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Hydrogeologic framework and groundwater/surface-water interactions of the South Fork Nooksack River Basin, northwestern Washington
Andrew S. Gendaszek
2014, Scientific Investigations Report 2014-5221
A hydrogeologic framework of the South Fork (SF) Nooksack River Basin in northwestern Washington was developed and hydrologic data were collected to characterize the groundwater-flow system and its interaction with surface‑water features. In addition to domestic, agricultural, and commercial uses of groundwater within the SF Nooksack River Basin, groundwater has...
Water quality in Indiana: trends in concentrations of selected nutrients, metals, and ions in streams, 2000-10
Martin R. Risch, Aubrey R. Bunch, Aldo V. Vecchia, Jeffrey D. Martin, Nancy T. Baker
2014, Scientific Investigations Report 2014-5205
Water quality in Indiana streams generally improved during the 2000–10 study period, based on trends in selected nutrients, metals, and ions. This study combined water-quality data from the Indiana Fixed Station Monitoring Program (FSMP) with streamflow data from nearby U.S. Geological Survey streamgages. A parametric time-series model, QWTREND, was used...
Small crater modification on Meridiani Planum and implications for erosion rates and climate change on Mars
M.P. Golombek, N.H. Warner, V. Ganti, M.P. Lamb, T. J. Parker, Robin L. Fergason, R. Sullivan
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (119) 2522-2547
A morphometric and morphologic catalog of ~100 small craters imaged by the Opportunity rover over the 33.5 km traverse between Eagle and Endeavour craters on Meridiani Planum shows craters in six stages of degradation that range from fresh and blocky to eroded and shallow depressions ringed by planed off rim blocks....
Distance to human populations influences epidemiology of respiratory disease in desert tortoises
Kristin H. Berry, no longer USGS Ashley A. Coble, Julie L. Yee, Jeremy S. Mack, William M. Perry, Kemp M. Anderson, Mary B. Brown
2014, Journal of Wildlife Management (79) 122-136
We explored variables likely to affect health of Agassiz's desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) in a 1,183-km2 study area in the central Mojave Desert of California between 2005 and 2008. We evaluated 1,004 tortoises for prevalence and spatial distribution of 2 pathogens, Mycoplasma agassizii and M. testudineum, that cause upper respiratory...
Potash: a global overview of evaporate-related potash resources, including spatial databases of deposits, occurrences, and permissive tracts
Greta J. Orris, Mark D. Cocker, Pamela Dunlap, Jeff C. Wynn, Gregory T. Spanski, Deborah A. Briggs, Leila Gass, James D. Bliss, Karen S. Bolm, Chao Yang, Bruce R. Lipin, Stephen Ludington, Robert J. Miller, Miroslaw Slowakiewicz
2014, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5090-S
Potash is mined worldwide to provide potassium, an essential nutrient for food crops. Evaporite-hosted potash deposits are the largest source of salts that contain potassium in water-soluble form, including potassium chloride, potassium-magnesium chloride, potassium sulfate, and potassium nitrate. Thick sections of evaporitic salt that form laterally continuous strata in sedimentary...
Maps showing bathymetry and modern sediment thickness on the inner continental shelf offshore of Fire Island, New York, pre-Hurricane Sandy
William C. Schwab, Jane F. Denny, Wayne E. Baldwin
2014, Open-File Report 2014-1203
The U.S. Geological Survey mapped approximately 336 square kilometers of the lower shoreface and inner continental shelf offshore of Fire Island, New York, in 2011 by using interferometric sonar and high-resolution chirp seismic-reflection systems. This report presents maps of bathymetry, acoustic backscatter, the coastal plain unconformity, the Holocene marine transgressive...
Gravity changes and deformation at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawaii, associated with summit eruptive activity, 2009-2012
Marco Bagnardi, Michael P. Poland, Daniele Carbone, Scott Baker, Maurizio Battaglia, Falk Amelung
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research (119) 7288-7305
Analysis of microgravity and surface displacement data collected at the summit of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawaii (USA), between December 2009 and November 2012 suggests a net mass accumulation at ~1.5 km depth beneath the northeast margin of Halema‘uma‘u Crater, within Kīlauea Caldera. Although residual gravity increases and decreases are accompanied by periods...
Shifts in plant functional types have time-dependent and regionally variable impacts on dryland ecosystem water balance
John B. Bradford, Daniel R. Schlaepfer, William K. Lauenroth, Ingrid C. Burke
2014, Journal of Ecology (102) 1408-1418
Summary 1. Terrestrial vegetation influences hydrologic cycling. In water-limited, dryland ecosystems, altered ecohydrology as a consequence of vegetation change can impact vegetation structure, ecological functioning and ecosystem services. Shrub steppe ecosystems dominated by big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) are widespread across western North America, and provide a range of ecosystem services. While...
