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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Using broad landscape level features to predict redd densities of steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in the Methow River watershed, Washington
Jason G. Romine, Russell W. Perry, Patrick J. Connolly
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1232
We used broad-scale landscape feature variables to model redd densities of spring Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in the Methow River watershed. Redd densities were estimated from redd counts conducted from 2005 to 2007 and 2009 for steelhead trout and 2005 to 2009 for spring Chinook...
Golden eagle population trends in the western United States: 1968-2010
Brian A. Millsap, Guthrie S. Zimmerman, John R. Sauer, Ryan M. Nielson, Mark Otto, Emily Bjerre, Robert K. Murphy
2013, Journal of Wildlife Management (77) 1436-1448
In 2009, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service promulgated permit regulations for the unintentional lethal take (anthropogenic mortality) and disturbance of golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos). Accurate population trend and size information for golden eagles are needed so agency biologists can make informed decisions when eagle take permits are requested....
Continuous gravity measurements reveal a low-density lava lake at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i
Daniele Carbone, Michael P. Poland, Matthew R. Patrick, Tim R. Orr
2013, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (376) 178-185
On 5 March 2011, the lava lake within the summit eruptive vent at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i, began to drain as magma withdrew to feed a dike intrusion and fissure eruption on the volcanoʼs east rift zone. The draining was monitored by a variety of continuous geological and geophysical measurements, including...
Spatial capture-recapture
J. Andrew Royle, Richard B. Chandler, Rahel Sollmann, Beth Gardner
2013, Book
Spatial Capture-Recapture provides a revolutionary extension of traditional capture-recapture methods for studying animal populations using data from live trapping, camera trapping, DNA sampling, acoustic sampling, and related field methods. This book is a conceptual and methodological synthesis of spatial capture-recapture modeling. As a comprehensive how-to manual, this reference contains...
The SAFRR Tsunami Scenario
K. Porter, Lucile M. Jones, Stephanie L. Ross, J. Borrero, J. Bwarie, D. Dykstra, Eric L. Geist, L. Johnson, Stephen H. Kirby, K. Long, P. Lynett, K. Miller, Carl E. Mortensen, S. Perry, G. Plumlee, C. Real, L. Ritchie, C. Scawthorn, H.K. Thio, Anne Wein, P. Whitmore, R. Wilson, Nathan J. Wood
Bruce I. Ostbo, Don Oates, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Ports 2013: Success Through Diversification
The U.S. Geological Survey and several partners operate a program called Science Application for Risk Reduction (SAFRR) that produces (among other things) emergency planning scenarios for natural disasters. The scenarios show how science can be used to enhance community resiliency. The SAFRR Tsunami Scenario describes potential impacts of a hypothetical,...
The Anemomilos prediction methodology for Dst
W. K. Tobiska, D. Knipp, W. J. Burke, D. Bouwer, J. Bailey, D. Odstrcil, M. P. Hagan, J. Gannon, B. R. Bowman
2013, Space Weather (11) 490-508
This paper describes new capabilities for operational geomagnetic Disturbance storm time (Dst) index forecasts. We present a data‐driven, deterministic algorithm called Anemomilos for forecasting Dst out to a maximum of 6 days for large, medium, and small storms, depending upon transit time to the Earth. This capability is used for operational satellite...
Predicting vertically-nonsequential wetting patterns with a source-responsive model
John R. Nimmo, Lara Mitchell
2013, Vadose Zone Journal (12)
Water infiltrating into soil of natural structure often causes wetting patterns that do not develop in an orderly sequence. Because traditional unsaturated flow models represent a water advance that proceeds sequentially, they fail to predict irregular development of water distribution. In the source-responsive model, a diffuse domain (D) represents flow...
Traces in the dark: sedimentary processes and facies gradients in the upper shale member of the Upper Devonian-Lower Mississippian Bakken Formation, Williston Basin, North Dakota, U.S.A.
Sven O. Egenhoff, Neil S. Fishman
2013, Journal of Sedimentary Research (83) 803-824
Black, organic-rich rocks of the upper shale member of the Upper Devonian–Lower Mississippian Bakken Formation, a world-class petroleum source rock in the Williston Basin of the United States and Canada, contain a diverse suite of mudstone lithofacies that were deposited in distinct facies belts. The succession consists of three discrete...
