Using strip-transect aerial surveys to estimate manatee abundance and population trend in the Ten Thousand Islands Region of southwest Florida
Dean E. Easton, Lynn W. Lefebvre, T.J. Doyle
2003, Conference Paper, Proceedings of Joint Conference on the Science and Restoration of the Greater Everglades and Florida Bay Ecosystem, April 13-18, 2003, Palm Harbor, Florida
No abstract available....
Influence of the Pacific decadal oscillation on the climate of the Sierra Nevada, California and Nevada
L. Benson, B. Linsley, J. Smoot, S. Mensing, S. Lund, S. Stine, A. Sarna-Wojcicki
2003, Quaternary Research (59) 151-159
Mono Lake sediments have recorded five major oscillations in the hydrologic balance between A.D. 1700 and 1941. These oscillations can be correlated with tree-ring-based oscillations in Sierra Nevada snowpack. Comparison of a tree-ring-based reconstruction of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) index (D' Arrigo et al., 2001) with a coral-based reconstruction...
Modeling manatee response to restoration in the Everglades and Ten Thousand Islands
Bradley Stith, James P. Reid, Dean E. Easton, Susan M. Butler
2003, Conference Paper, Proceedings of Joint Conference on the Science and Restoration of the Greater Everglades and Florida Bay Ecosystem, April 13-18, 2003, Palm Harbor, Florida
No abstract available....
Mineral resource of the month: platinum-group metals
Henry Hilliard
2003, Geotimes (2003)
The precious metals commonly referred to as platinum-group metals (PGM) include iridium, osmium, palladium, platinum, rhodium and ruthenium. PGM are among the rarest of elements, and their market values — particularly for palladium, platinum and rhodium — are the highest of all precious metals....
A comprehensive approach to monitoring volcano deformation as a window on the eruption cycle
D. Dzurisin
2003, Reviews of Geophysics (41) 1-1
Since the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, volcanologists have made considerable progress toward predicting eruptions on the basis of precursors that typically start a few days to several months in advance. Although accurate eruption prediction is by no means routine, it may now be possible in some cases to...
The distribution of meteoric 36Cl/Cl in the United States: A comparison of models
S. Moysey, S.N. Davis, M. Zreda, L.D. Cecil
2003, Hydrogeology Journal (11) 615-627
The natural distribution of 36Cl/Cl in groundwater across the continental United States has recently been reported by Davis et al. (2003). In this paper, the large-scale processes and atmospheric sources of 36Cl and chloride responsible for controlling the observed 36Cl/Cl distribution are discussed. The dominant process that affects 36Cl/Cl in...
Movements of Gulf sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi) in nearshore habitat as determined by acoustic telemetry
R. E. Edwards, K. J. Sulak, Craig B. Grimes, M. Randall
2003, Gulf of Mexico Science (21) 59-70
Gulf sturgeon were tagged with telemetry tags and were tracked and relocated in fall and early winter of 1996 and 1998 to determine migration patterns and winter feeding habitats after they emigrated from the Suwannee River, Florida, into the Gulf of Mexico. We hypothesized that their migration would generally follow...
Late Holocene earthquakes on the Toe Jam Hill fault, Seattle fault zone, Bainbridge Island, Washington
A.R. Nelson, S. Y. Johnson, H.M. Kelsey, R.E. Wells, B.L. Sherrod, S.K. Pezzopane, L. A. Bradley, R. D. Koehler III, R.C. Bucknam
2003, Geological Society of America Bulletin (115) 1388-1403
Five trenches across a Holocene fault scarp yield the first radiocarbon-measured earthquake recurrence intervals for a crustal fault in western Washington. The scarp, the first to be revealed by laser imagery, marks the Toe Jam Hill fault, a north-dipping backthrust to the Seattle fault. Folded and faulted strata, liquefaction features,...
