Origin of the Colorado River experimental flood in Grand Canyon
E.D. Andrews, L.A. Pizzi
2000, Hydrological Sciences Journal (45) 607-627
The Colorado River is one of the most highly regulated and extensively utilized rivers in the world. Total reservoir storage is approximately four times the mean annual runoff of −17 × 109 m3 year−1. Reservoir storage and regulation have decreased annual peak discharges and hydroelectric power generation has increased daily flow variability....
Acetogenic microbial degradation of vinyl chloride
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 2761-2763
Under methanogenic conditions, microbial degradation of [1,2-14C]vinyl chloride (VC) resulted in significant (14 ± 3% maximum recovery) but transient recovery of radioactivity as 14C-acetate. Subsequently, 14C-acetate was degraded to 14CH4 and 14CO2 (18 ± 2% and 54 ± 3% final recoveries, respectively). In contrast, under 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid (BES) amended conditions, 14C-acetate recovery remained high...
SH-wave refraction/reflection and site characterization
Z. Wang, R.L. Street, E.W. Woolery, I. P. Madin
2000, Conference Paper, Geotechnical Special Publication
Traditionally, nonintrusive techniques used to characterize soils have been based on P-wave refraction/reflection methods. However, near-surface unconsolidated soils are oftentimes water-saturated, and when groundwater is present at a site, the velocity of the P-waves is more related to the compressibility of the pore water than to the matrix of the...
Effects of neck collars and radiotransmitters on survival and reproduction of emperor geese
Joel A. Schmutz, Julie A. Morse
2000, Journal of Wildlife Management (64) 231-237
Neck collars have been used widely for studies of goose population biology. Despite concerns about their negative impacts, few studies have employed designs capable of clearly demonstrating these effects. During a 1993-98 study of emperor geese (Chen canagica), we contrasted survival and reproduction of geese marked with tarsal bands to...
Uncertain nest fates in songbird studies and variation in Mayfield estimation
J.C. Manolis, D. E. Andersen, F.J. Cuthbert
2000, The Auk (117) 615-626
Determining whether nesting attempts are successful can be difficult. Yet, current protocols for estimating nesting success do not address how uncertain nest fates should be handled. We examined the problem of nest-fate uncertainty as it relates to Mayfield estimation of nesting success and in analyses of factors that influence success....
Three-dimensional oxygen isotope imaging of convective fluid flow around the Big Bonanza, Comstock lode mining district, Nevada
R.E. Criss, M.J. Singleton, D.E. Champion
2000, Economic Geology (95) 131-142
Oxygen isotope analyses of propylitized andesites from the Con Virginia and California mines allow construction of a detailed, three-dimensional image of the isotopic surfaces produced by the convective fluid flows that deposited the famous Big Bonanza orebody. On a set of intersecting maps and sections, the δ18O isopleths clearly show...
Bed material transport in the Virgin River, Utah
E.D. Andrews
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 585-596
Detailed information concerning the rate and particle size distribution of bed material transport by streamflows can be very difficult and expensive to obtain, especially where peak streamflows are brief and bed material is poorly sorted, including some very large boulders. Such streams, however, are common in steep, arid watersheds. Any...
Infectious bursal disease virus antibodies in eider ducks and Herring Gulls
T. Hollmen, J. Christian Franson, Douglas E. Docherty, Mikael Kilpi, Martti Hario, Lynn H. Creekmore, Margaret R. Petersen
2000, Condor (102) 688-691
We measured antibodies to infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) in blood of nesting Common Eider (Somateria mollissima) females and immature Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) in the Baltic Sea, and in blood of Spectacled Eider (Somateria fischeri) females nesting in a remote area of western Alaska. Positive (≥ 1:16) IBDV titers...
Tephrochronology of the Brooks River Archaeological District, Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska: What can and cannot be done with tephra deposits
J.R. Riehle, D.E. Dumond, C.E. Meyer, J.M. Schaaf
2000, Book chapter, The archaeology of geological catastrophes
The Brooks River Archaeological District (BRAD) in Katmai National Park and Preserve is a classical site for the study of early humans in Alaska. Because of proximity to the active Aleutian volcanic arc, there are numerous tephra deposits in the BRAD, which are potentially useful for correlating among sites of...
