Latitudinal variations in Titan's methane and haze from Cassini VIMS observations
P.F. Penteado, C.A. Griffith, M.G. Tomasko, S. Engel, C. See, L. Doose, K. H. Baines, R. H. Brown, B. J. Buratti, R. Clark, P. Nicholson, Christophe Sotin
2010, Icarus (206) 352-365
We analyze observations taken with Cassini's Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS), to determine the current methane and haze latitudinal distribution between 60??S and 40??N. The methane variation was measured primarily from its absorption band at 0.61 ??m, which is optically thin enough to be sensitive to the methane abundance...
Detrital zircon evidence for progressive underthrusting in Franciscan metagraywackes, west-central California
C.A. Snow, J. Wakabayashi, W. G. Ernst, J. L. Wooden
2010, Geological Society of America Bulletin (122) 282-291
We present new U/Pb ages for detrital zircons separated from six quartzose metagraywackes collected from different Franciscan Complex imbricate nappes around San Francisco Bay. All six rocks contain a broad spread of Late Jurassic-Cretaceous grains originating from the Klamath-Sierra Nevada volcanic-plutonic arc. Units young structurally downward, consistent with models of...
Diurnal variation in invertebrate catch rates by sticky traps: Potential for biased indices of piping plover forage
M.J. Anteau, M. H. Sherfy
2010, Wetlands (30) 757-762
Measuring abundance of invertebrate forage for piping plovers (Charadrius melodus; hereafter plovers), a federally listed species in the USA, is an important component of research and monitoring targeted toward species recovery. Sticky traps are commonly used to passively sample invertebrates, but catch rates may vary diurnally or in response to...
Time-dependent seismic tomography
B.R. Julian, G.R. Foulger
2010, Geophysical Journal International (182) 1327-1338
Of methods for measuring temporal changes in seismic-wave speeds in the Earth, seismic tomography is among those that offer the highest spatial resolution. 3-D tomographic methods are commonly applied in this context by inverting seismic wave arrival time data sets from different epochs independently and assuming that differences in the...
Sediment discharges during storm flow from proximal urban and rural karst springs, central Kentucky, USA
T.M. Reed, McFarland J. Todd, A.E. Fryar, A.W. Fogle, J.L. Taraba
2010, Journal of Hydrology (383) 280-290
Since the mid-1990s, various studies have addressed the timing of sediment transport to karst springs during storm flow or the composition and provenance of sediment discharged from springs. However, relatively few studies have focused on the flow thresholds at which sediment is mobilized or total sediment yields across various time...
Small mammals associated with colonies of black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) in the Southern High Plains
A.L. Pruett, C. W. Boal, M.C. Wallace, Heather A. Whitlaw, J.D. Ray
2010, Southwestern Naturalist (55) 50-56
We compared diversity and abundance of small mammals at colonies of black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus) and paired non-colony sites. Of colonies of black-tailed prairie dogs in our study area, >80 were on slopes of playa lakes; thus, we used sites of colonies and non-colonies that were on slopes of...
Spatial trends in tidal flat shape and associated environmental parameters in South San Francisco Bay
J.A. Bearman, Carl T. Friedrichs, B. E. Jaffe, A.C. Foxgrover
2010, Journal of Coastal Research (26) 342-349
Spatial trends in the shape of profiles of South San Francisco Bay (SSFB) tidal flats are examined using bathymetric and lidar data collected in 2004 and 2005. Eigenfunction analysis reveals a dominant mode of morphologic variability related to the degree of convexity or concavity in the cross-shore profileindicative of (i)...
Global estimates of evapotranspiration and gross primary production based on MODIS and global meteorology data
W. Yuan, S. Liu, G. Yu, J.-M. Bonnefond, J. Chen, K. Davis, A.R. Desai, Allen H. Goldstein, D. Gianelle, F. Rossi, A.E. Suyker, S.B. Verma
2010, Remote Sensing of Environment (114) 1416-1431
The simulation of gross primary production (GPP) at various spatial and temporal scales remains a major challenge for quantifying the global carbon cycle. We developed a light use efficiency model, called EC-LUE, driven by only four variables: normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), air temperature, and...
Detecting the spatial and temporal variability of chlorophyll-a concentration and total suspended solids in Apalachicola Bay, Florida using MODIS imagery
Hongqing Wang, C.M. Hladik, W. Huang, K. Milla, L. Edmiston, M.A. Harwell, J.F. Schalles
2010, International Journal of Remote Sensing (31) 439-453
Apalachicola Bay, Florida, accounts for 90% of Florida's and 10% of the nation's eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) harvesting. Chlorophyll-a concentration and total suspended solids (TSS) are two important water quality variables, among other environmental factors such as salinity, for eastern oyster production in Apalachicola Bay. In this research,...
