Water balance models in one-month-ahead streamflow forecasting
William M. Alley
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 597-606
Techniques are tested that incorporate information from water balance models in making 1-month-ahead streamflow forecasts in New Jersey. The results are compared to those based on simple autoregressive time series models. The relative performance of the models is dependent on the month of the year in question. The water balance...
An estimate of hydrothermal fluid residence times and vent chimney growth rates based on 210Pb Pb ratios and mineralogic studies of sulfides dredged from the Juan de Fuca Ridge
D. Kadko, R. Koski, M. Tatsumoto, R. Bouse
1985, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (76) 35-44
The210PbPb ratios across two sulfide samples dredged from the Juan de Fuca Ridge are used to estimate the growth rate of the sulfide material and the residence time of the hydrothermal fluid within the oceanic crust from the onset of basalt alteration.210Pb...
Justification for a reduction in the crest-stage gage program in Louisiana
Richard A. Herbert, Darrell D. Carlson, Gregg J. Wiche
1985, Water Resources Bulletin (21) 953-965
The crest-stage gage program in Louisiana was evaluated to determine if the data were adequate for use in developing regional flood-frequency equations and to determine if any crest-stage gage stations could be discontinued. An abundance of data at many crest-stage gage stations and a lack of data for urban areas...
Carboniferous paleogeographic, phytogeographic, and paleoclimatic reconstructions
D.B. Rowley, A. Raymond, Judith T. Parrish, A.L. Lottes, C.R. Scotese, A.M. Ziegler
1985, International Journal of Coal Geology (5) 7-42
Two revised paleogeographic reconstructions of the Visean and Westphalian C-D stages are presented based on recent paleomagnetic, phytogeographic, stratigraphic, and tectonic data. These data change the positions of some continental blocks, and allow the definition of several new ones. The most...
Variations in tilt rate and harmonic tremor amplitude during the January-August 1983 east rift eruptions of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
J.J. Dvorak, A.T. Okamura
1985, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (25) 249-258
During January-August 1983, a network of telemetered tiltmeters and seismometers recorded detailed temporal changes associated with seven major eruptive phases along the east rift of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii. Each eruptive phase was accompanied by subsidence of the summit region and followed by reinflation of the summit to approximately the same...
The effect of glaciers on streamflow variations
Andrew G. Fountain, Wendell V. Tangborn
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 579-586
The effect of temperate glaciers on runoff variations is examined for the North Cascade Mountains of Washington State. The principal influences of glaciers on streamflow are often unexpected contributions to streamflow volume, a delay of the maximum seasonal flow, and a decrease in annual and monthly variation of runoff. The...
Seismicity and volcanism in the Pacific Northwest: Evidence for the segmentation of the Juan De Fuca Plate
Craig S. Weaver, Caryl A. Michaelson
1985, Geophysical Research Letters (12) 215-218
The distributions of earthquakes and late Cenozoic and Quaternary volcanism in Washington and northern Oregon change markedly across two northeast-striking lines, one near Mount Rainier and one near Mount Hood. On the basis of these observations and a comparison with the Nazca subduction zone, we propose...
Scarp degraded by linear diffusion: Inverse solution for age
D.J. Andrews, Thomas C. Hanks
1985, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (90) 10193-10208
Under the assumption that landforms unaffected by drainage channels are degraded according to the linear diffusion equation, a procedure is developed to invert a scarp profile to find its “diffusion age.” Diffusion age, having dimension [length]2, is the product of diffusivity times chronological age. The second moment of scarp slope...
Navy Fan, California Borderland: Growth pattern and depositional processes
W. R. Normark, D.J.W. Piper
1984, Geo-Marine Letters (3) 101-108
Navy Fan is a Late Pleistocene sand-rich fan prograding into an irregularly shaped basin in the southern California Borderland. The middle fan, characterized by one active and two abandoned 'distributary' channels and associated lobe deposits, at present onlaps part of the basin slope directly opposite from the upper-fan valley, thus...
Avian species differences in the intestinal absorption of xenobiotics (PCB, dieldrin, Hg2+)
John A. Serafin
1984, Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C: Comparative Pharmacology (78) 491-496
1. Intestinal absorption of a polychlorinated biphenyl, dieldrin, and mercury (from HgCl2) was measured in adult Northern bobwhites, Eastern screech owls, American kestrels, black-crowned night-herons and mallards in vivo by an in situ luminal perfusion technique.2. Bobwhites, screech owls and kestrels absorbed much more of each xenobiotic than black-crowned night-herons...
The use of auxiliary variables in capture-recapture and removal experiments
K. H. Pollock, J.E. Hines, J.D. Nichols
1984, Biometrics (40) 329-340
The dependence of animal capture probabilities on auxiliary variables is an important practical problem which has not been considered in the development of estimation procedures for capture-recapture and removal experiments. In this paper the linear logistic binary regression model is used to relate the probability of capture to continuous...
Organochlorine residues in eggs of black-crowned night herons from Colorado and Wyoming
L. C. McEwen, C. J. Stafford, Gary L. Hensler
1984, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (3) 367-376
Eggs of black-crowned night-herons Nycticorax nycticorax (L.) were collected for analysis from seven nesting sites in Colorado and Wyoming in 1979. One egg was taken per nest from as many as 20 nests per site during early incubation. The nests were marked and revisited after hatching, but before fledging, to record the...
A general methodology for maximum likelihood inference from band-recovery data
M.J. Conroy, B. Kenneth Williams
1984, Biometrics (40) 739-748
A numerical procedure is described for obtaining maximum likelihood estimates and associated maximum likelihood inference from band- recovery data. The method is used to illustrate previously developed one-age-class band-recovery models, and is extended to new models, including the analysis with a covariate for survival rates and variable-time-period recovery models....
