The paleohydrology of unsaturated and saturated zones at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, and vicinity
James B. Paces, Joseph F. Whelan
John S. Stuckless, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Hydrology and geochemistry of Yucca Mountain and vicinity, Southern Nevada and California
Surface, unsaturated-zone, and saturated-zone hydrologic conditions at Yucca Mountain responded to past climate variations and are at least partly preserved by sediment, fossil, and mineral records. Characterizing past hydrologic conditions in surface and subsurface environments helps to constrain hydrologic responses expected under future climate conditions and improve predictions of repository...
Global digital elevation model development from satellite remote-sensing data
Dean B. Gesch
Xiaojun Yang, Jonathan Li, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Advances in mapping from remote sensor imagery: techniques and applications
A new perspective on the geometry of the San Andreas Fault in southern California and its relationship to lithospheric structure
Gary S. Fuis, Daniel S. Scheirer, Victoria E. Langenheim, Monica D. Kohler
2012, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (102) 236-251
The widely held perception that the San Andreas fault (SAF) is vertical or steeply dipping in most places in southern California may not be correct. From studies of potential‐field data, active‐source imaging, and seismicity, the dip of the SAF is significantly nonvertical in many locations. The direction of dip appears...
The 2010 explosive eruption of Java's Merapi volcano—A ‘100-year’ event
Surono, Philippe Jousset, John S. Pallister, Marie Boichu, M. Fabrizia Buongiorno, Agus Budisantoso, Fidel Costa, Supriyati Andreastuti, Fred Prata, David J. Schneider, Lieven Clarisse, Hanik Humaida, Sri Sumarti, Christian Bignami, Julia P. Griswold, Simon A. Carn, Clive Oppenheimer, Franck Lavigne
2012, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (241-242) 121-135
Merapi volcano (Indonesia) is one of the most active and hazardous volcanoes in the world. It is known for frequent small to moderate eruptions, pyroclastic flows produced by lava dome collapse, and the large population settled on and around the flanks of the volcano that is at risk. Its usual...
Structural equation modeling and the analysis of long-term monitoring data
James B. Grace, Jon E. Keeley, Darren J. Johnson, Kenneth A. Bollen
Robert A. Gitzen, Joshua J. Millspaugh, Andrew B. Cooper, Daniel S. Licht, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Design and analysis of long-term ecological monitoring studies
Quantifying anthropogenically driven morphologic changes on a barrier island: Fire Island National Seashore, New York
Meredith G. Kratzmann, Cheryl J. Hapke
2012, Journal of Coastal Research (28) 76-88
Beach scraping, beach replenishment, and the presence of moderate development have altered the morphology of the dune–beach system at Fire Island National Seashore, located on a barrier island on the south coast of Long Island, New York. Seventeen communities are interspersed with sections of natural, nonmodified land within the park...
Spatial pattern formation of coastal vegetation in response to external gradients and positive feedbacks affecting soil porewater salinity: A model study
J. Jiang, Donald L. DeAngelis, T. J. Smith III, S.Y. Teh, H. L. Koh
2012, Landscape Ecology (27) 109-119
Coastal vegetation of South Florida typically comprises salinity-tolerant mangroves bordering salinity-intolerant hardwood hammocks and fresh water marshes. Two primary ecological factors appear to influence the maintenance of mangrove/hammock ecotones against changes that might occur due to disturbances. One of these is a gradient in one or more environmental factors. The...
Modeling of soil erosion and sediment transport in the East River Basin in southern China
Yping Wu, Ji Chen
2012, Science of the Total Environment (441) 159-168
Soil erosion is a major global environmental problem that has caused many issues involving land degradation, sedimentation of waterways, ecological degradation, and nonpoint source pollution. Therefore, it is significant to understand the processes of soil erosion and sediment transport along rivers, and this can help identify the erosion prone areas...
Climate variability during the Medieval Climate Anomaly and Little Ice Age based on ostracod faunas and shell geochemistry from Biscayne Bay, Florida
Thomas M. Cronin, G. Lynn Wingard, Gary S. Dwyer, Peter K. Swart, Debra A. Willard, Jessica Albietz
2012, Book chapter, Ostracoda as proxies for quaternary climate change
An 800-year-long environmental history of Biscayne Bay, Florida, is reconstructed from ostracod faunal and shell geochemical (oxygen, carbon isotopes, Mg/Ca ratios) studies of sediment cores from three mudbanks in the central and southern parts of the bay. Using calibrations derived from analyses of modern Biscayne and Florida Bay ostracods, palaeosalinity...
