Distribution of recoveries of Steller's Eiders banded on the lower Alaska Peninsula, Alaska
C.P. Dau, Paul L. Flint, Margaret R. Petersen
2000, Journal of Field Ornithology (71) 541-548
Molting adult Steller's Eiders (Polysticta stelleri) were banded at Izembek Lagoon (1961-1998) and Nelson Lagoon (1995-1997) along the lower Alaska Peninsula to determine breeding distribution and movements. Of 52,985 Steller's Eiders banded, 347 were recovered. The overall low recovery rate may not be indicative of harvest levels but may be...
African dust and the demise of Caribbean coral reefs
E.A. Shinn, G.W. Smith, J.M. Prospero, P. Betzer, M.L. Hayes, V. Garrison, R.T. Barber
2000, Geophysical Research Letters (27) 3029-3032
The vitality of Caribbean coral reefs has undergone a continual state of decline since the late 1970s, a period of time coincidental with large increases in transatlantic dust transport. It is proposed that the hundreds of millions of tons/year of soil dust that have been crossing the Atlantic during the...
Clast-fabric development in a shearing granular material: Implications for subglacial till and fault gouge
T.S. Hooyer, N.R. Iverson
2000, Geological Society of America Bulletin (112) 683-692
Elongate clasts in subglacial till and in fault gouge align during shearing, but the relation between clast-fabric strength and cumulative shear strain for such materials is effectively unknown. This relation was explored in experiments with a large ring-shear device in which a till and a viscous putty that contained isolated...
An updated Holocene sea-level curve for the Delaware coast
D.L. Nikitina, J.E. Pizzuto, R.A. Schwimmer, K.W. Ramsey
2000, Marine Geology (171) 7-20
We present an updated Holocene sea-level curve for the Delaware coast based on new calibrations of 16 previously published radiocarbon dates (Kraft, 1976; Belknap and Kraft, 1977) and 22 new radiocarbon dates of basal peat deposits. A review of published and unpublished 137Cs and 210Pb analyses, and tide gauge data...
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...
Reconnaissance survey of sulfonamide, sulfonylurea, and imidazolinone herbicides in surface streams and groundwater of the Midwestern United States
T.R. Steinheimer, R.L. Pfeiffer, K.D. Scoggin, W.A. Battaglin
2000, Conference Paper, Agrochemical fate and movement
The study objective was to conduct a small scale synoptic survey of representative water resources draining agricultural land for occurrence of several herbicide residues. These new classes of herbicides are commonly applied pre-emergence or post-emergence in conservation tillage systems to control grasses and broadleaf weeds in cropped and noncropped areas....
Tracer transport in fractured crystalline rock: Evidence of nondiffusive breakthrough tailing
Matthew W. Becker, Allen M. Shapiro
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1677-1686
Extended tailing of tracer breakthrough is often observed in pulse injection tracer tests conducted in fractured geologic media. This behavior has been attributed to diffusive exchange of tracer between mobile fluids traveling through channels in fractures and relatively stagnant fluid between fluid channels, along fracture walls, or within the bulk...
Identification of juvenile fall versus spring chinook salmon migrating through the lower Snake River based on body morphology
K.F. Tiffan, D.W. Rondorf, R.D. Garland, P.A. Verhey
2000, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (129) 1389-1395
We tested the use of body morphology to distinguish among subyearling fall-run, subyearling spring-run, and yearling spring-run smolts of chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha at two lower Snake River dams during the summer emigration. Based on principal-components analysis, subyearling fall-run chinook salmon had smaller heads and eyes, deeper bodies, and shorter...
Dominance of an ~150-year cycle of sand-supply change in late Holocene dune-building along the eastern shore of Lake Michigan
W.L. Loope, A.F. Arbogast
2000, Quaternary Research (54) 414-422
Outcrops of buried soils on lake-plains and glacial headlands along Lake Michigan's eastern shore suggest that periodic dune-building has occurred there after relatively long (≥100 yr) periods of low sand supply. We located, described, and radiocarbon dated 75 such buried soils that crop out in 32 coastal dune fields beside...
