Geodetic evidence for en echelon dike emplacement and concurrent slow slip during the June 2007 intrusion and eruption at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii
E. K. Montgomery-Brown, D. K. Sinnett, Michael Poland, P. Segall, Tim R. Orr, H. Zebker, Asta Mikijus
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth (115)
A series of complex events at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawaii, 17 June to 19 June 2007, began with an intrusion in the upper east rift zone (ERZ) and culminated with a small eruption (1500 m3). Surface deformation due to the intrusion was recorded in unprecedented detail by Global Positioning System (GPS)...
Seismicity of the Earth 1900-2007
Arthur C. Tarr, Antonio H. Villasenor, Kevin P. Furlong, Susan Rhea, Harley M. Benz
2010, Scientific Investigations Map 3064
This map illustrates more than one century of global seismicity in the context of global plate tectonics and the Earth's physiography. Primarily designed for use by earth scientists and engineers interested in earthquake hazards of the 20th and early 21st centuries, this map provides a comprehensive overview of strong earthquakes...
Hydrogeologic framework of the middle San Pedro watershed, southeastern Arizona
Jesse E. Dickinson, Jeffrey R. Kennedy, D. R. Pool, Jeffrey T. Cordova, John T. Parker, J. P. Macy, Blakemore Thomas
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5126
Water managers in rural Arizona are under increasing pressure to provide sustainable supplies of water despite rapid population growth and demands for environmental protection. This report describes the results of a study of the hydrogeologic framework of the middle San Pedro watershed. The components of this report include: (1) a...
The PRISM3D paleoenvironmental reconstruction
H. Dowsett, M. Robinson, A.M. Haywood, U. Salzmann, Daniel Hill, L.E. Sohl, M. Chandler, Mark Williams, K. Foley, D.K. Stoll
2010, Stratigraphy (7) 123-139
The Pliocene Research, Interpretation and Synoptic Mapping (PRISM) paleoenvironmental reconstruction is an internally consistent and comprehensive global synthesis of a past interval of relatively warm and stable climate. It is regularly used in model studies that aim to better understand Pliocene climate, to improve model performance in future climate scenarios,...
Alluvial Diamond Resource Potential and Production Capacity Assessment of Ghana
Peter G. Chirico, Katherine C. Malpeli, Solomon Anum, Emily C. Phillips
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5045
In May of 2000, a meeting was convened in Kimberley, South Africa, and attended by representatives of the diamond industry and leaders of African governments to develop a certification process intended to assure that rough, exported diamonds were free of conflictual concerns. This meeting was supported later in 2000 by...
Gulf of Mexico Climate-History Calibration Study
Jessica W. Spear, Richard Z. Poore
2010, Fact Sheet 2010-3044
Reliable instrumental records of past climate are available for about the last 150 years only. To supplement the instrumental record, reconstructions of past climate are made from natural recorders such as trees, ice, corals, and microfossils preserved in sediments. These proxy records provide information on the rate and magnitude of...
Public Review Draft: A Method for Assessing Carbon Stocks, Carbon Sequestration, and Greenhouse-Gas Fluxes in Ecosystems of the United States Under Present Conditions and Future Scenarios
Brian A. Bergamaschi, Richard Bernknopf, David Clow, Dennis Dye, Stephen Faulkner, William Forney, Robert Gleason, Todd Hawbaker, Jinxun Liu, Shu-Guang Liu, Stephen Prisley, Bradley Reed, Matthew Reeves, Matthew Rollins, Benjamin Sleeter, Terry Sohl, Sarah Stackpoole, Stephen Stehman, Robert G. Striegl, Anne Wein, Zhi-Liang Zhu
Zhi-Liang Zhu, editor(s)
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1144
The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA), Section 712, authorizes the U.S. Department of the Interior to develop a methodology and conduct an assessment of the Nation's ecosystems focusing on carbon stocks, carbon sequestration, and emissions of three greenhouse gases (GHGs): carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. The...
Thermal Imaging of the Waccasassa Bay Preserve: Image Acquisition and Processing
Ellen A. Raabe, Elzbieta Bialkowska-Jelinska
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1120
Thermal infrared (TIR) imagery was acquired along coastal Levy County, Florida, in March 2009 with the goal of identifying groundwater-discharge locations in Waccasassa Bay Preserve State Park (WBPSP). Groundwater discharge is thermally distinct in winter when Floridan aquifer temperature, 71-72 degrees F, contrasts with the surrounding cold surface waters. Calibrated...