Future coral reef habitat marginality: Temporal and spatial effects of climate change in the Pacific basin
J.M. Guinotte, R. W. Buddemeier, J.A. Kleypas
2003, Conference Paper, Coral Reefs
Marginal reef habitats are regarded as regions where coral reefs and coral communities reflect the effects of steady-state or long-term average environmental limitations. We used classifications based on this concept with predicted time-variant conditions of future climate to develop a scenario for the evolution of future marginality. Model results based...
Response of North American Great Basin Lakes to Dansgaard-Oeschger oscillations
L. Benson, S. Lund, R. Negrini, B. Linsley, M. Zic
2003, Quaternary Science Reviews (22) 2239-2251
We correlate oscillations in the hydrologic and/or cryologic balances of four Great Basin surface-water systems with Dansgaard-Oeschger (D-O) events 2-12. This correlation is relatively strong at the location of the magnetic signature used to link the lake records, but becomes less well constrained with distance/time from the signature. Comparison of...
Production waters associated with the Ferron coalbed methane fields, central Utah: Chemical and isotopic composition and volumes
C. A. Rice
2003, International Journal of Coal Geology (56) 141-169
This study investigated the composition of water co-produced with coalbed methane (CBM) from the Upper Cretaceous Ferron Sandstone Member of the Mancos Shale in east-central Utah to better understand coalbed methane reservoirs. The Ferron coalbed methane play currently has more than 600 wells producing an average of 240 bbl/day/well water....
Direct assessment of groundwater vulnerability from single observations of multiple contaminants
Fred Worrall, Dana W. Kolpin
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 2-1-2-8
Groundwater vulnerability is a central concept in pollution risk assessment, yet its estimation has been largely a matter of expert judgment. This work applies a method for the direct calculation of vulnerability from monitoring well observations of pesticide concentrations. The method has two major advantages: it is independent of the...
Status of Alabama shad and skipjack herring in Gulf of Mexico drainages
M.F. Mettee, P. E. O’Neil
2003, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2003) 157-170
Gulf of Mexico drainages are inhabited by two alosine species, the anadromous Alabama shad Alosa alabamae and the skipjack herring A. chrysochloris. Although their distributions are reasonably well documented, the life history and ecology of both species has been incompletely investigated. Infrequent literature references suggest populations of both species have...
Evaluation of landscape models for wolverines in the interior northwest, United States of America
M.M. Rowland, M.J. Wisdom, Douglas H. Johnson, B.C. Wales, J.P. Copeland, F.B. Edelmann
2003, Journal of Mammalogy (84) 92-105
The wolverine (Gulo gulo) is an uncommon, wide-ranging carnivore of conservation concern. We evaluated performance of landscape models for wolverines within their historical range at 2 scales in the interior Northwest based on recent observations (n = 421) from Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. At the subbasin scale, simple overlays of...
Interactions of bullfrog tadpole predators and an insecticide: Predation release and facilitation
M.D. Boone, R. D. Semlitsch
2003, Oecologia (137) 610-616
The effect of a contaminant on a community may not be easily predicted, given that complex changes in food resources and predator-prey dynamics may result. The objectives of our study were to determine the interactive effects of the insecticide carbaryl and predators on body size, development, survival, and activity of...
Visible/near-infrared spectra of experimentally shocked plagioclase feldspars
J. R. Johnson, F. Horz
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (108) 6-1
High shock pressures cause structural changes in plagioclase feldspars such as mechanical fracturing and disaggregation of the crystal lattice at submicron scales, the formation of diaplectic glass (maskelynite), and genuine melting. Past studies of visible/ near-infrared spectra of shocked feldspars demonstrated few spectral variations with pressure except for a decrease...
Improving ground-penetrating radar data in sedimentary rocks using deterministic deconvolution
J. Xia, E. K. Franseen, R. D. Miller, T.V. Weis, A.P. Byrnes
2003, Journal of Applied Geophysics (54) 15-33
Resolution is key to confidently identifying unique geologic features using ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data. Source wavelet "ringing" (related to bandwidth) in a GPR section limits resolution because of wavelet interference, and can smear reflections in time and/or space. The resultant potential for misinterpretation limits the usefulness of GPR. Deconvolution offers...
