The northern Sacramento Mountains, southwest United States. Part II: Exhumation history and detachment faulting
V. Pease, D. Foster, J. Wooden, P. O'Sullivan, J. Argent, C. Fanning
2000, Geological Society Special Publication (164) 199-238
Thermochronologic and thermobarometric data reveal the timing, distribution and intensity of thermal events associated with detachment faulting in the Sacramento Mountains metamorphic core complex. In the northwest Sacramento Mountains, cooling rates of c. 100°C Ma−1 are associated with Late Cretaceous plutonism followed by cooling of the crust by thermal conduction....
Comparisons of methods for determining dominance rank in male and female prairie voles (Microtus ochrogastor)
Richard B. Lanctot, Louis B. Best
2000, Journal of Mammalogy (81) 734-745
Dominance ranks in male and female prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster) were determined from 6 measurements that mimicked environmental situations that might be encountered by prairie voles in communal groups, including agonistic interactions resulting from competition for food and water and encounters in burrows. Male and female groups of 6 individuals...
Seasonal concentrations of organic contaminants at the fall line of the Susquehanna River basin and estimated fluxes to northern Chesapeake Bay, USA
G.D. Foster, K.A. Lippa, C.V. Miller
2000, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (19) 992-1001
Riverine fluxes of several pesticides and other organic contaminants from above the fall line of the Susquehanna River basin to northern Chesapeake Bay, USA, were quantified in 1994. Base flow and storm flow samples collected at the fall line of the river from February to December 1994 were analyzed for...
Atmospheric transport, deposition, and fate of triazine herbicides and their metabolites in pristine areas at Isle Royale National Park
E.M. Thurman, A.E. Cromwell
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 3079-3085
Trace concentrations of triazine herbicides, used in the Midwestern United States, are being transported atmospherically hundreds of kilometers and deposited by precipitation onto pristine areas, such as Isle Royale National Park (Lake Superior). Atrazine, deethylatrazine, deisopropylatrazine, and cyanazine were detected in Isle Royale rainfall from mid-May to...
Long-term impacts of the Exxon Valdez oil spill on sea otters, assessed through age-dependent mortality patterns
Daniel H. Monson, Daniel F. Doak, Brenda E. Ballachey, Aaron H. Johnson, James L. Bodkin
2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (97) 6562-6567
We use age distributions of sea otters (Enhydra lutris) found dead on beaches of western Prince William Sound, Alaska, between 1976 and 1998 in conjunction with time-varying demographic models to test for lingering effects from the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill. Our results show that sea otters in this area had decreased...
The 2000 revision of the joint UK/US geomagnetic field models and an IGRF 2000 candidate model
S. Macmillan, J.M. Quinn
2000, Earth, Planets and Space (52) 1149-1162
The method of derivation of the joint UK/US spherical harmonic geomagnetic main-field and secular-variation models is presented. Early versions of these models, with the main field truncated at degree 10, are the UK/US candidates for the IGRF 2000 model. The main-field model describes the Earth’s magnetic field at the 2000.0...
Palynomorphs of Permian Gondwana coal from borehole GDH-38, Barapukuria Coal Basin, Bangladesh
A. Akhtar, R.M. Kosanke
2000, Journal of African Earth Sciences (31) 107-117
Thirty-two core samples of Permian Gondwana coal from three coal beds of borehole GDH-38, Barapukuria Coal Basin, Dinajpur, the north-northwestern part of Bangladesh, have been collected for palynological analysis. All samples except one yielded palynomorphs and some samples contain well-preserved and abundant palynomorphs of the gymnospermal and cryptogamic groups that...
Evaluation of toxicity: Whole-sediment versus overlying-water exposures with amphipod Hyalella azteca
C.G. Ingersoll, C.D. Ivey, E.L. Brunson, D.K. Hardesty, N.E. Kemble
2000, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (19) 2906-2910
A laboratory study was conducted to evaluate the toxicity of whole-sediment versus overlying-water exposures to the amphipod Hyalella azteca using field-collected sediments. Severe toxic effects (5-63% survival) were observed with amphipods exposed for 10 d in direct contact with sediment. In contrast, amphipods exposed only to overlying water in these...