An evaluation of the relative quality of dike pools for benthic macroinvertebrates in the Lower Missouri River, USA
B.C. Poulton, A.L. Allert
2012, River Research and Applications (28) 1658-1679
A habitat-based aquatic macroinvertebrate study was initiated in the Lower Missouri River to evaluate relative quality and biological condition of dike pool habitats. Water-quality and sediment-quality parameters and macroinvertebrate assemblage structure were measured from depositional substrates at 18 sites. Sediment porewater was analysed for ammonia, sulphide, pH and oxidation-reduction potential....
Effects of roads on survival of San Clemente Island foxes
N.P. Snow, William F. Andelt, Thomas R. Stanley, J.R. Resnik, L. Munson
2012, Journal of Wildlife Management (76) 243-252
Roads generate a variety of influences on wildlife populations; however, little is known about the effects of roads on endemic wildlife on islands. Specifically, road‐kills of island foxes (Urocyon littoralis) on San Clemente Island (SCI), Channel Islands, California, USA are a concern for resource managers. To determine the effects of...
Verifiable metamodels for nitrate losses to drains and groundwater in the Corn Belt, USA
Bernard T. Nolan, Robert W. Malone, Jo Ann M. Gronberg, K.R. Thorp, Liwang Ma
2012, Environmental Science & Technology (46) 901-908
Nitrate leaching in the unsaturated zone poses a risk to groundwater, whereas nitrate in tile drainage is conveyed directly to streams. We developed metamodels (MMs) consisting of artificial neural networks to simplify and upscale mechanistic fate and transport models for prediction of nitrate losses by drains and leaching in the...
KINEROS2/AGWA: Model use, calibration and validation
D.C. Goodrich, I.S. Burns, C.L. Unkrich, Darius J. Semmens, D.P. Guertin, M. Hernandez, S. Yatheendradas, Jeffrey R. Kennedy, Lainie R. Levick
2012, Transactions of the ASABE (55) 1561-1574
KINEROS (KINematic runoff and EROSion) originated in the 1960s as a distributed event-based model that conceptualizes a watershed as a cascade of overland flow model elements that flow into trapezoidal channel model elements. KINEROS was one of the first widely available watershed models that interactively coupled a finite difference approximation...
Multi-gauge Calibration for modeling the Semi-Arid Santa Cruz Watershed in Arizona-Mexico Border Area Using SWAT
Rewati Niraula, Laura A. Norman, Thomas Meixner, James B. Callegary
2012, Air, Soil and Water Research (2012) 41-57
In most watershed-modeling studies, flow is calibrated at one monitoring site, usually at the watershed outlet. Like many arid and semi-arid watersheds, the main reach of the Santa Cruz watershed, located on the Arizona-Mexico border, is discontinuous for most of the year except during large flood events, and therefore the...
Old groundwater in parts of the upper Patapsco aquifer, Atlantic Coastal Plain, Maryland, USA: Evidence from radiocarbon, chlorine-36 and helium-4
Niel Plummer, John R. Eggleston, Jeff P. Raffensperger, Andrew G. Hunt, Gerolamo C. Casile, D. C. Andreasen
2012, Hydrogeology Journal (20) 1269-1294
Apparent groundwater ages along two flow paths in the upper Patapsco aquifer of the Maryland Atlantic Coastal Plain, USA, were estimated using 14C, 36Cl and 4He data. Most of the ages range from modern to about 500 ka, with one sample at 117 km downgradient from the recharge area dated by radiogenic...
Automating calibration, sensitivity and uncertainty analysis of complex models using the R package Flexible Modeling Environment (FME): SWAT as an example
Y. Wu, S. Liu
2012, Environmental Modelling and Software (31) 99-109
Parameter optimization and uncertainty issues are a great challenge for the application of large environmental models like the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT), which is a physically-based hydrological model for simulating water and nutrient cycles at the watershed scale. In this study, we present a comprehensive modeling environment for...
