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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Efficacy of monitoring and empirical predictive modeling at improving public health protection at Chicago beaches
Meredith B. Nevers, Richard L. Whitman
2011, Water Research (45) 1659-1668
Efforts to improve public health protection in recreational swimming waters have focused on obtaining real-time estimates of water quality. Current monitoring techniques rely on the time-intensive culturing of fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) from water samples, but rapidly changing FIB concentrations result in management errors that lead to the public being...
Lead in birds
J. Christian Franson, Deborah J. Pain
W. Nelson Beyer, James Parnell Meador, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Environmental contaminants in biota: Interpreting tissue concentrations
Lead is a highly toxic heavy metal that acts as a nonspecific poison affecting all body systems and has no known biological requirement. Absorption of low concentrations may result in a wide range of sublethal effects in animals, and higher concentrations may result in mortality (Demayo et al. 1982).Lead has...
A multitracer approach for characterizing interactions between shallow groundwater and the hydrothermal system in the Norris Geyser Basin area, Yellowstone National Park
W.P. Gardner, David D. Susong, D. K. Solomon, H.P. Heasler
2011, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (12)
Multiple environmental tracers are used to investigate age distribution, evolution, and mixing in local‐ to regional‐scale groundwater circulation around the Norris Geyser Basin area in Yellowstone National Park. Springs ranging in temperature from 3°C to 90°C in the Norris Geyser Basin area were sampled for stable isotopes of hydrogen and...
Agricultural practices and residual corn during spring crane and waterfowl migration in Nebraska
Mark H. Sherfy, Michael J. Anteau, A.A. Bishop
2011, Journal of Wildlife Management (75) 995-1003
Nebraska's Central Platte River Valley (CPRV) is a major spring‐staging area for migratory birds. Over 6 million ducks, geese, and sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) stage there en route to tundra, boreal forest, and prairie breeding habitats, storing nutrients for migration and reproduction by consuming primarily corn remaining in fields after...
OBIS-USA: a data-sharing legacy of the census of marine life
G.R. Sedberry, D.G. Fautin, M. Feldman, M.D. Fornwall, P. Goldstein, R.P. Guralnick
2011, Oceanography (24) 166-173
The United States Geological Survey's Biological Informatics Program hosts OBIS-USA, the US node of the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS). OBIS-USA gathers, coordinates, applies standard formats to, and makeswidely available data on biological collections in marine waters of the United States and other areas where US investigators have collected data...
Young (<7 Ma) gold deposits and active geothermal systems of the Great Basin: Enigmas, questions, and exploration potential
Mark F. Coolbaugh, Peter G. Vikre, James E. Faulds
2011, Conference Paper, Geological Society of Nevada Symposium 2010: Great Basin Evolution and Metallogeny
Young gold systems in the Great Basin (£ 7 Ma), though not as well studied as their older counterparts, comprise a rapidly growing and in some ways controversial group. The gold inventory for these systems has more than doubled in the last 5 years from roughly 370 tonnes (12 Moz)...
Deciphering fluid sources of hydrothermal systems: A combined Sr- and S-isotope study on barite (Schwarzwald, SW Germany)
S. Staude, S. Gob, K. Pfaff, F. Strobele, W. R. Premo, G. Markl
2011, Chemical Geology (286) 1-20
Primary and secondary barites from hydrothermal mineralizations in SW Germany were investigated, for the first time, by a combination of strontium (Sr) isotope systematics (87Sr/86Sr), Sr contents and δ34S values to distinguish fluid sources and precipitation mechanisms responsible for their formation. Barite of Permian age derived its Sr solely from...
Revisiting the Earth's sea-level and energy budgets from 1961 to 2008
John A. Church, Neil J. White, Leonard F. Konikow, Catia M. Domingues, J. Graham Cogley, Eric Rignot, Jonathan M. Gregory, Michiel R. van den Broeke, Andrew J. Monaghan, Isabella Velicogna
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
We review the sea-level and energy budgets together from 1961, using recent and updated estimates of all terms. From 1972 to 2008, the observed sea-level rise (1.8 0.2 mm yr-1 from tide gauges alone and 2.1 0.2 mm yr -1 from a combination of tide gauges and altimeter observations) agrees...
