Droughts, epic droughts and droughty centuries - lessons from a California paleoclimatic record: a PACLIM 2001 meeting report
M. D. Dettinger
2001, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (14) 51-53
During the early 1990s (but echoing studies by S.T. Harding at the University of California, from as early as the 1930s), several lines of paleoclimate evidence in and around the Sierra Nevada Range have provided the water community in California with some real horror stories. By studying ancient tree stumps...
The importance of defining technical issues in interagency environmental negotiations
B. L. Lamb, N. Burkardt, J. G. Taylor
2001, Public Works Management and Policy (5) 220-232
The role of technical clarity in successful multiparty negotiations was studied. Investigations involved in-depth interviews with the principal participants in six consultations conducted under the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s hydroelectric power project licensing procedures. Technical clarity was especially important in these cases because they concerned science-based questions. The principal...
Variation in aluminum, iron, and particle concentrations in oxic ground-water samples collected by use of tangential-flow ultrafiltration with low-flow sampling
Zoltan Szabo, J.H. Oden, J. Gibs, D.E. Rice, Y. Ding
Jensen J LBurggraf L W, editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Particulates that move with ground water and those that are artificially mobilized during well purging could be incorporated into water samples during collection and could cause trace-element concentrations to vary in unfiltered samples, and possibly in filtered samples (typically 0.45-um (micron) pore size) as well, depending on the particle-size fractions...
Use of 17O/16O to trace atmospherically-deposited sulfate in surface waters: A case study in alpine watersheds in the Rocky Mountains
C. A. Johnson, M.A. Mast, C.L. Kester
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 4483-4486
Building on the discovery of excess 17O in atmospheric sulfate by Lee et al. (2001), we have carried out a case study to determine whether 17O might provide a new tool for quantifying the impact of atmospheric deposition on surface-water sulfate loads. In Rocky Mountain alpine regions, excess 17O was...
Changes in the Onset of Spring in the Western United States
D.R. Cayan, Susan A. Kammerdiener, M. D. Dettinger, Joseph M. Caprio, D. H. Peterson
2001, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (82) 399-415
Fluctuations in spring climate in the western United States over the last 4-5 decades are described by examining changes in the blooming of plants and the timing of snowmelt-runoff pulses. The two measures of spring's onset that are employed are the timing of first bloom of lilac and honeysuckle bushes...
Use of electrical barriers to deter movement of round goby
Jacqueline F. Savino, David J. Jude, Melissa J. Kostich
Charles C. Coutant, editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Behavioral technologies for fish guidance: Proceedings of the American Fisheries Society Symposium 26
An electrical barrier was chosen as a possible means to deter movement of round goby Neogobius melanostomus. Feasibility studies in a 2.1-m donut-shaped tank determined the electrical parameters necessary to inhibit round goby from crossing the 1-m stretch of the benthic, electrical barrier. Increasing electrical pulse duration and voltage increased...
All equal-area map projections are created equal, but some are more equal than others
E. Lynn Usery, Jeong Chang Seong
2001, Cartography and Geographic Information Science (28) 183-193
High-resolution regional and global raster databases are currently being generated for a variety of environmental and scientific modeling applications. The projection of these data from geographic coordinates to a plane coordinate system is subject to significant areal error. Sources of error include users selecting an inappropriate projection or incorrect parameters...
Spatial extent of a hydrothermal system at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, determined from array analyses of shallow long-period seismicity 2. Results
J. Almendros, B. Chouet, P. Dawson
2001, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (106) 13581-13597
Array data from a seismic experiment carried out at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, in February 1997, are analyzed by the frequency-slowness method. The slowness vectors are determined at each of three small-aperture seismic antennas for the first arrivals of 1129 long-period (LP) events and 147 samples of volcanic tremor. The source...
