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Page 806, results 20126 - 20150

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
ATM Coastal Topography-Louisiana, 2001: UTM Zone 15 (Part 1 of 2)
Xan Yates, Amar Nayegandhi, John Brock, A. H. Sallenger, Emily S. Klipp, C. Wayne Wright
2010, Data Series 464
These remotely sensed, geographically referenced elevation measurements of lidar-derived first-surface (FS) topography were produced collaboratively by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Florida Integrated Science Center (FISC), St. Petersburg, FL, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Wallops Flight Facility, VA. This project provides highly detailed and accurate datasets of a...
Ecosystem health in mineralized terrane — Data from podiform chromite (Chinese Camp mining district, California), quartz alunite (Castle Peak and Masonic mining districts, Nevada/California), and Mo/Cu porphyry (Battle Mountain mining district, Nevada) deposits
Steve W. Blecker, Lisa L. Stillings, Michael C. Amacher, James A. Ippolito, Nicole M. DeCrappeo
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1040
The myriad definitions of soil/ecosystem quality or health are often driven by ecosystem and management concerns, and they typically focus on the ability of the soil to provide functions relating to biological productivity and/or environmental quality. A variety of attempts have been made to create indices that quantify the complexities...
Development of a three-dimensional model of sedimentary texture in valley-fill deposits of Central Valley, California, USA
Claudia C. Faunt, Kenneth Belitz, Randall T. Hanson
2010, Hydrogeology Journal (18) 625-649
A three-dimensional (3D) texture model was developed to help characterize the aquifer system of Central Valley, California (USA), for a groundwater flow model. The 52,000-km2 Central Valley aquifer system consists of heterogeneous valley-fill deposits. The texture model was developed by compiling and analyzing approximately 8,500 drillers’ logs, describing lithologies up to...
Depth-dependent sampling to identify short-circuit pathways to public-supply wells in multiple aquifer settings in the United States
Matthew K. Landon, Bryant C. Jurgens, Brian G. Katz, Sandra M. Eberts, Karen R. Burow, Christy A. Crandall
2010, Hydrogeology Journal (18) 577-593
Depth-dependent water-quality and borehole flow data were used to determine where and how contamination enters public-supply wells (PSWs) at study sites in different principal aquifers of the United States. At each of three study sites, depth-dependent samples and wellbore flow data were collected from multiple depths in selected PSWs under...
A consumer-resource approach to the density-dependent population dynamics of mutualism
J. Nathaniel Holland, Donald L. DeAngelis
2010, Ecology (91) 1286-1295
Like predation and competition, mutualism is now recognized as a consumer resource (C-R) interaction, including, in particular, bi-directional (e.g., coral, plant- mycorrhizae) and uni-directional (e.g., ant-plant defense, plant-pollinator) C-R mutualisms. Here, we develop general theory for the density-dependent population dynamics of mutualism based on the C-R mechanism of interspecific interaction....
Optimal pump and recharge management model for nitrate removal in the Warren groundwater basin, California
Yung-Chia Chiu, Tracy Nishikawa, William W.-G. Yeh
2010, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (136) 299-308
The town of Yucca Valley located in the southwest part of the Mojave Desert in southern California relies on groundwater pumping from the Warren groundwater basin as its sole source of water supply. This significant dependency has resulted in a large imbalance between groundwater pumpage and natural recharge, causing groundwater...
Landscape-scale analyses suggest both nutrient and antipredator advantages to Serengeti herbivore hotspots
T. Michael Anderson, J. Grant C. Hopcraft, Stephanie Eby, Mark Ritchie, James B. Grace, Han Olff
2010, Ecology (91) 1519-1529
Mechanistic explanations of herbivore spatial distribution have focused largely on either resource‐related (bottom‐up) or predation‐related (top‐down) factors. We studied direct and indirect influences on the spatial distributions of Serengeti herbivore hotspots, defined as temporally stable areas inhabited by mixed herds of resident grazers. Remote sensing and variation...
