Characterizing seismogenic fault structures in Oklahoma using a relocated template matched catalog
Robert Skoumal, Joern Kaven, Jake Water
2019, Seismological Research Letters (90) 1535-1543
Oklahoma is one of the most seismically active places in the United States as a result of industry activities. In order to characterize the fault networks responsible for these earthquakes in Oklahoma, we relocated a large-scale template matching catalog between 2010-2016 using the GrowClust algorithm . This relocated catalog is...
Simulation of groundwater flow in the Brunswick Area, Georgia, for 2004 and 2015, and selected groundwater-management scenarios
Gregory S. Cherry
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5035
The Upper Floridan aquifer (UFA) is the principal water source for industrial and public supply in Glynn County, Georgia. Wells in active pumping centers that tap the UFA for industries near the city of Brunswick have created an upward hydraulic-head gradient in the Floridan aquifer system, which has allowed high...
Simulation of the regional groundwater-flow system in the St. Louis River basin, Minnesota
Megan J. Haserodt, Randall J. Hunt, Timothy K. Cowdery, Andrew T. Leaf, Anna C. Baker
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5033
The St. Louis River Basin (SLRB) covers 3,600 square miles in northeastern Minnesota, with headwaters in the Mesabi Range and extensive wetlands and lakes throughout the basin. To better understand the regional groundwater system in the SLRB, a two-dimensional, steady-state groundwater-flow model of the SLRB was developed by the U.S....
Spatially explicit network analysis reveals multi-species annual cycle movement patterns of sea ducks
Juliet S. Lamb, Peter WC Paton, Jason E. Osenkowski, Shannon S. Badzinski, Alicia Berlin, Timothy D. Bowman, Chris Dwyer, Luke Fara, Scott G. Gilliland, Kevin P. Kenow, Christine Lepage, Mark L. Mallory, Glenn Olsen, Matthew Perry, Scott A. Petrie, Jean-Pierre L. Savard, Lucas Savoy, Michael L. Schummer, Caleb S. Spiegel, Scott R. McWilliams
2019, Ecological Applications (29)
Conservation of long-distance migratory species poses unique challenges. Migratory connectivity—that is, the extent to which groupings of individuals at breeding sites are maintained in wintering areas—is frequently used to evaluate population structure and assess use of key habitat areas. However, for species with complex or variable annual-cycle movements, this traditional...
Return flows from beaver ponds enhance floodplain-to-river metals exchange in alluvial mountain catchments
Martin Briggs, Cheng-Hui Wang, Frederick Day-Lewis, Kenneth H. Williams, Wenming Dong, John Lane
2019, Science of the Total Environment (685) 357-369
River to floodplain hydrologic connectivity is strongly enhanced by beaver- (Castor canadensis) engineered channel water diversions. The hydroecological impacts are wide ranging and generally positive, however, the hydrogeochemical characteristics of beaver-induced flowpaths have not been thoroughly examined. Using a suite of complementary ground- and drone-based heat tracing and remote sensing...
Active boulder movement at high Martian latitudes
Colin M. Dundas, Michael T. Mellon, Susan J. Conway, Renaldo Gastineau
2019, Geophysical Research Letters (46) 5075-5082
Lobate stony landforms occur on steep slopes at high latitudes on Mars. We demonstrate active boulder movement at seven such sites. Sub-meter-scale boulders frequently move distances of a few meters. The movement is concentrated in the vicinity of the lobate landforms but also occurs on other slopes. This provides evidence...
Groundwater quality in shallow aquifers in the western Mojave Desert, California
Krishangi D. Groover, Dara A. Goldrath
2019, Fact Sheet 2019-3033
Groundwater provides more than 40 percent of California’s drinking water. To protect this vital resource, the State of California created the Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment (GAMA) Program. The Priority Basin Project (PBP) of the GAMA Program provides a comprehensive assessment of the State’s groundwater quality and increases public access...
Growing pains of crowdsourced stream stage monitoring using mobile phones: The development of CrowdHydrology
Christopher Lowry, Michael N. Fienen, Damon M. Hall, Kristine Stepenuck
2019, Frontiers in Earth Science (7)
Citizen science-based approaches to monitor the natural environment tend to be bimodal in maturity. Older and established programs such as the Audubon’s Christmas bird count and Community Collaborative Rain, Hail, and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS) have thousands of participants across decades of observations, while less mature citizen science projects have shorter...