Ancient blue oaks reveal human impact on San Francisco Bay salinity
David W. Stahle, Matthew D. Therrell, Malcolm K. Cleaveland, Daniel R. Cayan, Michael D. Dettinger, Noah Knowles
2001, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (82) 141-145
San Francisco Bay is one of the most important estuaries on the west coast of the Americas. Its water quality is controlled primarily by streamflow from the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers. In fact, freshwater inflow from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta explains 86% of the salinity variability at the mouth...
Debris-flow generation from recently burned watersheds
S.H. Cannon
2001, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (7) 321-341
Evaluation of the erosional response of 95 recently burned drainage basins in Colorado, New Mexico and southern California to storm rainfall provides information on the conditions that result in fire-related debris flows. Debris flows were produced from only 37 of 95 (~40 percent) basins examined; the remaining basins produced either...
Guidance of yearling shortnose and pallid sturgeon using vertical bar rack and louver arrays
B. Kynard, Martin Horgan
2001, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (21) 561-570
Some populations of shortnose sturgeon Acipenser brevirostrum and pallid sturgeon Scaphirhynchus albus have been divided by hydroelectric dams, and migration downstream past the dams likely continues. No protection for downstream migrants is presently available, and the behavior of sturgeon to guidance structures has not been studied. We conducted experiments in a 5.4-m-long × 1.5-m-wide...
3-D imaging of large scale buried structure by 1-D inversion of very early time electromagnetic (VETEM) data
A.A. Aydmer, W.C. Chew, T.J. Cui, D.L. Wright, D.V. Smith, J.D. Abraham
2001, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (39) 1307-1315
A simple and efficient method for large scale three-dimensional (3-D) subsurface imaging of inhomogeneous background is presented. One-dimensional (1-D) multifrequency distorted Born iterative method (DBIM) is employed in the inversion. Simulation results utilizing synthetic scattering data are given. Calibration of the very early time electromagnetic (VETEM) experimental waveforms is detailed...
Trends in long-period seismicity related to magmatic fluid compositions
M.M. Morrissey, B. A. Chouet
2001, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (108) 265-281
Sound speeds and densities are calculated for three different types of fluids: gas-gas mixture; ash-gas mixture; and bubbly liquid. These fluid properties are used to calculate the impedance contrast (Z) and crack stiffness (C) in the fluid-driven crack model (Chouet: J. Geophys. Res., 91 (1986) 13,967; 101 (1988) 4375; A...
Inheritance of microsatellite loci in the polyploid lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens)
J.D. Pyatskowit, C.C. Krueger, H. L. Kincaid, B. May
2001, Genome (44) 185-191
Inheritance in the expression of amplicons for four microsatellite primer pairs was determined using 10 families created from gametes of wild lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens). Loci Afu34 and Afu68 expressed a maximum of two even-intensity bands per individual and had progeny genotype ratios that fit disomic inheritance (P > 0.05)....
Climate logging with a new rapid optical technique at siple dome
R.C. Bay, P.B. Price, G.D. Clow, A. J. Gow
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 4635-4638
The dust logger design is based on a decade of experience in the use of light sources to measure optical properties of deep Antarctic ice. Light is emitted at the top of the instrument by side-directed LEDs, scattered or absorbed by dust in the ice surrounding the borehole, and collected...
U-Pb age of the Diana Complex and Adirondack granulite petrogenesis
A. R. Basu, W. R. Premo
2001, Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences - Earth and Planetary Sciences (110) 385-395
U-Pb isotopic analyses of eight single and multi-grain zircon fractions separated from a syenite of the Diana Complex of the Adirondack Mountains do not define a single linear array, but a scatter along a chord that intersects the Concordia curve at 1145 ± 29 and 285 ± 204 Ma. For...
Does fluctuating asymmetry of antlers in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) follow patterns predicted for sexually selected traits?
S.S. Ditchkoff, R.L. Lochmiller, R.E. Masters, W.R. Starry, David M. Leslie Jr.
2001, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (268) 891-898
Secondary sexual characters have been hypothesized to signal male quality and should demonstrate a negative relationship between the size of the trait and degree of fluctuating asymmetry because they are costly to produce. We collected morphometric and antler data from 439 white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in Oklahoma, USA, in order...
