Variations in water clarity and bottom albedo in Florida Bay from 1985 to 1997
R. P. Stumpf, M.L. Frayer, M.J. Durako, J. C. Brock
1999, Estuaries (22) 431-444
Following extensive seagrass die-offs of the late 1980s and early 1990s, Florida Bay reportedly had significant declines in water clarity due to turbidity and algal blooms. Scant information exists on the extent of the decline, as this bay was not investigated for water quality concerns before the die-offs and limited...
Chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls in sediment cores from San Francisco Bay
M.I. Venkatesan, R. P. De Leon, A. VanGeen, Samuel N. Luoma
1999, Marine Chemistry (64) 85-97
Sediment cores of known chronology from Richardson and San Pablo Bays in San Francisco Bay, CA, were analyzed for a suite of chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls to reconstruct a historic record of inputs. Total DDTs (DDT = 2,4'- and 4,4'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and the metabolites, 2,4'- and 4,4'-DDE, -DDD) range...
Evaluating data worth for ground-water management under uncertainty
B.J. Wagner
1999, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (125) 281-288
A decision framework is presented for assessing the value of ground-water sampling within the context of ground-water management under uncertainty. The framework couples two optimization models-a chance-constrained ground-water management model and an integer-programing sampling network design model-to identify optimal pumping and sampling strategies. The methodology consists of four steps: (1)...
The rise and fall of late Paleozoic trilobites of the United States
D. K. Brezinski
1999, Journal of Paleontology (73) 164-175
Based on range data and generic composition, four stages of evolution are recognized for late Paleozoic trilobites of the contiguous United States. Stage 1 occurs in the Lower Mississippian (Kinderhookian-Osagean) and is characterized by a generically diverse association of short-ranging, stenotopic species that are strongly provincial. Stage 2 species are...
The usgs streamgaging network: Born of yesterday, serving today ... poised for tomorrow?
R.M. Hirsch
1999, Geotimes (44) 23-24
[No abstract available]...
Ten years of studies on Maryland's inner Continental Margin and coastal bays
R.T. Kerhin, R. Conkwright, D. Wells
1999, Marine Georesources and Geotechnology (17) 127-137
During the past ten years of the Association of American State Geologists-Mineral Management Service Continental Margins Program, the Maryland Geological Survey investigated the sedimentological, paleontological, stratigraphical and geophysical character of Maryland's inner continental shelf. Based on seismic records and sedimentological analyses completed during the first four years, a late Quaternary...
Crustal and lithospheric structure of the west Antarctic Rift System from geophysical investigations: A review
John C. Behrendt
1999, Global and Planetary Change (23) 25-44
The active West Antarctic Rift System, which extends from the continental shelf of the Ross Sea, beneath the Ross Ice Shelf and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, is comparable in size to the Basin and Range in North America, or the East African rift systems. Geophysical surveys (primarily marine seismic...
Cooling rates and crystallization dynamics of shallow level pegmatite-aplite dikes, San Diego County, California
Karen L. Webber, William B. Simmons, Alexander U. Falster, Eugene E. Foord
1999, American Mineralogist (84) 708-717
Pegmatites of the Pala and Mesa Grande Pegmatite Districts, San Diego County, California are typically thin, sheet-like composite pegmatite-aplite dikes. Aplitic portions of many dikes display pronounced mineralogical layering referred to as "line rock," characterized by fine-grained, garnet-rich bands alternating with albite- and quartz-rich bands. Thermal modeling was performed for...
Geochemistry of Florida Bay sediments: Nutrient history at five sites in eastern and central Florida Bay
W. H. Orem, C. W. Holmes, C. Kendall, H.E. Lerch, A. L. Bates, S. R. Silva, A. Boylan, M. Corum, M. Marot, C. Hedgman
1999, Journal of Coastal Research (15) 1055-1071
Recent seagrass dieoff and massive microalgal blooms have focused attention on the health of the Florida Bay ecosystem. Changes in nutrient input and the nutrient dynamics of Florida Bay are hypothesized to be linked to these problems, but crucial baseline information is still lacking. Efforts to restore Florida Bay to...
