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The postseismic response to the 2002 M 7.9 Denali Fault earthquake: Constraints from InSAR 2003-2005
J. Biggs, R. Burgmann, J.T. Freymueller, Z. Lu, B. Parsons, I. Ryder, G. Schmalzle, Tim Wright
2009, Geophysical Journal International (176) 353-367
InSAR is particularly sensitive to vertical displacements, which can be important in distinguishing between mechanisms responsible for the postseismic response to large earthquakes (afterslip, viscoelastic relaxation). We produce maps of the surface displacements resulting from the postseismic response to the 2002 Denali Fault earthquake, using data from the Canadian Radarsat-1...
Calibration and validation of the relative differenced Normalized Burn Ratio (RdNBR) to three measures of fire severity in the Sierra Nevada and Klamath Mountains, California, USA
J.D. Miller, E. E. Knapp, C.H. Key, C.N. Skinner, C.J. Isbell, R.M. Creasy, J.W. Sherlock
2009, Remote Sensing of Environment (113) 645-656
Multispectral satellite data have become a common tool used in the mapping of wildland fire effects. Fire severity, defined as the degree to which a site has been altered, is often the variable mapped. The Normalized Burn Ratio (NBR) used in an absolute difference change detection protocol (dNBR), has become...
Multi-offset GPR methods for hyporheic zone investigations
T.R. Brosten, J.H. Bradford, J. P. McNamara, M.N. Gooseff, J.P. Zarnetske, W.B. Bowden, M.E. Johnston
2009, Conference Paper, Near Surface Geophysics
Porosity of stream sediments has a direct effect on hyporheic exchange patterns and rates. Improved estimates of porosity heterogeneity will yield enhanced simulation of hyporheic exchange processes. Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) velocity measurements are strongly controlled by water content thus accurate measures of GPR velocity in saturated sediments provides estimates of...
Hydrologic characterization of desert soils with varying degrees of pedogenesis: 1. field experiments evaluating plant-relevant soil water behavior
John R. Nimmo, Kim S. Perkins, Kevin M. Schmidt, David M. Miller, Jonathan D. Stock, Kamini Singha
2009, Vadose Zone Journal (8) 480-495
To assess the eff ect of pedogenesis on the soil moisture dynamics infl uencing the character and quality of ecological habitat, we conducted infi ltration and redistribution experiments on three alluvial deposits in the Mojave National Preserve: (i) recently deposited active wash sediments, (ii) a soil of early Holocene age,...
Scrub-shrub bird habitat associations at multiple spatial scales in beaver meadows in Massachusetts
R.B. Chandler, D.I. King, S. DeStefano
2009, The Auk (126) 186-197
Most scrub-shrub bird species are declining in the northeastern United States, and these declines are largely attributed to regional declines in habitat availability. American Beaver (Castor canadensis; hereafter “beaver”) populations have been increasing in the Northeast in recent decades, and beavers create scrub-shrub habitat through their dam-building and foraging activities....
USGS: Science at the intersection of land and ocean
M.D. Myers
2009, Sea Technology (50) 18-21
The US Geological Survey (USGS) conducts an ongoing national assessment of coastal change hazards in order to help protect lives and support management of coastal infrastructure and resources. The research group rapidly gathers to investigate coastal changes along the Gulf Coast's sandy beaches after each hurricane to examine the magnitude...
Chlorine-36 as a tracer of perchlorate origin
N.C. Sturchio, M. Caffee, Abelardo D. Beloso Jr., L.J. Heraty, J.K. Böhlke, P.B. Hatzinger, W.A. Jackson, B. Gu, J.M. Heikoop, M. Dale
2009, Environmental Science & Technology (43) 6934-6938
Perchlorate (ClO4−) is ubiquitous in the environment. It is produced naturally by atmospheric photochemical reactions, and also is synthesized in large quantities for military, aerospace, and industrial applications. Nitrate-enriched salt deposits of the Atacama Desert (Chile) contain high concentrations of natural ClO4−, and have been exported worldwide...
Along-Arc and Back-Arc Attenuation, Site Response, and Source Spectrum for the Intermediate-Depth 8 January 2006 M 6.7 Kythera, Greece, Earthquake
David M. Boore, A.A. Skarlatoudis, B.N. Margaris, B.P. Costas, C. Ventouzi
2009, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (99) 2410-2434
An M 6.7 intermediate-depth (66 km), in-slab earthquake occurring near the island of Kythera in Greece on 8 January 2006 was well recorded on networks of stations equipped with acceleration sensors and with broadband velocity sensors. All data were recorded digitally using recording instruments with resolutions ranging from almost 11...
