Optically stimulated luminescence age controls on late Pleistocene and Holocene coastal lithosomes, North Carolina, USA
D. Mallinson, K. Burdette, S. Mahan, G. Brook
2008, Quaternary Research (69) 97-109
Luminescence ages from a variety of coastal features on the North Carolina Coastal Plain provide age control for shoreline formation and relative sea-level position during the late Pleistocene. A series of paleoshoreline ridges, dating to Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5a and MIS 3 have been defined. The Kitty Hawk beach...
An empirical study of statistical properties of variance partition coefficients for multi-level logistic regression models
Ji Li, B. R. Gray, D.M. Bates
2008, Communications in Statistics: Simulation and Computation (37) 2010-2026
Partitioning the variance of a response by design levels is challenging for binomial and other discrete outcomes. Goldstein (2003) proposed four definitions for variance partitioning coefficients (VPC) under a two-level logistic regression model. In this study, we explicitly derived formulae for multi-level logistic regression model and subsequently studied the distributional...
Storm-damaged saline-contaminated boreholes as a means of aquifer contamination
D.A. Carlson, T. P. Van Biersel, L.R. Milner
2008, Ground Water (46) 69-79
Saline water from a storm surge can flow down storm-damaged submerged water supply wells and contaminate boreholes and surrounding aquifers. Using data from conventional purging techniques, aquifer test response analysis, chemical analysis, and regression analysis of chloride/silica (Cl/Si) ratio, equations were derived to estimate the volume of saline water intrusion...
A comparative analysis of simulated and observed landslide locations triggered by Hurricane Camille in Nelson County, Virginia
M.M. Morrissey, G. F. Wieczorek, B. A. Morgan
2008, Hydrological Processes (22) 524-531
In 1969, Nelson County, Virginia received up to 71 cm of rain within 12 h starting at 7 p.m. on August 19. The total rainfall from the storm exceeded the 1000-year return period in the region. Several thousands of landslides were induced by rainfall associated with Hurricane Camille causing fatalities...
Are hotspots of evolutionary potential adequately protected in southern California?
Amy G. Vandergast, A.J. Bohonak, S.A. Hathaway, J. Boys, Robert N. Fisher
2008, Biological Conservation (141) 1648-1664
Reserves are often designed to protect rare habitats, or "typical" exemplars of ecoregions and geomorphic provinces. This approach focuses on current patterns of organismal and ecosystem-level biodiversity, but typically ignores the evolutionary processes that control the gain and loss of biodiversity at these and other levels (e.g., genetic, ecological). In...
Modeling variability and trends in pesticide concentrations in streams
A. V. Vecchia, Jeffrey D. Martin, R. J. Gilliom
2008, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (44) 1308-1324
A parametric regression model was developed for assessing the variability and long-term trends in pesticide concentrations in streams. The dependent variable is the logarithm of pesticide concentration and the explanatory variables are a seasonal wave, which represents the seasonal variability of concentration in response to seasonal application rates; a streamflow...
Factors influencing nesting success of king eiders on northern Alaska's Coastal Plain
R.L. Bentzen, A.N. Powell, R.S. Suydam
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 1781-1789
King eider (Somateria spectabilis) populations have declined markedly in recent decades for unknown reasons. Nest survival is one component of recruitment, and a female's chance of reproductive success increases with her ability to choose an appropriate nesting strategy. We estimated variation in daily nest survival of king eiders at 2...
Factors controlling nitrogen release from two forested catchments with contrasting hydrochemical responses
S.F. Christopher, M.J. Mitchell, Michael McHale, E.W. Boyer, Douglas A. Burns, C. Kendall
2008, Hydrological Processes (22) 46-62
Quantifying biogeochemical cycles of nitrogen (N) and the associated fluxes to surface waters remains challenging, given the need to deal with spatial and temporal variability and to characterize complex and heterogeneous landscapes. We focused our study on catchments S14 and S15 located in the Adirondack Mountains...
