Material-balance assessment of the New Albany-Chesterian petroleum system of the Illinois basin
M. D. Lewan, M. E. Henry, D.K. Higley, Janet K. Pitman
2002, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (86) 745-778
The New Albany-Chesterian petroleum system of the Illinois basin is a well-constrained system from which petroleum charges and losses were quantified through a material-balance assessment. This petroleum system has nearly 90,000 wells penetrating the Chesterian section, a single New Albany Shale source rock accounting for more than 99% of the...
The High Plains Aquifer, USA: Groundwater development and sustainability
K.F. Dennehy, D. W. Litke, P.B. McMahon
2002, Geological Society Special Publication 99-119
The High Plains Aquifer, located in the United States, is one of the largest freshwater aquifers in the world and is threatened by continued decline in water levels and deteriorating water quality. Understanding the physical and cultural features of this area is essential to assessing the factors that affect this...
The major-ion composition of Silurian seawater
S.T. Brennan, T.K. Lowenstein
2002, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (66) 2683-2700
One-hundred fluid inclusions in Silurian marine halite were analyzed in order to determine the major-ion composition of Silurian seawater. The samples analyzed were from three formations in the Late Silurian Michigan Basin, the A-1, A-2, and B Evaporites of the Salina Group, and one formation in the Early Silurian Canning...
Prediction of the fate of p,p'-DDE in sediment on the Palos Verdes shelf, California, USA
C. R. Sherwood, D.E. Drake, P.L. Wiberg, R. A. Wheatcroft
2002, Continental Shelf Research (22) 1025-1058
Long-term (60-yr) predictions of vertical profiles of p,p???-DDE concentrations in contaminated bottom sediments on the Palos Verdes shelf were calculated for three locations along the 60-m isobath using a numerical solution of the one-dimensional advection-diffusion equation. The calculations incorporated the following processes: sediment deposition (or erosion), depth-dependent solid-phase biodiffusive mixing,...
Classification of reaches in the Missouri and lower Yellowstone Rivers based on flow characteristics
Mark A. Pegg, Clay L. Pierce
2002, River Research and Applications (18) 31-42
Several aspects of flow have been shown to be important determinants of biological community structure and function in streams, yet direct application of this approach to large rivers has been limited. Using a multivariate approach, we grouped flow gauges into hydrologically similar units in the Missouri and lower Yellowstone Rivers...
Methylmercury in flood-control impoundments and natural waters of northwestern Minnesota, 1997-99
M. E. Brigham, D. P. Krabbenhoft, M.L. Olson, J.F. DeWild
2002, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (138) 61-78
We studied methylmercury (MeHg) and total mercury (HgT) in impounded and natural surface waters in northwestern Minnesota, in settings ranging from agricultural to undeveloped. In a recently constructed (1995) permanent-pool impoundment, MeHg levels typically increased from inflow to outflow during 1997; this trend broke down from late 1998 to early...
The oligocene Lund Tuff, Great Basin, USA: A very large volume monotonous intermediate
L.L. Maughan, E. H. Christiansen, M. G. Best, C. S. Grommé, A.L. Deino, D.G. Tingey
2002, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (113) 129-157
Unusual monotonous intermediate ignimbrites consist of phenocryst-rich dacite that occurs as very large volume (> 1000 km3) deposits that lack systematic compositional zonation, comagmatic rhyolite precursors, and underlying plinian beds. They are distinct from countless, usually smaller volume, zoned rhyolite-dacite-andesite deposits that are conventionally believed to have erupted from magma...
Adaptive inference for distinguishing credible from incredible patterns in nature
Crawford S. Holling, Craig R. Allen
2002, Ecosystems (5) 319-328
Strong inference is a powerful and rapid tool that can be used to identify and explain patterns in molecular biology, cell biology, and physiology. It is effective where causes are single and separable and where discrimination between pairwise alternative hypotheses can be determined experimentally by a simple yes or no...
