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Page 705, results 17601 - 17625

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A multi-year analysis of spillway survival for juvenile salmonids as a function of spill bay operations at McNary Dam, Washington and Oregon, 2004-09
Noah S. Adams, Hal C. Hansel, Russell W. Perry, Scott D. Evans
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1125
We analyzed 6 years (2004-09) of passage and survival data collected at McNary Dam to examine how spill bay operations affect survival of juvenile salmonids passing through the spillway at McNary Dam. We also examined the relations between spill bay operations and survival through the juvenile fish bypass in an...
Hydrogeology, water chemistry, and transport processes in the zone of contribution of a public-supply well in Albuquerque, New Mexico, 2007-9
Laura M. Bexfield, Bryant C. Jurgens, Dianna M. Crilley, Scott C. Christenson
2012, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5182
The National Water-Quality Assessment Program (NAWQA) of the U.S. Geological Survey began a series of groundwater studies in 2001 in representative aquifers across the Nation in order to increase understanding of the factors that affect transport of anthropogenic and natural contaminants (TANC) to public-supply wells. One of 10 regional-scale TANC...
State of the art satellite and airborne marine oil spill remote sensing: Application to the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill
Ira Leifer, William J. Lehr, Debra Simecek-Beatty, Eliza Bradley, Roger N. Clark, Philip E. Dennison, Yongxiang Hu, Scott Matheson, Cathleen E Jones, Benjamin Holt, Molly Reif, Dar A. Roberts, Jan Svejkovsky, Gregg A. Swayze, Jennifer M. Wozencraft
2012, Remote Sensing of Environment (124) 185-209
The vast and persistent Deepwater Horizon (DWH) spill challenged response capabilities, which required accurate, quantitative oil assessment at synoptic and operational scales. Although experienced observers are a spill response's mainstay, few trained observers and confounding factors including weather, oil emulsification, and scene illumination geometry present challenges. DWH spill and impact monitoring...
The Novarupta-Katmai eruption of 1912 - largest eruption of the twentieth century; centennial perspectives
Wes Hildreth, Judy Fierstein
2012, Professional Paper 1791
The explosive outburst at Novarupta (Alaska) in June 1912 was the 20th century's most voluminous volcanic eruption. Marking its centennial, we illustrate and document the complex eruptive sequence, which was long misattributed to nearby Mount Katmai, and how its deposits have provided key insights about volcanic and magmatic processes. It...
Organic geochemistry and petrology of subsurface Paleocene-Eocene Wilcox and Claiborne Group coal beds, Zavala County, Maverick Basin, Texas, USA
Paul C. Hackley, Peter D. Warwick, Robert W. Hook, Hossein Alimi, Maria Mastalerz, Sharon M. Swanson
2012, Organic Geochemistry (46) 137-153
Coal samples from a coalbed methane exploration well in northern Zavala County, Maverick Basin, Texas, were characterized through an integrated analytical program. The well was drilled in February, 2006 and shut in after coal core desorption indicated negligible gas content. Cuttings samples from two levels in the Eocene Claiborne Group...
Airborne electromagnetic mapping of the base of aquifer in areas of western Nebraska
Jared D. Abraham, James C. Cannia, Paul A. Bedrosian, Michaela R. Johnson, Lyndsay B. Ball, Steven S. Sibray
2012, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5219
Airborne geophysical surveys of selected areas of the North and South Platte River valleys of Nebraska, including Lodgepole Creek valley, collected data to map aquifers and bedrock topography and thus improve the understanding of groundwater - surface-water relationships to be used in water-management decisions. Frequency-domain helicopter electromagnetic surveys, using a...
Apalachicola Bay interpreted seismic horizons and updated IRIS chirp seismic-reflection data
V.A. Cross, D.C. Twichell, D.S. Foster, T.F. O’Brien
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1003
Apalachicola Bay and St. George Sound contain the largest oyster fishery in Florida, and the growth and distribution of the numerous oyster reefs here are the combined product of modern estuarine conditions and the late Holocene evolution of the bay. A suite of geophysical data and cores were collected during...
Evaluation of NDVI to assess avian abundance and richness along the upper San Pedro River
T.M. McFarland, Charles van Riper III, G. E. Johnson
2012, Journal of Arid Environments (77) 45-53
Remote-sensing models have become increasingly popular for identifying, characterizing, monitoring, and predicting avian habitat but have largely focused on single bird species. The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) has been shown to positively correlate with avian abundance and richness and has been successfully applied to southwestern riparian systems which are...