Ruby and sapphire from Jegdalek, Afghanistan
G.W. Bowersox, E.E. Foord, B.M. Laurs, J.E. Shigley, C.P. Smith
2000, Gems and Gemology (36) 110-126
This study provides detailed mining and gemological information on the Jegdalek deposit, in east-central Afghanistan, which is hosted by elongate beds of corundum-bearing marble. Some facet-grade ruby has been recovered, but most of the material consists of semitransparent pink sapphire of cabochon or carving quality. The most common internal features...
Diagenetic fate of organic contaminants on the Palos Verdes Shelf, California
R.P. Eganhouse, J. Pontolillo, T.J. Leiker
2000, Marine Chemistry (70) 289-315
Municipal wastes discharged through deepwater submarine outfalls since 1937 have contaminated sediments of the Palos Verdes Shelf. A site approximately 6–8 km downcurrent from the outfall system was chosen for a study of the diagenetic fate of organic contaminants in the waste-impacted sediments. Concentrations of three classes of hydrophobic organic...
Compositing water samples for analysis of volatile organic compounds
T. J. Lopes, J. D. Fallon, T.L. Maluk
2000, Journal of Environmental Engineering (126) 769-773
Accurate mean concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) can easily and economically be obtained from a single VOC analysis by using proven methods of collecting representative, discrete water samples and compositing them with a gas-tight syringe. The technique can be used in conjunction with chemical analysis by a conventional laboratory,...
USGS World Petroleum Assessment 2000: New Conventional Provinces
Thomas S. Ahlbrandt, T. R. Klett
2000, Conference Paper, World Petroleum Congress Proceedings
The USGS has completed a new assessment of the undiscovered oil and gas resources of the world. One hundred and five geologic provinces were analyzed for assessment. Assessment units (AU) that comprise Total Petroleum Systems (TPS) were identified and described for each of these provinces. The AU served as the...
Hydrological responses to dynamically and statistically downscaled climate model output
R.L. Wilby, L.E. Hay, W.J. Gutowski Jr., R.W. Arritt, E.S. Takle, Z. Pan, G.H. Leavesley, M.P. Clark
2000, Geophysical Research Letters (27) 1199-1202
Daily rainfall and surface temperature series were simulated for the Animas River basin, Colorado using dynamically and statistically downscaled output from the National Center for Environmental Prediction/National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCEP/NCAR) re-analysis. A distributed hydrological model was then applied to the downscaled data. Relative to raw NCEP output, downscaled...
Chlorine-36 and cesium-137 in ice-core samples from mid-latitude glacial sites in the Northern Hemisphere
J.R. Green, L.D. Cecil, H.-A. Synal, K.J. Kreutz, C.P. Wake, D. L. Naftz, S.K. Frape
2000, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms (172) 812-816
Chlorine-36 (36Cl) concentrations, 36Cl/Cl ratios, and 36Cl fluxes in ice-core samples collected from the Upper Fremont Glacier (UFG) in the Wind River Mountain Range, Wyoming, United States and the Nangpai Gosum Glacier (NGG) in the Himalayan Mountains, Nepal, were determined and compared with published results from the Dye-3 ice-core drilling...
Geochronology of the proterozoic basement of southwesternmost North America, and the origin and evolution of the Mojave crustal province
Andrew P. Barth, Joseph L. Wooden, Drew S. Coleman, C. Mark Fanning
2000, Tectonics (19) 616-629
The Proterozoic Baldwin gneiss in the central Transverse Ranges of southern California, a part of the Mojave crustal province, is composed of quartzofeldspathic gneiss and schist, augen and granitic gneiss, trondhjemite gneiss, and minor quartzite, amphibolite, metagabbro, and metapyroxenite. Sensitive high resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) data indicate that augen and...
