Investigation of aquifer-estuary interaction using wavelet analysis of fiber-optic temperature data
R.D. Henderson, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Charles F. Harvey
2009, Geophysical Research Letters (36)
Fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing (FODTS) provides sub-minute temporal and meter-scale spatial resolution over kilometer-long cables. Compared to conventional thermistor or thermocouple-based technologies, which measure temperature at discrete (and commonly sparse) locations, FODTS offers nearly continuous spatial coverage, thus providing hydrologic information at spatiotemporal scales previously impossible. Large and information-rich FODTS...
Near‐surface evaluation of Ball Mountain Dam, Vermont, using multi‐channel analysis of surface waves (MASW) and refraction tomography seismic methods on land‐streamer data
Julian M. Ivanov, Carole D. Johnson, John W. Lane Jr., Richard D. Miller, Drew Clemens
2009, Conference Paper, SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2009
A limited seismic investigation of Ball Mountain Dam, an earthen dam near Jamaica, Vermont, was conducted using multiple seismic methods including multi‐channel analysis of surface waves (MASW), refraction tomography, and vertical seismic profiling (VSP). The refraction and MASW data were efficiently collected in one survey using a towed land streamer...
Improving conceptual models of water and carbon transfer through peat
Jeffery M. McKenzie, Donald I. Siegel, Donald O. Rosenberry
Andrew J. Baird, Lisa R. Belyea, Xavier Comas, A.S. Reeve, Lee D. Slater, editor(s)
2009, Book chapter, Carbon cycling in northern peatlands: Geophysical Monograph Series
Northern peatlands store 500 × 1015 g of organic carbon and are very sensitive to climate change. There is a strong conceptual model of sources, sinks, and pathways of carbon within peatlands, but challenges remain both in understanding the hydrogeology and the linkages between carbon cycling and peat pore water...
Defining winter trophic habitat of juvenile Gulf Sturgeon in the Suwannee and Apalachicola rivermouth estuaries, acoustic telemetry investigations
K. J. Sulak, M.T. Randall, R. E. Edwards, T.M. Summers, K.E. Luke, W.T. Smith, A.D. Norem, William M. Harden, R.H. Lukens, F. Parauka, S. Bolden, R. Lehnert
2009, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (25) 505-515
Three automated listening post-telemetry studies were undertaken in the Suwannee and Apalachicola estuaries to gain knowledge of habitats use by juvenile Gulf Sturgeons (Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi) on winter feeding grounds. A simple and reliable method for external attachment of small acoustic tags to the dorsal fin base was developed using...
Spatially detailed quantification of metal loading for decision making: Metal mass loading to American fork and Mary Ellen Gulch, Utah
B. A. Kimball, R.L. Runkel
2009, Mine Water and the Environment (28) 274-290
Effective remediation requires an understanding of the relative contributions of metals from all sources in a catchment, and that understanding must be based on a spatially detailed quantification of metal loading. A traditional approach to quantifying metal loading has been to measure discharge and chemistry at a catchment outlet. This...
Dispersal of river sediment in the Southern California Bight
J.A. Warrick, K.L. Farnsworth
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 53-67
The rivers of Southern California deliver episodic pulses of water, sediment, nutrients, and pollutants to the region's coastal waters. Although river-sediment dispersal is observed in positively buoyant (hypopycnal) turbid plumes extending tens of kilometers from river mouths, very little of the river sediment is found in these plumes. Rather, river...
Quality assurance and quality control in light stable isotope laboratories: A case study of Rio Grande, Texas, water samples
T.B. Coplen, H. Qi
2009, Isotopes in Environmental and Health Studies (45) 126-134
New isotope laboratories can achieve the goal of reporting the same isotopic composition within analytical uncertainty for the same material analysed decades apart by (1) writing their own acceptance testing procedures and putting them into their mass spectrometric or laser-based isotope-ratio equipment procurement contract, (2) requiring...
Storm clouds on Saturn: Lightning-induced chemistry and associated materials consistent with Cassini/VIMS spectra
K. H. Baines, M.L. Delitsky, T.W. Momary, R. H. Brown, B. J. Buratti, R. N. Clark, P. D. Nicholson
2009, Planetary and Space Science (57) 1650-1658
Thunderstorm activity on Saturn is associated with optically detectable clouds that are atypically dark throughout the near-infrared. As observed by Cassini/VIMS, these clouds are ~20% less reflective than typical neighboring clouds throughout the spectral range from 0.8 ??m to at least 4.1 ??m. We propose that active thunderstorms originating in...