Seasonal movements, migratory behavior, and site fidelity of West Indian manatees along the Atlantic coast of the United States
C. J. Deutsch, J.P. Reid, R. K. Bonde, Dean E. Easton, H. I. Kochman, T. J. O'Shea
2003, Wildlife Monographs (151) 1-77
The West Indian manatee (Trichechus manatus) is endangered by human activities throughout its range, including the U.S. Atlantic coast where habitat degradation from coastal development and manatee deaths from watercraft collisions have been particularly severe. We radio-tagged and tracked 78 manatees along the east coast of Florida and Georgia over...
New signatures of underground nuclear tests revealed by satellite radar interferometry
P. Vincent, S. Larsen, D. Galloway, R. J. Laczniak, W.R. Walter, W. Foxall, J.J. Zucca
2003, Geophysical Research Letters (30) 1-5
New observations of surface displacement caused by past underground nuclear tests at the Nevada Test Site (NTS) are presented using interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR). The InSAR data reveal both coseismic and postseismic subsidence signals that extend one kilometer or more across regardless of whether or not a surface crater...
Mineral resource of the month: silicon
Lisa A. Corathers
2003, Geotimes (2003)
In the industrialized world, silicon is as ubiquitous in the objects people use every day as it is in nature. The second most abundant element in Earth’s crust and more than 25 percent of the crust by weight, silicon is one of the most useful elements to humans....
The influence of water depth and flow regime on phytoplankton biomass and community structure in a shallow, lowland river
H.V. Leland
2003, Conference Paper, Hydrobiologia
The taxonomic composition and biomass of phytoplankton in the San Joaquin River, California, were examined in relation to water depth, flow regime, and water chemistry. Without substantial tributary inflow, maintenance demands exceeded algal production during summer and autumn in this eutrophic, 'lowland type' river due to light-limiting conditions for algal...
Native weeds and exotic plants: Relationships to disturbance in mixed-grass prairie
D.L. Larson
2003, Plant Ecology (169) 317-333
Disturbance frequently is implicated in the spread of invasive exotic plants. Disturbances may be broadly categorized as endogenous (e.g., digging by fossorial animals) or exogenous (e.g., construction and maintenance of roads and trails), just as weedy species may be native or exotic in origin. The objective of this study was...
Salton Trough regional deformation estimated from combined trilateration and survey-mode GPS data
G. Anderson, D.C. Agnew, H.O. Johnson
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 2402-2414
The Salton Trough in southeastern California, United States, has one of the highest seismicity and deformation rates in southern California, including 20 earthquakes M 6 or larger since 1892. From 1972 through 1987, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) measured a 41-station trilateration network in this region. We remeasured 37 of the USGS baselines using survey-mode Global Positioning System methods from 1995...
Meter-scale slopes of candidate MER landing sites from point photoclinometry
Ross A. Beyer, Alfred S. McEwen, Randolph L. Kirk
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (108)
Photoclinometry was used to analyze the small-scale roughness of areas that fall within the proposed Mars Exploration Rover (MER) 2003 landing ellipses. The landing ellipses presented in this study were those in Athabasca Valles, Elysium Planitia, Eos Chasma, Gusev Crater, Isidis Planitia, Melas Chasma, and Meridiani Planum. We were able...
Possible emplacement of crustal rocks into the forearc mantle of the Cascadia Subduction Zone
A.J. Calvert, M. A. Fisher, K. Ramachandran, A.M. Trehu
2003, Geophysical Research Letters (30)
Seismic reflection profiles shot across the Cascadia forearc show that a 5–15 km thick band of reflections, previously interpreted as a lower crustal shear zone above the subducting Juan de Fuca plate, extends into the upper mantle of the North American plate, reaching depths of at least 50 km. In...