Growth and food consumption by tiger muskellunge: Effects of temperature and ration level on bioenergetic model predictions
Steven R. Chipps, Lisa M. Einfalt, David H. Wahl
2000, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (129) 186-193
We measured growth of age-0 tiger muskellunge as a function of ration size (25, 50, 75, and 100% Cmax) and water temperature (7.5–25°C) and compared experimental results with those predicted from a bioenergetic model. Discrepancies between actual and predicted values varied appreciably with water temperature and growth rate. On average,...
Geochemical influences on assimilation of sediment-bound metals in clams and mussels
S.B. Griscom, N.S. Fisher, S. N. Luoma
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 91-99
A series of experiments was performed to evaluate the extent to which Cd, Co, Ag, Se, Cr, and Zn bound to sediments with different geochemical properties could be assimilated by the mussel Mytilus edulis and the clam Macoma balthica. Oxidized and reduced radiolabeled sediments were fed to suspension-feeding animals, the...
Effects of the flood of 1993 on the chemical characteristics of bed sediments in the Upper Mississippi River
J. A. Moody, J.F. Sullivan, Howard E. Taylor
2000, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (117) 329-351
Concentrations of pollutants stored in the surficial bed sediments in the navigation pools of the Upper Mississippi River showed a general decrease after the record flood of 1993. Percent clay and total organic carbon in the surficial sediments decreased as a result of an increase in the proportion of coarser...
Osmotic generation of 'anomalous' fluid pressures in geological environments
C.E. Neuzil
2000, Nature (403) 182-184
Osmotic pressures are generated by differences in chemical potential of a solution across a membrane. But whether osmosis can have a significant effect on the pressure of fluids in geological environments has been controversial, because the membrane properties of geological media are poorly understood. 'Anomalous' pressures - large departures from...
Negative pH and extremely acidic mine waters from Iron Mountain, California
D. Kirk Nordstrom, Charles N. Alpers, C.J. Ptacek, D.W. Blowes
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 254-258
Extremely acidic mine waters with pH values as low as -3.6, total dissolved metal concentrations as high as 200 g/L, and sulfate concentrations as high as 760 g/L, have been encountered underground in the Richmond Mine at Iron Mountain, CA. These are the most acidic waters known. The pH measurements...
Gap analysis: Concepts, methods, and recent results
M.D. Jennings
2000, Landscape Ecology (15) 5-20
Rapid progress is being made in the conceptual, technical, and organizational requirements for generating synoptic multi-scale views of the earth's surface and its biological content. Using the spatially comprehensive data that are now available, researchers, land managers, and land-use planners can, for the first time, quantitatively place landscape units -...
The relationship of nitrate concentrations in streams to row crop land use in Iowa
K. E. Schilling, R.D. Libra
2000, Journal of Environmental Quality (29) 1846-1851
The relationship between row crop land use and nitrate N concentrations in surface water was evaluated for 15 Iowa watersheds ranging from 1002 to 2774 km2 and 10 smaller watersheds ranging from 47 to 775 km2 for the period 1996 to 1998. The percentage of land in row crop varied from 24...
Stage boundary recognition in the Eastern Americas realm based on rugose corals
W. A. Oliver Jr.
2000, CFS Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 57-63
Most Devonian stages contain characteristic coral assemblages but these tend to be geographically and facies limited and may or may not be useful for recognising stage boundaries. Within eastern North America, corals contribute to the recognition of two boundaries: the base of the Lochkovian (Silurian-Devonian boundary) and the base of...