Simulated groundwater flow in the Ogallala and Arikaree aquifers, Rosebud Indian Reservation area, South Dakota – Revisions with data through water year 2008 and simulations of potential future scenarios
Andrew J. Long, Larry D. Putnam
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5105
The Ogallala and Arikaree aquifers are important water resources in the Rosebud Indian Reservation area and are used extensively for irrigation, municipal, and domestic water supplies. Drought or increased withdrawals from the Ogallala and Arikaree aquifers in the Rosebud Indian Reservation area have the potential to affect water levels in...
Initial Results from a Study of Climatic Changes and the Effect on Wild Sheep Habitat in Selected Study Areas of Alaska
Edwin Pfeifer, Jana Ruhlman, Barry Middleton, Dennis Dye, Alex Acosta
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1135
Climate change theorists have projected striking changes in local weather on earth due to increases in temperature. These predicted changes may cause melting glaciers and ice caps, rising sea levels, increasing desertification and other environmental changes which seem likely to affect presumed indicator species as harbingers of more significant changes....
Impacts of exotic mangrove forests and mangrove deforestation on carbon remineralization and ecosystem functioning in marine sediments
A. K. Sweetman, J. J. Middelburg, A. M. Berle, A. F. Bernardino, C. Schander, A. W.J. Demopoulos, C. R. Smith
2010, Biogeosciences (7) 2129-2145
To evaluate how mangrove invasion and removal can modify short-term benthic carbon cycling and ecosystem functioning, we used stable-isotopically labeled algae as a deliberate tracer to quantify benthic respiration and C-flow over 48 h through macrofauna and bacteria in sediments collected from (1) an invasive mangrove forest, (2) deforested mangrove...
Sensitivity of the Greenland Ice Sheet to Pliocene sea surface temperatures
Daniel J. Hill, Aisling M. Dolan, Alan M. Haywood, Stephen J. Hunter, Danielle K. Stoll
2010, Stratigraphy (7) 111-121
The history of theGrIS (Greenland Ice Sheet), particularly in warm climates of the pre-Quaternary, is poorly known. IRD (ice-rafted debris) records suggest that the ice sheet has existed, at least transiently, since theMiocene and potentially since as long ago as the Eocene. As melting of the GrIS is a key...
Sub-weekly to interannual variability of a high-energy shoreline
Jeff E. Hansen, Patrick L. Barnard
2010, Coastal Engineering (57) 959-972
Sixty-one Global Positioning System (GPS), sub-aerial beach surveys were completed at 7 km long Ocean Beach, San Francisco, CA (USA), between April 2004 and March 2009. The five-year time series contains over 1 million beach elevation measurements and documents detailed changes in beach morphology over a variety of spatial, temporal, and physical...
Assimilating models and data to enhance predictions of shoreline evolution
Joseph W. Long, Nathaniel G. Plant
Jane McKee Smith, Patrick Lynett, editor(s)
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of 32nd International Conference on Coastal Engineering
A modeling system that considers both long- and short-term process-driven shoreline change is presented. The modeling system is integrated into a data assimilation framework that uses sparse observations of shoreline change to correct a model forecast and to determine unobserved model variables and free parameters. Application of the assimilation algorithm...
Estuaries of the Greater Everglades Ecosystem: Laboratories of Long-term Change
G.L. Wingard, J.W. Hudley, F.E. Marshall
2010, Fact Sheet 2010-3047
Restoring the greater Everglades ecosystem of south Florida is arguably the largest ecosystem restoration effort to date. A critical goal is to return more natural patterns of flow through south Florida wetlands and into the estuaries, but development of realistic targets requires acknowledgement that ecosystems are constantly evolving and changing...
Simulation of Groundwater Mounding Beneath Hypothetical Stormwater Infiltration Basins
Glen B. Carleton
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5102
Groundwater mounding occurs beneath stormwater management structures designed to infiltrate stormwater runoff. Concentrating recharge in a small area can cause groundwater mounding that affects the basements of nearby homes and other structures. Methods for quantitatively predicting the height and extent of groundwater mounding beneath and near stormwater Finite-difference groundwater-flow simulations of...
