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Page 809, results 20201 - 20225

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Data Used in Analyses of Trends, and Nutrient and Suspended-Sediment Loads for Streams in the Southeastern United States, 1973-2005
Erik L. Staub, Kelly L. Peak, Kirsten C. Tighe, Eric M. Sadorf, Douglas A. Harned
2010, Data Series 488
Water-quality data from selected surface-water monitoring sites in the Southeastern United States were assessed for trends in concentrations of nutrients, suspended sediment, and major constituents and for in-stream nutrient and suspended-sediment loads for the period 1973-2005. The area of interest includes river basins draining into the southern Atlantic Ocean, the...
A Seamless, High-Resolution, Coastal Digital Elevation Model (DEM) for Southern California
Patrick L. Barnard, Daniel Hoover
2010, Data Series 487
A seamless, 3-meter digital elevation model (DEM) was constructed for the entire Southern California coastal zone, extending 473 km from Point Conception to the Mexican border. The goal was to integrate the most recent, high-resolution datasets available (for example, Light Detection and Ranging (Lidar) topography, multibeam and single beam sonar...
Application of the Systems Impact Assessment Model (SIAM) to fishery resource issues in the Klamath River, California
Sharon G. Campbell, John M. Bartholow, John Heasley
2010, Open-File Report 2009-1265
At the request of two offices of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) located in Yreka and Arcata, Calif., we applied the Systems Impact Assessment Model (SIAM) to analyze a variety of water management concerns associated with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) relicensing of the Klamath hydropower projects...
Changes in streamflow and the flux of nutrients in the Mississippi-Atchafalaya River Basin, USA, 1980-2007
William A. Battaglin, Brent T. Aulenbach, Aldo Vecchia, Herbert T. Buxton
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5164
Nutrients and freshwater delivered by the Mississippi and Atchafalaya Rivers drive algal production in the northern Gulf of Mexico, which eventually results in the widespread occurrence of hypoxic bottom waters along the Louisiana and Texas coast. Researchers have demonstrated a relation between the extent of the hypoxic zone and the...
The Quaternary Silver Creek Fault Beneath the Santa Clara Valley, California
Carl M. Wentworth, Robert A. Williams, Robert C. Jachens, Russell W. Graymer, William J. Stephenson
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1010
The northwest-trending Silver Creek Fault is a 40-km-long strike-slip fault in the eastern Santa Clara Valley, California, that has exhibited different behaviors within a changing San Andreas Fault system over the past 10-15 Ma. Quaternary alluvium several hundred meters thick that buries the northern half of the Silver Creek Fault,...
Simulation of Runoff and Reservoir Inflow for Use in a Flood-Analysis Model for the Delaware River, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York, 2004-2006
Daniel J. Goode, Edward H. Koerkle, Scott A. Hoffman, R. Steve Regan, Lauren E. Hay, Steven L. Markstrom
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1014
A model was developed to simulate inflow to reservoirs and watershed runoff to streams during three high-flow events between September 2004 and June 2006 for the main-stem subbasin of the Delaware River draining to Trenton, N.J. The model software is a modified version of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Precipitation-Runoff...
Development and Application of Regression Models for Estimating Nutrient Concentrations in Streams of the Conterminous United States, 1992-2001
Norman E. Spahr, David K. Mueller, David M. Wolock, Kerie J. Hitt, JoAnn M. Gronberg
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5199
Data collected for the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment program from 1992-2001 were used to investigate the relations between nutrient concentrations and nutrient sources, hydrology, and basin characteristics. Regression models were developed to estimate annual flow-weighted concentrations of total nitrogen and total phosphorus using explanatory variables derived from currently...
Investigation of submarine groundwater discharge along the tidal reach of the Caloosahatchee River, southwest Florida
Christopher D. Reich
2010, Open-File Report 2009-1273
The tidal reach of the Caloosahatchee River is an estuarine habitat that supports a diverse assemblage of biota including aquatic vegetation, shellfish, and finfish. The system has been highly modified by anthropogenic activity over the last 150 years (South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD), 2009). For example, the river was...