Growth rate and age distribution of deep-sea black corals in the Gulf of Mexico
N.G. Prouty, E.B. Roark, N.A. Buster, Steve W. Ross
2011, Marine Ecology Progress Series (423) 101-115
Black corals (order Antipatharia) are important long-lived, habitat-forming, sessile, benthic suspension feeders that are found in all oceans and are usually found in water depths greater than 30 m. Deep-water black corals are some of the slowest-growing, longest-lived deep-sea corals known. Previous age dating of a limited number of black...
Molecular typing of Escherichia coli strains associated with threatened sea ducks and near-shore marine habitats of south-west Alaska
Tuula E. Hollmén, Chitrita DebRoy, Paul L. Flint, David E. Safine, Jason L. Schamber, Ann E. Riddle, Kimberly A. Trust
2011, Environmental Microbiology Reports (3) 262-269
In Alaska, sea ducks winter in coastal habitats at remote, non-industrialized areas, as well as in proximity to human communities and industrial activity. We evaluated prevalence and characteristics of Escherichia coli strains in faecal samples of Steller's eiders (Polysticta stelleri; n = 122) and harlequin ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus; n = 21) at an industrialized site and Steller's eiders...
Strong climate and tectonic control on plagioclase weathering in granitic terrain
C. Rasmussen, S. Brantley, D.D.B. Richter, Alex E. Blum, J. Dixon, Arthur F. White
2011, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (301) 521-530
Investigations to understand linkages among climate, erosion and weathering are central to quantifying landscape evolution. We approach these linkages through synthesis of regolith data for granitic terrain compiled with respect to climate, geochemistry, and denudation rates for low sloping upland profiles. Focusing on Na as a proxy for plagioclase weathering, we quantified regolith Na depletion, Na mass...
Sea ice loss enhances wave action at the Arctic coast
I. Overeem, R. Scott Anderson, C.W. Wobus, Gary D. Clow, Frank E. Urban, N. Matell
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
Erosion rates of permafrost coasts along the Beaufort Sea accelerated over the past 50 years synchronously with Arctic‐wide declines in sea ice extent, suggesting a causal relationship between the two. A fetch‐limited wave model driven by sea ice position and local wind data from northern Alaska indicates that the exposure...
Improving national-scale invasion maps: Tamarisk in the western United States
Catherine S. Jarnevich, P. Evangelista, Thomas J. Stohlgren, Jeffrey T. Morisette
2011, Western North American Naturalist (71) 164-175
New invasions, better field data, and novel spatial-modeling techniques often drive the need to revisit previous maps and models of invasive species. Such is the case with the at least 10 species of Tamarix, which are invading riparian systems in the western United States and expanding their range throughout...
Proactive aquatic ecotoxicological assessment of room-temperature ionic liquids
K. J. Kulacki, D. T. Chaloner, James H. Larson, D. M. Costello, M. A. Evans-White, K. M. Docherty, R. J. Bernot, M. A. Brueseke, C. F. Kulpa, G. A. Lamberti
2011, Current Organic Chemistry (15) 1918-1927
Aquatic environments are being contaminated with a myriad of anthropogenic chemicals, a problem likely to continue due to both unintentional and intentional releases. To protect valuable natural resources, novel chemicals should be shown to be environmentally safe prior to use and potential release into the environment. Such proactive assessment is...
Unravelling long-term vegetation change patterns in a binational watershed using multitemporal land cover data and historical photography
M.L. Villarreal, Laura M. Norman, Robert Webb, Diane E. Boyer, R.E. Turner
2011, Conference Paper, 2011 6th International Workshop on the Analysis of Multi-Temporal Remote Sensing Images, Multi-Temp 2011 - Proceedings
A significant amount of research conducted in the Sonoran Desert of North America has documented, both anecdotally and empirically, major vegetation changes over the past century due to human land use activities. However, many studies lack coincidental landscape-scale data characterizing the spatial and temporal manifestation of these changes. Vegetation changes...
Characterizing land surface change and levee stability in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta using UAVSAR radar imagery
C. Jones, G. Bawden, S. Deverel, J. Dudas, S. Hensley
2011, Conference Paper, International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
The islands of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta have been subject to subsidence since they were first reclaimed from the estuary marshlands starting over 100 years ago, with most of the land currently lying below mean sea level. This area, which is the primary water resource of the state of California,...