On the causes of mid-Pliocene warmth and polar amplification
Daniel J. Lunt, Alan M. Haywood, Gavin A. Schmidt, Ulrich Salzmann, Paul J. Valdes, Harry J. Dowsett, Claire A. Loptson
2012, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (321-322) 128-138
The mid-Pliocene (~ 3 to 3.3 Ma ago), is a period of sustained global warmth in comparison to the late Quaternary (0 to ~ 1 Ma ago), and has potential to inform predictions of long-term future climate change. However, given that several processes potentially contributed, relatively little is understood about...
Molecular characterization and comparison of shale oils generated by different pyrolysis methods
Justin E. Birdwell, Jang Mi Jin, Sunghwan Kim
2012, Energy & Fuels (26)
Shale oils generated using different laboratory pyrolysis methods have been studied using standard oil characterization methods as well as Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) with electrospray ionization (ESI) and atmospheric photoionization (APPI) to assess differences in molecular composition. The pyrolysis oils were generated from samples of...
Biostratigraphy and chronostratigraphy of the Cambrian-Ordovician great American carbonate bank
John F. Taylor, John E. Repetski, James D. Loch, Stephen A. Leslie
2012, Book chapter, The great American carbonate bank: The geology and economic resources of the Cambrian-Ordovician Sauk megasequence of Laurentia
The carbonate strata of the great American carbonate bank (GACB) have been subdivided and correlated with ever-increasing precision and accuracy during the past half century through use of the dominant organisms that evolved on the Laurentian platform through the Cambrian and the Ordovician. Trilobites and conodonts remain the primary groups...
Parasite invasion following host reintroduction: a case of Yellowstone’s wolves
Paul C. Cross, Emily S. Almberg, Andrew P. Dobson, Douglas W. Smith, Peter J. Hudson
2012, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (367) 2840-2851
Wildlife reintroductions select or treat individuals for good health with the expectation that these individuals will fare better than infected animals. However, these individuals, new to their environment, may also be particularly susceptible to circulating infections and this may result in high morbidity and mortality, potentially jeopardizing the goals of...
Modeling of land use and reservoir effects on nonpoint source pollution in a highly agricultural basin
Yiping Wu, Shu-Guang Liu
2012, Journal of Environmental Monitoring (14) 2350-2361
Nonpoint source (NPS) pollution is tightly linked to land use activities that determine the sources and magnitudes of pollutant loadings to stream water. The pollutant loads may also be alleviated within reservoirs because of the physical interception resulting from changed hydrological regimes and other biochemical processes. It is important but...
Dissolved organic matter enhances microbial mercury methylation under sulfidic conditions
Andrew M. Graham, George R. Aiken, Cynthia Gilmour
2012, Environmental Science & Technology (46) 2715-2723
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is generally thought to lower metal bioavailability in aquatic systems due to the formation of metal–DOM complexes that reduce free metal ion concentrations. However, this model may not be pertinent for metal nanoparticles, which are now understood to be ubiquitous, sometimes dominant, metal species in the...
Multifractal model of magnetic susceptibility distributions in some igneous rocks
Mark E. Gettings
2012, Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics (19) 635-642
Measurements of in-situ magnetic susceptibility were compiled from mainly Precambrian crystalline basement rocks beneath the Colorado Plateau and ranges in Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico. The susceptibility meter used measures about 30 cm3 of rock and measures variations in the modal distribution of magnetic minerals that form a minor component...
Wildfire impacts on soil-water retention in the Colorado Front Range, United States
Brian A. Ebel
2012, Water Resources Research (48) 1-12
This work examined the plot-scale differences in soil-water retention caused by wildfire in the area of the 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire in the Colorado Front Range, United States. We measured soil-water retention curves on intact cores and repacked samples, soil particle-size distributions, and organic matter content. Estimates were also made...
Relationships between Δ14C and the molecular quality of dissolved organic carbon in rivers draining to the coast from the conterminous United States
David Butman, Peter A. Raymond, Kenna D. Butler, George R. Aiken
2012, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (26)
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in natural waters possesses chemical and molecular qualities indicative of its source and age. The apportionment of DOC by age into millennial and decadal pools is necessary to understand the temporal connection between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in the global carbon cycle. We measured Δ14C-DOC and...