Contaminants in eggs of western snowy plovers and California least terns: Is there a link to population decline?
R.L. Hothern, A.N. Powell
2000, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (65) 42-50
No abstract available....
Bioavailability of particle-associated Se to the bivalve Potamocorbula amurensis
C.E. Schlekat, P.R. Dowdle, B.-G. Lee, S. N. Luoma, R.S. Oremland
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 4504-4510
Elemental selenium, Se(0), is a prevalent chemical form in sediments, but little is known about its bioavailability. We evaluated the bioavailability of two forms of Se(0) by generating radioisotopic 75Se(0) through bacterial dissimilatory reduction of 75SeO32- by pure bacterial cultures (SES) and by an anaerobic sediment microbial consortium (SED). A...
Simulations of flooding on Tchoutacabouffa River at State Highways 15 and 67 at D'Iberville, Mississippi
Karl E. Winters
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001-4007
A two-dimensional finite-element surface-water model was used to simulate the effects of the proposed State Highways 15 and 67 relocation on water-surface elevations and flow distributions for the 100-year flood on the Tchoutacabouffa River at D'Iberville, Mississippi. The Mississippi Department of Transportation plans to relocate State Highways 15 and 67...
Late Pleistocene granodiorite beneath Crater Lake caldera, Oregon, dated by ion microprobe
C. R. Bacon, H.M. Persing, J. L. Wooden, T. R. Ireland
2000, Geology (28) 467-470
Variably melted granodiorite blocks ejected during the Holocene caldera-forming eruption of Mount Mazama were plucked from the walls of the climactic magma chamber at ∼5 km depth. Ion-microprobe U-Pb dating of zircons from two unmelted granodiorite blocks with SHRIMP RG (sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe–reverse geometry) gives a nominal 238U/206Pb age of<div...
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...
Quantification and regionalization of groundwater recharge in South-Central Kansas: Integrating field characterization, statistical analysis, and GIS
M. Sophocleous
2000, The Compass: Earth Science Journal of Sigma Gamma Epsilon (75) 101-115
A practical methodology for recharge characterization was developed based on several years of field-oriented research at 10 sites in the Great Bend Prairie of south-central Kansas. This methodology combines the soil-water budget on a storm-by-storm year-round basis with the resulting watertable rises. The estimated 1985-1992 average annual recharge was less...
Moment-tensor solutions estimated using optimal filter theory: Global seismicity 1999
S.A. Sipkin, C. G. Bufe, M.D. Zirbes
2000, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (122) 147-159
Moment-tensor solutions estimated using optimal filter theory are listed for 271 moderate-to-large size earthquakes that occurred during 1999. Published by Elsevier Science B. V....
Topsmelt
M. K. Saiki
2000, Book chapter, Baylands ecosystem species and community profiles: life histories and environmental requirements of key plants, fish and wildlife
Abstract not available ...
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,...
Jacksmelt
M. K. Saiki
2000, Book chapter
Abstract not available...
Ergosterol
R. J. Rodriguez, L.W. Parks
2000, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of plant pathology
Abstract not available ...
Volatile organic compounds in storm water from a parking lot
T. J. Lopes, J. D. Fallon, D.W. Rutherford, M.H. Hiatt
2000, Journal of Environmental Engineering (126) 1137-1143
A mass balance approach was used to determine the most important nonpoint source of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in storm water from an asphalt parking lot without obvious point sources (e.g., gasoline stations). The parking lot surface and atmosphere are important nonpoint sources of VOCs, with each being important for...
Microbial populations in contaminant plumes
S.K. Haack, B.A. Bekins
2000, Hydrogeology Journal (8) 63-76
Efficient biodegradation of subsurface contaminants requires two elements: (1) microbial populations with the necessary degradative capabilities, and (2) favorable subsurface geochemical and hydrological conditions. Practical constraints on experimental design and interpretation in both the hydrogeological and microbiological sciences have resulted in limited knowledge of the interaction between hydrogeological and microbiological...
White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) predation on grassland songbird nestlings
P.J. Pietz, D. A. Granfors
2000, American Midland Naturalist (144) 419-422
White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) were videotaped depredating four songbird nests in grassland habitats in southeastern and northcentral North Dakota, 1996–1999. Deer ate two Savannah sparrow (Passerculus sandwichensis), two grasshopper sparrow (Ammodramus savannarum), one clay-colored sparrow (Spizella pallida), one red-winged blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus) and three brown-headed cowbird (Molothrus ater) nestlings. Deer...
Coordinated strike-slip and normal faulting in the Southern Ozark dome of Northern Arkansas: Deformation in a late Paleozoic foreland
M.R. Hudson
2000, Geology (28) 511-514
Structures that formed on the southern flank of the Ozark dome, in the foreland of the late Paleozoic Ouachita orogeny, have received little modern study. New mapping of the western Buffalo River region of northern Arkansas identifies diversely oriented faults and monoclinal folds that displace the generally flat lying Mississippian...