Predatory senescence in ageing wolves
D.R. MacNulty, D.W. Smith, J.A. Vucetich, L.D. Mech, D.R. Stahler, C. Packer
2009, Ecology Letters (12) 1347-1356
It is well established that ageing handicaps the ability of prey to escape predators, yet surprisingly little is known about how ageing affects the ability of predators to catch prey. Research into long-lived predators has assumed that adults have uniform impacts on prey regardless of age. Here we use longitudinal...
A serological survey of infectious disease in Yellowstone National Park's canid community
E.S. Almberg, L.D. Mech, D.W. Smith, J.W. Sheldon, R.L. Crabtree
2009, PLoS ONE (4)
Background: Gray wolves (Canis lupus) were reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park (YNP) after a >70 year absence, and as part of recovery efforts, the population has been closely monitored. In 1999 and 2005, pup survival was significantly reduced, suggestive of disease outbreaks. Methodology/Principal Findings: We analyzed sympatric wolf, coyote (Canis...
Time-series modeling of reservoir effects on river nitrate concentrations
A.L. Schoch, K. E. Schilling, K.-S. Chan
2009, Advances in Water Resources (32) 1197-1205
Saylorville Reservoir is a 24.1 km2 impoundment of the Des Moines River located approximately 10 km north of the City of Des Moines, Iowa, USA. Surface water from the Des Moines River used for drinking water supply is impaired for nitrate-nitrogen. Monthly mean nitrate concentration data collected upstream and downstream...
A synthesis of Martian aqueous mineralogy after 1 Mars year of observations from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
S.L. Murchie, J.F. Mustard, B.L. Ehlmann, R.E. Milliken, J.L. Bishop, N.K. McKeown, E.Z. Noe Dobrea, F.P. Seelos, D.L. Buczkowski, S.M. Wiseman, R. E. Arvidson, J.J. Wray, G. Swayze, R. N. Clark, D.J. Des Marais, A. S. McEwen, J.-P. Bibring
2009, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (114)
Martian aqueous mineral deposits have been examined and characterized using data acquired during Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's (MRO) primary science phase, including Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars hyperspectral images covering the 0.4-3.9 ??m wavelength range, coordinated with higher-spatial resolution HiRISE and Context Imager images. MRO's new high-resolution measurements, combined with...
Louisiana wetland water level monitoring using retracked TOPEX/POSEIDON altimetry
H. Lee, C. K. Shum, Y. Yi, M. Ibaraki, J.-W. Kim, Andreas Braun, C.-Y. Kuo, Z. Lu
2009, Marine Geodesy (32) 284-302
Previous studies using satellite radar altimetry to observe inland river and wetland water level changes usually spatially average high-rate (10-Hz for TOPEX, 18-Hz for Envisat) measurements. Here we develop a technique to apply retracking of TOPEX waveforms by optimizing the estimated retracked gate positions using the Offset Center of Gravity...
On selecting a prior for the precision parameter of Dirichlet process mixture models
R.M. Dorazio
2009, Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (139) 3384-3390
In hierarchical mixture models the Dirichlet process is used to specify latent patterns of heterogeneity, particularly when the distribution of latent parameters is thought to be clustered (multimodal). The parameters of a Dirichlet process include a precision parameter ?? and a base probability measure G0. In problems where ?? is...
Obtaining parsimonious hydraulic conductivity fields using head and transport observations: A Bayesian geostatistical parameter estimation approach
Michael N. Fienen, R. Hunt, D. Krabbenhoft, T. Clemo
2009, Water Resources Research (45)
Flow path delineation is a valuable tool for interpreting the subsurface hydrogeochemical environment. Different types of data, such as groundwater flow and transport, inform different aspects of hydrogeologic parameter values (hydraulic conductivity in this case) which, in turn, determine flow paths. This work combines flow and transport information to estimate...
Climate alters response of an endemic island plant to removal of invasive herbivores
Mceachern A. Kathryn, D.M. Thomson, K.A. Chess
2009, Ecological Applications (19) 1574-1584
Islands experience higher rates of species extinction than mainland ecosystems, with biological invasions among the leading causes; they also serve as important model systems for testing ideas in basic and applied ecology. Invasive removal programs on islands are conservation efforts that can also be viewed as powerful manipulative experiments, but...