Detection of Sub-Micron Radiation from the Surface of Venus by Cassini/VIMS
K. H. Baines, G. Bellucci, J.-P. Bibring, R. H. Brown, B. J. Buratti, E. Bussoletti, F. Capaccioni, P. Cerroni, R. N. Clark, A. Coradini, D. P. Cruikshank, P. Drossart, V. Formisano, R. Jaumann, Y. Langevin, D. L. Matson, T. B. McCord, V. Mennella, R.M. Nelson, P. D. Nicholson, B. Sicardy, Christophe Sotin, G. B. Hansen, J.J. Aiello, S. Amici
2000, Icarus (148) 307-311
We report the first detection and profile characterization of thermal emission from the surface of Venus at 0.85 and 0.90 ??m, observed in the first planetary spectrum acquired by the Visual-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer onboard the Cassini spacecraft en route to the Saturn system. The strength and shape of these two...
Characterization and disinfection by-product formation potential of natural organic matter in surface and ground waters from Northern Florida
Colleen E. Rostad, Jerry A. Leenheer, Brian Katz, Barbara S. Martin, Ted I. Noyes
2000, Conference Paper, Natural organic matter and disinfection by-products
Streamwaters in northern Florida have large concentrations of natural organic matter (NOM), and commonly flow directly into the ground water system through karst features, such as sinkholes. In this study NOM from northern Florida stream and ground waters was fractionated, the fractions characterized by infrared (IR) and nuclear magnetic resonance...
Single-dilution enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for quantification of antigen-specific salmonid antibody
S.W. Alcorn, R.J. Pascho
2000, Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation (12) 245-252
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed on the basis of testing a single dilution of serum to quantify the level of antibody to the p57 protein of Renibacterium salmoninarum in sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka). The levels of antibody were interpolated from a standard curve constructed by relating the optical densities (OD)...
Transient groundwater-lake interactions in a continental rift: Sea of Galilee, Israel
S. Hurwitz, E. Stanislavsky, V. Lyakhovsky, H. Gvirtzman
2000, Geological Society of America Bulletin (112) 1694-1702
The Sea of Galilee, located in the northern part of the Dead Sea rift, is currently an intermediate fresh-water lake. It is postulated that during a short highstand phase of former Lake Lisan in the late Pleistocene, saline water percolated into the subsurface. Since its recession from the Kinarot basin...
Significant deposits of gold, silver, copper, lead, and zinc in the United States
K. R. Long, J.H. DeYoung Jr., S. Ludington
2000, Economic Geology (95) 629-644
Approximately 99 percent of past production and remaining identified resources of gold, silver, copper, lead, and zinc in the United States are accounted for by deposits that originally contained at least 2 metric tonnes (t) gold, 85 t silver, 50,000 t copper, 30,000 t lead, or 50,000 t zinc. The...
Coastal erosion vs riverline sediment discharge in the Arctic shelfx seas
V. Rachold, M.N. Grigoriev, F.E. Are, Sean C. Solomon, E. Reimnitz, H. Kassens, M. Antonow
2000, International Journal of Earth Sciences (89) 450-459
This article presents a comparison of sediment input by rivers and by coastal erosion into both the Laptev Sea and the Canadian Beaufort Sea (CBS). New data on coastal erosion in the Laptev Sea, which are based on field measurements and remote sensing information and existing data on coastal erosion...
Re-Os isotopic systematics of primitive lavas from the Lassen region of the Cascade arc, California
L. E. Borg, A.D. Brandon, M.A. Clynne, R.J. Walker
2000, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (177) 301-317
Rhenium-osmium isotopic systematics of primitive calc-alkaline lavas from the Lassen region appear to be controlled by mantle wedge processes. Lavas with a large proportion of slab component have relatively low Re and Os abundances, and have radiogenic Os and mid ocean ridge basalt-like Sr and Pb isotopic compositions. Lavas with...
Mapping the petroleum system - An investigative technique to explore the hydrocarbon fluid system
L. B. Magoon, W.G. Dow
2000, AAPG Memoir (73) 53-68
Creating a petroleum system map includes a series of logical steps that require specific information to explain the origin in time and space of discovered hydrocarbon occurrences. If used creatively, this map provides a basis on which to develop complementary plays and prospects. The logical steps include the characterization of...