Storm-surge flooding on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
John Terenzi, Craig R. Ely, M. Torre Jorgenson
2014, Arctic (67) 360-374
Coastal regions of Alaska are regularly affected by intense storms of ocean origin, the frequency and intensity of which are expected to increase as a result of global climate change. The Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta (YKD), situated in western Alaska on the eastern edge of the Bering Sea, is one of the...
Occupancy of yellow-billed and Pacific loons: evidence for interspecific competition and habitat mediated co-occurrence
Trevor B. Haynes, Joel A. Schmutz, Mark S. Lindberg, Kenneth G. Wright, Brian D. Uher-Koch, Amanda E. Rosenberger
2014, Journal of Avian Biology (45) 296-304
Interspecific competition is an important process structuring ecological communities, however, it is difficult to observe in nature. We used an occupancy modelling approach to evaluate evidence of competition between yellow-billed (Gavia adamsii) and Pacific (G. pacifica) loons for nesting lakes on the Arctic Coastal Plain of Alaska. With multiple years...
A stage-structured, spatially explicit migration model for Myotis bats: mortality location affects system dynamics
Richard A. Erickson, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Robin E. Russell, James E. Diffendorfer, Jennifer A. Szymanski
2014, Letters in Biomathematics (1) 157-172
Bats are ecologically and economically important species because they consume insects, transport nutrients, and pollinate flowers.  Many species of bats, including those in the Myotis genus, are facing population decline and increased extinction risk.  Despite these conservation concerns, few models exist for providing insight into the population dynamics of bats in a...
Factors influencing immediate post-release survival of spectacled eiders following surgical implantation of transmitters with percutaneous antennae
Matthew G. Sexson, Daniel M. Mulcahy, Maria Spriggs, Gwen E. Myers
2014, Journal of Wildlife Management (78) 550-560
Surgically implanted transmitters are a common method for tracking animal movements. Immediately following surgical implantation, animals pass through a critical recovery phase when behaviors may deviate from normal and the likelihood of individual survival may be reduced. Therefore, data collected during this period may be censored to minimize bias introduced...
Temporal patterns in the foraging behavior of sea otters in Alaska
George G. Esslinger, James L. Bodkin, André R. Breton, Jennifer M. Burns, Daniel H. Monson
2014, Journal of Wildlife Management (78) 689-700
Activity time budgets in apex predators have been proposed as indicators of population status relative to resource limitation or carrying capacity. We used archival time-depth recorders implanted in 15 adult female and 4 male sea otters (Enhydra lutris) from the northernmost population of the species, Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA,...
Methods for estimating drought streamflow probabilities for Virginia streams
Samuel H. Austin
2014, Scientific Investigations Report 2014-5145
Maximum likelihood logistic regression model equations used to estimate drought flow probabilities for Virginia streams are presented for 259 hydrologic basins in Virginia. Winter streamflows were used to estimate the likelihood of streamflows during the subsequent drought-prone summer months. The maximum likelihood logistic regression models identify probable streamflows from 5...
Localized rejuvenation of a crystal mush recorded in zircon temporal and compositional variation at the Lassen Volcanic Center, northern California
Erik W. Klemetti, Michael A. Clynne
2014, PLoS ONE (9)
Zircon ages and trace element compositions from recent silicic eruptions in the Lassen Volcanic Center (LVC) allow for an evaluation of the timing and conditions of rejuvenation (reheating and mobilization of crystals) within the LVC magmatic system. The LVC is the southernmost active Cascade volcano and, prior to the 1980...
Estimation of potential evapotranspiration from extraterrestrial radiation, air temperature and humidity to assess future climate change effects on the vegetation of the Northern Great Plains, USA
David A. King, Dominique M. Bachelet, Amy J. Symstad, Ken Ferschweiler, Michael Hobbins
2014, Ecological Modelling (297) 86-97
The potential evapotranspiration (PET) that would occur with unlimited plant access to water is a central driver of simulated plant growth in many ecological models. PET is influenced by solar and longwave radiation, temperature, wind speed, and humidity, but it is often modeled as a function of temperature alone. This...
Introduction to the geologic and geophysical studies of Fort Irwin, California
David C. Buesch
David C. Buesch, editor(s)
2014, Open-File Report 2013-1024-A
Geologic and geophysical investigations in the vicinity of Fort Irwin National Training Center, California, have been completed in support of groundwater investigations, and are presented in eight chapters of this report. A generalized surficial geologic map along with field and borehole investigations conducted during 2010–11 provide a lithostratigraphic and structural...
