Mercury-contaminated hydraulic mining debris in San Francisco Bay
Robin M. Bouse, Christopher C. Fuller, Samuel N. Luoma, Michelle I. Hornberger, Bruce E. Jaffe, Richard E. Smith
2010, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (8) 1-28
The hydraulic gold-mining process used during the California Gold Rush and in many developing countries today contributes enormous amounts of sediment to rivers and streams. Commonly, accompanying this sediment are contaminants such as elemental mercury and cyanide used in the gold extraction process. We show that some of the mercurycontaminated...
Heat Flow and Hydrologic Characteristics at the AND-1B borehole, ANDRILL McMurdo Ice Shelf Project, Antarctica
Roger H. Morin, Trevor Williams, Stuart Henry, Diana Magens and Frank Niessen, Dhiresh Hansaraj
2010, Geosphere (6) 370-378
The Antarctic Drilling Program (ANDRILL) successfully drilled and cored a borehole, AND-1B, beneath the McMurdo Ice Shelf and into a flexural moat basin that surrounds Ross Island. Total drilling depth reached 1285 m below seafloor (mbsf) with 98 percent core recovery for the detailed study of glacier dynamics. With the...
Anomalously low strength of serpentinite sheared against granite and implications for creep on the Hayward and Calaveras Faults
Diane E. Moore, David A. Lockner, David A. Ponce
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Third Conference on Earthquake Hazards in the Eastern San Francisco Bay Area : science, hazard, engineering and risk: California Geological Survey Special Publicatoin 219
Serpentinized ophiolitic rocks are juxtaposed against quartzofeldspathic rocks at depth across considerable portions of the Hayward and Calaveras Faults. The marked compositional contrast between these rock types may contribute to fault creep that has been observed along these faults. To investigate this possibility, we are conducting hydrothermal shearing experiments to...
Using GIS and Google Earth for the creation of the Going-to-the-Sun Road Avalanche Atlas, Glacier National Park, Montana, USA
Erich H. Peitzsch, Daniel B. Fagre, Mark Dundas
2010, Conference Paper
Snow avalanche paths are key geomorphologic features in Glacier National Park, Montana, and an important component of mountain ecosystems: they are isolated within a larger ecosystem, they are continuously disturbed, and they contain unique physical characteristics (Malanson and Butler, 1984). Avalanches impact subalpine forest structure and function, as well...
Global earthquake casualties due to secondary effects: A quantitative analysis for improving PAGER losses
Kristin Marano, David J. Wald, Trevor I. Allen
2010, Natural Hazards (52) 319-328
This study presents a quantitative and geospatial description of global losses due to earthquake-induced secondary effects, including landslide, liquefaction, tsunami, and fire for events during the past 40 years. These processes are of great importance to the US Geological Survey’s (USGS) Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response (PAGER) system,...
The use of scenario analysis to assess water ecosystem services in response to future land use change in the Willamette River Basin, Oregon
M. Hernandez, W. G. Kepner, D. G. Goodrich, Darius J. Semmens
2010, Book chapter
Human pressures on the natural resources of the United States have resulted in many unintended changes in our ecosystems, e.g., loss of biodiversity, habitat degradation, increases in the number of endangered species, and increases in contamination and water pollution. Environmental managers are concerned about broad-scale changes in land use and...
Mechanics and modeling of flow, sediment transport and morphologic change in riverine lateral separation zones
Brandy L. Logan, Jonathan M. Nelson, Richard R. McDonald, Scott Wright
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2nd joint federal interagency conference (9th federal interagency sedimentation conference and 4th federal interagency hydrologic modeling conference)
Lateral separation zones or eddies in rivers are critically important features for sediment storage and for a variety of roles they play in riparian and aquatic ecology. As part of a larger effort to predict the morphology of lateral separation zones in the Colorado River in Grand Canyon for a...
Effects of groundwater-flow paths on nitrate concentrations across two riparian forest corridors
Gary K. Speiran
2010, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (46) 246-260
Groundwater levels, apparent age, and chemistry from field sites and groundwater-flow modeling of hypothetical aquifers collectively indicate that groundwater-flow paths contribute to differences in nitrate concentrations across riparian corridors. At sites in Virginia (one coastal and one Piedmont), lowland forested wetlands separate upland fields from nearby surface waters (an estuary...
