Volcano collapse promoted by progressive strength reduction: New data from Mount St. Helens
Mark E. Reid, Terry E.C. Keith, Robert E. Kayen, Neal R. Iverson, Richard M. Iverson, Dianne Brien
2010, Bulletin of Volcanology (72) 761-766
Rock shear strength plays a fundamental role in volcano flank collapse, yet pertinent data from modern collapse surfaces are rare. Using samples collected from the inferred failure surface of the massive 1980 collapse of Mount St. Helens (MSH), we determined rock shear strength via laboratory tests designed to mimic conditions...
Using land-cover data to understand effects of agricultural and urban development on regional water quality
Krista A. Karstensen, Kelly L. Warner
2010, General Information Product 113
The Land-Cover Trends project is a collaborative effort between the Geographic Analysis and Monitoring Program of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to understand the rates, trends, causes, and consequences of contemporary land-use and land-cover change in...
PHAST version 2-A program for simulating groundwater flow, solute transport, and multicomponent geochemical reactions
David L. Parkhurst, Kenneth L. Kipp, Scott R. Charlton
2010, Techniques and Methods 6-A35
The computer program PHAST (PHREEQC And HST3D) simulates multicomponent, reactive solute transport in three-dimensional saturated groundwater flow systems. PHAST is a versatile groundwater flow and solute-transport simulator with capabilities to model a wide range of equilibrium and kinetic geochemical reactions. The flow and transport calculations are based on a modified...
Use of Continuous Monitors and Autosamplers to Predict Unmeasured Water-Quality Constituents in Tributaries of the Tualatin River, Oregon
Chauncey W. Anderson, Stewart A. Rounds
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5008
Management of water quality in streams of the United States is becoming increasingly complex as regulators seek to control aquatic pollution and ecological problems through Total Maximum Daily Load programs that target reductions in the concentrations of certain constituents. Sediment, nutrients, and bacteria, for example, are constituents that regulators target...
Resilience and vulnerability of permafrost to climate change
M.Torre Jorgenson, Vladimir Romanovsky, Jennifer W. Harden, Yuri Shur, Jonathan O'Donnell, Edward A.G. Schuur, Mikhail Kanevskiy, Sergei Marchenko
2010, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (40) 1219-1236
The resilience and vulnerability of permafrost to climate change depends on complex interactions among topography, water, soil, vegetation, and snow, which allow permafrost to persist at mean annual air temperatures (MAATs) as high as +2 °C and degrade at MAATs as low as –20 °C. To assess these interactions, we...
Assessing conservation relevance of organism-environment relations using predicted changes in response variables
Kevin J. Gutzwiller, Wylie C. Barrow, Joseph D. White, Lori Johnson-Randall, Brian S. Cade, Lisa M. Zygo
2010, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (1) 351-358
1. Organism–environment models are used widely in conservation. The degree to which they are useful for informing conservation decisions – the conservation relevance of these relations – is important because lack of relevance may lead to misapplication of scarce conservation resources or failure to resolve important conservation dilemmas. Even when models...
The power to detect trends in Missouri River fish populations within the Pallid Sturgeon Population Assessment Program
Janice L. Bryan, Mark L. Wildhaber, Dan Gladish, Scott Holan, Mark Ellerseick
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1020
As with all large rivers in the United States, the Missouri River has been altered, with approximately 32.5 percent of the main stem length impounded and 32.5 percent channelized. These physical alterations to the environment have had effects on the fisheries, but studies examining the effects of alterations have been...
Hurricane Influences on Vegetation Community Change in Coastal Louisiana
Gregory D. Steyer, Kari Foster Cretini, Sarai C. Piazza, Leigh A. Sharp, Gregg A. Snedden, Sijan Sapkota
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1105
The impacts of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 on wetland vegetation were investigated in Louisiana coastal marshes. Vegetation cover, pore-water salinity, and nutrients data from 100 marsh sites covering the entire Louisiana coast were sampled for two consecutive growing seasons after the storms. A mixed-model nested ANOVA with Tukey's...
Uncovering a latent multinomial: Analysis of mark–recapture data with misidentification
W.A. Link, J. Yoshizaki, L.L. Bailey, K. H. Pollock
2010, Biometrics (66) 178-185
Natural tags based on DNA fingerprints or natural features of animals are now becoming very widely used in wildlife population biology. However, classic capture-recapture models do not allow for misidentification of animals which is a potentially very serious problem with natural tags. Statistical analysis of misidentification processes is...