Predator avoidance performance of larval fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) following short-term exposure to estrogen mixtures
M.R. McGee, M.L. Julius, A.M. Vajda, D.O. Norris, L. B. Barber, H.L. Schoenfuss
2009, Aquatic Toxicology (91) 355-361
Aquatic organisms exposed to endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) at early life-stages may have reduced reproductive fitness via disruption of reproductive and non-reproductive behavioral and physiological pathways. Survival to reproductive age relies upon optimal non-reproductive trait expression, such as adequate predator avoidance responses, which may be impacted through EDC exposure. During...
A quarter-million years of paleoenvironmental change at Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho
D. S. Kaufman, Jordon Bright, W.E. Dean, J. G. Rosenbaum, K. Moser, R. Scott Anderson, Steven M. Colman, C.W. Heil Jr., Gonzalo Jiménez-Moreno, M.C. Reheis, K. R. Simmons
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 311-351
A continuous, 120-m-long core (BL00-1) from Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho, contains evidence of hydrologic and environmental change over the last two glacial-interglacial cycles. The core was taken at 41.95??N, 111.31??W, near the depocenter of the 60-m-deep, spring-fed, alkaline lake, where carbonate-bearing sediment has accumulated continuously. Chronological control is poor...
Assigning land use to supply wells for the statistical characterization of regional groundwater quality: Correlating urban land use and VOC occurrence
T.D. Johnson, K. Belitz
2009, Journal of Hydrology (370) 100-108
Many national and regional groundwater studies have correlated land use "near" a well, often using a 500 m radius circle, with water quality. However, the use of a 500 m circle may seem counterintuitive given that contributing areas are expected to extend up-gradient from wells, and not be circular in...
Impacts of stormwater runoff in the Southern California Bight: Relationships among plume constituents
K.M. Reifel, S.C. Johnson, P.M. DiGiacomo, M.J. Mengel, N.P. Nezlin, J.A. Warrick, B.H. Jones
2009, Continental Shelf Research (29) 1821-1835
The effects from two winter rain storms on the coastal ocean of the Southern California Bight were examined as part of the Bight '03 program during February 2004 and February-March 2005. The impacts of stormwater from fecal indicator bacteria, water column toxicity, and nutrients were evaluated for five major river...
Silt and gas accumulation beneath an artificial recharge spreading basin, Southwestern Utah, U.S.A.
V.M. Heilweil, D. K. Solomon, G. Ortiz
2009, Boletin Geologico y Minero (120) 185-196
Sand Hollow Reservoir in southwestern Utah, USA, is operated for both surface-water storage and artificial recharge to the underlying Navajo Sandstone. The total volume of estimated artificial recharge between 2002 and 2007 is 85 million cubic meters (69,000 acre-feet). Since 2002, artificial recharge rates have generally been declining and are...
Coral disease following massive bleaching in 2005 causes 60% decline in coral cover on reefs in the US Virgin Islands
J. Miller, E. Muller, C. Rogers, R. Waara, A. Atkinson, K.R.T. Whelan, M. Patterson, B. Witcher
2009, Coral Reefs (28) 925-937
In the northeast Caribbean, doldrum-like conditions combined with elevated water temperatures in the summer/fall 2005 created the most severe coral bleaching event ever documented within this region. Video monitoring of 100 randomly chosen, permanent transects at five study sites in the US Virgin Islands revealed over 90% of the scleractinian...
Sources of sediment to the coastal waters of the Southern California Bight
J.A. Warrick, K.L. Farnsworth
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 39-52
The sources of sediment to the Southern California Bight were investigated with new calculations and published records of sediment fluxes, both natural and anthropogenic. We find that rivers are by far the largest source of sediment, producing over 10 ?? 106 t/yr on average, or over 80% of the sediment...
Hydrochemical analysis of groundwater using multivariate statistical methods - The Volta region, Ghana
B. Banoeng-Yakubo, S.M. Yidana, E. Nti
2009, KSCE Journal of Civil Engineering (13) 55-63
Q and R-mode multivariate statistical analyses were applied to groundwater chemical data from boreholes and wells in the northern section of the Volta region Ghana. The objective was to determine the processes that affect the hydrochemistry and the variation of these processes in space among the three main geological terrains:...