Storm surge modeling and applications in coastal areas
Shisir K. Dube, Tad S. Murty, Jesse C. Feyen, Reggina Cabrera, Bruce A. Harper, Jerad D. Bales, Saud A. Amer
2010, Book chapter, World Scientific Series on Asia-Pacific Weather and Climate
This chapter introduces the reader to a wide spectrum of storm surge modeling systems used to assess the impact of tropical cyclones, covering a range of numerical methods, model domains, forcing and boundary conditions, and purposes. New technologies to obtain data such as deployment of temporary sensors and remote sensing...
Increasing precision of turbidity-based suspended sediment concentration and load estimates
John D. Jastram, Carl E. Zipper, Lucian W. Zelanzny, Kenneth Hyer
2010, Journal of Environmental Quality (39) 1306-1316
Turbidity is an effective tool for estimating and monitoring suspended sediments in aquatic systems. Turbidity can be measured in situ remotely and at fine temporal scales as a surrogate for suspended sediment concentration (SSC), providing opportunity for a more complete record of SSC than is possible with physical sampling approaches....
Aquifer characteristics near cuestas and their relation to rock tensile strength
Roger H. Morin, William H. Schulz
James LoCoco, editor(s)
2010, Conference Paper
Along the northeast coast of North America, extensional tectonic processes have generated lithologic and topographic features that are common to several rift basins. A cap of igneous rock overlies sedimentary rock to form a cuesta with both rock types exposed along a steep ridge flank. Field studies investigating the near‐surface...
Comparison of atmospheric mercury speciation and deposition at nine sites across central and eastern North America
Mark A. Engle, Michael T. Tate, David P. Krabbenhoft, James J Schauer, Allan Kolker, James B. Shanley, Michael Bothner
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research (115)
This study presents >5 cumulative years of tropospheric mercury (Hg) speciation measurements, over the period of 2003–2009, for eight sites in the central and eastern United States and one site in coastal Puerto Rico. The purpose of this research was to identify local and regional processes that impact Hg speciation...
Developing a spatially distributed terrestrial biogeochemical cycle modeling system to support the management of Fort Benning and its surrounding areas
Shuguang Liu, Larry L. Tieszen, Shuqing Zhao, Zhen Li, Jinxun Liu
2010, Report
The overarching goal of this project is to develop an advanced, spatially distributed biogeochemical cycle modeling system to simulate the dynamics of ecosystem C and N cycles under historical, current, and future land use and disturbances scenarios. The modeling system and simulated results were used to facilitate the evaluation of...
GAGES: A stream gage database for evaluating natural and alteredflow conditions in the conterminous United States
James A. Falcone, Daren M. Carlisle, David M. Wolock, Michael R. Meador
2010, Ecology (91) 621-621
Stream flow is a controlling element in the ecology of rivers and streams. Knowledge of the natural flow regime facilitates the assessment of whether specific hydrologic attributes have been altered by humans in a particular stream and the establishment of specific goals for stream-flow restoration. Because most streams are ungaged...
Erosion of tilted fault blocks and deposition of coarse sediments in half-graben basins during late stages of extension: Gold Butte area, Basin and Range Province
Keith A. Howard, Sue Beard, M. A. Kuntz, Michael J. Kunk, Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki, M. E. Perkins, Ivo Lucchitta
2010, GSA Special Papers (463) 147-170
The provenance and stratigraphic architecture of basin-filling Miocene sediments around the Gold Butte area, southern Nevada, and adjacent highlands record the erosion of fault blocks that progressively tilted during extension. This study focuses especially on upper Miocene correlatives of the red sandstone unit and the Muddy Creek Formation that were...
Trait-based approaches in the analysis of stream fish communities
Emmanuel Frimpong, Paul L. Angermeier
2010, Conference Paper, American Fisheries Society Symposium
Species traits are used to study the functional organization of fish communities for a range of reasons, from simply reducing data dimensionality to providing mechanistic explanations for observed variation in communities. Ecological and life history traits have been used to understand the basic ecology of fishes and predict (1) species...
