A comparison of diets of blueback herring (Alosa aestivalis) and threadfin shad (Dorosoma petenense) in a large southeastern U.S. Reservoir
Dana L. Winkelman, Michael J. Van Den Avyle
2002, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (17) 209-221
The objective of this study was to determine dietary overlap between blueback herring and threadfin shad in J. Strom Thrumond Reservoir, South Carolina/Georgia. We also evaluated prey selectivity for each speices and diet differences between two size categories of blueback herring. Diet and zooplankton samples were collected every other month...
Variations in sediment texture on the northern Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary continental shelf
B. D. Edwards
2002, Marine Geology (181) 83-100
The storm-protected continental shelf of Monterey Bay, part of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, north-central California, is subject to abundant, episodic sediment input from fluvial sources. North of Monterey Bay, conditions of reduced sediment supply combined with the exposed nature of the shelf provide an effective laboratory for studying...
Accumulation rate and mixing of shelf sediments in the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary
R.C. Lewis, K.H. Coale, B. D. Edwards, M. Marot, J.N. Douglas, E.J. Burton
2002, Marine Geology (181) 157-169
The distribution of excess 210Pb in 31 sediment cores was used to determine modern (last 100 yr) mass accumulation rates and the depth of sediment mixing on the continental shelf between Pacifica and Monterey, California, USA. Apparent mass accumulation rates average 0.27 g cm-2 yr-1 and range from 0.42 g...
Using flowmeter pulse tests to define hydraulic connections in the subsurface: A fractured shale example
J.H. Williams, Frederick L. Paillet
2002, Journal of Hydrology (265) 100-117
Cross-borehole flowmeter pulse tests define subsurface connections between discrete fractures using short stress periods to monitor the propagation of the pulse through the flow system. This technique is an improvement over other cross-borehole techniques because measurements can be made in open boreholes without packers or previous identification of water-producing intervals....
On geological interpretations of crystal size distributions: Constant vs. proportionate growth
D. D. Eberl, D. E. Kile, V. A. Drits
2002, American Mineralogist (87) 1235-1241
Geological interpretations of crystal size distributions (CSDs) depend on understanding the crystal growth laws that generated the distributions. Most descriptions of crystal growth, including a population-balance modeling equation that is widely used in petrology, assume that crystal growth rates at any particular time are identical for all crystals, and, therefore,...
Economic and ecological impacts of abrupt climate change
U.S. National Research Council
2002, Book chapter, Abrupt climate change: Inevitable surprises
Most studies of the potential ecological and economic impacts of climate change and greenhouse warming have focused on scenarios that involve gradual climate change. Accumulating evidence from the paleosciences, however, shows that the patterns of change suggested by projections of future climate change are not representative of past climatic changes...
An upwelling model for the Phosphoria sea: A Permian, ocean-margin sea in the northwest United States
D.Z. Piper, P. K. Link
2002, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (86) 1217-1235
The Permian Phosphoria Formation, a petroleum source rock and world-class phosphate deposit, was deposited in an epicratonic successor basin on the western margin of North America. We calculate the seawater circulation in the basin during deposition of the lower ore zone in the Meade Peak Member from the accumulation rates...
Hydrocarbon geochemistry of cold seeps in the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary
T.D. Lorenson, K.A. Kvenvolden, F. D. Hostettler, R.J. Rosenbauer, D.L. Orange, J.B. Martin
2002, Marine Geology (181) 285-304
Samples from four geographically and tectonically discrete cold seeps named Clam Flat, Clamfield, Horseshoe Scarp South, and Tubeworm City, within the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary were analyzed for their hydrocarbon content. The sediment contains gaseous hydrocarbons and CO2, as well as high molecular weight aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons with...
Multispectral image sharpening using a shift-invariant wavelet transform and adaptive processing of multiresolution edges
G.P. Lemeshewsky
Z.-U. Rahman, R.A. Schowengerdt, S.E. Reichenbach, editor(s)
2002, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Enhanced false color images from mid-IR, near-IR (NIR), and visible bands of the Landsat thematic mapper (TM) are commonly used for visually interpreting land cover type. Described here is a technique for sharpening or fusion of NIR with higher resolution panchromatic (Pan) that uses a shift-invariant implementation of the discrete...
Comparison of two probability distributions used to model sizes of undiscovered oil and gas accumulations: Does the tail wag the assessment?
E. D. Attanasi, Ronald R. Charpentier
2002, Mathematical Geology (34) 767-777
Undiscovered oil and gas assessments are commonly reported as aggregate estimates of hydrocarbon volumes. Potential commercial value and discovery costs are, however, determined by accumulation size, so engineers, economists, decision makers, and sometimes policy analysts are most interested in projected discovery sizes. The lognormal and Pareto distributions have been used...
Distribution and movement of shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum) in the Chesapeake Bay
S.A. Welsh, M.F. Mangold, J.E. Skjeveland, A.J. Spells
2002, Estuaries (25) 101-104
During a reward program for Atlantic sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus), 40 federally endangered shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum) were captured and reported by commercial fishers between January 1996 and January 2000 from the Chesapeake Bay. Since this is more than double the number of published records of shortnose sturgeon in the Chesapeake...
