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Page 702, results 17526 - 17550

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ecosystem performance monitoring of rangelands by integrating modeling and remote sensing
Bruce K. Wylie, Stephen P. Boyte, Donald J. Major
2012, Rangeland Ecology and Management (65) 241-252
Monitoring rangeland ecosystem dynamics, production, and performance is valuable for researchers and land managers. However, ecosystem monitoring studies can be difficult to interpret and apply appropriately if management decisions and disturbances are inseparable from the ecosystem's climate signal. This study separates seasonal weather influences from influences caused by disturbances and...
Interannual variability of snowmelt in the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains, United States: examples from two alpine watersheds
Steven M. Jepsen, Noah P. Molotch, Mark W. Williams, Karl E. Rittger, James O. Sickman
2012, Water Resources Research (48)
The distribution of snow and the energy flux components of snowmelt are intrinsic characteristics of the alpine water cycle controlling the location of source waters and the effect of climate on streamflow. Interannual variability of these characteristics is relevant to the effect of climate change on alpine hydrology. Our objective...
P2S--Coupled simulation with the Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System (PRMS) and the Stream Temperature Network (SNTemp) Models
Steven L. Markstrom
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1116
A software program, called P2S, has been developed which couples the daily stream temperature simulation capabilities of the U.S. Geological Survey Stream Network Temperature model with the watershed hydrology simulation capabilities of the U.S. Geological Survey Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System. The Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System is a modular, deterministic, distributed-parameter, physical-process watershed...
Assessing the vulnerability of human and biological communities to changing ecosystem services using a GIS-based multi-criteria decision support tool
Miguel L. Villarreal, Laura M. Norman, William B. Labiosa
2012, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the sixth biannial meeting of the International Environmental Modelling and Software Society, Leipzig, Germany, July 1-5, 2012
In this paper we describe an application of a GIS-based multi-criteria decision support web tool that models and evaluates relative changes in ecosystem services to policy and land management decisions. The Santa Cruz Watershed Ecosystem Portfolio (SCWEPM) was designed to provide credible forecasts of responses to ecosystem drivers and stressors...
Modelling ecosystem service flows under uncertainty with stochiastic SPAN
Gary W. Johnson, Robert R. Snapp, Ferdinando Villa, Kenneth J. Bagstad
2012, Conference Paper, 2012 International Congress on Environmental Modelling and Software: Managing resources of a limited planet
Ecosystem service models are increasingly in demand for decision making. However, the data required to run these models are often patchy, missing, outdated, or untrustworthy. Further, communication of data and model uncertainty to decision makers is often either absent or unintuitive. In this work, we introduce a systematic approach to...
An initial investigation into the organic matter biogeochemistry of the Congo River
Robert G.M. Spencer, Peter J. Hernes, Anthony K. Aufdenkampe, Andy Baker, Pauline Gulliver, Aron Stubbins, George R. Aiken, Rachael Y. Dyda, Kenna D. Butler, Vincent L. Mwamba, Arthur M. Mangangu, Jose N. Wabakanghanzi, Johan Six
2012, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (84) 614-627
The Congo River, which drains pristine tropical forest and savannah and is the second largest exporter of terrestrial carbon to the ocean, was sampled in early 2008 to investigate organic matter (OM) dynamics in this historically understudied river basin. We examined the elemental (%OC, %N, C:N), isotopic (δ13C, Δ14C, δ15N)...
Process-based coastal erosion modeling for Drew Point (North Slope, Alaska)
Thomas M. Ravens, Benjamin M. Jones, Jinlin Zhang, Christopher D. Arp, Joel A. Schmutz
2012, Journal of Waterway, Port, Coastal and Ocean Engineering (138) 122-130
A predictive, coastal erosion/shoreline change model has been developed for a small coastal segment near Drew Point, Beaufort Sea, Alaska. This coastal setting has experienced a dramatic increase in erosion since the early 2000’s. The bluffs at this site are 3-4 m tall and consist of ice-wedge bounded blocks of...
Paleontology and geochronology of the Long Beach core sites and monitoring wells, Long Beach, California
Kristin McDougall, John Hillhouse, Charles Powell II, Shannon Mahan, Elmira Wan, Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki
2012, Open-File Report 2011-1274
The U.S. Geological Survey's Focus on Quaternary Stratigraphy in Los Angeles (FOQUS-LA) project was a cooperative coring program between Federal, State, and local agencies. It was designed to provide a better understanding of earthquake potentials and to develop a stratigraphic model of the western Los Angeles Basin in California. The...