Global characteristics of stream flow seasonality and variability
M. D. Dettinger, Henry F. Diaz
2000, Journal of Hydrometeorology (1) 289-310
Monthly stream flow series from 1345 sites around the world are used to characterize geographic differences in the seasonality and year-to-year variability of stream flow. Stream flow seasonality varies regionally, depending on the timing of maximum precipitation, evapotranspiration, and contributions from snow and ice. Lags between peaks of precipitation and...
Predicting and downscaling ENSO impacts on intraseasonal precipitation statistics in California: The 1997/98 event
A. Gershunov, T.P. Barnett, D.R. Cayan, T. Tubbs, L. Goddard
2000, Journal of Hydrometeorology (1) 201-210
Three long-range forecasting methods have been evaluated for prediction and downscaling of seasonal and intraseasonal precipitation statistics in California. Full-statistical, hybrid-dynamical–statistical and full-dynamical approaches have been used to forecast El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO)–related total precipitation, daily precipitation frequency, and average intensity anomalies during the January–March season. For El Niño winters,...
Regional Crustal Structures and Their Relationship to the Distribution of Ore Deposits in the Western United States, Based on Magnetic and Gravity Data
T.G. Hildenbrand, B. Berger, R.C. Jachens, S. Ludington
2000, Economic Geology (95) 1583-1603
Upgraded gravity and magnetic databases and associated filtered-anomaly maps of western United States define regional crustal fractures or faults that may have guided the emplacement of plutonic rocks and large metallic ore deposits. Fractures, igneous intrusions, and hydrothermal circulation tend to be localized along boundaries of crustal blocks, with geophysical...
Was the 18 May 1980 lateral blast at Mt St Helens the product of two explosions?
R. Hoblitt
2000, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences (358) 1639-1661
The 18 May 1980 lateral blast at Mt St Helens has been interpreted as the product of a single explosion by some stratigraphers and as two closely spaced explosions by others. The stratigraphic evidence that bears on this question is inconclusive; strata change dramatically over short distances and this complexity...
Effects of topography and soil properties on recharge at two sites in an agricultural field
G. N. Delin, R. W. Healy, M.K. Landon, J.K. Böhlke
2000, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (36) 1401-1416
Field experiments were conducted from 1992 to 1995 to estimate ground water recharge rates at two sites located within a 2.7-hectare agricultural field. The field lies in a sand plain setting in central Minnesota and is cropped continuously in field corn. The sites are located at a topographically high (upland)...
Addendum to `numerical modeling of an enhanced very early time electromagnetic (VETEM) prototype system'
T.J. Cui, W.C. Chew, A.A. Aydiner, D.L. Wright, D.V. Smith, J.D. Abraham
2000, IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine (42) 54-57
Two numerical models to simulate an enhanced very early time electromagnetic (VETEM) prototype system that is used for buried-object detection and environmental problems are presented. In the first model, the transmitting and receiving loop antennas accurately analyzed using the method of moments (MoM), and then conjugate gradient (CG) methods with...
Lichens of Izembek National Wildlife Refuge, westernmost Alaska Peninsula
Stephen S. Talbot, Sandra Looman Talbot, John W. Thomson, Wilfred B. Schofield
2000, Bryologist (103) 379-389
One hundred eighty-two taxa of lichens including two lichen parasites are reported from Izembek National Wildlife Refuge on the tip of the Alaska Peninsula. Metasphaeria tartarina is new to North America; Scoliciosporum umbrinum is new to Alaska. Wide-ranging, arctic-alpine, and boreal species dominate the lichen flora; a coastal element is...
Lower Mississippian trilobites from southern New Mexico
D. K. Brezinski
2000, Journal of Paleontology (74) 1043-1064
Twenty-three species of trilobites are recognized in the lower Mississippian Caballero and Lake Valley Formations of southern New Mexico. Species exhibit a segregation into shelf and off-shelf faunas, and can be subdivided into three distinct stratigraphic faunas. Species found in the Caballero Formation are similar to those found in the...