Ross Ice Shelf response to climate driven by the tectonic imprint on seafloor bathymetry
K J Tinto, L Padman, C S Siddoway, M.R. Springer, H.A. Fricker, I. Das, F. Caratori Tontini, D.F. Porter, N.P. Frearson, S. J. Howard, M.R. Siegfried, C. Mosbeux, M.K. Becker, C. Bertinato, A. Boghosian, N. Brady, Bethany L. Burton, W. Chu, S.I. Cordero, T. Dhakal, L. Dong, C.D. Gustafson, S. Keeshin, C. Locke, A. Lockett, G. O'Brien, J.J. Spergel, S.E. Starke, M. Tankersley, M. Wearing, R. E. Bell
2019, Nature Geoscience (12) 441-449
Ocean melting has thinned Antarctica's ice shelves at an increasing rate over the past two decades, leading to loss of grounded ice. The Ross Ice Shelf is currently close to steady state but geological records indicate that it can disintegrate rapidly, which would accelerate grounded ice loss from catchments...
Remembering F. Peter Haeni - "What did we learn from this?"
Carole D. Johnson, John W. Lane Jr.
2019, Conference Paper, Symposium on the application of geophysics to engineering and environmental problems proceedings
Frederick Peter (‘Pete’) Haeni grew up on Long Island, New York, where he developed a lifelong love of the water —–a love that continued with his family in Deep River, Connecticut, and at their Eagle Island cottage in Maine. Pete was always at home on the water — whether sailing,...
Use of a towed electromagnetic induction (tTem) system for shallow aquifer characterization – An example from the Mississippi Alluvial Plain
Eric A. White, Carole D. Johnson, Pradip Kumar Maurya, Wade Kress, David B. Kelly, John W. Lane
2019, Conference Paper, Symposium on the application of geophysics to engineering and environmental problems proceedings
The Mississippi Alluvial Plain (MAP) aquifer system is a vital resource that supports agriculture in one of the most productive regions of the country. The U.S. Geological Survey Water Availability and Use Science Program (WAUSP) is conducting a multi-discipline investigation of the MAP aquifer system. The investigation is utilizing borehole,...
Evidence for a role of arginine vasotocin (AVT) receptors in the gill during salinity acclimation by a euryhaline teleost fish
Sean C. Lema, Elise H Washburn, Mary E Crowley, Paul G Carvalho, Jennifer N Egelston, Stephen D. McCormick
2019, American Journal of Physiology - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology (316) R735-R750
The neurohypophysial nonapeptide arginine vasotocin (AVT) plays a role in regulation of osmotic balance in teleost fishes, but its mechanisms of action are not fully understood. Recently, is was discovered that nonapeptide receptors differentiated into V1a-type, several V2-type, and two isotocin (IT) receptor paralogs in teleost fishes, and it remains...
Characterizing groundwater/surface-water interaction using hydrograph-separation techniques and groundwater-level data throughout the Mississippi Delta, USA
Courtney D. Killian, William H. Asquith, Jeannie R. B. Barlow, Gardner C. Bent, Wade Kress, Paul M. Barlow, Darrel W. Schmitz
2019, Hydrogeology Journal (27) 2167-2179
The Mississippi Delta, located in northwest Mississippi, is an area dense with industrial-level agriculture sustained by groundwater-dependent irrigation supplied by the Mississippi River Valley Alluvial aquifer (alluvial aquifer). The Delta provides agricultural commodities across the United States and around the world. Observed declines in groundwater altitudes and streamflow contemporaneous with...
Predicting hydrologic disturbance of streams using species occurrence data
J.T. Fox, Daniel D. Magoulick
2019, Science of the Total Environment (686) 254-263
Aquatic organisms have adapted over evolutionary time-scales to hydrologic variability represented by the natural flow regime of rivers and streams in their unimpaired state. Rapid landscape change coupled with growing human demand for water have altered natural flow regimes of many rivers and streams...
Toward explaining nitrogen and phosphorus trends in Chesapeake Bay tributaries, 1992-2012
Scott Ator, Ana M. Garcia, Gregory E. Schwarz, Joel D. Blomquist, Andrew J. Sekellick
2019, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (55) 1149-1168
Understanding trends in stream chemistry is critical to watershed management, and often complicated by multiple contaminant sources and landscape conditions changing over varying time scales. We adapted spatially-referenced regression (SPARROW) to infer causes of recent nutrient trends in Chesapeake Bay tributaries by relating observed fluxes during 1992, 2002, and 2012...
