Calibration of GOES-derived solar radiation data using a distributed network of surface measurements in Florida, USA
David M. Sumner, Chandra S. Pathak, John R. Mecikalski, Simon J. Paech, Qinglong Wu, Taiye Sangoyomi
Roger W. Babcock Jr., Raymond Walton, editor(s)
2008, Conference Paper, World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2008: Ahupua'A
Solar radiation data are critically important for the estimation of evapotranspiration. Analysis of visible-channel data derived from Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES) using radiative transfer modeling has been used to produce spatially- and temporally-distributed datasets of solar radiation. An extensive network of (pyranometer) surface measurements of solar radiation in the...
Chapter 31 Sensitivity and spin-up times of cohesive sediment transport models used to simulate bathymetric change
D. H. Schoellhamer, N. K. Ganju, P. R. Mineart, M. A. Lionberger
T. Kusuda, H. Yamanishi, J. Spearman, J. Z. Gailani, editor(s)
2008, Proceedings in Marine Science (9) 463-475
Bathymetric change in tidal environments is modulated by watershed sediment yield, hydrodynamic processes, benthic composition, and anthropogenic activities. These multiple forcings combine to complicate simple prediction of bathymetric change; therefore, numerical models are necessary to simulate sediment transport. Errors arise from these simulations, due to inaccurate initial conditions and model...
A linear geospatial streamflow modeling system for data sparse environments
Kwabena O. Asante, Guleid A. Arlan, Md Shahriar Pervez, James Rowland
2008, International Journal of River Basin Management (6) 233-241
In many river basins around the world, inaccessibility of flow data is a major obstacle to water resource studies and operational monitoring. This paper describes a geospatial streamflow modeling system which is parameterized with global terrain, soils and land cover data and run operationally with satellite‐derived precipitation and evapotranspiration datasets....
Documentation of a Gulf sturgeon spawning site on the Yellow River, Alabama, USA
Brian R. Kreiser, J. Berg, M. Randall, F. Parauka, S. Floyd, B. Young, Kenneth J. Sulak
2008, Gulf and Caribbean Research (20) 91-95
The Gulf Sturgeon Recovery Plan (USFWS, GSMFC and NMFS 1995) stressed the need to provide maximum protection to Gulf sturgeon spawning habitat. The approach employed by various Gulf sturgeon researchers, including ourselves, to document spawning has been to identify potential spawning habitat on the basis of physical characteristics and/or tracking...
Application of RHIZON samplers to obtain high-resolution pore-fluid records during geochemical investigations of gas hydrate systems
John W. Pohlman, M Riedel, William F. Waite, K. Rose, L. Lapham
2008, Fire in the Ice: NETL Methane Hydrate Newsletter (8) 16-17
Obtaining accurate, high-resolution profiles of pore fluid constituents is critical for characterizing the subsurface geochemistry of hydrate-bearing sediments. Tightly-constrained downcore profiles provide clues about fluid sources, fluid flow, and the milieu of chemical and diagenetic reactions, all of which are used to interpret where and why gas and gas hydrate...
Estimation of bedrock depth using the horizontal‐to‐vertical (H/V) ambient‐noise seismic method
John W. Lane Jr., Eric A. White, Gregory V. Steele, James C. Cannia
2008, Conference Paper, Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2008
Estimating sediment thickness and the geometry of the bedrock surface is a key component of many hydrogeologic studies. The horizontal‐to‐vertical (H/V) ambient‐noise seismic method is a novel, non‐invasive technique that can be used to rapidly estimate the depth to bedrock. The H/V method uses a single, broad‐band three‐component seismometer to...
Levee evaluation using MASW: Preliminary findings from the Citrus Lakefront Levee, New Orleans, Louisiana
John W. Lane Jr., Julian M. Ivanov, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Drew Clemens, Robert Patev, Richard D. Miller
2008, Conference Paper
The utility of the multi‐channel analysis of surface waves (MASW) seismic method for non‐invasive assessment of earthen levees was evaluated for a section of the Citrus Lakefront Levee, New Orleans, Louisiana. This test was conducted after the New Orleans' area levee system had been stressed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005....
Preliminary results of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission collaborative research program to assess tsunami hazard for nuclear power plants on the Atlantic and gulf coasts
A.M. Kammerer, Uri S. ten Brink, David C. Twitchell, Eric L. Geist, Jason D. Chaytor, J. Locat, H. J. Lee, Brian J. Buczkowski, M. Sansoucy
2008, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 14th world conference on earthquake engineering
In response to the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission (US NRC) initiated a long-term research program to improve understanding of tsunami hazard levels for nuclear facilities in the United States. For this effort, the US NRC organized a collaborative research program with the United States...