Adaptive moving mesh methods for simulating one-dimensional groundwater problems with sharp moving fronts
W. Huang, Lingyun Zheng, X. Zhan
2002, International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering (54) 1579-1603
Accurate modelling of groundwater flow and transport with sharp moving fronts often involves high computational cost, when a fixed/uniform mesh is used. In this paper, we investigate the modelling of groundwater problems using a particular adaptive mesh method called the moving mesh partial differential equation approach. With this approach, the...
Fate and effects of the triazinone herbicide metribuzin in experimental pond mesocosms
J.F. Fairchild, L.C. Sappington
2002, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (43) 198-202
Metribuzin is a triazinone herbicide that is widely used for the control of grasses and broad-leaved weeds in soybeans, sugarcane, and numerous other crops. Metribuzin is highly toxic to freshwater macrophytes and algae under laboratory conditions (median plant EC50 = 31 ??g/L; n = 11 species) but has not been...
Using chemical, hydrologic, and age dating analysis to delineate redox processes and flow paths in the riparian zone of a glacial outwash aquifer‐stream system
Larry J. Puckett, Timothy K. Cowdery, Peter B. McMahon, Lan H. Tornes, Jeffrey D. Stoner
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 9-1-9-20
A combination of chemical and dissolved gas analyses, chlorofluorocarbon age dating, and hydrologic measurements were used to determine the degree to which biogeochemical processes in a riparian wetland were responsible for removing NO3−from groundwaters discharging to the Otter Tail River in west central Minnesota. An analysis of river chemistry and...
Functional variability of habitats within the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta: Restoration implications
L.V. Lucas, J. E. Cloern, J.K. Thompson, N.E. Monsen
2002, Ecological Applications (12) 1528-1547
We have now entered an era of large-scale attempts to restore ecological functions and biological communities in impaired ecosystems. Our knowledge base of complex ecosystems and interrelated functions is limited, so the outcomes of specific restoration actions are highly uncertain. One approach for exploring that uncertainty and anticipating the range...
Paleoseismology at high latitudes: Seismic disturbance of upper Quaternary deposits along the Castle Mountain fault near Houston, Alaska
Peter J. Haeussler, Timothy C. Best, Christopher F. Waythomas
2002, Geological Society of America Bulletin (114) 1296-1310
Most paleoseismic studies are at low to moderate latitudes. Here we present results from a high-latitude (61°30′ N) trenching study of the Castle Mountain fault in south-central Alaska. This fault is the only one known in the greater Anchorage, Alaska, area with historical seismicity and a Holocene fault scarp. It...
How sedge meadow soils, microtopography, and vegetation respond to sedimentation
K. J. Werner, Joy B. Zedler
2002, Wetlands (22) 451-466
The expansion of urban and agricultural activities in watersheds of the Midwestern USA facilitates the conversion of species-rich sedge meadows to stands of Phalaris arundinacea and Typha spp. We document the role of sediment accumulation in this process based on field surveys of three sedge meadows dominated by Carex stricta, their adjacent Phalaris or Typha stands, and transitions from Carex to...
Impacts of swine manure pits on groundwater quality
I.G. Krapac, W.S. Dey, William R. Roy, C.A. Smyth, E. Storment, S.L. Sargent, J.D. Steele
2002, Environmental Pollution (120) 475-492
Manure deep-pits are commonly used to store manure at confined animal feeding operations. However, previous to this study little information had been collected on the impacts of deep-pits on groundwater quality to provide science-based guidance in formulating regulations and waste management strategies that address risks to human health and the...
Sea level response to ENSO along the central California coast: How the 1997-1998 event compares with the historic record
H. F. Ryan, M. Noble
2002, Progress in Oceanography (54) 149-169
Long-term monthly sea level and sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies from central California show that during winter months, positive anomalies are associated with El Niño events and the negative ones with La Niña events. There is no significant impact on monthly mean anomalies associated with Pacific decadal oscillations, although there...
Integrated management of waterbirds: Beyond the conventional
R.M. Erwin
2002, Waterbirds (25) 5-12
Integrated waterbird management over the past few decades has implicitly referred to methods for managing wetlands that usually attempt to enhance habitat for taxonomic groups such as shorebirds and wading birds, in addition to waterfowl, the traditional focus group. Here I describe five elements of integration in management: taxonomic, spatial,...
