Earthquake occurrence modeling for evaluating seismic risks to roadway systems
D. Perkins, C. Taylor
Beavers J.E., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, Technical Council on Lifeline Earthquake Engineering Monograph
The results of the application of a variety of techniques, which included bootstrap sampling, the use of antithetic values, the use of Latin squares sampling, use of control functions, a compound Poisson approach, and importance sampling, were presented. It was found that extremely large reductions in the number of simulations...
Post-Depositional Behavior of Cu in a Metal-Mining Polishing Pond (East Lake, Canada)
A.J. Martin, J.L. Jambor, Thomas F. Pedersen, John Crusius
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 4925-4933
The post-depositional behavior of Cu in a gold-mining polishing pond (East Lake, Canada) was assessed after mine closure by examination of porewater chemistry and mineralogy. The near-surface (upper 1.5 cm) sediments are enriched in Cu, with values ranging from 0.4 to 2 wt %. Mineralogical examination revealed that the bulk...
A reservoir of nitrate beneath desert soils
Michelle Ann Walvoord, Fred M. Phillips, David A. Stonestrom, R. Dave Evans, Peter C. Hartsough, Brent D. Newman, Robert G. Striegl
2003, Science (302) 1021-1024
A large reservoir of bioavailable nitrogen (up to ∼104 kilograms of nitrogen per hectare, as nitrate) has been previously overlooked in studies of global nitrogen distribution. The reservoir has been accumulating in subsoil zones of arid regions throughout the Holocene. Consideration of the subsoil reservoir raises estimates of vadose-zone nitrogen...
The petrographic microscope: Evolution of a mineralogical research instrument
D. E. Kile
2003, Mineralogical Record (1) 5-39
The petrographic microscope, designed to observe and measure the optical properties of minerals as a means of identifying them, has provided a foundation for mineralogical and petrological research for more than 120 years. Much of what is known today in these fields is attributable to this instrument, the development of...
Complications with using ratios for environmental data: Comparing enantiomeric ratios (ERs) and enantiomer fractions (EFs)
E.M. Ulrich, D.R. Helsel, W.T. Foreman
2003, Chemosphere (53) 531-538
Complications arise when ratios are used to present environmental data because ratios are an unbounded, multiplicative scale that can lead to asymmetrical (skewed) data distributions. Enantiomeric ratios (ERs), historically used in discussions of chiral signatures, often are published as mean ER??single-value standard deviation. Application of statistical summaries, such as the...
Benthic foraminifers from the continental shelf and slope of the Gulf of Mexico: An indicator of shelf hypoxia
L.E. Osterman
2003, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (58) 17-35
Benthic foraminifers from 74 core-top sediment samples collected primarily from the continental shelf of the Gulf of Mexico were analyzed to determine a microfaunal indicator for shelf hypoxia to be used in future paleoenvironmental studies. Principal component analysis (PCA) and cluster analysis (CA) of 93 species recognized factors/clusters that were...
Performance of the radial semblance method for the location of very long period volcanic signals
J. Almendros, B. Chouet
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 1890-1903
We investigate the performance of a source location method that combines multichannel semblance and particle motions and is being increasingly used to obtain estimates of the source locations of very long period (VLP) seismic signals recorded on volcanoes. The method makes use of the radial particle motions and large wavelengths that characterize the VLP events. To assess the capabilities of this radial semblance method, and to better understand its...
The mesoproterozoic Beaverhead impact structure and its tectonic setting, Montana-Idaho: 40Ar/39 and U-Pb isotopic constraints
K.S. Kellogg, L.W. Snee, D.M. Unruh
2003, Journal of Geology (111) 639-652
New 40Ar/39Ar and uranium-lead (U-Pb) zircon data from the Beaverhead impact structure, first identified by extensive shatter coning of Proterozoic quartzite and gneiss from the Beaverhead Mountains near the Montana-Idaho border, indicate that the structure formed at or after 900 Ma. The 40Ar/39Ar age spectra from fine-grained muscovite and biotite...