Ecological prediction with nonlinear multivariate time-frequency functional data models
Wen-Hsi Yang, Christopher K. Wikle, Scott H. Holan, Mark L. Wildhaber
2013, Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics (18) 450-474
Time-frequency analysis has become a fundamental component of many scientific inquiries. Due to improvements in technology, the amount of high-frequency signals that are collected for ecological and other scientific processes is increasing at a dramatic rate. In order to facilitate the use of these data in ecological prediction, we introduce...
A new laboratory approach to shale analysis using NMR relaxometry
Kathryn E. Washburn, Justin E. Birdwell
Luis Baez, Ken Beeney, Steve Sonnenberg, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, Denver, Colorado, 12-14 August 2013
Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) relaxometry is a non-invasive technique commonly used to assess hydrogen-bearing fluids in petroleum reservoir rocks. Measurements made using LF-NMR provide information on rock porosity, pore-size distributions, and in some cases, fluid types and saturations (Timur, 1967; Kenyon et al., 1986; Straley et al., 1994; Brown,...
Crusts: biological
Jayne Belnap
Scott A. Elias, editor(s)
2013, Book chapter, Reference Module in Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences
Biological soil crusts, a community of cyanobacteria, lichens, mosses, and fungi, are an essential part of dryland ecosystems. They are critical in the stabilization of soils, protecting them from wind and water erosion. Similarly, these soil surface communities also stabilized soils on early Earth, allowing vascular plants to establish. They...
Increases in flood magnitudes in California under warming climates
Tapash Das, Edwin P. Maurer, David W. Pierce, Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel R. Cayah
2013, Journal of Hydrology (501) 101-110
Downscaled and hydrologically modeled projections from an ensemble of 16 Global Climate Models suggest that flooding may become more intense on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada mountains, the primary source for California’s managed water system. By the end of the 21st century, all 16 climate projections for the...
Characterizing tight-gas systems with production data: Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado
Philip H. Nelson, Stephen L. Santus
Luis Baez, Ken Beeney, Steve Sonnenberg, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, Denver, Colorado, 12-14 August 2013
The study of produced fluids allows comparisons among tight-gas systems. This paper examines gas, oil, and water production data from vertical wells in 23 fields in five Rocky Mountain basins of the United States, mostly from wells completed before the year 2000. Average daily rates of gas, oil, and water...
Comparing approaches to spatially explicit ecosystem service modeling: a case study from the San Pedro River, Arizona
Kenneth J. Bagstad, Darius J. Semmens, Robert Winthrop
2013, Ecosystem Services (5) 40-50
Although the number of ecosystem service modeling tools has grown in recent years, quantitative comparative studies of these tools have been lacking. In this study, we applied two leading open-source, spatially explicit ecosystem services modeling tools – Artificial Intelligence for Ecosystem Services (ARIES) and Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and...
Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance characterization of organic content in shales
Kathryn E. Washburn, Justin E. Birdwell, Joseph D. Seymour, Catherine Kirkland, Sarah J. Vogt
2013, Conference Paper, Proceedings: International Symposium of the Society of Core Analysts
Low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) relaxometry is a non-invasive technique commonly used to assess hydrogen-bearing fluids in petroleum reservoir rocks. Longitudinal T1 and transverse T2 relaxation time measurements made using LF-NMR on conventional reservoir systems provides information on rock porosity, pore size distributions, and fluid types and saturations in some...
Reverberations on the watery element: A significant tsunamigenic historical earthquake offshore the Carolina coast
Susan E. Hough, Jeffrey Munsey, Steven N. Ward
2013, Seismological Research Letters (84) 891-898
We investigate an early nineteenth-century earthquake that has been previously cataloged but not previously investigated in detail or recognized as a significant event. The earthquake struck at approximately 4:30 a.m. LT on 8 January 1817 and was widely felt throughout the southeastern and mid-Atlantic United States. Around 11:00 a.m. the same day, an eyewitness described a...
Evaluation of near-critical overdamping effects in slug-test response
Edwin P. Weeks, Arthur C. Clark
2013, Groundwater (51) 775-780
A slug test behaves as a harmonic oscillator, subject to both inertial effects and viscous damping. When viscous and inertial forces are closely balanced, the system is nearly critically damped, and water-level recovery is affected by inertial effects, but does not exhibit oscillation. These effects were investigated by use of...