Geospatial Data Used in Water-Level and Land-Subsidence Studies in the Mojave River and Morongo Groundwater Basins for 2008
Carolyn Glockhoff, Christina L. Stamos
2009, Report
During 2008, the U.S. Geological Survey and other agencies made approximately 2,500 water-level measurements in the Mojave River and Morongo groundwater basins. These data document recent conditions and, when compared with previous data, changes in groundwater levels. A water-level contour map was drawn using data from about 700 wells, providing...
An experimental study of hydromagmatic fragmentation through energetic, non-explosive magma-water mixing
L.G. Mastin, O. Spieler, W.S. Downey
2009, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (180) 161-170
In this paper we report the first experimental investigation of non-explosive hydromagmatic fragmentation during energetic mixing with water. We mix magma and water by two methods: (1) pouring a basaltic melt between two converging water sprays; and (2) jetting basaltic melt at high pressure (3??MPa) through a nozzle into a...
Methylmercury enters an aquatic food web through acidophilic microbial mats in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
Eric S. Boyd, S. King, J.K. Tomberlin, D. Kirk Nordstrom, D. P. Krabbenhoft, T. Barkay, G. G. Geesey
2009, Environmental Microbiology (11) 950-959
Microbial mats are a visible and abundant life form inhabiting the extreme environments in Yellowstone National Park (YNP), WY, USA. Little is known of their role in food webs that exist in the Park's geothermal habitats. Eukaryotic green algae associated with a phototrophic green/purple Zygogonium microbial mat community that inhabits low-temperature regions...
Threatened fishes of the world: Moapa coriacea Hubbs and Miller, 1948 (cyprinidae)
G.G. Scoppettone, S. Goodchild
2009, Environmental Biology of Fishes (86) 339-340
Moapa dace. Conservation status: Endangered (U.S. Department of the Interior 1967), Critically Endangered, IUCN (Gimenez 1996). Identification: Small embedded scales, narrow caudal peduncle and a bright black spot at the base of deeply forked tail. Pharyngeal...
Forecasting urban growth across the United States-Mexico border
L.M. Norman, M. Feller, Guertin D. Phillip
2009, Computers, Environment and Urban Systems (33) 150-159
The sister-city area of Nogales, Arizona, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, is known collectively as Ambos (both) Nogales. This area was historically one city and was administratively divided by the Gadsden Purchase in 1853. These arid-lands have limited and sensitive natural resources. Environmental planning can support sustainable development to accommodate the...
Biology of the caddisfly oligostomis ocelligera (Trichoptera: Phryganeidae) inhabiting acidic mine drainage in Pennsylvania
Lori A. Redell, W.K. Gall, R. M. Ross, D. S. Dropkin
2009, Northeastern Naturalist (16) 285-306
Oligostomis ocelligera (a phryganeid caddisfly) is reported for the first time from a degraded lotic systema first-order stream in north-central Pennsylvania that was severely impacted by acid mine drainage. Although uncommonly collected and poorly known, O. ocelligera maintained a substantial population in the mine discharge, free of competition from Plecoptera,...
High precision relocation of earthquakes at Iliamna Volcano, Alaska
P. Statz-Boyer, C. Thurber, J.D. Pesicek, S. Prejean
2009, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (184) 323-332
In August 1996, a period of elevated seismicity commenced beneath Iliamna Volcano, Alaska. This activity lasted until early 1997, consisted of over 3000 earthquakes, and was accompanied by elevated emissions of volcanic gases. No eruption occurred and seismicity returned to background levels where it has remained since. We use waveform...
Integrated analysis of PALSAR/Radarsat-1 InSAR and ENVISAT altimeter data for mapping of absolute water level changes in Louisiana wetlands
J.-W. Kim, Z. Lu, H. Lee, C. K. Shum, C.M. Swarzenski, T.W. Doyle, S.-H. Baek
2009, Remote Sensing of Environment (113) 2356-2365
Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) has been used to detect relative water level changes in wetlands. We developed an innovative method to integrate InSAR and satellite radar altimetry for measuring absolute or geocentric water level changes and applied the methodology to remote areas of swamp forest in coastal Louisiana. Coherence...
Impact of municipal wastewater effluent on seed bank response and soils excavated from a wetland impoundment
R.G. Finocchiaro, R.J. Kremer, L.H. Fredrickson
2009, Wetlands (29) 713-723
Intensive management of wetlands to improve wildlife habitat typically includes the manipulation of water depth, duration, and timing to promote desired vegetation communities. Increased societal, industrial, and agricultural demands for water may encourage the use of alternative sources such as wastewater effluents in managed wetlands. However, water quality is commonly...