other large carnivores. Estimates of genetic...
Fish assemblage structure and relations with environmental conditions in a Rocky Mountain watershed
M.C. Quist, W.A. Hubert, D.J. Isaak
2004, Canadian Journal of Zoology (82) 1554-1565
Fish and habitat were sampled from 110 reaches in the Salt River basin (Idaho and Wyoming) during 1996 and 1997 to assess patterns in fish assemblage structure across a Rocky Mountain watershed. We identified four distinct fish assemblages using cluster analysis: (1) allopatric cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki (Richardson, 1836)); (2)...
Evidence for Late Holocene earthquakes on the Utsalady Point fault, Northern Puget Lowland, Washington
S. Y. Johnson, A.R. Nelson, S. F. Personius, R.E. Wells, H.M. Kelsey, B.L. Sherrod, K. Okumura, R. Koehler III, Robert C. Witter, L. A. Bradley, D.J. Harding
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 2299-2316
Trenches across the Utsalady Point fault in the northern Puget Lowland of Washington reveal evidence of at least one and probably two late Holocene earthquakes. The "Teeka" and "Duffers" trenches were located along a 1.4-km-long, 1-to 4-m-high, northwest-trending, southwest-facing, topographic scarp recognized from Airborne Laser Swath Mapping. Glaciomarine drift exposed...
Accumulation of dietary DDE and dieldrin by largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides floridanus
Jennifer K. Muller, K. G. Johnson, M. S. Sepulveda, Christopher J. Borgert, T. S. Gross
2004, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (73) 1078-1085
[No abstract available]...
Intra-strain dioxin sensitivity and morphometric effects in swim-up rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
Paulo S. M. Carvalho, Douglas B. Noltie, D. E. Tillitt
2004, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C: Toxicology & Pharmacology (137) 133-142
Inter and intra-specific differences in sensitivity of early life stage salmonids to 2,3,7,8-TCDD exposure have been reported, but intra-strain differences have not been found in the literature. Our results indicate that intra-strain variability in terms of embryo mortality (LD50) is small in Eagle Lake strain of rainbow trout, LD50 values...
Founding events influence genetic population structure of sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) in Lake Clark, Alaska
K.M. Ramstad, C.A. Woody, G. Kevin Sage, F.W. Allendorf
2004, Molecular Ecology (13) 277-290
Bottlenecks can have lasting effects on genetic population structure that obscure patterns of contemporary gene flow and drift. Sockeye salmon are vulnerable to bottleneck effects because they are a highly structured species with excellent colonizing abilities and often occupy geologically young habitats. We describe genetic divergence among and genetic variation...
Mink predation on radio-tagged trout during winter in a low-gradient reach of a mountain stream, Wyoming
J.W. Lindstrom, W.A. Hubert
2004, Western North American Naturalist (64) 551-553
[No abstract available]...
Gas evolution in eruptive conduits: Combining insights from high temperature and pressure decompression experiments with steady-state flow modeling
M. Mangan, L. Mastin, T. Sisson
2004, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (129) 23-36
In this paper we examine the consequences of bubble nucleation mechanism on eruptive degassing of rhyolite magma. We use the results of published high temperature and pressure decompression experiments as input to a modified version of CONFLOW, the numerical model of Mastin and Ghiorso [(2000) U.S.G.S. Open-File Rep. 00-209, 53...
Streaks, multiplets, and holes: High-resolution spatio-temporal behavior of Parkfield seismicity
F. Waldhauser, W.L. Ellsworth, D. P. Schaff, A. Cole
2004, Geophysical Research Letters (31)
Double-difference locations of ???8000 earthquakes from 1969-2002 on the Parkfield section of the San Andreas Fault reveal detailed fault structures and seismicity that is, although complex, highly organized in both space and time. Distinctive features of the seismicity include: 1) multiple recurrence of earthquakes of the same size at precisely...
Evaluation of three gears for sampling spawning populations of rainbow trout in a large Alaskan river
C.J. Schwanke, W.A. Hubert
2004, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (24) 1078-1082
Alternatives to electrofishing are needed for sampling sexually mature rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss during the spawning season in large Alaskan rivers. We compared hook and line, beach seining, and actively fished gill nets as sampling tools. Beach seining and active gill netting yielded similar catch rates, length frequencies, and sex...
Ultra-high chlorine in submarine Kı̄lauea glasses: Evidence for direct assimilation of brine by magma
Michelle L. Coombs, Thomas W. Sisson, Jun-Ichi Kimura
2004, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (217) 297-313
Basaltic glass grains from the submarine south flank of Kı̄lauea, Hawai′i, have Cl concentrations of 0.01–1.68 wt%, the latter being the highest Cl content yet recorded for a Hawaiian glass. The high-Cl glass grains are products of brine assimilation by tholeiite magma. The glasses are grains in a sandstone clast...