Radiocarbon dating, chronologic framework, and changes in accumulation rates of holocene estuarine sediments from Chesapeake Bay
Steven M. Colman, P.C. Baucom, J.F. Bratton, T. M. Cronin, J. P. McGeehin, D. Willard, A.R. Zimmerman, P.R. Vogt
2002, Quaternary Research (57) 58-79
Rapidly accumulating Holocene sediments in estuaries commonly are difficult to sample and date. In Chesapeake Bay, we obtained sediment cores as much as 20 m in length and used numerous radiocarbon ages measured by accelarator mass spectrometry methods to provide the first detailed chronologies of Holocene sediment accumulation in the...
Isotopically exchangeable organic hydrogen in coal relates to thermal maturity and maceral composition
Maria Mastalerz, A. Schimmelmann
2002, Organic Geochemistry (33) 921-931
Hydrogen isotopic exchangeability (Hex) and ??Dn values of non-exchangeable organic hydrogen were investigated in coal kerogens ranging in rank from lignite to graphite. The relative abundance of Hex is highest in lignite with about 18% of total hydrogen being exchangeable, and decreases to around 2.5% in coals with Ro of...
U-Pb geochronology of zircon and polygenetic titanite from the Glastonbury Complex, Connecticut, USA: An integrated SEM, EMPA, TIMS, and SHRIMP study
J. N. Aleinikoff, R. P. Wintsch, C.M. Fanning, M. J. Dorais
2002, Chemical Geology (188) 125-147
U-Pb ages for zircon and titanite from a granodioritic gneiss in the Glastonbury Complex, Connecticut, have been determined using both isotope dilution thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS) and the sensitive high resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP). Zircons occur in three morphologic populations: (1) equant to stubby, multifaceted, colorless, (2) prismatic, dark...
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,...
Holocene vegetation and climate history of the northern Bighorn Basin, southern Montana
M.E. Lyford, J.L. Betancourt, S.T. Jackson
2002, Quaternary Research (58) 171-181
Records of Holocene vegetation and climate change at low elevations (<2000 m) are rare in the central Rocky Mountain region. We developed a record of Holocene vegetation and climate change from 55 14C-dated woodrat middens at two low-elevation sites (1275 to 1590 m, currently vegetated by Juniperus osteosperma woodlands, in...
Evidence from uranium-series-dated speleothems for the timing of the penultimate deglaciation of northwestern Europe
I.J. Winograd
2002, Quaternary Research (58) 60-61
[No abstract available]...
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...
Influence of an extreme high water event on survival, reproduction, and distribution of snail kites in Florida, USA
Robert E. Bennetts, Wiley M. Kitchens, Victoria Dreitz
2002, Wetlands (22) 366-373
Hydrology frequently has been reported as the environmental variable having the greatest influence on Florida snail kite (Rostrhamus sociabilis) populations. Although drought has received the most attention, high-water conditions also have been reported to affect kites. Years of high water generally have been reported to be favorable for nesting, although...
Large-scale fractures related to inception of the Yellowstone hotspot
J.M.G. Glen, D. A. Ponce
2002, Geology (30) 647-650
During middle Miocene time, western North America was subject to flood-basalt volcanism, dike-swarm injection, and broad-scale fracturing and folding of the crust. We propose a simple model to account for these events and for a regional pattern of geologic and geophysical features. Aeromagnetic maps reveal some of the most important...
Regeneration of triangle-leaf bursage (Ambrosia deltoidea: Asteraceae): Germination behavior and persistent seed bank
Janice E. Bowers
2002, Southwestern Naturalist (47) 449-453
[No abstract available]...
Chemical transport from paired agricultural and restored prairie watersheds
Keith E. Schilling
2002, Journal of Environmental Quality (31) 1184-1193
A five-year record of streamflow and chemical sampling data was evaluated to assess the effects of large-scale prairie restoration on transport of NO3–N, Cl, and SO4 loads from paired 5000-ha watersheds located in Jasper County, Iowa. Water quality conditions monitored during land use conversion from row crop agriculture to native prairie...
Life history attributes of fishes along the latitudinal gradient of the Missouri River
P.J. Braaten, C.S. Guy
2002, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (131) 931-945
Populations of two short-lived species (emerald shiner Notropis atherinoides and sicklefin chub Macrhybopsis meeki) and three long-lived species (freshwater drum Aplodinotus grunniens, river carpsucker Carpiodes carpio, and sauger Stizostedion canadense) were studied in the Missouri River to examine spatial variations in life history characteristics across a latitudinal and thermal gradient...
Mapping apparent stress and energy radiation over fault zones of major earthquakes
Art McGarr, Joe B. Fletcher
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 1633-1646
Using published slip models for five major earthquakes, 1979 Imperial Valley, 1989 Loma Prieta, 1992 Landers, 1994 Northridge, and 1995 Kobe, we produce maps of apparent stress and radiated seismic energy over their fault surfaces. The slip models, obtained by inverting seismic and geodetic data, entail the division of the...
Impacts of aquatic nonindigenous invasive species on the Lake Erie ecosystem
Madeline J.W. Austen, Jan J.H. Ciborowski, Lynda D. Corkum, Tim B. Johnson, Hugh J. MacIsaac, Janice L. Metcalfe-Smith, Donald W. Schloesser, Sandra E. George
2002, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Aquatic Invasive Species
Lake Erie is particularly vulnerable to the introduction and establishment of aquatic nonindigenous invasive species (NIS) populations. A minimum of 144 aquatic NIS have been recorded in the Lake Erie basin including several species [e.g., Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum); zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha); quagga mussel (Dreissena bugensis); an amphipod (Echinogammarus...