Soil organic carbon stocks in Alaska estimated with spatial and pedon data
Norman B. Bliss, J. Maursetter
2010, Soil Science Society of America Journal (74) 565-579
Temperatures in high-latitude ecosystems are increasing faster than the average rate of global warming, which may lead to a positive feedback for climate change by increasing the respiration rates of soil organic C. If a positive feedback is confirmed, soil C will represent a source of greenhouse gases that is...
Predicting the probability and volume of postwildfire debris flows in the intermountain western United States
S.H. Cannon, J.E. Gartner, M.G. Rupert, J. A. Michael, A. H. Rea, C. Parrett
2010, Geological Society of America Bulletin (122) 127-144
Empirical models to estimate the probability of occurrence and volume of postwildfire debris flows can be quickly implemented in a geographic information system (GIS) to generate debris-flow hazard maps either before or immediately following wildfires. Models that can be used to calculate the probability of debris-flow production from individual drainage...
Judging a brook by its cover: The relation between ecological condition of a stream and urban land cover in new England
J.F. Coles, T. F. Cuffney, G. McMahon, C. J. Rosiu
2010, Northeastern Naturalist (17) 29-48
The US Geological Survey conducted an urban land-use study in the New England Coastal Basins (NECB) area during 2001 to determine how urbanization relates to changes in the ecological condition of streams. Thirty sites were selected that differed in their level of watershed development (low to high). An urban intensity...
Paradigms and proboscideans in the southern Great Lakes region, USA
J.J. Saunders, E.C. Grimm, C.C. Widga, G.D. Campbell, B. Brandon Curry, D.A. Grimley, P.R. Hanson, J.P. McCullum, J.S. Oliver, J.D. Treworgy
2010, Quaternary International (217) 175-187
Thirteen new chronometric dates for Illinois proboscideans are considered in relation to well-dated pollen records from northeastern and central Illinois. These dates span an interval from 21,228 to 12,944 cal BP. When compared to pollen spectra, it is evident that Mammut americanum inhabited spruce (Picea) and black ash (Fraxinus nigra)...
Mid-Piacensian mean annual sea surface temperature: an analysis for data-model comparisons
Harry J. Dowsett, Marci M. Robinson, Kevin M. Foley, Danielle K. Stoll
2010, Stratigraphy (7) 189-198
Numerical models of the global climate system are the primary tools used to understand and project climate disruptions in the form of future global warming. The Pliocene has been identified as the closest, albeit imperfect, analog to climate conditions expected for the end of this century, making an independent data...
A trade-off solution between model resolution and covariance in surface-wave inversion
J. Xia, Y. Xu, R. D. Miller, C. Zeng
2010, Pure and Applied Geophysics (167) 1537-1547
Regularization is necessary for inversion of ill-posed geophysical problems. Appraisal of inverse models is essential for meaningful interpretation of these models. Because uncertainties are associated with regularization parameters, extra conditions are usually required to determine proper parameters for assessing inverse models. Commonly used techniques for assessment of a geophysical inverse...
Land use and small mammal predation effects on shortgrass prairie birds
T.R. Stanley
2010, Journal of Wildlife Management (74) 1825-1833
Grassland birds endemic to the central shortgrass prairie ecoregion of the United States have experienced steep and widespread declines over the last 3 decades, and factors influencing reproductive success have been implicated. Nest predation is the major cause of nest failure in passerines, and nesting success for some shortgrass prairie...
New models for Paleoproterozoic orogenesis in the Cheyenne belt region: Evidence from the geology and U-Pb geochronology of the Big Creek Gneiss, southeastern Wyoming
D.S. Jones, A.W. Snoke, W. R. Premo, K.R. Chamberlain
2010, Geological Society of America Bulletin (122) 1877-1898
The disputed age of the deep crust of the Colorado Province is central to hypotheses for Paleoproterozoic crustal growth in the region. We studied the high-grade Big Creek Gneiss, southeastern Wyoming, as a potential exposure of pre-1780 Ma basement rocks. New geologic mapping and U-Pb geochronological data indicate that the...
Terrestrial reference standard sites for postlaunch sensor calibration
P.M. Teillet, G. Chander
2010, Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing (36) 437-450
In an era when the number of Earth observation satellites is rapidly growing and measurements from satellite sensors are used to address increasingly urgent global issues, often through synergistic and operational combinations of data from multiple sources, it is imperative that scientists and decision-makers are able to rely on the...
