Geologic columns for the ICDP-USGS Eyreville A and B cores, Chesapeake Bay impact structure: Sediment-clast breccias, 1096 to 444 m depth
Lucy E. Edwards, David S. Powars, Gregory Gohn, H. Dypvik
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 51-89
The Eyreville A and B cores, recovered from the “moat” of the Chesapeake Bay impact structure, provide a thick section of sediment-clast breccias and minor stratified sediments from 1095.74 to 443.90 m. This paper discusses the...
Breeding biology of the Three-striped warbler in Venezuela: A contrast between tropical and temperate parulids
W.A. Cox, T. E. Martin
2009, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (121) 667-678
We document reproductive life history traits of the Three-striped Warbler (Basileuterus tristriatus) from 146 nests in Venezuela and compare our results to data from the literature for other tropical and temperate parulid species. Mean (?? SE) clutch size was 1.96 ?? 0.03 eggs (n = 96) and fresh egg mass...
Paleontological interpretations of crater processes and infilling of synimpact sediments from the Chesapeake Bay impact structure
Jean Self-Trail, Lucy E. Edwards, Ronald J. Litwin
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 633-654
Biostratigraphic analysis of sedimentary breccias and diamictons in the Chesapeake Bay impact structure provides information regarding the timing and processes of late-stage gravitational crater collapse and ocean resurge. Studies of calcareous nannofossil and palynomorph assemblages in the International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP)-U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Eyreville A and B...
Silicate glasses and sulfide melts in the ICDP-USGS Eyreville B core, Chesapeake Bay impact structure, Virginia, USA
H. E. Belkin, J. Wright Horton Jr.
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 447-468
Optical and electron-beam petrography of melt-rich suevite and melt-rock clasts from selected samples from the Eyreville B core, Chesapeake Bay impact structure, reveal a variety of silicate glasses and coexisting sulfur-rich melts, now quenched to various sulfi de minerals (??iron). The glasses show a wide variety of textures, fl ow...
What you should know about land-cover data
Alisa L. Gallant
2009, Journal of Wildlife Management (73) 796-805
Wildlife biologists are using land-characteristics data sets for a variety of applications. Many kinds of landscape variables have been characterized and the resultant data sets or maps are readily accessible. Often, too little consideration is given to the accuracy or traits of these data sets, most likely because biologists do...
Widespread occurrence of the chytrid fungus batrachochytrium dendrobatidis on oregon spotted frogs (rana pretiosa)
C.A. Pearl, J. Bowerman, M.J. Adams, N.D. Chelgren
2009, EcoHealth (6) 209-218
The pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) has been associated with amphibian declines in multiple continents, including western North America. We investigated Bd prevalence in Oregon spotted frog (Rana pretiosa), a species that has declined across its range in the Pacific Northwest. Polymerase chain reaction analysis of skin swabs indicated that Bd...
Trace-element record in zircons during exhumation from UHP conditions, North-East Greenland Caledonides
W.C. McClelland, J. A. Gilotti, F.K. Mazdab, J. L. Wooden
2009, European Journal of Mineralogy (21) 1135-1148
Coesite-bearing zircon formed at ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) conditions share general characteristics of eclogite-facies zircon with trace-element signatures characterized by depleted heavy rare earth elements (HREE), lack of an Eu anomaly, and low Th/ U ratios. Trace-element signatures of zircons from the Caledonian UHP terrane in North-East Greenland were used to examine...
Influence of diet of double-crested cormorants on thiamine, lead, and mineral contents of their eggs
H. G. Ketola, J. H. Johnson, C.M. Adams, J.F. Farquhar
2009, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (24) 39-43
Throughout much of the Great Lakes basin, reproduction of several fish species is impaired by deficiency of thiamine in their eggs, an effect attributed to consumption of thiaminase-containing forage species, primarily alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus). Because the double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) nesting on islands in Lake Ontario is known to consume...