Experimental infection of nontarget species of rodents and birds with Brucella abortus strain RB51 vaccine
M.C. Januszewski, S.C. Olsen, R. G. McLean, L. Clark, Jack C. Rhyan
2001, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (37) 532-537
The Brucella abortus vaccine strain RB51 (SRB51) is being considered for use in the management of brucellosis in wild bison (Bison bison) and elk (Cervus elaphus) populations in the Greater Yellowstone Area (USA). Evaluation of the vaccine's safety in non-target species was considered necessary prior to field use. Between June 1998 and...
Rehabilitation of gypsum-mined lands in the Indian desert
K.D. Sharma, S. Kumar, L. P. Gough
2001, Arid Soil Research and Rehabilitation (15) 61-76
The economic importance of mining in the Indian Desert is second only to agriculture. Land disturbed by mining, however, has only recently been the focus of rehabilitation efforts. This research assesses the success of rehabilitation plans used to revegetate gypsum mine spoils within the environmental constraints of the north-west Indian...
Sulfur and lead isotope geochemistry of hypogene mineralization at the Barite Hill Gold Deposit, Carolina Slate Belt, southeastern United States: A window into and through regional metamorphism
Robert R. Seal, II, Robert A. Ayuso, Nora K. Foley, Sandra H. B. Clark
2001, Mineralium Deposita (36) 137-148
The Barite Hill gold deposit, at the southwestern end of the Carolina slate belt in the southeastern United States, is one of four gold deposits in the region that have a combined yield of 110 metric tons of gold over the past 10 years. At Barite Hill, production has dominantly come from oxidized...
Field soil aggregate stability kit for soil quality and rangeland health evaluations
J. E. Herrick, W. G. Whitford, A. G. de Soyza, J. W. Van Zee, K. M. Havstad, C. A. Seybold, M. Walton
2001, Catena (44) 27-35
Soil aggregate stability is widely recognized as a key indicator of soil quality and rangeland health. However, few standard methods exist for quantifying soil stability in the field. A stability kit is described which can be inexpensively and easily assembled with minimal tools. It permits up to 18 samples to...
Influence of mining-related activities on concentrations of metals in water and sediment from streams of the Black Hills, South Dakota
T.W. May, Ray H. Wiedmeyer, J. Gober, S. Larson
2001, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (40) 1-9
Water and sediment samples were collected from streams in Spearfish Creek, Whitewood Creek, and Bear Butte Creek watersheds in the Black Hills, SD, an area impacted by gold mining operations. Arsenic concentrations that exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Maximum Concentration Limit of 50 μg/L for drinking water were found...
Evolution of continental slope gullies on the northern California margin
G.A. Spinelli, M.E. Field
2001, Journal of Sedimentary Research (71) 237-245
A series of subparallel, downslope-trending gullies on the northern California continental slope is revealed on high-resolution seismic reflection profiles imaging the uppermost 50 m of sediment. The gullies are typically 100 m wide and have 1 to 3 m of relief. They extend for 10 to 15 km down the...
Identifying determinants of nations' wetland management programs using structural equation modeling: An exploratory analysis
M.K. La Peyre, I.A. Mendelssohn, M.A. Reams, P.H. Templet, J.B. Grace
2001, Environmental Management (27) 859-868
Integrated management and policy models suggest that solutions to environmental issues may be linked to the socioeconomic and political Characteristics of a nation. In this study, we empirically explore these suggestions by applying them to the wetland management activities of nations. Structural equation modeling was used to evaluate a model...
Historic fire regime in southern California shrublands
Jon E. Keeley, C. J. Fotheringham
2001, Conservation Biology (15) 1536-1548
Historical variability in fire regime is a conservative indicator of ecosystem sustainability, and thus understanding the natural role of fire in chaparral ecosystems is necessary for proper fire management. It has been suggested that the “natural” fire regime was one of frequent small fires that fragmented the landscape into a...