Characterizing submarine ground‐water discharge using fiber‐optic distributed temperature sensing and marine electrical resistivity
Rory Henderson, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, John W. Lane Jr., Charles F. Harvey, Lanbo Liu
2008, Conference Paper, Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2008
Submarine ground‐water discharge (SGD) contributes important solute fluxes to coastal waters. Pollutants are transported to coastal ecosystems by SGD at spatially and temporally variable rates. New approaches are needed to characterize the effects of storm‐event, tidal, and seasonal forcing on SGD. Here, we evaluate the utility of two geophysical methods‐fiber‐optic...
A prototype system for forecasting landslides in the Seattle, Washington, area
Alan F. Chleborad, Rex L. Baum, Jonathan W. Godt, Philip S. Powers
2008, Reviews in Engineering Geology (20) 103-120
Empirical rainfall thresholds and related information form the basis of a prototype system for forecasting landslides in the Seattle area. The forecasts are tied to four alert levels, and a decision tree guides the use of thresholds to determine the appropriate level. From analysis of historical landslide data, we developed...
Shallow landslide hazard map of Seattle, Washington
Edwin L. Harp, John A. Michael, William T. Laprade
2008, Reviews in Engineering Geology (20) 67-82
Landslides, particularly debris flows, have long been a significant cause of damage and destruction to people and property in the Puget Sound region. Following the years of 1996 and 1997, the Federal Emergency Management Agency designated Seattle as a “Project Impact” city with the goal of encouraging the city to...
Stratigraphy and structural setting of Upper Cretaceous Frontier Formation, western Centennial Mountains, southwestern Montana and southeastern Idaho
T. S. Dyman, R. G. Tysdal, W. J. Perry Jr., D. J. Nichols, J. D. Obradovich
2008, Cretaceous Research (29) 237-248
Stratigraphic, sedimentologic, and palynologic data were used to correlate the Frontier Formation of the western Centennial Mountains with time-equivalent rocks in the Lima Peaks area and other nearby areas in southwestern Montana. The stratigraphic interval studied is in the middle and upper parts (but not uppermost) of the formation based...
M-log A observations for recent large earthquakes
Thomas C. Hanks, W. H. Bakun
2008, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (98) 490-494
Using a magnitude (M)-log area (A) dataset augmented with seven large (M > 7.0) earthquakes occurring since Wells and Coppersmith (1994), this short note assesses the current validity of the bilinear M-log A relations for continental, strike-slip earthquakes proposed by Hanks and Bakun (2002), in particular the L-model scaling at...
Techniques for Monitoring Razorback Sucker in the Lower Colorado River, Hoover to Parker Dams, 2006-2007, Final Report
Gordon A. Mueller, Richard Wydoski, Eric Best, Steve Hiebert, Jeff Lantow, Mark Santee, Bill Goettlicher, Joe Millosovich
2008, Open-File Report 2008-1245
Trammel netting is generally the accepted method of monitoring razorback sucker in reservoirs, but this method is ineffective for monitoring this fish in rivers. Trammel nets set in the current become fouled with debris, and nets set in backwaters capture high numbers of nontarget species. Nontargeted fish composed 97 percent...
Herpetological Monitoring Using a Pitfall Trapping Design in Southern California
Robert Fisher, Drew Stokes, Carlton Rochester, Cheryl Brehme, Stacie Hathaway, Ted Case
2008, Techniques and Methods 2-A5
The steps necessary to conduct a pitfall trapping survey for small terrestrial vertebrates are presented. Descriptions of the materials needed and the methods to build trapping equipment from raw materials are discussed. Recommended data collection techniques are given along with suggested data fields. Animal specimen processing procedures, including toe- and...
Transport of water, carbon, and sediment through the Yukon River Basin
Timothy P. Brabets, Paul F. Schuster
2008, Fact Sheet 2008-3005
In 2001, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) began a water-quality study of the Yukon River. The Yukon River Basin (YRB), which encompasses 330,000 square miles in northwestern Canada and central Alaska (fig. 1), is one of the largest and most diverse ecosystems in North America. The Yukon River is more...
Molecular and phenotypic diversity in Chionactis occipitalis (Western Shovel-nosed Snake), with emphasis on the status of C. o. klauberi (Tucson Shovel-nosed Snake).