Rodent middens reveal episodic, long-distance plant colonizations across the hyperarid Atacama Desert over the last 34,000 years
Francisca P. Diaz, Claudio Latorre, Antonio Maldonado, Jay Quade, Julio L. Betancourt
2012, Journal of Biogeography (39) 510-525
Aim To document the impact of late Quaternary pluvial events on plant movements between the coast and the Andes across the Atacama Desert, northern Chile. Location Sites are located along the lower and upper fringes of absolute desert (1100–2800 m a.s.l.), between the western slope of the...
Biodiversity of man-made open habitats in an underused country: a class of multispecies abundance models for count data
Yuichi Yamaura, J. Andrew Royle, Naoaki Shimada, Seigo Asanuma, Tamotsu Sato, Hisatomo Taki, Shun’ichi Makino
2012, Biodiversity and Conservation (21) 1365-1380
Since the 1960s, Japan has become highly dependent on foreign countries for natural resources, and the amount of managed lands (e.g. coppice, grassland, and agricultural field) has declined. Due to infrequent natural and human disturbance, early-successional species are now declining in Japan. Here we surveyed bees, birds, and plants in...
Relations between precipitation, groundwater withdrawals, and changes in hydrologic conditions at selected monitoring sites in Volusia County, Florida, 1995--2010
Louis C. Murray Jr.
2012, Scientific Investigations Report 2012-5075
A study to examine the influences of climatic and anthropogenic stressors on groundwater levels, lake stages, and surface-water discharge at selected sites in northern Volusia County, Florida, was conducted in 2009 by the U.S. Geological Survey. Water-level data collected at 20 monitoring sites (17 groundwater and 3 lake sites) in...
The physical hydrogeology of ore deposits
Steven E. Ingebritsen, M.S. Appold
2012, Economic Geology (107) 559-584
Hydrothermal ore deposits represent a convergence of fluid flow, thermal energy, and solute flux that is hydrogeologically unusual. From the hydrogeologic perspective, hydrothermal ore deposition represents a complex coupled-flow problem—sufficiently complex that physically rigorous description of the coupled thermal (T), hydraulic (H), mechanical (M), and chemical (C) processes (THMC modeling)...
Pore- and fracture-filling gas hydrate reservoirs in the Gulf of Mexico Gas Hydrate Joint Industry Project Leg II Green Canyon 955 H well
Myung W. Lee, T. S. Collett
2012, Marine and Petroleum Geology (34) 62-71
High-quality logging-while-drilling (LWD) downhole logs were acquired in seven wells drilled during the Gulf of MexicoGasHydrateJointIndustryProjectLegII in the spring of 2009. Well logs obtained in one of the wells, the GreenCanyon Block 955Hwell (GC955-H), indicate that a 27.4-m thick zone at the depth of 428 m below sea floor (mbsf;...
Soil greenhouse gas fluxes during wetland forest retreat along the Lower Savannah River, Georgia (USA)
Ken W. Krauss, Julie L. Whitbeck
2012, Wetlands (32) 73-81
Tidal freshwater forested wetlands (tidal swamps) are periodically affected by salinity intrusion at seaward transitions with marsh, which, along with altered hydrology, may affect the balance of gaseous carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) losses from soils. We measured greenhouse gas emissions (CO2, CH4, N2O) from healthy, moderately degraded, and degraded...
A brief history and summary of the effects of river engineering and dams on the Mississippi River system and delta
Jason S. Alexander, Richard C. Wilson, W. Reed Green
2012, Circular 1375
The U.S. Geological Survey Forecast Mekong project is providing technical assistance and information to aid management decisions and build science capacity of institutions in the Mekong River Basin. A component of this effort is to produce a synthesis of the effects of dams and other engineering structures on large-river hydrology,...
Geomorphic response of the Sandy River, Oregon, to removal of Marmot Dam
Jon J. Major, Jim E. O'Connor, Charles J. Podolak, Mackenzie K. Keith, Gordon E. Grant, Kurt R. Spicer, Smokey Pittman, Heather M. Bragg, J. Rose Wallick, Dwight Q. Tanner, Abagail Rhode, Peter R. Wilcock
2012, Professional Paper 1792
The October 2007 breaching of a temporary cofferdam constructed during removal of the 15-meter (m)-tall Marmot Dam on the Sandy River, Oregon, triggered a rapid sequence of fluvial responses as ~730,000 cubic meters (m3) of sand and gravel filling the former reservoir became available to a high-gradient river. Using direct...
Landscape controls on total and methyl Hg in the Upper Hudson River basin, New York, USA
Douglas A. Burns, K. Riva-Murray, P. M. Bradley, G. R. Aiken, M. E. Brigham
2012, Journal of Geophysical Research (117) G01034
Approaches are needed to better predict spatial variation in riverine Hg concentrations across heterogeneous landscapes that include mountains, wetlands, and open waters. We applied multivariate linear regression to determine the landscape factors and chemical variables that best account for the spatial variation of total Hg (THg) and methyl Hg (MeHg)...