Effects of a spring flushing flow on the distribution of radio-tagged juvenile rainbow trout in a Wyoming tailwater
D.G. Simpkins, W.A. Hubert, Thomas A. Wesche
2000, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (20) 546-551
The controlled release of dammed water, designed to produce a flushing flow that would remove fine sediments from spawning habitat in a flow-regulated river, did not displace juvenile rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss (20-25 cm total length) downstream. Of eight naturally spawned (wild) and nine hatchery fish that were radio-tagged, only...
Upper plate contraction north of the migrating Mendocino triple junction northern California: Implications for partitioning of strain
P.A. McCrory
2000, Tectonics (19) 1144-1160
Geologic measurement of permanent contraction across the Cascadia subduction margin constrains one component of the tectonic deformation along the convergent plate boundary, the component critical for the seismic hazard assessment of crustal faults. A comprehensive survey of active faults in onshore subduction margin rocks at the southern end of the...
Efficacy of hydrogen peroxide to control mortalities associated with bacterial gill disease infections on hatchery-reared salmonids
J.J. Rach, M.P. Gaikowski, R.T. Ramsay
2000, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (12) 119-127
The efficacy of hydrogen peroxide to control mortalities associated with bacterial gill disease (BGD) was evaluated in three trials conducted at two Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources hatcheries. Microscopic examination of the fish gills before treatment revealed gill damage and the presence of bacteria indicative of BGD. In separate trials,...
Foods, trophic relationships, and migration of Sooty and Short-tailed Shearwaters associated with squid and large-mesh driftnet fisheries in the North Pacific Ocean
Patrick J. Gould, Peggy H. Ostrom, William Walker
2000, Waterbirds (23) 165-186
We salvaged dead birds from high seas driftnets in the Central North Pacific Ocean during a study of the impact of high seas driftnet fishing on marine ecosystems. Digestive tract contents and stable isotopes of nitrogen and carbon in breast muscles of these birds were analyzed to assess the effect...
Channel stability downstream from a dam assessed using aerial photographs and stream-gage information
K. E. Juracek
2000, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (36) 633-645
The stability of the Neosho River channel downstream from John Redmond Dam, in southeast Kansas, was investigated using multiple-date aerial photographs and stream-gage information. Bankfull channel width was used as the primary indicator variable to assess pre- and post-dam channel change. Five six-mile river reaches and four stream gages were...
Historic and current use of Lower Cook Inlet, Alaska, by Belugas, Delphinapterus leucas
Suzann G. Speckman, John F. Piatt
2000, Marine Fisheries Review (63) 22-26
Dedicated at-sea surveys for marine birds and mammals conducted in lower Cook Inlet in late July and early August from 1995–99 failed to locate any belugas, Delphinapterus leucas. Surveys covered a total of 6,249 linear km and were conducted in both nearshore and offshore habitats. Sightings included 791 individual marine...
Volcano geodesy: Challenges and opportunities for the 21st century
D. Dzurisin
2000, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences (358) 1547-1566
Intrusions of magma beneath volcanoes deform the surrounding rock and, if the intrusion is large enough, the overlying ground surface. Numerical models generally agree that, for most eruptions, subsurface volume changes are sufficient to produce measurable deformation at the surface. Studying this deformation can help to determine the location, volume,...
Time-averaged fluxes of lead and fallout radionuclides to sediments in Florida Bay
J. A. Robbins, C. Holmes, R. Halley, Michael H. Bothner, E. Shinn, J. Graney, G. Keeler, M. TenBrink, K.A. Orlandini, D. Rudnick
2000, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (105) 28805-28821
Recent, unmixed sediments from mud banks of central Florida Bay were dated using 210Pb/226Ra, and chronologies were verified by comparing sediment lead temporal records with Pb/Ca ratios in annual layers of coral (Montastrea annularis) located on the ocean side of the Florida Keys. Dates of sediment lead peaks (1978±2) accord...
The 1999 Southern California Seismic Network bulletin
L. A. Wald, S. Schwarz
2000, Seismological Research Letters (71) 401-413
The Pasadena office of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), together with the Caltech Seismological Laboratory, operates a network of more than 350 remote seismometers in southern California called the Southern California Seismic Network (SCSN). SCSN is part of TriNet, a cooperative project between the USGS, Caltech, and the California Division of Mines and Geology...