Nest predation increases with parental activity: Separating nest site and parental activity effects
T. E. Martin, J. Scott, C. Menge
2000, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (267) 2287-2293
Alexander Skutch hypothesized that increased parental activity can increase the risk of nest predation. We tested this hypothesis using ten open-nesting bird species in Arizona, USA. Parental activity was greater during the nestling than incubation stage because parents visited the nest frequently to feed their young during the nestling stage....
Spatial and temporal variability of picocyanobacteria Synechococcus sp. in San Francisco Bay
X. Ning, J. E. Cloern, B.E. Cole
2000, Limnology and Oceanography (45) 695-702
We collected samples monthly, from April to August 1998, to measure the abundance of autotrophic picoplankton in San Francisco Bay. Samples taken along a 160-km transect showed that picocyanobacteria (Synechococcus sp.) was a persistent component of the San Francisco Bay phytoplankton in all the estuarine habitats, from freshwater to seawater...
Periphyton dynamics in a subalpine mountain stream during winter
G.W. Gustina, J.P. Hoffmann
2000, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (32) 127-134
We conducted two experiments to determine the activity of and factors which control periphyton during winter in Stevensville Brook, Vermont. The first experiment during winter/spring 1994 examined the effect of a 300 to 450% difference in light and doubling of flow (low and high light, slow and fast flow) on...
Strontium isotope geochemistry of groundwaters and streams affected by agriculture, Locust Grove, MD
J.K. Böhlke, M. Horan
2000, Applied Geochemistry (15) 599-609
The effects of agriculture on the isotope geochemistry of Sr were investigated in two small watersheds in the Atlantic coastal plain of Maryland. Stratified shallow oxic groundwaters in both watersheds contained a retrievable record of increasing recharge rates of chemicals including NO3−, Cl, Mg, Ca and Sr that were correlated...
Fractures and their distribution in the tills of Ohio
C.S. Brockman, J.P. Szabo
2000, Ohio Journal of Science (100) 39-55
Fractures in till may be horizontal, parallel high- to low-angle, or polygonal (when viewed on a horizontal surface). They have been attributed to several geologic processes, the most important of which are desiccation, freeze-thaw, glaciotectonics, and lodgement till deposition. A literature review, a field study, and core examinations have identified...
Forest clearing and regional landsliding
D. R. Montgomery, K. M. Schmidt, H. M. Greenberg, W. E. Dietrich
2000, Geology (28) 311-314
The influence of forest clearing on landsliding is central to long-standing concern over the effects of timber harvesting on slope stability. Here we document a strong topographic control on shallow landsliding by combining unique ground-based landslide surveys in an intensively monitored study area with digital terrain modeling using high-resolution laser...
The use of earthquake rate changes as a stress meter at Kilauea volcano
J. Dieterich, V. Cayol, P. Okubo
2000, Nature (408) 457-460
Stress changes in the Earth's crust are generally estimated from model calculations that use near-surface deformation as an observational constraint. But the widespread correlation of changes of earthquake activity with stress has led to suggestions that stress changes might be calculated from earthquake occurrence rates obtained from seismicity catalogues. Although...
U.S. Geological Survey, remote sensing, and geoscience data: Using standards to serve us all
Michael G. Benson, John Faundeen
2000, Conference Paper, Proceedings of International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) advocates the use of standards with geosciences and remotely sensed data and metadata for its own purposes and those of its customers. In activities that range from archiving data to making a product, the incorporation of standards makes these functions repeatable and understandable. More important,...
Microbial degradation of chloroethenes in groundwater systems
Paul M. Bradley
2000, Hydrogeology Journal (8) 104-111
The chloroethenes, tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE) are among the most common contaminants detected in groundwater systems. As recently as 1980, the consensus was that chloroethene compounds were not significantly biodegradable in groundwater. Consequently, efforts to remediate chloroethene-contaminated groundwater were limited to largely unsuccessful pump-and-treat attempts. Subsequent investigation revealed that...