Development of a standard reference material for Cr(vi) in contaminated soil
S.J. Nagourney, S. A. Wilson, B. Buckley, H.M.S. Kingston, S.-Y. Yang, S.E. Long
2008, Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry (23) 1550-1554
Over the last several decades, considerable contamination by hexavalent chromium has resulted from the land disposal of Chromite Ore Processing Residue (COPR). COPR contains a number of hexavalent chromium-bearing compounds that were produced in high temperature industrial processes. Concern over the carcinogenic potential of this chromium species, and its environmental...
Long-term water quality and biological responses to multiple best management practices in Rock Creek, Idaho
T.R. Maret, D.E. MacCoy, D.M. Carlisle
2008, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (44) 1248-1269
Water quality and macroinvertebrate assemblage data from 1981 to 2005 were assessed to evaluate the water quality and biological responses of a western trout stream to the implementation of multiple best management practices (BMPs) on irrigated cropland. Data from Rock Creek near Twin Falls, Idaho, a long-term monitoring site, were...
Gas and gas hydrate distribution around seafloor seeps in Mississippi Canyon, Northern Gulf of Mexico, using multi-resolution seismic imagery
W.T. Wood, P. E. Hart, D. R. Hutchinson, N. Dutta, F. Snyder, R.B. Coffin, J.F. Gettrust
2008, Marine and Petroleum Geology (25) 952-959
To determine the impact of seeps and focused flow on the occurrence of shallow gas hydrates, several seafloor mounds in the Atwater Valley lease area of the Gulf of Mexico were surveyed with a wide range of seismic frequencies. Seismic data were acquired with a deep-towed, Helmholz resonator source (220-820...
Demographic analysis of Lost River sucker and shortnose sucker populations in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon
E.C. Janney, R.S. Shively, B.S. Hayes, P.M. Barry, D. Perkins
2008, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (137) 1812-1825
We used 13 years (1995-2007) of capture-mark-recapture data to assess population dynamics of endangered Lost River suckers Deltistes luxatus and shortnose suckers Chasmistes brevirostris in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon. The Cormack-Jolly-Seber method was used to estimate survival, and information theoretic modeling was used to assess variation due to time, gender,...
Data management and digital delivery of analog data
W. A. Miller, Ryan Longhenry, T. Smith
2008, Conference Paper, International Astronautical Federation - 59th International Astronautical Congress 2008, IAC 2008
The U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) data archive at the Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center is a comprehensive and impartial record of the Earth's changing land surface. USGS/EROS has been archiving and preserving land remote sensing data for over 35 years. This remote sensing archive continues to grow as...
Land use and the structure of western US stream invertebrate assemblages: Predictive models and ecological traits
D.M. Carlisle, C.P. Hawkins
2008, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (27) 986-999
Inferences drawn from regional bioassessments could be strengthened by integrating data from different monitoring programs. We combined data from the US Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) program and the US Environmental Protection Agency Wadeable Streams Assessment (WSA) to expand the scope of an existing River InVertebrate Prediction and Classification...
A fully distributed implementation of mean annual streamflow regional regression equations
K.L. Verdin, B. Worstell
2008, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (44) 1537-1547
Estimates of mean annual streamflow are needed for a variety of hydrologic assessments. Away from gage locations, regional regression equations that are a function of upstream area, precipitation, and temperature are commonly used. Geographic information systems technology has facilitated their use for projects, but traditional approaches using the polygon overlay...
Great Basin paleontological database
N. Zhang, R. B. Blodgett, A. H. Hofstra
2008, Geosphere (4) 520-535
The U.S. Geological Survey has constructed a paleontological database for the Great Basin physiographic province that can be served over the World Wide Web for data entry, queries, displays, and retrievals. It is similar to the web-database solution that we constructed for Alaskan paleontological data (www.alaskafossil.org). The first phase of...
Assigning king eiders to wintering regions in the Bering Sea using stable isotopes of feathers and claws
S. Oppel, A.N. Powell
2008, Marine Ecology Progress Series (373) 149-156
Identification of wintering regions for birds sampled during the breeding season is crucial to understanding how events outside the breeding season may affect populations. We assigned king eiders captured on breeding grounds in northern Alaska to 3 broad geographic wintering regions in the Bering Sea using stable carbon and nitrogen...