Adaptive finite volume methods with well-balanced Riemann solvers for modeling floods in rugged terrain: Application to the Malpasset dam-break flood (France, 1959)
D.L. George
2011, International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids (66) 1000-1018
The simulation of advancing flood waves over rugged topography, by solving the shallow-water equations with well-balanced high-resolution finite volume methods and block-structured dynamic adaptive mesh refinement (AMR), is described and validated in this paper. The efficiency of block-structured AMR makes large-scale problems tractable, and allows the use of accurate and...
The indication of Martian gully formation processes by slope-area analysis
Susan J. Conway, Matthew R. Balme, John B. Murray, Martin C. Towner, Chris Okubo, Peter M. Grindrod
2011, Geological Society Special Publication (356) 171-201
The formation process of recent gullies on Mars is currently under debate. This study aims to discriminate between the proposed formation processes - pure water flow, debris flow and dry mass wasting - through the application of geomorphological indices commonly used in terrestrial geomorphology. High-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) of...
Nitrogen uptake by the shoots of smooth cordgrass Spartina alterniflora
T. J. Mozdzer, M. Kirwan, K. J. McGlathery, J. C. Zieman
2011, Marine Ecology Progress Series (433) 43-52
The smooth cordgrass Spartina alterniflora is the foundation species in intertidal salt marshes of the North American Atlantic coast. Depending on its elevation within the marsh, S. alterniflora may be submerged for several hours per day. Previous ecosystem-level studies have demonstrated that S. alterniflora marshes are a net sink for nitrogen (N), and that removal of...
Mineralogic sources of metals in leachates from the weathering of sedex, massive sulfide, and vein deposit mining wastes
S. F. Diehl, P. L. Hageman, R.R. Seal II, N.M. Piatak, H. Lowers
2011, Conference Paper, SME Annual Meeting and Exhibit and CMA 113th National Western Mining Conference 2011
Weathered mine waste consists of oxidized primary minerals and chemically unstable secondary phases that can be sources of readily soluble metals and acid rock drainage. Elevated concentrations of metals such as Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, and Zn are observed in deionized water-based leachate solutions derived from complex sedex...
Coordinating standards and applications for optical water quality sensor networks
B. Bergamaschi, B. Pellerin
2011, Conference Paper, Eos
Joint USGS-CUAHSI Workshop: In Situ Optical Water Quality Sensor Networks; Shepherdstown, West Virginia, 8-10 June 2011; Advanced in situ optical water quality sensors and new techniques for data analysis hold enormous promise for advancing scientific understanding of aquatic systems through measurements of important biogeochemical parameters at the time scales over...
From agricultural intensification to conservation: Sediment transport in the Raccoon River, Iowa, 1916-2009
C.S. Jones, K. E. Schilling
2011, Journal of Environmental Quality (40) 1911-1923
Fluvial sediment is a ubiquitous pollutant that negatively aff ects surface water quality and municipal water supply treatment. As part of its routine water supply monitoring, the Des Moines Water Works (DMWW) has been measuring turbidity daily in the Raccoon River since 1916. For this study, we calibrated daily turbidity...
Inversion of multi-frequency electromagnetic induction data for 3D characterization of hydraulic conductivity
Troy R. Brosten, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Gregory M. Schultz, Gary P. Curtis, John W. Lane Jr.
2011, Journal of Applied Geophysics (73) 323-335
Electromagnetic induction (EMI) instruments provide rapid, noninvasive, and spatially dense data for characterization of soil and groundwater properties. Data from multi-frequency EMI tools can be inverted to provide quantitative electrical conductivity estimates as a function of depth. In this study, multi-frequency EMI data collected across an abandoned uranium mill site...
Potential for iron oxides to control metal releases in CO2 sequestration scenarios
P.M. Berger, William R. Roy
2011, Energy Procedia (4) 3195-3201
The potential for the release of metals into groundwater following the injection of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the subsurface during carbon sequestration projects remains an open research question. Changing the chemical composition of even the relatively deep formation brines during CO2 injection and storage may be of concern because of the...