Phylogeny and phylogenetic classification of the antbirds, ovenbirds, woodcreepers, and allies (Aves: Passeriformes: Infraorder Furnariides)
R.G. Moyle, R.T. Chesser, R.T. Brumfield, J.G. Tello, D.J. Marchese, J. Cracraft
2009, Cladistics (25) 386-405
The infraorder Furnariides is a diverse group of suboscine passerine birds comprising a substantial component of the Neotropical avifauna. The included species encompass a broad array of morphologies and behaviours, making them appealing for evolutionary studies, but the size of the group (ca. 600 species) has limited well-sampled higher-level phylogenetic...
A method for assigning species into groups based on generalized Mahalanobis distance between habitat model coefficients
C.J. Williams, P.J. Heglund
2009, Environmental and Ecological Statistics (16) 495-513
Habitat association models are commonly developed for individual animal species using generalized linear modeling methods such as logistic regression. We considered the issue of grouping species based on their habitat use so that management decisions can be based on sets of species rather than individual species. This research was motivated...
Geospatial Data Used in Water-Level and Land-Subsidence Studies in the Mojave River and Morongo Groundwater Basins for 2008
Carolyn Glockhoff, Christina L. Stamos
2009, Report
During 2008, the U.S. Geological Survey and other agencies made approximately 2,500 water-level measurements in the Mojave River and Morongo groundwater basins. These data document recent conditions and, when compared with previous data, changes in groundwater levels. A water-level contour map was drawn using data from about 700 wells, providing...
Feature pruning by upstream drainage area to support automated generalization of the United States National Hydrography Dataset
L.V. Stanislawski
2009, Computers, Environment and Urban Systems (33) 325-333
The United States Geological Survey has been researching generalization approaches to enable multiple-scale display and delivery of geographic data. This paper presents automated methods to prune network and polygon features of the United States high-resolution National Hydrography Dataset (NHD) to lower resolutions. Feature-pruning rules, data enrichment, and partitioning are derived...
Developing collaborative classifiers using an expert-based model
G. Mountrakis, R. Watts, L. Luo, Jingyuan Wang
2009, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (75) 831-843
This paper presents a hierarchical, multi-stage adaptive strategy for image classification. We iteratively apply various classification methods (e.g., decision trees, neural networks), identify regions of parametric and geographic space where accuracy is low, and in these regions, test and apply alternate methods repeating the process until the entire image is...
A method to establish seismic noise baselines for automated station assessment
D.E. McNamara, C. R. Hutt, L.S. Gee, H.M. Benz, R.P. Buland
2009, Seismological Research Letters (80) 628-637
We present a method for quantifying station noise baselines and characterizing the spectral shape of out-of-nominal noise sources. Our intent is to automate this method in order to ensure that only the highest-quality data are used in rapid earthquake products at NEIC. In addition, the station noise baselines provide a...
Processes affecting δ34S and δ18O values of dissolved sulfate in alluvium along the Canadian River, central Oklahoma, USA
Michele L. Tuttle, George N. Breit, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli
2009, Chemical Geology (265) 455-467
The δ34S and δ18O values for dissolved sulfate in groundwater are commonly used in aquifer studies to identify sulfate reservoirs and describe biogeochemical processes. The utility of these data, however, often is compromised by mixing of sulfate sources within reservoirs and isotope fractionation during sulfur redox cycling. Our study shows...
Major earthquakes recorded by Speleothems in Midwestern U.S. caves
S.V. Panno, C.C. Lundstrom, Keith C. Hackley, B. Brandon Curry, B.W. Fouke, Z. Zhang
2009, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (99) 2147-2154
Historic earthquakes generated by the New Madrid seismic zone represent some of the largest recorded in the United States, yet prehistoric events are recognized only through deformation in late-Wisconsin to Holocene-age, near surface sediments (liquefaction, monoclinal folding, and changes in river meanders). In this article, we show that speleothems in...
TreeMAC: Localized TDMA MAC protocol for real-time high-data-rate sensor networks
W.-Z. Song, R. Huang, B. Shirazi, R.L. Husent
2009, Conference Paper, 7th Annual IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications, PerCom 2009
Earlier sensor network MAC protocols focus on energy conservation in low-duty cycle applications, while some recent applications involve real-time high-data-rate signals. This motivates us to design an innovative localized TDMA MAC protocol to achieve high throughput and low congestion in data collection sensor networks, besides energy conservation. TreeMAC divides a...