Recent climate trends and implications for water resources in the Catskill Mountain region, New York, USA
Douglas A. Burns, Julian Klaus, Michael R. McHale
2007, Journal of Hydrology (336) 155-170
Climate scientists have concluded that the earth’s surface air temperature warmed by 0.6 °C during the 20th century, and that warming induced by increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases is likely to continue in the 21st century, accompanied by changes in the hydrologic cycle. Climate change has important implications in the Catskill...
Estimating the amount of eroded section in a partially exhumed basin from geophysical well logs: An example from the North Slope
W. Matthew Burns, Daniel O. Hayba, Elisabeth L. Rowan, David W. Houseknecht
2007, Professional Paper 1732-D
The reconstruction of burial and thermal histories of partially exhumed basins requires an estimation of the amount of erosion that has occurred since the time of maximum burial. We have developed a method for estimating eroded thickness by using porosity-depth trends derived from borehole sonic logs of wells in the...
Sea level fluctuations in central California at subtidal to decadal and longer time scales with implications for San Francisco Bay, California
H. F. Ryan, M.A. Noble
2007, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (73) 538-550
Sea level elevations from near the mouth of San Francisco Bay are used to describe the low-frequency variability of forcing of the coastal ocean on the Bay at a variety of temporal scales. About 90% of subtidal fluctuations in sea level...
Arsenic attenuation by oxidized aquifer sediments in Bangladesh
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, George N. Breit, Alan H. Welch, James C. Yount, John W. Whitney, Andrea L. Foster, M.N. Uddin, R.K. Majumder, N. Ahmed
2007, Science of the Total Environment (379) 133-150
Recognition of arsenic (As) contamination of shallow fluvio-deltaic aquifers in the Bengal Basin has resulted in increasing exploitation of groundwater from deeper aquifers that generally contain low concentrations of dissolved As. Pumping-induced infiltration of high-As groundwater could eventually cause As concentrations in these aquifers to increase. This study investigates the...
The state of the art in raptor electrocution research: A global review
Robert N. Lehman, P.L. Kennedy, J. A. Savidge
2007, Biological Conservation (136) 159-174
We systematically reviewed the raptor electrocution literature to evaluate study designs and methods used in raptor electrocution research, mitigation, and monitoring, emphasizing original research published in English. Specifically, we wondered if three decades of effort to reduce raptor electrocutions has had positive effects. The majority of literature examined came from...
Isotopic characterization of three groundwater recharge sources and inferences for selected aquifers in the upper Klamath Basin of Oregon and California, USA
P.C. Palmer, M. W. Gannett, S.R. Hinkle
2007, Journal of Hydrology (336) 17-29
Stable isotope (??D and ??18O) signatures of three principal groundwater recharge areas in the 21,000-km2 upper Klamath Basin are used to infer recharge sources for aquifers in the interior parts of the basin. Two of the principal recharge areas, the Cascade Range on the western and southern margin of the...
Hydrology and Flood Profiles of Duck Creek and Jordan Creek Downstream from Egan Drive, Juneau, Alaska
Janet H. Curran
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5323
Hydrologic and hydraulic updates for Duck Creek and the lower part of Jordan Creek in Juneau, Alaska, included computation of new estimates of peak streamflow magnitudes and new water-surface profiles for the 10-, 50-, 100-, and 500-year floods. Computations for the 2-, 5-, 10-, 25-, 50-, 100-, 200-, and 500-year...
Mapping moderate-scale land-cover over very large geographic areas within a collaborative framework: A case study of the Southwest Regional Gap Analysis Project (SWReGAP)
J. Lowry, R.D. Ramsey, K. Thomas, D. Schrupp, T. Sajwaj, J. Kirby, E. Waller, S. Schrader, S. Falzarano, L. Langs, G. Manis, C. Wallace, K. Schulz, P. Comer, K. Pohs, W. Rieth, C. Velasquez, B. Wolk, W. Kepner, K. Boykin, L. O’Brien, D. Bradford, B. Thompson, J. Prior-Magee
2007, Remote Sensing of Environment (108) 59-73
Land-cover mapping efforts within the USGS Gap Analysis Program have traditionally been state-centered; each state having the responsibility of implementing a project design for the geographic area within their state boundaries. The Southwest Regional Gap Analysis Project (SWReGAP) was the first formal GAP project designed at a regional, multi-state scale....