Hazards affecting grizzly bear survival in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Charles C. Schwartz, Mark A. Haroldson, Gary C. White
2010, Journal of Wildlife Management (74) 654-667
During the past 2 decades, the grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) population in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) has increased in numbers and expanded its range. Early efforts to model grizzly bear mortality were principally focused within the United States Fish and Wildlife Service Grizzly Bear Recovery Zone, which currently...
Agronomic and environmental implications of enhanced s-triazine degradation
L. Jason Krutz, Dale L. Shaner, Mark A. Weaver, Richard M. Webb, Robert M. Zablotowicz, Krishna N. Reddy, Yanbo Huang, Steven J. Thompson
2010, Pest Management Science (66) 461-481
Novel catabolic pathways enabling rapid detoxification of s-triazine herbicides have been elucidated and detected at a growing number of locations. The genes responsible for s-triazine mineralization, i.e. atzABCDEF and trzNDF, occur in at least four bacterial phyla and are implicated in the development of enhanced degradation in agricultural soils from all continents except Antarctica. Enhanced...
Sediment-hosted lead-zinc deposits in Earth history
David L Leach, Dwight Bradley, David Huston, Sergei A. Pisarevsky, Ryan D. Taylor, S. Gardoll
2010, Economic Geology (105) 593-625
Sediment-hosted Pb-Zn deposits can be divided into two major subtypes. The first subtype is clastic-dominated lead-zinc (CD Pb-Zn) ores, which are hosted in shale, sandstone, siltstone, or mixed clastic rocks, or occur as carbonate replacement, within a CD sedimentary rock sequence. This subtype includes deposits that have been traditionally referred...
Evaluating remediation alternatives for mine drainage, Little Cottonwood Creek, Utah, USA
Briant A. Kimball, Robert L. Runkel
2010, Environmental Earth Sciences (60) 1021-1036
The vast occurrence of mine drainage worldwide, documented in descriptive studies, presents a staggering challenge for remediation. Any tool that can move beyond descriptive study and helps to evaluate options for remediation in a way that maximizes improvements to the water quality of streams and minimizes cost of remediation could...
Displaying seismic deaggregation: The importance of the various sources
Warwick D. Smith, Stephen Harmsen
2010, Seismological Research Letters (81) 488-497
Seismic hazard deaggregation has become a standard part of probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA). The first product of PSHA is calculation of the likely severity of ground motion at a given range of annual probability levels, and this is extremely important for seismic design...
Permeability of the continental crust: Dynamic variations inferred from seismicity and metamorphism
Steven E. Ingebritsen, C. E. Manning
2010, Geofluids (10) 193-205
The variation of permeability with depth can be probed indirectly by various means, including hydrologic models that use geothermal data as constraints and the progress of metamorphic reactions driven by fluid flow. Geothermal and metamorphic data combine to indicate that mean permeability (k) of tectonically active continental crust decreases with...
Modeling the production, decomposition, and transport of dissolved organic carbon in boreal soils
Zhaosheng Fan, Jason C. Neff, Kimberly P. Wickland
2010, Soil Science (175) 223-232
The movement of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) through boreal ecosystems has drawn increased attention because of its potential impact on the feedback of OC stocks to global environmental change in this region. Few models of boreal DOC exist. Here we present a one-dimensional model with simultaneous production, decomposition, sorption/desorption, and...
A comparison of algal, macroinvertebrate, and fish assemblage indices for assessing low-level nutrient enrichment in wadeable Ozark streams
B. G. Justus, James C. Petersen, Suzanne R. Femmer, Jerri V. Davis, J. E. Wallace
2010, Ecological Indicators (10) 627-638
Biotic indices for algae, macroinvertebrates, and fish assemblages can be effective for monitoring stream enrichment, but little is known regarding the value of the three assemblages for detecting perturbance as a consequence of low-level nutrient enrichment. In the summer of 2006, we collected nutrient and biotic samples from 30 wadeable...