Coupled arsenotrophy in a hot spring photosynthetic biofilm at Mono Lake, California
Shelley E. Hoeft, Thomas R. Kulp, Sukkyun Han, Brian Lanoil, Ronald S. Oremland
2010, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (76) 4633-4639
Red-pigmented biofilms grow on rock and cobble surfaces present in anoxic hot springs located on Paoha Island in Mono Lake. The bacterial community was dominated (∼ 85% of 16S rRNA gene clones) by sequences from the photosynthetic Ectothiorhodospiragenus. Scraped biofilm materials incubated under anoxic conditions rapidly oxidized...
Resilience of Alaska’s boreal forest to climatic change
F.S. Chapin, A. David McGuire, Roger W. Ruess, Teresa N. Hollingsworth, M.C. Mack, J.F. Johnstone, E.S. Kasischke, E.S. Euskirchen, Jack B. Jones, M.T. Jorgenson, K. Kielland, G. Kofinas, M.R. Turetsky, J. Yarie, A.H. Lloyd, D.L. Taylor
2010, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (40) 1360-1370
This paper assesses the resilience of Alaska’s boreal forest system to rapid climatic change. Recent warming is associated with reduced growth of dominant tree species, plant disease and insect outbreaks, warming and thawing of permafrost, drying of lakes, increased wildfire extent, increased postfire recruitment of deciduous trees, and reduced safety...
Effects of climate change on saltwater intrusion at Hilton Head Island, SC. U.S.A.
Dorothy F. Payne
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 21st Salt Water Intrusion Meeting, Azores, Portugal, 2010
Sea‐level rise and changes in precipitation patterns may contribute to the occurrence and affect the rate of saltwater contamination in the Hilton Head Island, South Carolina area. To address the effects of climate change on saltwater intrusion, a threedimensional, finite‐element, variable‐density, solute‐transport model was developed to simulate different rates of...
Feedbacks between community assembly and habitat selection shape variation in local colonization
J.M. Kraus, J.R. Vonesh
2010, Journal of Animal Ecology (79) 795-802
1. Non-consumptive effects of predators are increasingly recognized as important drivers of community assembly and structure. Specifically, habitat selection responses to top predators during colonization and oviposition can lead to large differences in aquatic community structure, composition and diversity. 2. These differences among communities due to predators may develop as...
Channel geomorphic responses to disturbances assessed using streamgage information
Kyle E. Juracek, Mark W. Bowen
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2nd Joint Federal Interagency Conference on Sedimentation and Hydrologic Modeling
No abstract available....
Extending and testing Graizer-Kalkan ground motion attenuation model based on atlas database of shallow crustal events
Vladimir Graizer, Erol Kalkan, Kuo-Wan Lin
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 9th U.S. National and 10th Canadian Conference on Earthquake Engineering
No abstract available....
Regional and grain size influences on the geochemistry of soil at Gusev Crater
Suniti Karunatillake, Scott M. McLennan, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (115)
Congruous with earlier work, Martian soil along the Spirit Rover's traverse at Gusev crater can be divided into three broad groups by size: fines (<150 μm), sand, and a mix of various grain sizes. The key chemical observation is greater homogeneity in fines relative to the other two, consistent with regional‐...
Grain-size evolution in suspended sediment and deposits from the 2004 and 2008 controlled-flood experiments in Marble and Grand Canyons, Arizona
Amy E. Draut, David J. Topping, David M. Rubin, Scott Wright, John C. Schmidt
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Joint Federal Interagency Conference 2010: Hydrology and sedimentation for a changing future: Existing and emerging issues
Since the closure of Glen Canyon Dam in 1963, the hydrology, sediment supply, and distribution and size of modern alluvial deposits in the Colorado River through Grand Canyon have changed substantially (e.g., Howard and Dolan, 1981; Johnson and Carothers, 1987; Webb et al., 1999; Rubin et al., 2002; Topping et...
The use of the multi-dimensional surface-water modeling system (MD-SWMS) in calculating discharge and sediment transport in remote ephemeral streams
Peter G. Griffiths, David J. Topping, Richard R. McDonald, Thomas A. Sabol
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Joint Federal Interagency Conference 2010: Hydrology and sedimentation for a changing future: Existing and emerging issues
No abstract available....