The nature of earthquake prediction
Allan Goddard Lindh
2003, Seismological Research Letters (74) 723-725
Earthquake prediction is inherently statistical. Although some people continue to think of earthquake prediction as the specification of the time, place, and magnitude of a future earthquake, it has been clear for at least two decades that this is an unrealistic and unreasonable definition. The reality is that earthquake prediction...
Geologic map of the Mount Trumbull 30' X 60' quadrangle, Mohave and Coconino Counties, northwestern Arizona
George H. Billingsley, Jessica L. Wellmeyer
2003, IMAP 2766
The geologic map of the Mount Trumbull 30' x 60' quadrangle is a cooperative product of the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Park Service, and the Bureau of Land Management that provides geologic map coverage and regional geologic information for visitor services and resource management of Grand Canyon National Park,...
Echinochiton dufoei, a new spiny Ordovician chiton
J. Pojeta Jr., Douglas J. Eernisse, R. D. Hoare, M. D. Henderson
2003, Journal of Paleontology (77) 646-654
Echinochiton dufoei new genus and species is described from the Ordovician age Forreston Member, Grand Detour Formation (Blackriveran) near Beloit, Wisconsin. For a variety of reasons, we regard E. dufoei as a chiton; the species is known from four articulated or partially articulated specimens, one of which has eight plates and...
Reproductive maturation and senescence in the female brown bear
Charles C. Schwartz, Kim A. Keating, Harry V. Reynolds III, Victor G. Barnes Jr., Richard A. Sellers, J. E. Swenson, Sterling D. Miller, B. N. McLellan, Jeffrey A. Keay, Robert McCann, Michael Gibeau, Wayne F. Wakkinen, Richard D. Mace, Wayne Kasworm, Rodger Smith, Steven Herrero
2003, Ursus (14) 109-119
Changes in age-specific reproductive rates can have important implications for managing populations, but the number of female brown (grizzly) bears (Ursus arctos) observed in any one study is usually inadequate to quantify such patterns, especially for older females and in hunted areas. We examined patterns of reproductive maturation and senescence...
Typing mineral deposits using their grades and tonnages in an artificial neural network
Donald A. Singer, Ryoichi Kouda
2003, Natural Resources Research (12) 201-208
A test of the ability of a probabilistic neural network to classify deposits into types on the basis of deposit tonnage and average Cu, Mo, Ag, Au, Zn, and Pb grades is conducted. The purpose is to examine whether this type of system might serve as a basis for...
Giant submarine canyons: Is size any clue to their importance in the rock record?
William R. Normark, Paul R. Carlson
2003, GSA Special Papers (370) 175-190
Submarine canyons are the most important conduits for funneling sediment from continents to oceans. Submarine canyons, however, are zones of sediment bypassing, and little sediment accumulates in the canyon until it ceases to be an active conduit. To understand the potential importance in the rock record of any given submarine...
Pathogenic human viruses in coastal waters
Dale W. Griffin, Kim A. Donaldson, J.H. Paul, Joan B. Rose
2003, Clinical Microbiology Reviews (16) 129-143
This review addresses both historical and recent investigations into viral contamination of marine waters. With the relatively recent emergence of molecular biology-based assays, a number of investigations have shown that pathogenic viruses are prevalent in marine waters being impacted by sewage. Research has shown that this group of fecal-oral viral...
Orogenic tectonism on Io
Windy L. Jaeger, Elizabeth P. Turtle, Laszlo P. Keszthelyi, Jani Radebaugh, A.S. McEwen, Robert T. Pappalardo
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (108)
We catalog 143 Ionian mountains (montes) and mountain‐like features (mensae, tholi, plana, and small peaks) in order to investigate orogenic tectonism on Io. From this comprehensive list, we select 96 mountains for which there are sufficient coverage and resolution to discern spatial relationships with surrounding geologic features. Three of the...