Brittle structures and their role in controlling porosity and permeability in a complex Precambrian crystalline-rock aquifer system in the Colorado Rocky Mountain front range
Jonathan S. Caine, S.R.A. Tomusiak
2003, Geological Society of America Bulletin (115) 1410-1424
Expansion of the Denver metropolitan area has resulted in substantial residential development in the foothills of the Rocky Mountain Front Range. This type of sub-urban growth, characteristic of much of the semiarid intermountain west, often relies on groundwater from individual domestic wells and is exemplified in the Turkey Creek watershed....
Historical trend in river ice thickness and coherence in hydroclimatological trends in Maine
T.G. Huntington, G.A. Hodgkins, R. W. Dudley
2003, Climatic Change (61) 217-236
We analyzed long-term records of ice thickness on the Piscataquis River in central Maine and air temperature in Maine to determine whether there were temporal trends that were associated with climate warming. The trend in ice thickness was compared and correlated with regional time series of winter air temperature, heating...
Effects of CRP field age and cover type on ring-necked pheasants in eastern South Dakota
S.L. Eggebo, K.F. Higgins, D.E. Naugle, F.R. Quamen
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 779-785
Loss of native grasslands to tillage has increased the importance of Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) grasslands to maintain ring-necked pheasant (Phasianus colchicus) populations. Despite the importance of CRP to pheasants, little is known about the effects of CRP field age and cover type on pheasant abundance and productivity in the...
Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus)
Charles J. Henny, J.E. Pagel
David B. Marshall, Matthew G. Hunter, Alan Contreras, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Birds of Oregon: A general reference
No abstract available....
Managing troubled data: Coastal data partnerships smooth data integration
S.S. Hale, Miglarese A. Hale, M.P. Bradley, T.J. Belton, L.D. Cooper, M.T. Frame, C.A. Friel, L.M. Harwell, R.E. King, W.K. Michener, D.T. Nicolson, B.G. Peterjohn
2003, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (81) 133-148
Understanding the ecology, condition, and changes of coastal areas requires data from many sources. Broad-scale and long-term ecological questions, such as global climate change, biodiversity, and cumulative impacts of human activities, must be addressed with databases that integrate data from several different research and monitoring programs. Various barriers, including widely...
The Willet (Catoptrophorus semipalmatus)
P.M. Sanzenbacher, Susan M. Haig
David B. Marshall, Matthew G. Hunter, Alan Contreras, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Birds of Oregon: A general reference
No abstract available....
Individual variation in prey selection by sea otters: Patterns, causes and implications
J. A. Estes, Marianne L. Riedman, M. M. Staedler, M. T. Tinker, B.E. Lyon
2003, Journal of Animal Ecology (72) 144-155
1. Longitudinal records of prey selection by 10 adult female sea otters on the Monterey Peninsula, California, from 1983 to 1990 demonstrate extreme inter-individual variation in diet. Variation in prey availability cannot explain these differences as the data were obtained from a common spatial-temporal area. 2. Individual dietary patterns persisted...
Percolation induced heat transfer in deep unsaturated zones
N. Lu, G.D. LeCain
2003, Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering (129) 1040-1053
Subsurface temperature data from a borehole located in a desert wash were measured and used to delineate the conductive and advective heat transfer regimes, and to estimate the percolation quantity associated with the 1997-1998 El Ni??no precipitation. In an arid environment, conductive heat transfer dominates the variation of shallow subsurface...
Fungal biology and agriculture: revisiting the field
O. Yarden, D.J. Ebbole, S. Freeman, R. J. Rodriguez, M. B. Dickman
2003, Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (16) 859-866
Plant pathology has made significant progress over the years, a process that involved overcoming a variety of conceptual and technological hurdles. Descriptive mycology and the advent of chemical plant-disease management have been followed by biochemical and physiological studies of fungi and their hosts. The later establishment of biochemical genetics along...
Surface wave tomography of North America and the Caribbean using global and regional broad-band networks: Phase velocity maps and limitations of ray theory
S. Godey, R. Snieder, A. Villasenor, H.M. Benz
2003, Geophysical Journal International (152) 620-632
We present phase velocity maps of fundamental mode Rayleigh waves across the North American and Caribbean plates. Our data set consists of 1846 waveforms from 172 events recorded at 91 broad-band stations operating in North America. We compute phase velocity maps in four narrow period bands between 50 and 150...
