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Page 69, results 1701 - 1725

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Landsat Data Continuity Mission
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3093
The Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM) is a partnership between the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) to place the next Landsat satellite in orbit by late 2012. The Landsat era that began in 1972 will become a nearly 45-year global land record with...
U.S. Geological Survey Mentoring Program - Paired for a Powerful Science Future
K. F. Miller, S.D. Clarke
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3089
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) prides itself in its excellence in science. The resource bank of skills and knowledge that is contained within the current employees of the USGS is what makes our science excellent. With an aging workforce, we must ensure that the knowledge and skills represented by those...
USGS ShakeCast
David Wald, Kuo-Wan Lin
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3086
Automating, Simplifying, and Improving the Use of ShakeMap for Post-Earthquake Decisionmaking and Response. ShakeCast is a freely available, post-earthquake situational awareness application that automatically retrieves earthquake shaking data from ShakeMap, compares intensity measures against users facilities, and generates potential damage assessment notifications, facility damage maps, and other Web-based products for emergency...
Investigating atmospheric mercury with the U.S. Geological Survey Mobile Mercury Laboratory
Allan Kolker
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3071
Atmospheric mercury is thought to be an important source of mercury present in fish, resulting in numerous local, statewide, tribal, and province-wide fish consumption advisories in the United States and Canada (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2007a). To understand how mercury occurs in the atmosphere and its potential to be transferred...
Borehole Geophysical Logging of Water-Supply Wells in the Piedmont, Blue Ridge, and Valley and Ridge, Georgia
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3048
Crystalline and carbonate-rock aquifers in northern Georgia provide water to an ever-increasing number of private and public wells in the region. Understanding the depth and yield of water-bearing zones in such wells is crucial for the development and long-term sustainability of ground-water resources and for keeping wells in good operating...
Assessment of undiscovered oil and gas resources in Tertiary strata of the Gulf Coast, 2007
Russell F. Dubiel, Janet K. Pitman, Ofori N. Pearson, Peter D. Warwick, Alexander W. Karlsen, James L. Coleman Jr., Paul C. Hackley, Daniel O. Hayba, Sharon M. Swanson, Ronald R. Charpentier, Troy A Cook, Timothy R. Klett, Richard M. Pollastro, Christopher J. Schenk
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3066
Using a geology-based assessment methodology, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated a mean of 113.7 trillion cubic feet of undiscovered natural gas, a mean of 690 million barrels of undiscovered oil, and a mean of 3.7 billion barrels of undiscovered natural gas liquids in onshore lands and State waters of...
Geographic information systems, remote sensing, and spatial analysis activities in Texas, 2002-07
D.K. Pearson, R.H. Gary, Z.D. Wilson
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3076
Geographic information system (GIS) technology has become an important tool for scientific investigation, resource management, and environmental planning. A GIS is a computer-aided system capable of collecting, storing, analyzing, and displaying spatially referenced digital data. GIS technology is particularly useful when analyzing a wide variety of spatial data such as...
U.S. Geological Survey Menlo Park campus: Self-guided tour
Elizabeth M. Colvard, Mara G. Tongue, Leslie C. Gordon
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3072
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), established by an act of Congress in 1879, is the Nation's largest natural science and civilian mapping agency. The USGS works in cooperation with more than 2,000 organizations across the country to provide reliable, impartial scientific information. This information is used to minimize the loss...
The Desert Laboratory Repeat Photography Collection - An Invaluable Archive Documenting Landscape Change
Robert H. Webb, Diane E. Boyer, Raymond M. Turner, Stephen H. Bullock
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3046
The Desert Laboratory Repeat Photography Collection, the largest collection of its kind in the world, is housed at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in Tucson, Arizona. The collection preserves thousands of photos taken precisely in the same places but at different times. This archive of 'repeat photographs' documents changes in...
Somerset County Flood Information System
Heidi L. Hoppe
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3090
The timely warning of a flood is crucial to the protection of lives and property. One has only to recall the floods of August 2, 1973, September 16 and 17, 1999, and April 16, 2007, in Somerset County, New Jersey, in which lives were lost and major property damage occurred,...
Phage therapy for Florida corals?
Christina A. Kellogg
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3065
Coral disease is a major cause of reef decline in the Florida Keys. Bacterium has been defined as the most common pathogen (disease-causing organism). Although much is being done to catalog coral diseases, map their locations, determine the causes of disease, or measure the rates of coral demise, very little...
Streamflow of 2006 -- Water Year Summary
Harry F. Lins
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3062
The maps and graphs appearing in this summary describe streamflow conditions for water-year 2006 (October 1, 2005 to September 30, 2006) in the context of the 77-year period 1930-2006, unless otherwise noted. The illustrations are based on observed data from the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) National Streamflow Information Program. The...