D.A. Wood, J.M. Meik, A.T. Holycross, Robert N. Fisher, Amy G. Vandergast
2008, Conservation Genetics (9) 1489-1507
Chionactis occipitalis (Western Shovel-nosed Snake) is a small colubrid snake inhabiting the arid regions of the Mojave, Sonoran, and Colorado deserts. Morphological assessments of taxonomy currently recognize four subspecies. However, these taxonomic proposals were largely based on weak morphological differentiation and inadequate geographic sampling. Our goal was to explore evolutionary...
Modeling soil moisture processes and recharge under a melting snowpack
A. L. Flint, L. E. Flint, M. D. Dettinger
2008, Conference Paper, Vadose Zone Journal
Recharge into granitic bedrock under a melting snowpack is being investigated as part of a study designed to understand hydrologic processes involving snow at Yosemite National Park in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. Snowpack measurements, accompanied by water content and matric potential measurements of the soil under the snowpack,...
Meteorological characteristics and overland precipitation impacts of atmospheric rivers affecting the West coast of North America based on eight years of SSM/I satellite observations
P.J. Neiman, F.M. Ralph, G.A. Wick, J.D. Lundquist, M. D. Dettinger
2008, Journal of Hydrometeorology (9) 22-47
The pre-cold-frontal low-level jet within oceanic extratropical cyclones represents the lower-tropospheric component of a deeper corridor of concentrated water vapor transport in the cyclone warm sector. These corridors are referred to as atmospheric rivers (ARs) because they are narrow relative to their length scale and are responsible for most of...
Dike orientations in the late jurassic independence dike swarm and implications for vertical-axis tectonic rotations in eastern California
R.F. Hopson, John W. Hillhouse, K. A. Howard
2008, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 481-498
Analysis of the strikes of 3841 dikes in 47 domains in the 500-km-long Late Jurassic Independence dike swarm indicates a distribution that is skewed clockwise from the dominant northwest strike. Independence dike swarm azimuths tend to cluster near 325?? ?? 30??, consistent with initial subparallel intrusion along much of the...
Diagnosis of an intense atmospheric river impacting the pacific northwest: Storm summary and offshore vertical structure observed with COSMIC satellite retrievals
P.J. Neiman, F.M. Ralph, G.A. Wick, Y.-H. Kuo, T.-K. Wee, Z. Ma, G.H. Taylor, M. D. Dettinger
2008, Monthly Weather Review (136) 4398-4420
This study uses the new satellite-based Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere, and Climate (COSMIC) mission to retrieve tropospheric profiles of temperature and moisture over the data-sparse eastern Pacific Ocean. The COSMIC retrievals, which employ a global positioning system radio occultation technique combined with "first-guess" information from numerical weather prediction...
Extreme changes in stable hydrogen isotopes and precipitation characteristics in a landfalling Pacific storm
T.B. Coplen, P.J. Neiman, A.B. White, J.M. Landwehr, F.M. Ralph, M. D. Dettinger
2008, Geophysical Research Letters (35)
With a new automated precipitation collector we measured a remarkable decrease of 51??? in the hydrogen isotope ratio (?? 2H) of precipitation over a 60-minute period during the landfall of an extratropical cyclone along the California coast on 21 March 2005. The rapid drop in ??2H occurred as precipitation generation...
Seasonal passerine migratory movements over the arid Southwest
Rodney K. Felix, Robert H. Diehl, Janet M. Ruth
2008, Studies in Avian Biology (37) 126-137
Biannually, millions of Neotropical and Nearctic migratory birds traverse the arid southwestern US-Mexico borderlands, yet our knowledge of avian migration patterns and behaviors in this region is extremely limited. To describe the spatial and temporal patterns of migration, we examined echoes from weather surveillance radar sites across the American Southwest...
Vision of a cyberinfrastructure for nonnative, invasive species management
Jim Graham, Annie Simpson, Alycia W. Crall, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Greg Newman, Thomas J. Stohlgren
2008, BioScience (58) 263-268
Although the quantity of data on the location, status, and management of invasive species is ever increasing, invasive species data sets are often difficult to obtain and integrate. A cyberinfrastructure for such information could make these data available for Internet users. The data can be used to create regional watch...
When desert tortoises are rare: Testing a new protocol for assessing status
Kevin Keith, Kristin H. Berry, James F. Weigand
2008, California Fish and Game (94) 75-97
We developed and tested a new protocol for sampling populations of the desert tortoise, Gopherus agassizii, a state- and federally listed species, in areas where population densities are very low, historical data are sparse, and anthropogenic uses may threaten the well-being of tortoise populations and habitat. We conducted a 3-year...