Channel response to tectonic forcing: field analysis of stream morphology and hydrology in the Mendocino triple junction region, northern California
Noah P. Snyder, Kelin X. Whipple, Gregory E. Tucker, D.J. Merritts
2003, Geomorphology (53) 97-127
An empirical calibration of the shear stress model for bedrock incision is presented, using field and hydrologic data from a series of small, coastal drainage basins near the Mendocino triple junction in northern California. Previous work comparing basins from the high uplift zone (HUZ, uplift rates around 4 mm/year) to ones in the low uplift zone (LUZ, ∼0.5...
EarthScoping the inner workings of magmatic systems
Michael W Hamburger, Stephen McNutt, Daniel Dzurisin, Jonathan Fink, David P. Hill, Charles Meertens, Chris Newhall, Susan Owen, John A. Power
2003, Eos Science News (84) 235-236
In the shadow of one of the world's great volcanic systems, an intensive 3-day workshop was undertaken to work toward developing a scientific plan for the magmatic systems component of the U.S. National Science Foundation's (NSF) EarthScope Initiative. This NSF-sponsored workshop was designed to provide direction to the EarthScope planning...
Uncertainty in spatially explicit animal dispersal models
Wolf M. Mooij, Donald L. DeAngelis
2003, Ecological Applications (13) 794-805
Uncertainty in estimates of survival of dispersing animals is a vexing difficulty in conservation biology. The current notion is that this uncertainty decreases the usefulness of spatially explicit population models in particular. We examined this problem by comparing dispersal models of three levels of complexity: (1) an event-based binomial model...
Preliminary northeast Asia geodynamics map
Leonid M. Parfenov, Alexander I. Khanchuk, Gombosuren Badarch, Robert J. Miller, Vera V. Naumova, Warren J. Nokleberg, Masatsugu Ogasawara, Andrei V. Prokopiev, Hongquan Yan
2003, Open-File Report 2003-205
This map portrays the geodynamics of Northeast Asia at a scale of 1:5,000,000 using the concepts of plate tectonics and analysis of terranes and overlap assemblages. The map is the result of a detailed compilation and synthesis at 5 million scale and is part of a major international collaborative study...
Use of multispectral Ikonos imagery for discriminating between conventional and conservation agricultural tillage practices
Andres Vina, Albert J. Peters, Lei Ji
2003, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (69) 537-544
There is a global concern about the increase in atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases. One method being discussed to encourage greenhouse gas mitigation efforts is based on a trading system whereby carbon emitters can buy effective mitigation efforts from farmers implementing conservation tillage practices. These practices sequester carbon from the...
Methods for capturing and banding Kalij Pheasants
John P. Vetter
2003, North American Bird Bander (28) 111-116
We developed methods to capture and band Kalij Pheasants (Lophura leucomelanos) in their introduced range at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, where they are not hunted and are relatively tame. Kalij were wary of foreign structures, such as traps, but readily took cracked corn bait and entered baited traps, provided they...
Hydrothermal alteration at the Lonar Lake impact structure, India: Implications for impact cratering on Mars
Justin Hagerty, Horton E. Newsom
2003, Meteoritics and Planetary Science (38) 365-381
The 50,000 year old, 1.8 km diameter Lonar crater is one of only two known terrestrial craters to be emplaced in basaltic target rock (the 65 million year old Deccan Traps). The composition of the Lonar basalts is similar to martian basaltic meteorites, which establishes Lonar as an excellent analogue...
Compositional analyses of lunar pyroclastic deposits
Lisa R. Gaddis, Matthew I. Staid, James A. Tyburczy, B. Ray Hawke, Noah E. Petro
2003, Icarus (161) 262-280
The 5-band Clementine UVVIS data at ∼100 m/pixel were used to examine the compositions of 75 large and small lunar pyroclastic deposits (LPDs), and these were compared to representative lunar maria and highlands deposits. Results show that the albedo, spectral color, and inferred composition of most LPDs are similar to those of low-titanium, mature lunar maria....
Guidelines for finding nests of passerine birds in tallgrass prairie
Maiken Winter, Shawn E. Hawks, Jill A. Shaffer, Douglas H. Johnson
2003, Prairie Naturalist (35) 197-211
The productivity of birds is one of the most critical components of their natural history affected by habitat quality. Birds might occur at high densities in a given habitat patch but have low nesting success. Such "population sinks" would not be detected if observers relied solely on estimates of bird...