Crustal structure in the Elko-Carlin Region, Nevada, during Eocene gold mineralization: Ruby-East Humboldt metamorphic core complex as a guide to the deep crust
K. A. Howard
2003, Economic Geology (98) 249-268
The deep crustal rocks exposed in the Ruby-East Humboldt metamorphic core complex, northeastern Nevada, provide a guide for reconstructing Eocene crustal structure ∼50 km to the west near the Carlin trend of gold deposits. The deep crustal rocks, in the footwall of a west-dipping normal-sense shear system, may have underlain the Piñon and Adobe Ranges about 50 km to the west before Tertiary extension, close to or under part of the Carlin trend. Eocene lakes formed on the hanging wall of the fault...
Isotopic age of the Black Forest Bed, Petrified Forest Member, Chinle Formation, Arizona: An example of dating a continental sandstone
N. R. Riggs, S.R. Ash, A. P. Barth, G. E. Gehrels, J. L. Wooden
2003, Geological Society of America Bulletin (115) 1315-1323
Zircons from the Black Forest Bed, Petrified Forest Member, Chinle Formation, in Petrified Forest National Park, yield ages that range from Late Triassic to Late Archean. Grains were analyzed by multigrain TIMS (thermal-ionization mass spectrometry), single-crystal TIMS, and SHRIMP (sensitive, high-resolution ion-microprobe). Multiple-grain analysis yielded a discordia trajectory with a...
Atmospheric deposition maps for the Rocky Mountains
L. Nanus, K. Campbell, G.P. Ingersoll, D. W. Clow, M.A. Mast
2003, Atmospheric Environment (37) 4881-4892
Variability in atmospheric deposition across the Rocky Mountains is influenced by elevation, slope, aspect, and precipitation amount and by regional and local sources of air pollution. To improve estimates of deposition in mountainous regions, maps of average annual atmospheric deposition loadings of nitrate, sulfate, and acidity were developed for the...
Reduction of elemental selenium to selenide: Experiments with anoxic sediments and bacteria that respire Se-oxyanions
M.J. Herbel, J.S. Blum, R.S. Oremland, S.E. Borglin
2003, Geomicrobiology Journal (20) 587-602
A selenite-respiring bacterium, Bacillus selenitireducens, produced significant levels of Se(-II) (as aqueous HSe−) when supplied with Se(0). B. selenitireducens was also able to reduce selenite [Se(IV)] through Se(0) to Se(-II). Reduction of Se(0) by B. selenitireducens was more rapid in cells grown on colloidal sulfur [S(0)] or Se(IV) as their electron acceptor than for cell...
Analysis of ecological context for identifying vegetation and animal conservation planning foci: An example from the arid South-western USA
T. Hamazaki, B.C. Thompson, B.A. Locke, K.G. Boykin
2003, Journal of Environmental Planning and Management (46) 239-256
In developing conservation strategies, it is important to maximize effects of conservation within a specified land tract and to maximize conservation effects on surrounding area (ecological context). The authors proposed two criteria to select biotic entities for conservation foci: (1) the relative occurrence of fauna or flora in a tract...
Benefits and costs of increased levels of corticosterone in seabird chicks
A.S. Kitaysky, E.V. Kitaiskaia, John F. Piatt, J.C. Wingfield
2003, Hormones and Behavior (43) 140-149
Seabird chicks respond to food shortages by increasing corticosterone (cort) secretion, which is probably associated with fitness benefits and costs. To examine this, we experimentally increased levels of circulating cort in captive black-legged kittiwake chicks fed ad libitum. We found that cort-implanted chicks begged more frequently and were more aggressive...
Temperature dependence of polyhedral cage volumes in clathrate hydrates
B.C. Chakoumakos, C.J. Rawn, A.J. Rondinone, L.A. Stern, S. Circone, S. H. Kirby, Y. Ishii, C.Y. Jones, B.H. Toby
2003, Canadian Journal of Physics (81) 183-189
The polyhedral cage volumes of structure I (sI) (carbon dioxide, methane, trimethylene oxide) and structure II (sII) (methane-ethane, propane, tetrahydrofuran, trimethylene oxide) hydrates are computed from atomic positions determined from neutron powder-diffraction data. The ideal structural formulas for sI and sII are, respectively, S2L6 ?? 46H2O and S16L???8 ?? 136H2O,...