Cross-well slug testing in unconfined aquifers: A case study from the Sleepers River Watershed, Vermont
Kenneth Belitz, W. Dripps
1999, Ground Water (37) 438-447
Normally, slug test measurements are limited to the well in which the water level is perturbed. Consequently, it is often difficult to obtain reliable estimates of hydraulic properties, particularly if the aquifer is anisotropic or if there is a wellbore skin. In this investigation, we use partially penetrating stress and...
Utilization of the gypsum from a wet limestone flue gas desulfurization process
I.-M. Chou, V. Patel, J.M. Lytle, S.J. Chou, R.H. Carty
1999, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the International Conference on Solid Waste Technology and Management
The authors have been developing a process which converts FGD-gypsum to ammonium sulfate fertilizer with precipitated calcium carbonate as a by-product during the conversion. Preliminary cost estimates suggest that the process is economically feasible when ammonium sulfate crystals are produced in a granular size (1.2 to 3.3 mm), instead of...
The relative importance of light and nutrient limitation of phytoplankton growth: A simple index of coastal ecosystem sensitivity to nutrient enrichment
J. E. Cloern
1999, Aquatic Ecology (33) 3-16
Anthropogenic nutrient enrichment of the coastal zone is now a well-established fact. However, there is still uncertainty about the mechanisms through which nutrient enrichment can disrupt biological communities and ecosystem processes in the coastal zone. For example, while some estuaries exhibit classic symptoms of acute eutrophication, including enhanced production of...
Depositional and diagenetic history and petroleum geology of the Jurassic Norphlet Formation of the Alabama coastal waters area and adjacent federal waters area
R.L. Kugler, R.M. Mink
1999, Marine Georesources and Geotechnology (17) 215-232
The discovery of deep (>20,000 ft) gas reservoirs in eolian sandstone of the Upper Jurassic Norphlet Formation in Mobile Bay and offshore Alabama in the late 1970s represents one of the most significant hydrocarbon discoveries in the nation during the past several decades. Estimated original proved gas from Norphlet reservoirs...
Pyometra in a Siberian Polecat (Mustela eversmanni)
J.D. Johnson, E. Biggins, R.H. Wrigley, B.A. Mangone, J. Wimsatt
1999, Contemporary Topics in Laboratory Animal Science (38) 39-41
A 2-year-old Siberian polecat (Mustela eversmanni) from a breeding colony presented for ultrasound evaluation for pregnancy. It was paired with a male for 2.75 months and had remained absent of pregnancy signs when it was anesthetized and clinically evaluated. Until this time, the animal had eaten well and shown no...
Effects of layered sediments on the guided wave in crosswell radar data
K.J. Ellefsen
1999, Geophysics (64) 1698-1707
To understand how layered sediments affect the guided wave in crosswell radar data, traces are calculated for a model representing a sand layer between two clay layers. A guided wave propagates if the wavelengths in the sand layer are similar to the...
Simmonsite, Na2LiAlF6, a new mineral from the Zapot amazonite-topazzinnwaldite pegmatite, Hawthorne, Nevada, U.S.A
E.E. Foord, J. T. O’Connor, J.M. Hughes, S. J. Sutley, A.U. Falster, A.E. Soregaroli, F.E. Lichte, D. E. Kile
1999, American Mineralogist (84) 769-772
Simmonsite, Na2LiAlF6, a new mineral of pegmatitic-hydrothermal origin, occurs in a late-stage breccia pipe structure that cuts the Zapot amazonite-topaz-zinnvvaldite pegmatite located in the Gillis Range, Mineral Co., Nevada, U.S.A. The mineral is intimately intergrown with cryolite, cryolithionite and trace elpasolite. A secondary assemblage of other alumino-fluoride minerals and a...
Are shifts in herbicide use reflected in concentration changes in Midwestern rivers?