L-moments and TL-moments of the generalized lambda distribution
W.H. Asquith
2007, Computational Statistics and Data Analysis (51) 4484-4496
The 4-parameter generalized lambda distribution (GLD) is a flexible distribution capable of mimicking the shapes of many distributions and data samples including those with heavy tails. The method of L-moments and the recently developed method of trimmed L-moments (TL-moments) are attractive techniques for parameter estimation for heavy-tailed distributions for which...
Differentiating the Bishop ash bed and related tephra layers by elemental-based similarity coefficients of volcanic glass shards using solution inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (S-ICP-MS)
J.R. Knott, A.M. Sarna-Wojcicki, I.P. Montanez, E. Wan
2007, Quaternary International (166) 79-86
Volcanic glass samples from the same volcanic center (intra-source) often have a similar major-element composition. Thus, it can be difficult to distinguish between individual tephra layers, particularly when using similarity coefficients calculated from electron microprobe major-element measurements. Minor/trace element concentrations in glass...
Habitat characteristics of adult frosted elfins (Callophrys irus) in sandplain communities of southeastern Massachusetts, USA
G. Albanese, P.D. Vickery, P.R. Sievert
2007, Biological Conservation (136) 53-64
Changes to land use and disturbance frequency threaten disturbance-dependent Lepidoptera within sandplain habitats of the northeastern United States. The frosted elfin (Callophrys irus) is a rare and declining monophagous butterfly that is found in xeric open habitats maintained by disturbance. We surveyed potential habitat for adult frosted elfins at four...
A comparison of macroinvertebrate and habitat methods of data collection in the Little Colorado River Watershed, Arizona 2007
Patrice Spindler, Nick V. Paretti
2007, Open-File Report 10-05
The Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) Ecological Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP), use different field methods for collecting macroinvertebrate samples and habitat data for bioassessment purposes. Arizona’s Biocriteria index was developed using a riffle habitat sampling methodology, whereas the EMAP method employs...
Comparison of the dust distributions in the innermost comae of comets-1P/Halley and 19P/Borrelly spacecraft observations
T.-M. Ho, N. Thomas, D. C. Boice, M. Combi, L.A. Soderblom, V. Tenishev
2007, Planetary and Space Science (55) 974-985
We present a comparative study of the inner comae of comets 1P/Halley and 19P/Borrelly using data from the Halley Multicolour Camera (HMC) onboard Giotto and the Miniature Integrated Camera and Spectrometer onboard Deep Space 1 (DS1). We show that the dust brightness dependence as a function of radial distance is...
Correcting acoustic Doppler current profiler discharge measurement bias from moving-bed conditions without global positioning during the 2004 Glen Canyon Dam controlled flood on the Colorado River
J. W. Gartner, N. K. Ganju
2007, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods (5) 156-162
Discharge measurements were made by acoustic Doppler current profiler at two locations on the Colorado River during the 2004 controlled flood from Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona. Measurement hardware and software have constantly improved from the 1980s such that discharge measurements by acoustic profiling instruments are now routinely made over a...
Blooms of the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium fundyense in the western Gulf of Maine in 1993 and 1994: A comparative modeling study
C.A. Stock, D.J. McGillicuddy Jr., D.M. Anderson, A.R. Solow, R. P. Signell
2007, Continental Shelf Research (27) 2486-2512
Blooms of the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium fundyense commonly occur in the western Gulf of Maine but the amount of toxin observed in coastal shellfish is highly variable. In this study, a coupled physical-biological model is used to investigate the dynamics underlying the observed A. fundyense abundance and shellfish toxicity in...
Oxygen and chlorine isotopic fractionation during perchlorate biodegradation: Laboratory results and implications for forensics and natural attenuation studies
Neil C. Sturchio, John Karl Bohlke, Abelardo D. Beloso Jr., S.H. Streger, Linnea J. Heraty, Paul B. Hatzinger
2007, Environmental Science & Technology (41) 2796-2802
Perchlorate is a widespread environmental contaminant having both anthropogenic and natural sources. Stable isotope ratios of O and Cl in a given sample of perchlorate may be used to distinguish its source(s). Isotopic ratios may also be useful for identifying the extent of biodegradation of perchlorate, which is critical for...