Gaining the necessary geologic, hydrologic, and geochemical understanding for additional brackish groundwater development, coastal San Diego, California, USA
Wesley R. Danskin
2012, Book, 22nd Salt Water Intrusion Meeting (SWIM)
Local water agencies and the United States Geological Survey are using a combination of techniques to better understand the scant freshwater resources and the much more abundant brackish resources in coastal San Diego, California, USA. Techniques include installation of multiple-depth monitoring well sites; geologic and paleontological analysis of drill cuttings;...
Reflections on our Model Validation editorial
John D. Bredehoeft, Leonard F. Konikow
2012, Ground Water (50) 493-495
This reprinted editorial from 1993 helps to celebrate the legacy of ideas that have influenced generations of hydrogeologists. Drs. Bredehoeft and Konikow kindly provided the following reflections on their editorial....
Examining spring wet slab and glide avalanche occurrence along the Going-to-the-Sun Road corridor, Glacier National Park, Montana, USA
Erich H. Peitzsch, Jordy Hendrikx, Daniel B. Fagre, Blase Reardon
2012, Cold Regions Science and Technology (78) 73-81
Wet slab and glide snow avalanches are dangerous and yet can be particularly difficult to predict. Wet slab and glide avalanches are presumably triggered by free water moving through the snowpack and the subsequent interaction with layer or ground interfaces, and typically occur in the spring during warming and...
A unifying model for planform straightness of ripples and dunes in air and water
David M. Rubin
2012, Earth-Science Reviews (113) 176-185
Geologists, physicists, and mathematicians have studied ripples and dunes for more than a century, but despite considerable effort, no general model has been proposed to explain perhaps the most fundamental property of their morphology: why are some bedforms straight, continuous, parallel, and uniform in planform geometry (i.e. two-dimensional) whereas others...
Objective definition of rainfall intensity-duration thresholds for the initiation of post-fire debris flows in southern California
Dennis Staley, Jason W. Kean, Susan H. Cannon, Kevin M. Schmidt, Jayme L. Laber
2012, Landslides
Rainfall intensity–duration (ID) thresholds are commonly used to predict the temporal occurrence of debris flows and shallow landslides. Typically, thresholds are subjectively defined as the upper limit of peak rainstorm intensities that do not produce debris flows and landslides, or as the lower limit of peak rainstorm intensities that initiate...
Refinements to the method of epicentral location based on surface waves from ambient seismic noise: introducing Love waves
Anatoli L. Levshin, Mikhail P. Barmin, Morgan P. Moschetti, Carlos Mendoza, Michael H. Ritzwoller
2012, Geophysical Journal International
The purpose of this study is to develop and test a modification to a previous method of regional seismic event location based on Empirical Green’s Functions (EGFs) produced from ambient seismic noise. Elastic EGFs between pairs of seismic stations are determined by cross-correlating long ambient noise time-series recorded at the...
Structural stability of coprecipitated natural organic matter and ferric iron under reducing conditions
Yumiko K. Henneberry, Tamara E.C. Kraus, Peter S. Nico, William R. Horwath
2012, Organic Geochemistry (48) 81-89
The objective was to assess the interaction of Fe coprecipitated with dissolved organic matter (DOM) and its effect on Fe (hydr)oxide crystallinity and DOM retention under abiotic reducing conditions. A Fe-based coagulant was reacted with DOM from an agricultural drain and the resulting precipitate (floc) was exposed to S(-II) and...
Statistical relations of salt and selenium loads to geospatial characteristics of corresponding subbasins of the Colorado and Gunnison Rivers in Colorado
Kenneth J. Leib, Joshua I. Linard, Cory A. Williams
2012, Scientific Investigations Report 2012-5003
Elevated loads of salt and selenium can impair the quality of water for both anthropogenic and natural uses. Understanding the environmental processes controlling how salt and selenium are introduced to streams is critical to managing and mitigating the effects of elevated loads. Dominant relations between salt and selenium loads and...