Generalized surficial geologic map of the Fort Irwin Area, San Bernardino County, California
David M. Miller, Christopher M. Menges, David J. Lidke
David C. Buesch, editor(s)
2014, Open-File Report 2013-1024-B
The geology and landscape of the Fort Irwin area, typical of many parts of the Mojave Desert, consist of rugged mountains separated by broad alluviated valleys that form the main coarse-resolution features of the geologic map. Crystalline and sedimentary rocks, Mesozoic and older in age, form most of the mountains...
Exposure pathways and biological receptors: baseline data for the canyon uranium mine, Coconino County, Arizona
Jo Ellen Hinck, Greg L. Linder, Abigail J. Darrah, Charles A. Drost, Michael C. Duniway, Matthew J. Johnson, Francisca M. Mendez-Harclerode, Erika M. Nowak, Ernest W. Valdez, Charles van Riper III, S.W. Wolff
2014, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (5) 422-440
Recent restrictions on uranium mining within the Grand Canyon watershed have drawn attention to scientific data gaps in evaluating the possible effects of ore extraction to human populations as well as wildlife communities in the area. Tissue contaminant concentrations, one of the most basic data requirements to determine exposure, are...
A model to locate potential areas for lake sturgeon spawning habitat construction in the St. Clair–Detroit River System
David Bennion, Bruce A. Manny
2014, Journal of Great Lakes Research (40) 43-51
In response to a need for objective scientific information that could be used to help remediate loss of fish spawning habitat in the St. Clair River and Detroit River International Areas of Concern, this paper summarizes a large-scale geographic mapping investigation. Our study integrates data on two variables that many...
Inner-shelf circulation and sediment dynamics on a series of shoreface connected ridges offshore of Fire Island, NY
John C. Warner, Jeffrey H. List, William C. Schwab, George Voulgaris, Brandy N. Armstrong, N Marshall
2014, Ocean Dynamics (64) 1767-1781
Locations along the inner-continental shelf offshore of Fire Island, NY, are characterized by a series of shoreface-connected ridges (SFCRs). These sand ridges have approximate dimensions of 10 km in length, 3 km spacing, and up to ∼8 m ridge to trough relief and are oriented obliquely at approximately 30° clockwise from the coastline....
Magma-ice-sediment interactions and the origin of lava/hyaloclastite sequences in the Síða formation, South Iceland
Tenley J. Banik, Paul J. Wallace, Armann Hoskuldsson, Calvin F. Miller, Charles R. Bacon, David J. Furbish
2014, Bulletin of Volcanology (76)
Products of subglacial volcanism can illuminate reconstructions of paleo-environmental conditions on both local and regional scales. Competing interpretations of Pleistocene conditions in south Iceland have been proposed based on an extensive sequence of repeating lava-and-hyaloclastite deposits in the Síða district. We propose here a new eruptive model and refine the...
Accounting for imperfect detection and survey bias in statistical analysis of presence-only data
Robert M. Dorazio
2014, Global Ecology and Biogeography (23) 1472-1484
Aim During the past decade ecologists have attempted to estimate the parameters of species distribution models by combining locations of species presence observed in opportunistic surveys with spatially referenced covariates of occurrence. Several statistical models have been proposed for the analysis of presence-only data, but these models have largely ignored the...
Why the New Madrid earthquakes are M 7–8 and the Charleston earthquake is ∼M 7
Chris H. Cramer, Oliver S. Boyd
2014, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (104) 2884-2903
Estimates of magnitudes of large historical earthquakes are an essential input to and can seriously affect seismic‐hazard estimates. The earthquake‐intensity observations, modified Mercalli intensities (MMI), and assigned magnitudes Mof the 1811–1812 New Madrid events have been reinterpreted several times in the last decade and have been a source of controversy...
Geologic implications of gas hydrates in the offshore of India: results of the National Gas Hydrate Program Expedition 01
Timothy S. Collett, Ray Boswell, J. R. Cochran, Pushpendra Kumar, Malcolm Lall, Aninda Mazumdar, Mangipudi Venkata Ramana, Tammisetti Ramprasad, Michael Riedel, Kalachand Sain, Arun Vasant Sathe, Krishna Vishwanath
2014, Marine and Petroleum Geology (58) 3-28
The Indian National Gas Hydrate Program Expedition 01 (NGHP-01) is designed to study the occurrence of gas hydrate along the passive continental margin of the Indian Peninsula and in the Andaman convergent margin, with special emphasis on understanding the geologic and geochemical controls on the occurrence of gas hydrate in...