Land Cover Applications, Landscape Dynamics, and Global Change
Larry L. Tieszen
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3040
The Land Cover Applications, Landscape Dynamics, and Global Change project at U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Center for Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) seeks to integrate remote sensing and simulation models to better understand and seek solutions to national and global issues. Modeling processes related to population impacts, natural resource...
Klamath Basin: A watershed approach to support habitat restoration, species recovery, and water resource planning
S. P. VanderKooi, L. Thorsteinson
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3068
Water allocation among human and natural resource uses in the American West is challenging. Western rivers have been largely managed for hydropower, irrigation, drinking water, and navigation. Today land and water use practices have gained importance, particularly as aging dams are faced with re-licensing requirements and provisions of the Endangered...
Otolith research for Puget Sound
K. Larsen, R. Reisenbichler
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3042
Otoliths are hard structures located in the brain cavity of fish. These structures are formed by a buildup of calcium carbonate within a gelatinous matrix that produces light and dark bands similar to the growth rings in trees. The width of the bands corresponds to environmental factors such as temperature...
St. Louis Area Earthquake Hazards Mapping Project
Robert A. Williams, Phyllis Steckel, Eugene Schweig
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3073
St. Louis has experienced minor earthquake damage at least 12 times in the past 200 years. Because of this history and its proximity to known active earthquake zones, the St. Louis Area Earthquake Hazards Mapping Project will produce digital maps that show variability of earthquake hazards in the St. Louis...
Tintina Gold Province Study, Alaska and Yukon Territory, 2002-2007
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3061
The Tintina gold province is an arc-shaped 2,000-kilometer-long metallogenic province that extends from northern British Columbia, through the Yukon Territory, and across and into southwestern Alaska. In the United States, the province remains a prime area for gold exploration and includes such large gold deposits as Pogo, Fort Knox-True North,...
Climate Change Research at USGS Center for Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS)
U.S. Geological Survey
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3091
Research and development projects at EROS apply unique resources to support the USGS mission of developing understanding, monitoring, and modeling of climate variability and change and their human, physical, and biological impacts. Remote sensing resources, both new and archived, form the core of our ability to determine changes in the...
National Water-Quality Assessment Program - Source Water-Quality Assessments
Gregory C. Delzer, Pixie A. Hamilton
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3069
In 2002, the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) implemented Source Water-Quality Assessments (SWQAs) to characterize the quality of selected rivers and aquifers used as a source of supply to community water systems in the United States. These assessments are intended to complement drinking-water monitoring...
Understanding Contaminants Associated with Mineral Deposits
Philip L. Verplanck, Stan E. Church, Kathleen S. Smith
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3079
Recent interdisciplinary studies by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) have resulted in substantial progress in understanding the processes that control * the release of metals and acidic waters from inactive mines and mineralized areas, * the transport of metals and acidic waters to streams, and * the fate and effect of metals and...
Contamination in fractured-rock aquifers: Research at the former Naval Air Warfare Center, West Trenton, New Jersey
Daniel J. Goode, Claire R. Tiedeman, Pierre J. Lacombe, Thomas E. Imbrigiotta, Allen M. Shapiro, Francis H. Chapelle
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3074
The U.S. Geological Survey and cooperators are studying chlorinated solvents in a fractured sedimentary rock aquifer underlying the former Naval Air Warfare Center (NAWC), West Trenton, New Jersey. Fractured-rock aquifers are common in many parts of the United States and are highly susceptible to contamination, particularly at industrial sites. Compared...
Geographic Research in the USGS Western Region
Mara Tongue
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3067
The two geography research programs of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Land Remote Sensing and Geographic Analysis and Monitoring, have very strong relevance to the USGS mission and science strategy. In the western United States, the particular niche of these geography programs is in connecting USGS science to people and...
Predicting water quality by relating secchi-disk transparency and chlorophyll a measurements to Landsat satellite imagery for Michigan inland lakes, 2001-2006
L. M. Fuller, R. J. Minnerick
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3022
The State of Michigan has more than 11,000 inland lakes; approximately 3,500 of these lakes are greater than 25 acres. The USGS, in cooperation with the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ), has been monitoring the quality of inland lakes in Michigan through the Lake Water Quality Assessment monitoring program....
Integrated Geologic, Geochemical, and Geophysical Studies of Big Bend National Park, Texas
John E. Gray, Carol A. Finn, Lisa A. Morgan, William R. Page, Wayne C. Shanks
2007, Fact Sheet 2007-3078
Introduction Big Bend National Park (BBNP), Texas, covers 801,163 acres (3,242 km2) and was established in 1944 through a transfer of land from the State of Texas to the United States. The park is located along a 118-mi (190-km) stretch of the Rio Grande at the United States border with Mexico....