Probability of rupture of multiple fault segments
D.J. Andrews, E. Schwerer
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) 1498-1506
Fault segments identified from geologic and historic evidence have sometimes been adopted as features limiting the likely extends of earthquake ruptures. There is no doubt that individual segments can sometimes join together to produce larger earthquakes. This work is a trial of an objective method to determine the probability of...
A test of various site-effect parameterizations in probabilistic seismic hazard analyses of southern California
E. H. Field, M.D. Petersen
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) S222-S244
We evaluate the implications of several attenuation relationships, including three customized for southern California, in terms of accounting for site effects in probabilistic seismic hazard studies. The analysis is carried out at 43 sites along a profile spanning the Los Angeles basin with respect to peak acceleration, and 0.3-, 1.0-,...
Trihalomethanes formed from natural organic matter isolates: Using isotopic and compositional data to help understand sources
Brian A. Bergamaschi, Miranda S. Fram, Roger Fujii, George R. Aiken, Carol Kendall, Steven R. Silva
2000, ACS Symposium Series (761) 206-222
Over 20 million people drink water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta despite problematic levels of natural organic matter (NOM) and bromide in Delta water, which can form trihalomethanes (THMs) during the treatment process. It is widely believed that NOM released from Delta peat islands is a substantial contributor to...
Late Albian Kiowa-Skull Creek marine transgression, lower Dakota Formation, eastern margin of Western Interior Seaway, U.S.A
Richard L. Brenner, Greg A. Ludvigson, B.J. Witzke, A.N. Zawistoski, E.P. Kvale, R.L. Ravn, R. M. Joeckel
2000, Journal of Sedimentary Research (70) 868-878
An integrated geochemical-sedimentological project is studying the paleoclimatic and paleogeographic characteristics of the mid-Cretaceous greenhouse world of western North America. A critical part of this project, required to establish a temporal framework, is a stratigraphic study of depositional relationships between the Albian-Cenomanian Dakota and the Upper Albian Kiowa formations of...
The significance of microbial processes in hydrogeology and geochemistry
F. H. Chapelle
2000, Hydrogeology Journal (8) 41-46
Microbial processes affect the chemical composition of groundwater and the hydraulic properties of aquifers in both contaminated and pristine groundwater systems. The patterns of water-chemistry changes that occur depend upon the relative abundance of electron donors and electron acceptors. In many pristine aquifers, where microbial metabolism is limited by the...
Three-dimensional simulations of ground motions in the Seattle region for earthquakes in the Seattle fault zone
A. Frankel, W. Stephenson
2000, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (90) 1251-1267
We used the 3D finite-difference method to model observed seismograms of two earthquakes (ML 4.9 and 3.5) in the Seattle region and to simulate ground motions for hypothetical M 6.5 and M 5.0 earthquakes on the Seattle fault, for periods greater than 2 sec. A 3D velocity model of the...
Variation in pesticide tolerance of tadpoles among and within species of ranidae and patterns of amphibian decline
C.M. Bridges, R. D. Semlitsch
2000, Conservation Biology (14) 1490-1499
There is significant variation among and within amphibian species with respect to reports of population decline; declining species are often found in environments that are physiograpically similar to environments where the same species is thriving. Because variability exists among organisms in their sensitivity to environmental stressors, it is important to...
Sedimentary record of the 1872 earthquake and "Tsunami" at Owens Lake, southeast California
J. P. Smoot, R. J. Litwin, J. L. Bischoff, S. J. Lund
2000, Sedimentary Geology (135) 241-254
In 1872, a magnitude 7.5-7.7 earthquake vertically offset the Owens Valley fault by more than a meter. An eyewitness reported a large wave on the surface of Owens Lake, presumably initiated by the earthquake. Physical evidence of this event is found in cores and trenches from Owens Lake, including soft-sediment...
Delayed, disequilibrium degassing in rhyolite magma: Decompression experiments and implications for explosive volcanism
M. Mangan, T. Sisson
2000, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (183) 441-455
Recent numerical models and analog shock tube experiments show that disequilibrium degassing during magma ascent may lead to violent vesiculation very near the surface. In this study a series of decompression experiments using crystal-free, rhyolite melt were conducted to examine the development of large supersaturations due to delayed, homogenous (spontaneous)...
Biomes of western North America at 18,000, 6000 and 0 14C yr BP reconstructed from pollen and packrat midden data
R.S. Thompson, K. H. Anderson
2000, Journal of Biogeography (27) 555-584
A new compilation of pollen and packrat midden data from western North America provides a refined reconstruction of the composition and distribution of biomes in western North America for today and for 6000 and 18,000 radiocarbon years before present (14C yr BP). Modern biomes in western North America are adequately...