Shallow subsurface structure of the Wasatch fault, Provo segment, Utah, from integrated compressional and shear-wave seismic reflection profiles with implications for fault structure and development
J.H. McBride, W. J. Stephenson, R. A. Williams, J. K. Odum, D. M. Worley, J.V. South, A.R. Brinkerhoff, R.W. Keach, A. O. Okojie-Ayoro
2010, Geological Society of America Bulletin (122) 1800-1814
Integrated vibroseis compressional and experimental hammer-source, shear-wave, seismic reflection profiles across the Provo segment of the Wasatch fault zone in Utah reveal near-surface and shallow bedrock structures caused by geologically recent deformation. Combining information from the seismic surveys, geologic mapping, terrain analysis, and previous seismic first-arrival modeling provides a well-constrained...
Effect of imperfect detectability on adaptive and conventional sampling: Simulated sampling of freshwater mussels in the upper Mississippi River
D. R. Smith, B. R. Gray, T.J. Newton, D. Nichols
2010, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (170) 499-507
Adaptive sampling designs are recommended where, as is typical with freshwater mussels, the outcome of interest is rare and clustered. However, the performance of adaptive designs has not been investigated when outcomes are not only rare and clustered but also imperfectly detected. We address this combination of challenges using data...
Locating non-volcanic tremor along the San Andreas Fault using a multiple array source imaging technique
T. Ryberg, C.H. Haberland, G. S. Fuis, W.L. Ellsworth, D.R. Shelly
2010, Geophysical Journal International (183) 1485-1500
Non-volcanic tremor (NVT) has been observed at several subduction zones and at the San Andreas Fault (SAF). Tremor locations are commonly derived by cross-correlating envelope-transformed seismic traces in combination with source-scanning techniques. Recently, they have also been located by using relative relocations with master events, that is low-frequency earthquakes that...
Sediment contamination of residential streams in the metropolitan Kansas City area, USA: Part II. whole-sediment toxicity to the amphipod hyalella azteca
J. Tao, Christopher G. Ingersoll, Nile E. Kemble, J.R. Dias, J.B. Murowchick, G. Welker, D. Huggins
2010, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (59) 370-381
This is the second part of a study that evaluates the influence of nonpoint sources on the sediment quality of five adjacent streams within the metropolitan Kansas City area, central United States. Physical, chemical, and toxicity data (Hyalella azteca 28-day whole-sediment toxicity test) for 29 samples collected in 2003 were...
Forest responses to increasing aridity and warmth in the southwestern United States
A.P. Williams, Craig D. Allen, C. I. Millar, T.W. Swetnam, J. Michaelsen, C.J. Still, Steven W. Leavitt
2010, PNAS (107) 21289-21294
In recent decades, intense droughts, insect outbreaks, and wildfires have led to decreasing tree growth and increasing mortality in many temperate forests. We compared annual tree-ring width data from 1,097 populations in the coterminous United States to climate data and evaluated site-specific tree responses to climate variations throughout the 20th...
Summary of the Second International Planetary Dunes Workshop: Planetary Analogs - Integrating Models, Remote Sensing, and Field Data, Alamosa, Colorado, USA, May 18-21, 2010
L.K. Fenton, M.A. Bishop, M.C. Bourke, C.S. Bristow, R.K. Hayward, B.H. Horgan, N. Lancaster, T.I. Michaels, D. Tirsch, T.N. Titus, A. Valdez
2010, Conference Paper, Aeolian Research
The Second International Planetary Dunes Workshop took place in Alamosa, Colorado, USA from May 18-21, 2010. The workshop brought together researchers from diverse backgrounds to foster discussion and collaboration regarding terrestrial and extra-terrestrial dunes and dune systems. Two and a half days were spent on five oral sessions and one...
Holocene variations in mineral and grain-size composition along the East Greenland glaciated margin (ca 67°–70°N): local versus long-distance sediment transport
John T. Andrews, Anne E. Jennings, George C. Coleman, Dennis D. Eberl
2010, Quaternary Science Reviews (29) 2619-2632
Quantitative X-Ray Diffraction (qXRD) analysis of the <2 mm sediment fraction from surface (sea floor) samples, and marine sediment cores that span the last 10-12 cal ka BP, are used to describe spatial and temporal variations in non-clay mineral compositions for an area between Kangerlussuaq Trough and Scoresby Sund (???67??-70??N),...