Isotope geochemistry and fluxes of carbon and organic matter in tropical small mountainous river systems and adjacent coastal waters of the Caribbean
Ryan Moyer, James Bauer, Andrea Grottoli
2012, Biogeochemistry
Recent studies have shown that small mountainous rivers (SMRs) may act as sources of aged and/or refractory carbon (C) to the coastal ocean, which may increase organic C burial at sea and subsidize coastal food webs and heterotrophy. However, the characteristics and spatial and temporal variability of C and organic...
Transtensional deformation and structural control of contiguous but independent magmatic systems: Mono-Inyo Craters, Mammoth Mountain, and Long Valley Caldera, California
P. Riley, B. Tikoff, Wes Hildreth
2012, Geosphere (8) 740-751
The Long Valley region of eastern California (United States) is the site of abundant late Tertiary–present magmatism, including three geochemically distinct stages of magmatism since ca. 3 Ma: Mammoth Mountain, the Mono-Inyo volcanic chain, and Long Valley Caldera. We propose two tectonic models, one explaining the Mammoth Mountain–Mono-Inyo magmatism and...
Since “Groundwater and surface water–A single resource”: some U.S. Geological Survey advances in modeling groundwater/surface-water interactions
Daniel T. Feinstein
2012, Acque Sotterranee: Italian Journal of Groundwater (1) 9-24
Field and interpretive studies conducted by T.C. Winter and U.S. Geological Survey colleagues, and summarized in the 1998 publication “Groundwater and Surface Water – A Single Resource”, inspired a new generation of research centered on extensions of the groundwater-flow code MODFLOW to more sophisticated simulation of coupled...
Radar analysis of fall bird migration stopover sites in the Northeastern U.S.
Jeffrey J. Butler, Deanna K. Dawson
2012, Report
The national network of weather surveillance radars (WSR-88D/NEXRAD) detects birds in flight, and has proven to be a useful remote-sensing tool for ornithological study. We used data collected during Fall 2008 and 2009 by 16 WSR-88D and 3 terminal Doppler weather radars in the northeastern U.S. (U.S. Fish and Wildlife...
Prion protein degradation by lichens of the genus Cladonia
James P. Bennett, Cynthia M. Rodriguez, Christopher J. Johnson
2012, Lichenologist (44) 523-531
It has recently been discovered that lichens contain a serine protease capable of degrading the pathogenic prion protein, the etiological agent of prion diseases such as sheep scrapie and cervid chronic wasting disease. Limited methods are available to degrade or inactivate prion disease agents, especially in the environment, and lichens...
Disequilibrium dihedral angles in dolerite sills
Marian B. Holness, Chris Richardson, Rosalind T. Helz
2012, Geology (40) 795-798
The geometry of clinopyroxene-plagioclase-plagioclase junctions in mafic rocks, measured by the median dihedral angle Θcpp, is created during solidification. In the solidifying Kilauea Iki (Hawaii) lava lake, the wider junctions between plagioclase grains are the first to be filled by pyroxene, followed by the narrower junctions. The final Θcpp, attained...
Quick-start guide for version 3.0 of EMINERS - Economic Mineral Resource Simulator
Walter J. Bawiec, Gregory T. Spanski
2012, Open-File Report 2009-1057
Quantitative mineral resource assessment, as developed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), consists of three parts: (1) development of grade and tonnage mineral deposit models; (2) delineation of tracts permissive for each deposit type; and (3) probabilistic estimation of the numbers of undiscovered deposits for each deposit type (Singer and...
Documentation of the U.S. Geological Survey sea floor stress and sediment mobility database
P. Soupy Dalyander, Bradford Butman, Christopher R. Sherwood, Richard P. Signell
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1137
The U.S. Geological Survey Sea Floor Stress and Sediment Mobility Database contains estimates of bottom stress and sediment mobility for the U.S. continental shelf. This U.S. Geological Survey database provides information that is needed to characterize sea floor ecosystems and evaluate areas for human use. The estimates contained in the...
The effect of changes in habitat conditions on the movement of juvenile Snail Kites Rostrhamus sociabilis
Andrea C. Bowling, Julien Martin, Wiley M. Kitchens
2012, Ibis (154) 554-565
The degradation of habitats due to human activities is a major topic of interest for the conservation and management of wild populations. There is growing evidence that the Florida Everglades ecosystem continues to suffer from habitat degradation. After a period of recovery in the 1990s, the Snail Kite Rostrhamus sociabilis...