The Limit of Inundation of the September 29, 2009, Tsunami on Tutuila, American Samoa
Bruce E. Jaffe, Guy Gelfenbaum, Mark L. Buckley, Steve Watt, Alex Apotsos, Andrew W. Stevens, Bruce M. Richmond
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1018
U.S. Geological Survey scientists investigated the coastal impacts of the September 29, 2009, South Pacific tsunami in Tutuila, American Samoa in October and November 2009, including mapping the alongshore variation in the limit of inundation. Knowing the inundation limit is useful for planning safer coastal development and evacuation routes for...
Modeling the human invader in the United States
Thomas J. Stohlgren, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Chandra P. Giri
2010, Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (4)
Modern biogeographers recognize that humans are seen as constituents of ecosystems, drivers of significant change, and perhaps, the most invasive species on earth. We found it instructive to model humans as invasive organisms with the same environmental factors. We present a preliminary model of the spread of modern humans in...
Power to detect trends in Missouri River fish populations within the Habitat Assessment Monitoring Program
Janice L. Bryan, Mark L. Wildhaber, Dan W. Gladish
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1011
As with all large rivers in the United States, the Missouri River has been altered, with approximately one-third of the mainstem length impounded and one-third channelized. These physical alterations to the environment have affected the fish populations, but studies examining the effects of alterations have been localized and for short...
Evolution of Ore Deposits and Technology Transfer Project: Isotope and Chemical Methods in Support of the U.S. Geological Survey Science Strategy, 2003-2008
Robert O. Rye, Craig A. Johnson, Gary P. Landis, Albert H. Hofstra, Poul Emsbo, Craig A. Stricker, Andrew G. Hunt, Brian G. Rusk
2010, Circular 1343
Principal functions of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Mineral Resources Program are providing assessments of the location, quantity, and quality of undiscovered mineral deposits, and predicting the environmental impacts of exploration and mine development. The mineral and environmental assessments of domestic deposits are used by planners and decisionmakers to improve...
Health effects of energy resources
William Orem, Calin Tatu, Nikola Pavlovic, Joseph Bunnell, Allan Kolker, Mark Engle, Ben Stout
2010, Fact Sheet 2009-3096
Energy resources (coal, oil, and natural gas) are among the cornerstones of modern industrial society. The exploitation of these resources, however, is not without costs. Energy materials may contain harmful chemical substances that, if mobilized into air, water, or soil, can adversely impact human health and environmental quality. In order...
Rheologic and structural controls on the deformation of Okmok volcano, Alaska: FEMs, InSAR, and ambient noise tomography
Timothy Masterlark, Matthew M. Haney, Haylee Dickinson, Cheryl Searcy, T. Fournier
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (115)
Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data indicate that the caldera of Okmok volcano, Alaska, subsided more than a meter during its eruption in 1997. The large deformation suggests a relatively shallow magma reservoir beneath Okmok. Seismic tomography using ambient ocean noise reveals two low‐velocity zones (LVZs). The shallow LVZ corresponds...
Hydraulic modeling of mussel habitat at a bridge-replacement site, Allegheny River, Pennsylvania, USA
John W. Fulton, Chad R. Wagner, Megan E. Rogers, Gregory F. Zimmerman
2010, Ecological Modelling (221) 540-554
The Allegheny River in Pennsylvania supports a large and diverse freshwater-mussel community, including two federally listed endangered species, Pleurobema clava(Clubshell) and Epioblasma torulosa rangiana (Northern Riffleshell). It is recognized that river hydraulics and morphology play important roles in mussel distribution. To assess the hydraulic influences of bridge replacement on mussel habitat, metrics...