Surface-Water Quality Conditions and Long-Term Trends at Selected Sites within the Ambient Water-Quality Monitoring Network in Missouri, Water Years 1993-2008
Miya N. Barr, Jerri V. Davis
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5078
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, collects data pertaining to the surface-water resources of Missouri. These data are collected as part of the Missouri Ambient Water-Quality Monitoring Network and constitute a valuable source of reliable, impartial, and timely information for developing an improved...
Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
Thomas H. Osborne, Heather E. Jamieson, Karen A. Hudson-Edwards, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Stephen R. Walker, Seamus A. Ward, Joanne M. Santini
2010, BMC Microbiology (10)
Arsenic is toxic to most living cells. The two soluble inorganic forms of arsenic are arsenite (+3) and arsenate (+5), with arsenite the more toxic. Prokaryotic metabolism of arsenic has been reported in both thermal and moderate environments and has been shown to be involved in the redox cycling of...
Productivity, embryo and eggshell characteristics, and contaminants in bald eagles from the Great Lakes, USA, 1986 to 2000
David A. Best, Kyle Elliott, William Bowerman, Mark C. Shieldcastle, Sergej Postupalsky, Timothy J. Kubiak, Donald E. Tillitt, John E. Elliott
2010, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (29) 1581-1592
Chlorinated hydrocarbon concentrations in eggs of fish-eating birds from contaminated environments such as the Great Lakes of North America tend to be highly intercorrelated, making it difficult to elucidate mechanisms causing reproductive impairment, and to ascribe cause to specific chemicals. An information- theoretic approach was used on data from 197...
Biological pathways of exposure and ecotoxicity values for uranium and associated radionuclides: Chapter D in Hydrological, geological, and biological site characterization of breccia pipe uranium deposits in Northern Arizona
Jo Ellen Hinck, Greg L. Linder, Susan E. Finger, Edward E. Little, Donald E. Tillitt, Wendy Kuhne
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5025-D
This chapter compiles available chemical and radiation toxicity information for plants and animals from the scientific literature on naturally occurring uranium and associated radionuclides. Specifically, chemical and radiation hazards associated with radionuclides in the uranium decay series including uranium, thallium, thorium, bismuth, radium, radon, protactinium, polonium, actinium, and francium were...
Paleoclimates: Understanding climate change past and present
Thomas M. Cronin
2010, Book
The field of paleoclimatology relies on physical, chemical, and biological proxies of past climate changes that have been preserved in natural archives such as glacial ice, tree rings, sediments, corals, and speleothems. Paleoclimate archives obtained through field investigations, ocean sediment coring expeditions, ice sheet coring programs, and other projects allow...
Climate change, cranes, and temperate floodplain ecosystems
Sammy L. King
2010, Conference Paper, Cranes, agriculture, and climate change
Floodplain ecosystems provide important habitat to cranes globally. Lateral, longitudinal, vertical, and temporal hydrologic connectivity in rivers is essential to maintaining the functions and values of these systems. Agricultural development, flood control, water diversions, dams, and other anthropogenic activities have greatly affected hydrologic connectivity of river systems worldwide and altered...
Land Disturbance Associated with Oil and Gas Development and Effects of Development-Related Land Disturbance on Dissolved-Solids Loads in Streams in the Upper Colorado River Basin, 1991, 2007, and 2025
Susan G. Buto, Terry A. Kenney, Steven J. Gerner
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5064
Oil and gas resource development in the Upper Colorado River Basin (UCRB) has increased substantially since the year 2000. The UCRB encompasses several significant oil and gas producing areas that have the potential for continued oil and gas resource development. Land disturbance associated with oil and gas resource development is...
Gas, oil, and water production from Grand Valley, Parachute, Rulison, and Mamm Creek fields in the Piceance Basin, Colorado
Philip H. Nelson, Stephen L. Santus
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1110
Gas, oil, and water production data for tight gas reservoirs were compiled from selected wells in western Colorado. These reservoir rocks—the relatively shallow Paleogene Wasatch G sandstone interval in the Parachute and Rulison fields and fluvial sandstones in the deeper Upper Cretaceous Mesaverde Group in the Grand Valley, Parachute, Rulison,...