A special issue devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada: Part 2. Carlin-type Deposits
Albert H. Hofstra, David A. John, Ted G. Theodore
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1063-1067
This is the second of two special issues of Economic Geology devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada. Readers interested in a general overview of these deposits, their economic significance, their context within the tectonic evolution of the region, and synoptic references on each gold deposit type are directed to...
Temperature-profile methods for estimating percolation rates in arid environments
Jim Constantz, Scott W. Tyler, Edward Kwicklis
2003, Vadose Zone Journal (2) 12-24
Percolation rates are estimated using vertical temperature profiles from sequentially deeper vadose environments, progressing from sediments beneath stream channels, to expansive basin-fill materials, and finally to deep fractured bedrock underlying mountainous terrain. Beneath stream channels, vertical temperature profiles vary over time in response to downward heat transport, which is generally...
Developmental instability: measures of resistance and resilience using pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo L.)
D. Carl Freeman, Michelle L. Brown, Melissa Dobson, Yolanda Jordan, Anne Kizy, Chris Micallef, Leandria C. Hancock, John H. Graham, John M. Emlen
2003, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (78) 27-41
Fluctuating asymmetry measures random deviations from bilateral symmetry, and thus estimates developmental instability, the loss of ability by an organism to regulate its development. There have been few rigorous tests of this proposition. Regulation of bilateral symmetry must involve either feedback between the sides or independent regulation toward a symmetric...
Does the Animal Welfare Act apply to free-ranging animals?
Daniel M. Mulcahy
2003, ILAR Journal (44) 252-258
Despite the long-standing role that institutional animal care and use committees (IACUCs) have played in reviewing and approving studies at academic institutions, compliance with the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) is not always complete for government natural resource agencies that use free-ranging animals in research and management studies. Even at universities,...
Identification of larval Pacific lampreys (Lampetra tridentata), river lampreys (L. ayresi), and western brook lampreys (L. richardsoni) and thermal requirements of early life history stages of lampreys. Annual report 2002-2003
M.H. Meeuwig, J.M. Bayer, J.G. Seelye, R.A. Reiche
2003, Report
Two fundamental aspects of lamprey biology were examined to provide tools for population assessment and determination of critical habitat needs of Columbia River Basin (CRB) lampreys (the Pacific lamprey, Lampetra tridentata, and the western brook lamprey, L. richardsoni). We evaluated the usefulness of current diagnostic characteristics for identification of larval...
High latitude marine reserve research in Glacier Bay National Park
S. James Taggart, Jennifer Mondragon, A.G. Andrews, J.K. Nielsen
2003, Alaska Park Science (2) 27-31
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is dominated by the marine waters that make up nearly one-fifth of the park’s area. Since the late 1800s, the nutrient rich waters of Glacier Bay have supported highly productive commercial fisheries. Congress closed fishing in parts of Glacier Bay National Park in 1999,...
Improving size estimates of open animal populations by incorporating information on age
Bryan F.J. Manly, Trent L. McDonald, Steven C. Amstrup, Eric V. Regehr
2003, BioScience (53) 666-669
Around the world, a great deal of effort is expended each year to estimate the sizes of wild animal populations. Unfortunately, population size has proven to be one of the most intractable parameters to estimate. The capture-recapture estimation models most commonly used (of the Jolly-Seber type) are complicated and require...
The geochemical evolution of riparian ground water in a forested piedmont catchment
Douglas A. Burns, Niel Plummer, Jeffrey J. McDonnell, Eurybiades Busenberg, Gerolamo C. Casile, Carol Kendall, Richard P. Hooper, James E. Freer, Norman E. Peters, Keith Beven, Peter Schlosser
2003, Groundwater (41) 913-925
The principal weathering reactions and their rates in riparian ground water were determined at the Panola Mountain Research Watershed (PMRW) near Atlanta, Georgia. Concentrations of major solutes were measured in ground water samples from 19 shallow wells completed in the riparian (saprolite) aquifer and in one borehole completed in granite,...