Fluvial sedimentation on a quivering craton: Influence of slight crustal movements on fluvial processes, upper Jurassic Morrison formation, western Colorado Plateau
Fred Peterson
1984, Sedimentary Geology (38) 21-49
One of the most important challenges facing the fluvial sedimentologist is identification of processes outside the stream channel that influence deposition of fluvial sediments. Detailed studies in the lower sequence of the Salt Wash Member (Morrison Formation, Upper Jurassic) demonstrate that crustal deformation at the site of deposition may considerably...
A review of crust and upper mantle structure studies of the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone volcanic system: A major lithospheric anomaly in the western U.S.A.
H. M. Iyer
1984, Tectonophysics (105) 291-308
The Snake River Plain-Yellowstone volcanic system is one of the largest, basaltic, volcanic field in the world. Here, there is clear evidence for northeasterly progression of rhyolitic volcanism with its present position in Yellowstone. Many theories have been advanced for the origin of the Snake River Plain-Yellowstone system. Yellowstone and...
Transport and concentration controls for chloride, strontium, potassium and lead in Uvas Creek, a small cobble-bed stream in Santa Clara County, California, U.S.A.: 2. Mathematical modeling
A. P. Jackman, R. A. Walters, V. C. Kennedy
1984, Journal of Hydrology (75) 111-141
Three models describing solute transport of conservative ion species and another describing transport of species which adsorb linearly and reversibly on bed sediments are developed and tested. The conservative models are based on three different conceptual models of the transient storage of solute in the bed. One model assumes the...
A reconnaissance of the water resources of the Shoalwater Bay Indian Reservation and adjacent areas, Pacific County, Washington, 1978-1979
W. E. Lum
1984, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4165
A 1978-79 reconnaissance of the quantity and quality of water in the Shoalwater Bay Indian Reservation yielded information needed by the Shoalwater Bay Indian Tribe to plan future use of these resources. Ground water from the local artesian aquifer is suitable for most uses and it is estimated that yield...
Habitat Suitability Index Models: Pronghorn
Arthur W. Allen, John G. Cook, Michael J. Armbruster
1984, FWS/OBS 82/10.65
This is one of a series of publications that provide information on the habitat requirements of selected fish and wildlife species. Literature describing the relationship between habitat variables related to life requisites and habitat suitability for the pronghorn (Antilocapra americana) are synthesized. These data are subsequently used to develop Habitat Suitability Index (HSI) models. The...
Design and implementation of evapotranspiration measuring equipment for Owens Valley, California
Michael R. Simpson, Lowell F. W. Duell Jr.
1984, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (4) 155-163
As part of a plant survivability and ground water study in Owens Valley, California, semipermanent installations are used to measure continuous range‐land evapotranspiration in the valley's phreatophyte community. A proposed mobile installation also has been designed. The semipermanent micrometeoro‐logical station collects continuous data for solution of the Bowen ratio/energy budget...
Proceedings of a workshop on fish habitat suitability index models
James W. Terrell
1984, Biological Report (85)
One of the habitat-based methodologies for impact assessment currently in use by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the Habitat Evaluation Procedures (HEP) (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1980). HEP is based on the assumption that the quality of an area as wildlife habitat at a specified target year...
Late Devonian icriodontid biofacies models and alternate shallow-water conodont zonation
Charles Sandberg, Roland Dreesen
1984, GSA Special Papers (196) 143-178
Recognition of differences in the habitats, apparatuses, and ranges of Late Devonian Icriodus and Pelekysgnathus permits refinement of their biofacies interpretations and construction of an alternate icriodontid zonation. Icriodus is a euphotic genus that predominated in most environments during the early Late Devonian (Frasnian) but died out during the early Famennian. Its apparatus consists of platform...
Carbon assimilation characteristics of the aquatic CAM plant Isoetes howellii
Jon E. Keeley, G. Busch
1984, Plant Physiology (76) 525-530
The relationship between malic acid production and carbon assimilation was examined in the submerged aquatic Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant, Isoetes howellii Engelmann. Under natural conditions free-CO2 level in the water was highest at 0600 hours and 14CO2 assimilation rates in I. howellii were also highest at this time. After 0900 hours there was a similar pattern...
Sedimentary processes on the Atlantic Continental Slope of the United States
Harley J. Knebel
1984, Marine Geology (61) 43-74
Until recently, the sedimentary processes on the United States Atlantic Continental Slope were inferred mainly from descriptive studies based on the bathymetry and on widely spaced grab samples, bottom photographs, and seismic-reflection profiles. Over the past 6 years, however, much additional information has been collected on the bottom morphology, characteristics...
Tidal-cycle changes in oscillation ripples on the inner part of an estuarine sand flat
J.R. Dingler, H.E. Clifton
1984, Marine Geology (60) 219-233
Oscillation ripples form on subaqueous sand beds when wave-generated, near-bottom water motions are strong enough to move sand grains. The threshold of grain motion is the lower bound of the regime of oscillation ripples and the onset of sheet flow is the upper bound. Based on the relation between ripple...
Interlaminated ice-proximal glacimarine sediments in Muir Inlet, Alaska
N.E. Mackiewicz, R.D. Powell, P.R. Carlson, Bruce F. Molnia
1984, Marine Geology (57) 113-147
Muir Inlet in Glacier Bay, Alaska, is a glacial fjord receiving a tremendous volume of sediment annually. The rate of sediment accumulation is greatest proximal to Muir Glacier (about 9 m yr−1) and decreases away from the glacier. The primary sediment sources are meltwater streams discharging at subglacial and ice-marginal...