W.A. Battaglin, D. A. Goolsby
1999, Environmental Science & Technology (33) 2917-2925
In many Midwestern rivers, elevated concentrations of herbicides occur during runoff events for 1-3 months following application. The highest or 'peak' herbicide concentration often occurs during one of these runoff events. Herbicide concentrations in rivers are affected by a number of factors, including herbicide use patterns within the associated basin....
Trace-element geochemistry of metabasaltic rocks from the Yukon-Tanana Upland and implications for the origin of tectonic assemblages in east-central Alaska
Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, K.M. Cooper
1999, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (36) 1671-1695
We present major- and trace- element geochemical data for 27 amphibolites and six greenstones from three structural packages in the Yukon-Tanana Upland of east-central Alaska: the Lake George assemblage (LG) of Devono-Mississippian augen gneiss, quartz-mica schist, quartzite, and amphibolite; the Taylor Mountain assemblage (TM) of mafic schist and gneiss, marble,...
Comparative microhabitat use of ecologically similar benthic fishes
E. van Snik Gray, Jay R. Stauffer Jr.
1999, Environmental Biology of Fishes (56) 443-453
Although benthic insectivorous fishes such as darters and sculpins represent a significant component of riffle communities, few studies have compared the habitat use of these non-related but ecologically similar fishes. The objectives of this study were to examine the habitat use of Etheostoma olmstedi (tessellated darter) compared to Cottus bairdi...
Selenium isotope ratios as indicators of selenium sources and oxyanion reduction
T.M. Johnson, M.J. Herbel, T.D. Bullen, P.T. Zawislanski
1999, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (63) 2775-2783
Selenium stable isotope ratio measurements should serve as indicators of sources and biogeochemical transformations of Se. We report measurements of Se isotope fractionation during selenate reduction, selenite sorption, oxidation of reduced Se in soils, and Se volatilization by algae and soil samples. These results, combined with previous work with Se...
Seismic reflection and vibracoring studies of the continental shelf offshore central and western Long Island, New York
W.M. Kelly, J.R. Albanese, N.K. Coch, A.A. Harsch
1999, Marine Georesources and Geotechnology (17) 141-153
The ridge-and-swale topography on the continental shelf south of Fire Island, New York, is characterized by northeast-trending linear shoals that are shore attached and shore oblique on the inner shelf and isolated and shore parallel on the middle shelf. High-resolution seismic reflection profiles show that the ridges and swales occur...
Kyanite
M.J. Potter
1999, American Ceramic Society Bulletin (78) 131-132
[No abstract available]...
Stabilization of volcanic flanks by dike intrusion: An example from Kilauea
P.T. Delaney, R.P. Denlinger
1999, Bulletin of Volcanology (61) 356-362
Dike propagation and dilation increases the compression of adjacent rocks. On volcanoes, especially oceanic shields, dikes are accordingly thought to be structurally destabilizing. As compression is incremented, volcanic flanks are driven outward or downslope and thus increase their susceptibility to destructive earthquakes and giant landslides. We show, however, that the...
Age and paleoenvironment of the imperial formation near San Gorgonio Pass, Southern California
K. McDougall, R.Z. Poore, J. Matti
1999, Journal of Foraminiferal Research (29) 4-25
Microfossiliferous marine sediments of the Imperial Formation exposed in the Whitewater and Cabazon areas, near San Gorgonio Pass, southern California, are late Miocene in age and were deposited at intertidal to outer neritic depths, and possibly upper bathyal depths. A late Miocene age of 7.4 to >6.04 Ma is based...
Surface faulting and paleoseismic history of the 1932 Cedar Mountain earthquake area, west-central Nevada, and implications for modern tectonics of the Walker Lane
J. W. Bell, C.M. DePolo, A. R. Ramelli, A.M. Sarna-Wojcicki, C.E. Meyer
1999, Geological Society of America Bulletin (111) 791-807
The 1932 Cedar Mountain earthquake (Ms 7.2) was one of the largest historical events in the Walker Lane region of western Nevada, and it produced a complicated strike-slip rupture pattern on multiple Quaternary faults distributed through three valleys. Primary, right-lateral surface ruptures occurred on north-striking faults in Monte Cristo Valley;...