Attenuation of ground-motion spectral amplitudes in southeastern Australia
T.I. Allen, P.R. Cummins, T. Dhu, J.F. Schneider
2007, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (97) 1279-1292
A dataset comprising some 1200 weak- and strong-motion records from 84 earthquakes is compiled to develop a regional ground-motion model for southeastern Australia (SEA). Events were recorded from 1993 to 2004 and range in size from moment magnitude 2.0 ??? M ??? 4.7. The decay of vertical-component Fourier spectral amplitudes...
Population response to habitat fragmentation in a stream-dwelling brook trout population
B. H. Letcher, K.H. Nislow, J.A. Coombs, M. J. O'Donnell, T.L. Dubreuil
2007, PLoS ONE (2)
Fragmentation can strongly influence population persistence and expression of life-history strategies in spatially-structured populations. In this study, we directly estimated size-specific dispersal, growth, and survival of stream-dwelling brook trout in a stream network with connected and naturally-isolated tributaries. We used multiple-generation, individual-based data to develop and parameterize a size-class and...
Comparison of 15 evaporation methods applied to a small mountain lake in the northeastern USA
Donald O. Rosenberry, Thomas C. Winter, D.C. Buso, G.E. Likens
2007, Journal of Hydrology (340) 149-166
Few detailed evaporation studies exist for small lakes or reservoirs in mountainous settings. A detailed evaporation study was conducted at Mirror Lake, a 0.15 km2 lake in New Hampshire, northeastern USA, as part of a long-term investigation of lake hydrology. Evaporation was determined using 14 alternate evaporation methods during six...
Relationship between evapotranspiration and precipitation pulses in a semiarid rangeland estimated by moisture flux towers and MODIS vegetation indices
P.L. Nagler, E. P. Glenn, H. Kim, W. Emmerich, R.L. Scott, T. E. Huxman, A.R. Huete
2007, Journal of Arid Environments (70) 443-462
We used moisture Bowen ratio flux tower data and the enhanced vegetation index (EVI) from the moderate resolution imaging spectrometer (MODIS) on the Terra satellite to measure and scale evapotranspiration (ET) over sparsely vegetated grassland and shrubland sites in a semiarid watershed in southeastern Arizona from 2000 to 2004. The...
Modeling grain size variations of aeolian gypsum deposits at White Sands, New Mexico, using AVIRIS imagery
H.A. Ghrefat, P.C. Goodell, B.E. Hubbard, R.P. Langford, R.E. Aldouri
2007, Geomorphology (88) 57-68
Visible and Near-Infrared (VNIR) through Short Wavelength Infrared (SWIR) (0.4-2.5????m) AVIRIS data, along with laboratory spectral measurements and analyses of field samples, were used to characterize grain size variations in aeolian gypsum deposits across barchan-transverse, parabolic, and barchan dunes at White Sands, New Mexico, USA. All field samples contained a...
Integrated geologic and geophysical studies of North American continental intraplate seismicity
X. Van Lanen, Walter D. Mooney
2007, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (425) 101-112
The origin of earthquakes within stable continental regions has been the subject of debate over the past thirty years. Here, we examine the correlation of North American stable continental region earthquakes using five geologic and geophysical data sets: (1) a newly compiled age-province map; (2) Bouguer...
Monitoring Hurricane Rita Inland Storm Surge
Benton D. McGee, Roland W. Tollett, Burl B. Goree
2007, Circular 1306-7J
Pressure transducers (sensors) are accurate, reliable, and cost-effective tools to measure and record the magnitude, extent, and timing of hurricane storm surge. Sensors record storm-surge peaks more accurately and reliably than do high-water marks. Data collected by sensors may be used in storm-surge models to estimate when, where, and to...
ASAR images a diverse set of deformation patterns at Kilauea volcano, Hawai'i
Michael P. Poland
2007, Conference Paper
Since 2003, 27 independent look angles have been acquired by ENVISAT’s Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) instrument over the island of Hawai`i, allowing for the formation of thousands of interferograms showing deformation of the ground surface. On Kīlauea volcano, a transition from minor to broad-scale summit inflation was observed by...
Estimation of post-Katrina debris volume
Mark Hansen, Peter Howd, Asbury Sallenger, C. Wayne Wright, Jeff Lillycrop
2007, Circular 1306-3E
Hurricane Katrina severely impacted coastal Mississippi, creating large quantities of building and vegetation debris. This paper summarizes techniques to estimate vegetation and nonvegetation debris quantities from light detection and ranging (lidar) data and presents debris volume results for Harrison County, Miss....