Transport of elemental mercury in the unsaturated zone from a waste disposal site in an arid region
Michelle Ann Walvoord, Brian J. Andraski, D. P. Krabbenhoft, Robert G. Striegl
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 572-583
Mercury contained in buried landfill waste may be released via upward emission to the atmosphere or downward leaching to groundwater. Data from the US Geological Survey’s Amargosa Desert Research Site (ADRS) in arid southwestern Nevada reveal another potential pathway of Hg release: long-distance (102 m) lateral migration of elemental Hg (Hg0)...
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...
Seasonal changes in submarine groundwater discharge to coastal salt ponds estimated using 226Ra and 228Ra as tracers
A.L. Hougham, S.B. Moran, John P. Masterson, R.P. Kelly
2008, Marine Chemistry (109) 268-278
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) to coastal southern Rhode Island was estimated from measurements of the naturally-occurring radioisotopes 226Ra (t1/2 = 1600??y) and 228Ra (t1/2 = 5.75??y). Surface water and porewater samples were collected quarterly in Winnapaug, Quonochontaug, Ninigret, Green Hill, and Pt. Judith-Potter Ponds, as well as nearly monthly in...
Dislocation models of interseismic deformation in the western United States
F. F. Pollitz, P. McCrory, J. Svarc, J. Murray
2008, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (113)
The GPS-derived crustal velocity field of the western United States is used to construct dislocation models in a viscoelastic medium of interseismic crustal deformation. The interseismic velocity field is constrained by 1052 GPS velocity vectors spanning the ???2500-km-long plate boundary zone adjacent to the San Andreas fault and Cascadia subduction...
Generation of a pseudo-2D shear-wave velocity section by inversion of a series of 1D dispersion curves
Y. Luo, J. Xia, J. Liu, Y. Xu, Q. Liu
2008, Journal of Applied Geophysics (64) 115-124
Multichannel Analysis of Surface Waves utilizes a multichannel recording system to estimate near-surface shear (S)-wave velocities from high-frequency Rayleigh waves. A pseudo-2D S-wave velocity (vS) section is constructed by aligning 1D models at the midpoint of each receiver spread and using a spatial interpolation scheme. The horizontal resolution of the...
Ecohydrological factors affecting nitrate concentrations in a phreatic desert aquifer in northwestern China
J.B. Gates, J.K. Böhlke, W.M. Edmunds
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 3531-3537
Aerobic conditions in desert aquifers commonly allow high nitrate (NO 3-) concentrations in recharge to persist for long periods of time, an important consideration for N-cycling and water quality. In this study, stable isotopes of NO3- (??15N NO3 and ??18ONO3) were used to trace NO3- cycling processes which affect concentrations...
Application of multiple isotopic and geochemical tracers for investigation of recharge, salinization, and residence time of water in the Souss-Massa aquifer, southwest of Morocco
L. Bouchaou, J.L. Michelot, A. Vengosh, Y. Hsissou, M. Qurtobi, C.B. Gaye, T.D. Bullen, G.M. Zuppi
2008, Journal of Hydrology (352) 267-287
Groundwater and surface water in Souss-Massa basin in the west-southern part of Morocco is characterized by a large variation in salinity, up to levels of 37 g L-1. The high salinity coupled with groundwater level decline pose serious problems for current irrigation and domestic water supplies as well as future...
Dissolved oxygen transfer to sediments by sweep and eject motions in aquatic environments
B.L. O’Connor, Miki Hondzo
2008, Limnology and Oceanography (53) 566-578
Dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations were quantified near the sediment-water interface to evaluate DO transfer to sediments in a laboratory recirculating flume and open channel under varying fluid-flow conditions. DO concentration fluctuations were observed within the diffusive sublayer, as defined by the time-averaged DO concentration gradient near the sediment-water interface. Evaluation...