Nitrogen dynamics in an Alaskan salt marsh following spring use by geese
Amy B. Zacheis, Roger W. Ruess, Jerry W. Hupp
2002, Oecologia (130) 600-608
Lesser snow geese (Anser caerulescens caerulescens) and Canada geese (Branta canadensis) use several salt marshes in Cook Inlet, Alaska, as stopover areas for brief periods during spring migration. We investigated the effects of geese on nitrogen cycling processes in Susitna Flats, one of the marshes. We...
Global Omori law decay of triggered earthquakes: Large aftershocks outside the classical aftershock zone
Tom Parsons
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (107) ESE 9-1-ESE 9-20
[1] Triggered earthquakes can be large, damaging, and lethal as evidenced by the1999 shocks in Turkey and the 2001 earthquakes in El Salvador. In this study, earthquakes with Ms ≥ 7.0 from the Harvard centroid moment tensor (CMT) catalog are modeled as dislocations to calculate shear stress changes on subsequent earthquake rupture...
Characterization of annual reproductive cycles for pond-reared Florida largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides floridanus
T. S. Gross, C.M. Wieser, M. S. Sepulveda, J.J. Wiebe, T. R. Schoeb, N. D. Denslow
2002, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2002) 205-212
The annual reproductive cycle of hatchery-raised largemouth bass (Florida subspecies Micropterus salmoides floridanus) was characterized over a one-year period. Largemouth bass have a distinct annual reproductive cycle with a spring spawning season (approximately between mid-January and mid-June). Cycle characterization focused on an evaluation of gonadal development and plasma concentrations of...
Performance of a satellite-linked GPS on Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens)
Chadwick V. Jay, Gerald W. Garner
2002, Polar Biology (25) 235-237
We evaluated the utility of a satellite-linked GPS in obtaining location data from Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens). A unit was attached to one of the tusks of each of three adult male walruses in Bristol Bay, Alaska. The units were designed to relay GPS positions through the Argos Data...
A simulation study of factors controlling white sturgeon recruitment in the Snake River
H.I. Jager, W. Van Winkle, James Angus Chandler, K.B. Lepla, P. Bates, T.D. Counihan
2002, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2002) 127-150
Five of the nine populations of white sturgeon Acipenser transmontanus, located between dams on the Middle Snake River, have declined from historical levels and are now at risk of extinction. One step towards more effectively protecting and managing these nine populations is ranking factors that influence recruitment in each of...
Estradiol-induced gene expression in largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides)
C.J. Bowman, K.J. Kroll, T.G. Gross, N. D. Denslow
2002, Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology (196) 67-77
Vitellogenin (Vtg) and estrogen receptor (ER) gene expression levels were measured in largemouth bass to evaluate the activation of the ER-mediated pathway by estradiol (E2). Single injections of E2 ranging from 0.0005 to 5 mg/kg up-regulated plasma Vtg in a dose-dependent manner. Vtg and ER mRNAs were measured using partial...
Geochemistry of fluid phases and sediments: Relevance to hydrothermal circulation in Middle Valley, ODP Legs 139 and 169
J. M. Gieskes, Bernd R. T. Simoneit, Wayne C. Shanks III, W.D. Goodfellow, R.H. James, P.A. Baker, J.-I. Ishibashi
2002, Applied Geochemistry (17) 1381-1399
Geochemical and isotopic studies of pore fluids and solid phases recovered from the Dead Dog and Bent Hill hydrothermal sites in Middle Valley (Ocean Drilling Program Leg 169) have been compared with similar data obtained previously from these sites during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 139. Although generally the hydrothermal systems...
Environmentalism and natural aggregate mining
Lawrence J. Drew, William H. Langer, Janet Somerville Sachs
2002, Natural Resources Research (11) 19-28
Sustaining a developed economy and expanding a developing one require the use of large volumes of natural aggregate. Almost all human activity (commercial, recreational, or leisure) is transacted in or on facilities constructed from natural aggregate. In our urban and suburban worlds, we are almost totally dependent on supplies of...