Revisions of rump fat and body scoring indices for deer, elk, and moose
Rachel C. Cook, John G. Cook, Thomas R. Stephenson, Woodrow L. Myers, Scott M. Mccorquodale, David J. Vales, Larry L. Irwin, P. Briggs Hall, Rocky D. Spencer, Shannon L. Murphie, Kathryn A. Schoenecker, Patrick J. Miller
2010, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (74) 880-896
Because they do not require sacrificing animals, body condition scores (BCS), thickness of rump fat (MAXFAT), and other similar predictors of body fat have advanced estimating nutritional condition of ungulates and their use has proliferated in North America in the last decade. However, initial testing of these predictors was too...
Fluvial processes and vegetation - Glimpses of the past, the present, and perhaps the future.
Waite R. Osterkamp, Cliff R. Hupp
2010, Geomorphology (116) 274-285
"Most research before 1960 into interactions among fluvial processes, resulting landforms, and vegetation was descriptive. Since then, however, research has become more detailed and quantitative permitting numerical modeling and applications including agricultural-erosion abatement and rehabilitation of altered bottomlands. Although progress was largely observational, the empiricism increasingly yielded to objective recognition of...
Flood of April and May 2008 in Northern Maine
Pamela J. Lombard
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5003
Severe flooding occurred in Aroostook and Penobscot Counties in northern Maine between April 28 and May 1, 2008, and was most extreme in the town of Fort Kent. Peak streamflows in northern Aroostook County were the result of a persistent heavy snowpack that caused high streamflows when it quickly melted...
Seasonal H2O and CO2 ice cycles at the Mars Phoenix landing site: 1. Prelanding CRISM and HiRISE observations
Selby Cull, Raymond E. Arvidson, Michael T. Mellon, Sandra M. Wiseman, Roger N. Clark, Timothy N. Titus, Richard V. Morris, Patrick E. McGuire
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (115)
The condensation, evolution, and sublimation of seasonal water and carbon dioxide ices were characterized at the Mars Phoenix landing site from Martian northern midsummer to midspring (Ls ∼ 142° – Ls ∼ 60°) for the year prior to the Phoenix landing on 25 May 2008. Ice relative abundances and grain sizes were...
Mg isotope constraints on soil pore-fluid chemistry: Evidence from Santa Cruz, California
Edward T. Tipper, Jerome Gaillardet, Pascale Louvat, Francoise Capmas, Arthur F. White
2010, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (74) 3883-3896
Mg isotope ratios (26Mg/24Mg) are reported in soil pore-fluids, rain and seawater, grass and smectite from a 90 kyr old soil, developed on an uplifted marine terrace from Santa Cruz, California. Rain water has an invariant 26Mg/24Mg ratio (expressed as δ26Mg>δ26Mg) at −0.79 ± 0.05‰, identical to seawater <span...
Modeling Climate Change and Sturgeon Populations in the Missouri River
Mark L. Wildhaber
2010, Fact Sheet 2010-3019
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Columbia Environmental Research Center (CERC), in collaboration with researchers from the University of Missouri and Iowa State University, is conducting research to address effects of climate change on sturgeon populations (Scaphirhynchus spp.) in the Missouri River. The CERC is conducting laboratory, field, and modeling research...
Influence of tidal range on the stability of coastal marshland
Matthew L. Kirwan, Glenn R. Guntenspergen
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research (115)
Early comparisons between rates of vertical accretion and sea level rise across marshes in different tidal ranges inspired a paradigm that marshes in high tidal range environments are more resilient to sea level rise than marshes in low tidal range environments. We use field‐based observations to propose a relationship between...
A Natural History Summary and Survey Protocol for the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher
Mark K. Sogge, Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, Darrell Ahlers, Bureau of Reclamation, Susan J. Sferra, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
2010, Techniques and Methods 2-A10
The Southwestern Willow Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii extimus) has been the subject of substantial research, monitoring, and management activity since it was listed as an endangered species in 1995. When proposed for listing in 1993, relatively little was known about the flycatcher's natural history, and there were only 30 known breeding...