Semiparametric bivariate zero-inflated Poisson models with application to studies of abundance for multiple species
Ali Arab, Scott H. Holan, Christopher K. Wikle, Mark L. Wildhaber
2012, Environmetrics (23) 183-196
Ecological studies involving counts of abundance, presence–absence or occupancy rates often produce data having a substantial proportion of zeros. Furthermore, these types of processes are typically multivariate and only adequately described by complex nonlinear relationships involving externally measured covariates. Ignoring these aspects of the data and implementing standard approaches can...
Reconciling estimates of the contemporary North American carbon balance among terrestrial biosphere models, atmospheric inversions, and a new approach for estimating net ecosystem exchange from inventory-based data
Daniel J. Hayes, David P. Turner, Graham Stinson, A. David McGuire, Yaxing Wei, Tristram O. West, Linda S. Heath, Bernardus de Jong, Brian G. McConkey, Richard A. Birdsey, Werner A. Kurz, Andrew R. Jacobson, Deborah N. Huntzinger, Yude Pan, W. Mac Post, Robert B. Cook
2012, Global Change Biology (18) 1282-1299
We develop an approach for estimating net ecosystem exchange (NEE) using inventory-based information over North America (NA) for a recent 7-year period (ca. 2000–2006). The approach notably retains information on the spatial distribution of NEE, or the vertical exchange between land and atmosphere of all non-fossil fuel sources and sinks...
Pattern and process of prescribed fires influence effectiveness at reducing wildfire severity in dry coniferous forests
Robert S. Arkle, David S. Pilliod, Justin L. Welty
2012, Forest Ecology and Management (276) 174-184
We examined the effects of three early season (spring) prescribed fires on burn severity patterns of summer wildfires that occurred 1–3 years post-treatment in a mixed conifer forest in central Idaho. Wildfire and prescribed fire burn severities were estimated as the difference in normalized burn ratio (dNBR) using Landsat imagery....
Hydrologic conditions controlling runoff generation immediately after wildfire
Brian A. Ebel, John A. Moody, Deborah A. Martin
2012, Water Resources Research (48)
We investigated the control of postwildfire runoff by physical and hydraulic properties of soil, hydrologic states, and an ash layer immediately following wildfire. The field site is within the area burned by the 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire in Colorado, USA. Physical and hydraulic property characterization included ash thickness, particle size...
Erosion, storage, and transport of sediment in two subbasins of the Rio Puerco, New Mexico
A. C. Gellis, M.J. Pavich, A.L. Ellwein, S. Aby, I. Clark, M.E. Wieczorek, R. Viger
2012, GSA Bulletin (124) 817-841
Arroyos in the American Southwest proceed through cut-and-fill cycles that operate at centennial to millennial time scales. The geomorphic community has put much effort into understanding the causes of arroyo cutting in the late Quaternary and in the modern record (late 1800s), while little effort has gone into understanding how...
Estimating parameters of hidden Markov models based on marked individuals: use of robust design data
William L. Kendall, Gary C. White, James E. Hines, Catherine A. Langtimm, Jun Yoshizaki
2012, Ecology (93) 913-920
Development and use of multistate mark-recapture models, which provide estimates of parameters of Markov processes in the face of imperfect detection, have become common over the last twenty years. Recently, estimating parameters of hidden Markov models, where the state of an individual can be uncertain even when it is detected,...
Spatial ecology of white-tailed deer fawns in the northern Great Plains: implications of loss of conservation reserve program grasslands
Troy W. Grovenburg, Robert W. Klaver, Jonathan A. Jenks
2012, Journal of Wildlife Management (76) 632-644
Few studies have evaluated how wildlife, and white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in particular, respond to Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) grasslands. We conducted a 3-year study (2007–2009) to determine the influence of CRP on fawn ecology during a time of declining CRP enrollment. We captured and radiocollared 81 fawn white-tailed deer...
Factors controlling nitrate fluxes in groundwater in agricultural areas
Lixia Liao, Christopher T. Green, Barbara A. Bekins, J.K. Böhlke
2012, Water Resources Research (48)
The impact of agricultural chemicals on groundwater quality depends on the interactions of biogeochemical and hydrologic factors. To identify key processes affecting distribution of agricultural nitrate in groundwater, a parsimonious transport model was applied at 14 sites across the U.S. Simulated vertical profiles of NO3-, N2 from denitrification, O2, Cl-,...