Chemical Constituents in Groundwater from Multiple Zones in the Eastern Snake River Plain Aquifer at the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho, 2005-08
Roy C. Bartholomay, Brian V. Twining
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5116
From 2005 to 2008, the U.S. Geological Survey's Idaho National Laboratory (INL) Project office, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Energy, collected water-quality samples from multiple water-bearing zones in the eastern Snake River Plain aquifer. Water samples were collected from six monitoring wells completed in about 350-700 feet of...
Flood of September 2008 in Northwestern Indiana
Kathleen K. Fowler, Moon H. Kim, Chad D. Menke, Donald V. Arvin
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1098
During September 12-15, 2008, rainfall ranging from 2 to more than 11 inches fell on northwestern Indiana. The rainfall resulted in extensive flooding on many streams within the Lake Michigan and Kankakee River Basins during September 12-18, causing two deaths, evacuation of hundreds of residents, and millions of dollars of...
Structured decision-making and rapid prototyping to plan a management response to an invasive species
S. M. Blomquist, Trisha D. Johnson, David R. Smith, Geoff P. Call, Brant N. Miller, W. Mark Thurman, Jamie E. McFadden, Mary J. Parkin, G. Scott Bloomer
2010, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (1) 19-32
We developed components of a decision structure that could be used in an adaptive management framework for responding to invasion of hemlock woolly adelgid Adeleges tsugae on the Cumberland Plateau of northern Tennessee. Hemlock woolly adelgid, an invasive forest pest, was first detected in this area in 2007. We used a structured...
Wyoming Landscape Conservation Initiative Science and Management Workshop Proceedings, May 12-14, 2009, Laramie, Wyoming
Vito F. Nuccio, Frank D. D’Erchia, K. Parady, A. Mellinger (compiler), editor(s)
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5067
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) hosted the second Wyoming Landscape Conservation Initiative (WLCI) Science and Management Workshop at the University of Wyoming Conference Center and Hilton Garden Inn on May 12, 13, and 14, 2009, in Laramie, Wyo. The workshop focused on six topics seen as relevant to ongoing WLCI science...
A geochemical module for "AMDTreat" to compute caustic quantity, effluent quantity, and sludge volume
Charles A. Cravotta III,, David L. Parkhurst, Brent P Means, Bob McKenzie, Harry Morris, Bill Arthur
2010, Conference Paper, Joint Mining Reclamation Conference 2010: 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Mining and Reclamation, 12th Annual Pennsylvania Abandoned Mine Reclamation Conference and 4th Annual Appalachian Regional Reforestation Initiative Mined Land Reforestation Conference, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, 5-11 June 2010
Treatment with caustic chemicals typically is used to increase pH and decrease concentrations of dissolved aluminum, iron, and/or manganese in largevolume, metal-laden discharges from active coal mines. Generally, aluminum and iron can be removed effectively at near-neutral pH (6 to 8), whereas active manganese removal requires treatment to alkaline pH...
Terrestrial ecosystems: Surficial lithology of the conterminous United States
Jill Cress, David Soller, Roger G. Sayre, Patrick Comer, Harumi Warner
2010, Scientific Investigations Map 3126
As part of an effort to map terrestrial ecosystems, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has generated a new classification of the lithology of surficial materials to be used in creating maps depicting standardized, terrestrial ecosystem models for the conterminous United States. The ecosystems classification used in this effort was developed...
Hydraulic Properties of the Magothy and Upper Glacial Aquifers at Centereach, Suffolk County, New York
Paul E. Misut, Ronald Busciolano
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5190
Horizontal and vertical hydraulic conductivity, transmissivity, and storativity of the aquifer system at Centereach, New York, were estimated using analytical multiple-well aquifer test models and compared with results of numerical regional flow modeling and hydrogeologic framework studies. During the initial operation of production well S125632 in May 2008, continuous water-level...
A snapshot of climate variability at Tahiti ~ 9 ka using a fossil coral from IODP Expedition 310
Kristine L DeLong, Terrence M. Quinn, Chuan-Chou Shen, Ke Lin
2010, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (11)
The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 310 recovered drill cores from the drowned reefs around the island of Tahiti (17°40′S, 149°30′W), many of which contained samples of massive corals from the genus Porites. Herein we report on one well-preserved fossil coral sample: a 13.6 cm long Porites sp. dated by uranium series...