Comparison of a simple hydrostatic and a data-intensive 3D numerical modeling method of simulating sea-level rise induced groundwater inundation for Honolulu, Hawai'i, USA
Shellie Habel, Charles H. Fletcher, Kolja Rotzoll, Aly I. El-Kadi, Delwyn S. Oki
2019, Environmental Research Letters (1)
Groundwater inundation (GWI) is a particularly challenging consequence of sea-level rise (SLR), as it progressively inundates infrastructure located above and below the ground surface. Paths of flooding by GWI differ from other types of SLR flooding (i.e., wave overwash, storm-drain backflow) such that it is more difficult to mitigate, and...
Planning for ecological drought: Integrating ecosystem services and vulnerability assessment
Nejem Raheem, Amanda E. Cravens, Molly S. Cross, Shelley D. Crausbay, Aaron R. Ramirez, Jamie McEvoy, Dionne Zoanni, Deborah J. Bathke, Michael Hayes, Shawn Carter, Madeleine Rubenstein, Ann Schwend, Kimberly R. Hall, Paul Suberu
2019, WIREs Water (6)
As research recognizes the importance of ecological impacts of drought to natural and human communities, drought planning processes need to better incorporate ecological impacts. Drought planning currently recognizes the vulnerability of some ecological impacts from drought (e.g., loss of instream flow affecting fish populations). However, planning often does not identify...
Drilling, construction, water chemistry, water levels, and regional potentiometric surface of the upper carbonate-rock aquifer in Clark County, Nevada, 2009–2015
Jon W. Wilson
2019, Scientific Investigations Map 3434
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) initiated a cooperative study through the Southern Nevada Public Land Management Act (Bureau of Land Management, 1998) to install six wells in the carbonate-rock and basin-fill aquifers of Clark County, Nevada, in areas of sparse groundwater data. This...
San Francisco Bay triennial bird egg monitoring program for contaminants, California—2018
Joshua T. Ackerman, C. Alex Hartman, Mark P. Herzog, Matthew Toney
2019, Data Series 1114
The Regional Monitoring Program for Water Quality in San Francisco Bay (RMP), administered by the San Francisco Estuary Institute, is a large-scale effort to monitor contaminant trends in water, sediment, fish, and birds throughout San Francisco Bay (San Francisco Estuary Institute, 2016). As part of the RMP and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) long-term Wildlife Contaminants...
Dam effects on bedload transport on the upper Santa Ana River, California, and implications for native fish habitat
Scott Wright, J Toby Minear
2019, River Research and Applications 1-14
Dams disrupt the flow of water and sediment and thus have the potential to affect the downstream geomorphic characteristics of a river. Though there are some well‐known and common geomorphic responses to dams, such as bed armouring, the response downstream from any particular dam is dependent...
Turbidity current observations in a large reservoir following a major wildfire
Scott Wright, Mathieu D. Marineau
2019, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (145)
Turbidity currents are generated when denser river water plunges and flows along the bottom of a lake, reservoir, or ocean. The plunging and downstream movement are driven by density differences due to temperature and/or suspended sediment, and currents have been observed to move slowly over long distances....
Climate adaptation Science Centers—Annual report for 2018
Elda Varela Minder
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1041
2018 marked the 10-year anniversary of the establishment of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center! With the passage of the fiscal year 2018 budget on March 23, 2018, our program name was changed from the National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center to the...
Atrazine induced transgenerational reproductive effects in medaka (Oryzias latipes)
Jacob A. Cleary, Donald E. Tillitt, Fredrick S. vom Saal, Diane Nicks, Rachel Claunch, Ramji K. Bhandari
2019, Environmental Pollution (251) 639-650
Atrazine is presently one of the most abundantly used herbicides in the United States, and a common contaminant of natural water bodies and drinking waters in high-use areas. Dysregulation of reproductive processes has been demonstrated in atrazine exposed fish, including alteration of key endocrine...
The importance of groundwater flow to the formation of modern thrombolitic microbialites
John G. Warden, Lee Coshell, Michael R. Rosen, Daniel O. Breecker, Katinka X. Ruthrof, Christopher R. Omelon
2019, Geobiology
Modern microbialites are often located within groundwater discharge zones, yet the role of groundwater in microbialite accretion has yet to be resolved. To understand relationships between groundwater, microbialites, and associated microbial communities, we quantified and characterized groundwater flow and chemistry in active thrombolitic microbialites in Lake...
Groundwater quality in the Delaware, Genesee, and St. Lawrence River Basins, New York, 2015
Tia-Marie Scott, Elizabeth A. Nystrom, James E. Reddy
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1005
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, collected groundwater samples from 5 production wells and 5 domestic wells in the Delaware River Basin, 8 production wells and 7 domestic wells in the Genesee River Basin, and 1 municipal well, 7 production wells,...