Invasion and production of New Zealand mud snails in the Colorado River, Glen Canyon
Wyatt F. Cross, E.J. Rosi-Marshall, Katherine E. Behn, Theodore A. Kennedy, Robert O Hall, A. Elizabeth Fuller, C. V. Baxter
2010, Biological Invasions (12) 3033-3043
Species invasions are often associated with large-scale human alteration of ecosystems. One classic example is the increasing dominance of non-native taxa below and above dams on large rivers. These dams substantially alter the physical template of river ecosystems, and exotic taxa often proliferate with potentially large impacts on coexisting taxa...
Geophysical Data Collected off the South Shore of Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts
J. F. Denny, W. W. Danforth, D.S. Foster, C. R. Sherwood
2010, Open-File Report 2008-1288
The U.S. Geological Survey Woods Hole Science Center conducted a nearshore geophysical survey offshore of the southern coast of Martha's Vineyard, in the vicinity of the Martha's Vineyard Coastal Observatory in 2007. This mapping program was part of a larger research effort supporting the Office of Naval Research Ripples Directed-Research...
USGS-WHOI-DPRI Coulomb Stress-Transfer Model for the January 12, 2010, MW=7.0 Haiti Earthquake
Jian Lin, Ross S. Stein, Volkan Sevilgen, Shinji Toda
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1019
Using calculated stress changes to faults surrounding the January 12, 2010, rupture on the Enriquillo Fault, and the current (January 12 to 26, 2010) aftershock productivity, scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), and Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University (DPRI) have made rough estimates...
Assessing the vulnerability of public-supply wells to contamination: Glacial aquifer system in Woodbury, Connecticut
Martha L. Jagucki, Craig J. Brown, J. Jeffrey Starn, Sandra M. Eberts
2010, Fact Sheet 2010-3002
This fact sheet highlights findings from the vulnerability study of a public-supply well in Woodbury, Connecticut. The well typically produces water at the rate of 72 gallons per minute from the glacial aquifer system in the Pomperaug River Basin. Water samples were collected at the public-supply well and at monitoring...
Groundwater flow systems at the Nevada Test Site, Nevada: A synthesis of potentiometric contours, hydrostratigraphy, and geologic structures
Joseph M. Fenelon, Donald S. Sweetkind, Randell J. Laczniak
2010, Professional Paper 1771
Contaminants introduced into the subsurface of the Nevada Test Site by underground nuclear testing are of concern to the U.S. Department of Energy and regulators responsible for protecting human health and safety. The potential for contaminant movement away from the underground test areas and into the accessible environment is greatest...
Middle Jurassic through Quaternary metallogenesis and tectonics of northeast Asia, Chapter 8 in Metallogenesis and tectonics of northeast Asia
Sergey M. Rodionov, Alexander I. Khanchuk, Alexander A. Obolenskiy, Masatsugu Ogasawara, Zhan V. Seminskiy, Andrei V. Prokopiev, Vladimir F. Timofeev, Warren J. Nokleberg
2010, Professional Paper 1765-8
The major purposes of this chapter are to provide (1) an overview of the regional geology, tectonics, and metallogenesis of Northeast Asia for readers who are unfamiliar with the region, (2) a general scientific introduction to the succeeding chapters of this volume, and (3) an overview of the methodology of...
Introduction, Chapter 1 in Metallogenesis and tectonics of northeast Asia
Leonid M. Parfenov, Gombosuren Badarch, Nikolai A. Berzin, Duk-Hwan Hwang, Alexander I. Khanchuk, Mikhail I. Kuzmin, Warren J. Nokleberg, Alexander A. Obolenskiy, Masatsugu Ogasawara, Andrei V. Prokopiev, Sergey M. Rodionov, Alexander P. Smelov, Hongquan Yan
2010, Professional Paper 1765-1
The major purposes of this chapter are to provide (1) an overview of the regional geology, tectonics, and metallogenesis of Northeast Asia for readers who are unfamiliar with the region, (2) a general scientific introduction to the succeeding chapters of this volume, and (3) an overview of the methodology of...