Movements of wild ruddy shelducks in the Central Asian Flyway and their spatial relationship to outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1
John Y. Takekawa, Diann J. Prosser, Bridget M. Collins, David C. Douglas, William M. Perry, Yan Baoping, Ze Luo, Yuansheng Hou, Fumin Lei, Tianxian Li, Yongdong Li, Scott H. Newman
2013, Viruses (5) 2129-2152
Highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 remains a serious concern for both poultry and human health. Wild waterfowl are considered to be the reservoir for low pathogenic avian influenza viruses; however, relatively little is known about their movement ecology in regions where HPAI H5N1 outbreaks regularly occur. We studied movements of...
Effects of error covariance structure on estimation of model averaging weights and predictive performance
Dan Lu, Ming Ye, Philip D. Meyer, Gary P. Curtis, Xiaoqing Shi, Xu-Feng Niu, Steve B. Yabusaki
2013, Water Resources Research (49) 6029-6047
When conducting model averaging for assessing groundwater conceptual model uncertainty, the averaging weights are often evaluated using model selection criteria such as AIC, AICc, BIC, and KIC (Akaike Information Criterion, Corrected Akaike Information Criterion, Bayesian Information Criterion, and Kashyap Information Criterion, respectively). However, this method often leads to an unrealistic...
Effect of organic matter properties, clay mineral type and thermal maturity on gas adsorption in organic-rich shale systems
Tongwei Zhang, Geoffrey S. Ellis, Stephen C. Ruppel, Kitty Milliken, Mike Lewan, Xun Sun
Luis Baez, Ken Beeney, Steve Sonnenberg, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Unconventional Resources Technology Conference, Denver, Colorado, 12-14 August 2013
A series of CH4 adsorption experiments on natural organic-rich shales, isolated kerogen, clay-rich rocks, and artificially matured Woodford Shale samples were conducted under dry conditions. Our results indicate that physisorption is a dominant process for CH4 sorption, both on organic-rich shales and clay minerals. The Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) surface area of...
Steady rotation of the Cascade arc
Ray E. Wells, Robert McCaffrey
2013, Geology (41) 1027-1030
Displacement of the Miocene Cascade volcanic arc (northwestern North America) from the active arc is in the same sense and at nearly the same rate as the present clockwise block motions calculated from GPS velocities in a North American reference frame. Migration of the ancestral arc over the past 16...
Great Lakes rivermouth ecosystems: scientific synthesis and management implications
James H. Larson, Anett S. Trebitz, Alan D. Steinman, Michael J. Wiley, Martha Carlson Mazur, Victoria Pebbles, Heather A. Braun, Paul W. Seelbach
2013, Journal of Great Lakes Research (39) 513-524
At the interface of the Great Lakes and their tributary rivers lies the rivermouths, a class of aquatic ecosystem where lake and lotic processes mix and distinct features emerge. Many rivermouths are the focal point of both human interaction with the Great Lakes and human impacts to the lakes; many...
Melts of garnet lherzolite: experiments, models and comparison to melts of pyroxenite and carbonated lherzolite
Timothy L. Grove, Eva S. Holbig, Jay A. Barr, Christy B. Till, Michael J. Krawczynski
2013, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (166) 887-910
Phase equilibrium experiments on a compositionally modified olivine leucitite from the Tibetan plateau have been carried out from 2.2 to 2.8 GPa and 1,380–1,480 °C. The experiments-produced liquids multiply saturated with spinel and garnet lherzolite phase assemblages (olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene and spinel ± garnet) under nominally anhydrous conditions. These SiO2-undersaturated...
Integrated geophysical imaging of a concealed mineral deposit: a case study of the world-class Pebble porphyry deposit in southwestern Alaska
Anjana K. Shah, Paul A. Bedrosian, Eric D. Anderson, Karen D. Kelley, James Lang
2013, Geophysics (78) 317-328
We combined aeromagnetic, induced polarization, magnetotelluric, and gravity surveys as well as drillhole geologic, alteration, magnetic susceptibility, and density data for exploration and characterization of the Cu-Au-Mo Pebble porphyry deposit. This undeveloped deposit is almost completely concealed by postmineralization sedimentary and volcanic rocks, presenting an exploration challenge. Individual geophysical methods...
The genetic basis of speciation in the Giliopsis lineage of Ipomopsis (Polemoniaceae)
Takuya Nakazato, Loren H. Rieseberg, Troy E. Wood
2013, Heredity (111) 227-237
One of the most powerful drivers of speciation in plants is pollinator-mediated disruptive selection, which leads to the divergence of floral traits adapted to the morphology and behavior of different pollinators. Despite the widespread importance of this speciation mechanism, its genetic basis has been explored in only a few groups....