Nutrient mass balance and trends, Mobile River Basin, Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi
D.A. Harned, J.B. Atkins, J.S. Harvill
2004, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (40) 765-793
A nutrient mass balance - accounting for nutrient inputs from atmospheric deposition, fertilizer, crop nitrogen fixation, and point source effluents; and nutrient outputs, including crop harvest and storage - was calculated for 18 subbasins in the Mobile River Basin, and trends (1970 to 1997) were evaluated as part of the...
Approaches to surface complexation modeling of Uranium(VI) adsorption on aquifer sediments
J.A. Davis, D.E. Meece, M. Kohler, G.P. Curtis
2004, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (68) 3621-3641
Uranium(VI) adsorption onto aquifer sediments was studied in batch experiments as a function of pH and U(VI) and dissolved carbonate concentrations in artificial groundwater solutions. The sediments were collected from an alluvial aquifer at a location upgradient of contamination from a former uranium mill...
Critical swimming speeds of wild bull trout
M.G. Mesa, L.K. Weiland, G.B. Zydlewski
2004, Northwest Science (78) 59-65
We estimated the critical swimming speeds (Ucrit) of wild bull trout at 6??, 11??, and 15??C in laboratory experiments. At 11??C, 5 fish ranging from 11 to 19 cm in length had a mean Ucrit of 48.24 cm/s or 3.22 body lengths per second (BL/s). Also at 11??C , 6...
Surface rupture and slip distribution of the Denali and Totschunda faults in the 3 November 2002 M 7.9 earthquake, Alaska
Peter J. Haeussler, David P. Schwartz, Timothy E. Dawson, Heidi D. Stenner, James J. Lienkaemper, Brian L. Sherrod, Francesca R. Cinti, Paola Montone, Patricia Craw, Anthony J. Crone, Stephen F. Personius
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) S23-S52
The 3 November 2002 Denali fault, Alaska, earthquake resulted in 341 km of surface rupture on the Susitna Glacier, Denali, and Totschunda faults. The rupture proceeded from west to east and began with a 48-km-long break on the previously unknown Susitna Glacier thrust fault. Slip on this thrust averaged about...
Correlative weighted stacking for seismic data in the wavelet domain
S. Zhang, Y. Xu, J. Xia
Chen C.Xia J., editor(s)
2004, Conference Paper, Progress in Environmental and Engineering Geophysics: Proceedings of the International Conference on Environmental and Engineering Geophysics, ICEEG 2004
Horizontal stacking plays a crucial role for modern seismic data processing, for it not only compresses random noise and multiple reflections, but also provides a foundational data for subsequent migration and inversion. However, a number of examples showed that random noise in adjacent traces exhibits correlation and coherence. The average...
Stress field variations in the Swiss Alps and the northern Alpine foreland derived from inversion of fault plane solutions
U. Kastrup, M.L. Zoback, N. Deichmann, Kenneth F. Evans, D. Giardini, A.J. Michael
2004, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (109)
This study is devoted to a systematic analysis of the state of stress of the central European Alps and northern Alpine foreland in Switzerland based on focal mechanisms of 138 earthquakes with magnitudes between 1 and 5. The most robust feature of the results is that the azimuth of the...
Shear wave velocity variation across the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand, from receiver function inversion
S. Bannister, C.J. Bryan, H.M. Bibby
2004, Geophysical Journal International (159) 291-310
The Taupo Volcanic Zone (TVZ), New Zealand is a region characterized by very high magma eruption rates and extremely high heat flow, which is manifest in high-temperature geothermal waters. The shear wave velocity structure across the region is inferred using non-linear inversion of receiver functions, which were derived from teleseismic...
Ultramafic xenoliths from the Bearpaw Mountains, Montana, USA: Evidence for multiple metasomatic events in the lithospheric mantle beneath the Wyoming craton
H. Downes, R. Macdonald, B.G.J. Upton, K.G. Cox, J.-L. Bodinier, P.R.D. Mason, D. James, P.G. Hill, B. C. Hearn Jr.
2004, Journal of Petrology (45) 1631-1662
Ultramafic xenoliths in Eocene minettes of the Bearpaw Mountains volcanic field (Montana, USA), derived from the lower lithosphere of the Wyoming craton, can be divided based on textural criteria into tectonite and cumulate groups. The tectonites consist of strongly depleted spinel lherzolites, harzbugites and dunites. Although their mineralogical compositions are...
Miocene extension and extensional folding in an anticlinal segment of the Black Mountains accommodation zone, Colorado River extensional corridor, southwestern United States
R. J. Varga, J. E. Faulds, L.W. Snee, S. S. Harlan, L. Bettison-Varga
2004, Tectonics (23)
Recent studies demonstrate that rifts are characterized by linked tilt domains, each containing a consistent polarity of normal faults and stratal tilt directions, and that the transition between domains is typically through formation of accommodation zones and generally not through production of throughgoing transfer faults. The mid-Miocene Black Mountains accommodation...