Methods based on surface-water data
Richard W. Healy
2010, Book chapter, Estimating groundwater recharge
Streamflow data are commonly used to estimate recharge rates in humid and subhumid regions, in part because of the abundance of streamflow data and the availability of computer programs for analyzing those data. Most of the methods described in this chapter are easy to use, but application of any of...
Topographic evolution of sandbars: Flume experiment and computational modeling
Paul J. Kinzel, Jonathan M. Nelson, Richard R. McDonald, Brandy L. Logan
2010, Conference Paper
Measurements of sandbar formation and evolution were carried out in a laboratory flume and the topographic characteristics of these barforms were compared to predictions from a computational flow and sediment transport model with bed evolution. The flume experiment produced sandbars with approximate mode 2, whereas numerical simulations produced a bed...
Estimating carcass persistence and scavenging bias in a human‐influenced landscape in western Alaska
Paul L. Flint, Ellen W. Lance, Kristine M. Sowl, Tyrone F. Donnelly
2010, Journal of Field Ornithology (81) 206-214
We examined variation in persistence rates of waterfowl carcasses placed along a series of transects in tundra habitats in western Alaska. This study was designed to assess the effects of existing tower structures and was replicated with separate trials in winter, summer and fall as both the resident avian population...
Topographic complexity and roughness of a tropical benthic seascape
David G. Zawada, Clifford J. Hearn, Gregory Piniak
2010, Geophysical Research Letters (37)
Topographic complexity is a fundamental structural property of benthic marine ecosystems that exists across all scales and affects a multitude of processes. Coral reefs are a prime example, for which this complexity has been found to impact water flow, species diversity, nutrient uptake, and wave-energy dissipation, among other properties. Despite...
Forecasting the effects of land-use and climate change on wildlife communities and habitats in the lower Mississippi Valley
Stephen P. Faulkner
2010, Fact Sheet 2010-3112
Landscape patterns and processes reflect both natural ecosystem attributes and the policy and management decisions of individual Federal, State, county, and private organizations. Land-use regulation, water management, and habitat conservation and restoration efforts increasingly rely on landscape-level approaches that incorporate scientific information into the decision-making process. Since management actions are...
Reducing Uncertainty in the Distribution of Hydrogeologic Units within Volcanic Composite Units of Pahute Mesa Using High-Resolution 3-D Resistivity Methods, Nevada Test Site, Nevada
Brian D. Rodriguez, Don Sweetkind, Bethany L. Burton
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1304
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) at their Nevada Site Office (NSO) are addressing groundwater contamination resulting from historical underground nuclear testing through the Environmental Management program and, in particular, the Underground Test Area (UGTA) project. From 1951 to 1992, 828 underground nuclear...
CO2calc: A User-Friendly Seawater Carbon Calculator for Windows, Mac OS X, and iOS (iPhone)
L. L. Robbins, M. E. Hansen, J.A. Kleypas, S.C. Meylan
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1280
A user-friendly, stand-alone application for the calculation of carbonate system parameters was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey Florida Shelf Ecosystems Response to Climate Change Project in response to its Ocean Acidification Task. The application, by Mark Hansen and Lisa Robbins, USGS St. Petersburg, FL, Joanie Kleypas, NCAR, Boulder, CO,...
Two mechanisms of aquatic and terrestrial habitat change along an Alaskan Arctic coastline
Christopher D. Arp, Benjamin M. Jones, Joel A. Schmutz, Frank E. Urban, M. Torre Jorgenson
2010, Polar Biology (33) 1629-1640
Arctic habitats at the interface between land and sea are particularly vulnerable to climate change. The northern Teshekpuk Lake Special Area (N-TLSA), a coastal plain ecosystem along the Beaufort Sea in northern Alaska, provides habitat for migratory waterbirds, caribou, and potentially, denning polar bears. The 60-km coastline of N-TLSA is...
Quantifying canal leakage rates using a mass-balance approach and heat-based hydraulic conductivity estimates in selected irrigation canals, western Nebraska, 2007 through 2009
Christopher M. Hobza, Michael J. Andersen
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5226
The water supply in areas of the North Platte River Basin in the Nebraska Panhandle has been designated as fully appropriated or overappropriated by the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources (NDNR). Enacted legislation (Legislative Bill 962) requires the North Platte Natural Resources District (NPNRD) and the NDNR to develop an...