Effects of past logging and grazing on understory plant communities in a montane Colorado forest
P.J. Fornwalt, M. R. Kaufmann, L. S. Huckaby, T.J. Stohlgren
2009, Plant Ecology (203) 99-109
Throughout Pinus ponderosa-Pseudotsuga menziesii forests of the southern Colorado Front Range, USA, intense logging and domestic grazing began at the time of Euro-American settlement in the late 1800s and continued until the early 1900s. We investigated the long-term impacts of these settlement-era activities on understory plant communities by comparing understory...
Visualizing fossilization using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry maps of trace elements in Late Cretaceous bones
A.E. Koenig, R.R. Rogers, C.N. Trueman
2009, Geology (37) 511-514
Elemental maps generated by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) provide a previously unavailable high-resolution visualization of the complex physicochemical conditions operating within individual bones during the early stages of diagenesis and fossilization. A selection of LA-ICP-MS maps of bones collected from the Late Cretaceous of Montana (United States) and...
The geologic relationships of industrial mineral deposits and asbestos in the western united states
B.S. VanGosen
2009, Conference Paper, SME Annual Meeting and Exhibit and CMA's 111th National Western Mining Conference 2009
In recent years, U.S. regulatory agencies have placed emphasis on identifying and regulating asbestos dust exposures in the mining environment, with a particular focus upon industrial mineral deposits in which asbestos occurs as an accessory mineral. Because asbestos minerals form in specific geologic environments, only certain predictable types of industrial...
Fine sediment affects on survival to emergence of robust redhorse
Cecil A. Jennings, E.W. Dilts, J.L. Shelton Jr., Ronald C. Peterson
2009, Environmental Biology of Fishes (87) 43-53
Robust redhorse (Moxostoma robustum) is a rare riverine sucker for which life history information is scarce. Spawning occurs over loose gravel substrate and eggs and larvae may be adversely affected by fine sediments among the gravel. A 2-year study was conducted to determine the threshold at which fine sediments are...
The puzzle of the 1996 Bárdarbunga, Iceland, earthquake: no volumetric component in the source mechanism
Hrvoje Tkalcic, Douglas S. Dreger, Gillian R. Foulger, Bruce R. Julian
2009, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (99) 3077-3085
A volcanic earthquake with Mw 5.6 occurred beneath the Bárdarbunga caldera in Iceland on 29 September 1996. This earthquake is one of a decade-long sequence of events at Bárdarbunga with non-double-couple mechanisms in the Global Centroid Moment Tensor catalog. Fortunately, it was recorded well by the regional-scale...
Effect of species rarity on the accuracy of species distribution models for reptiles and amphibians in southern California
J. Franklin, K.E. Wejnert, S.A. Hathaway, C.J. Rochester, Robert N. Fisher
2009, Diversity and Distributions (15) 167-177
Aim: Several studies have found that more accurate predictive models of species' occurrences can be developed for rarer species; however, one recent study found the relationship between range size and model performance to be an artefact of sample prevalence, that is, the proportion of presence versus absence observations in the...
Palaeoseismology of the Vilariça segment of the Manteigas-Bragança fault in northeastern Portugal
Thomas Rockwell, Joao Fonseca, Chris Madden, Tim Dawson, Lewis A. Owen, Susana Vilanova, Paula Figueiredo
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 237-258
The Manteigas-Bragança fault is a major, 250-km-long, NNE-striking, sinistral strike-slip structure in northern Portugal. This fault has no historical seismicity for large earthquakes, although it may have generated moderate (M5+) earthquakes in 1751 and 1858. Evidence of continued left horizontal displacement is shown by the presence of Cenozoic pull-apart basins...
Age, geochemical composition, and distribution of Oligocene ignimbrites in the northern Sierra Nevada, California: Implications for landscape morphology, elevation, and drainage divide geography of the Nevadaplano
Elizabeth J. Cassel, Andrew T. Calvert, Stephan A. Graham
2009, International Geology Review (51) 723-742
To gain a better understanding of the topographic and landscape evolution of the Cenozoic Sierra Nevada and Basin and Range, we combine geochemical and isotopic age correlations with palaeoaltimetry data from widely distributed ignimbrites in the northern Sierra Nevada, California. A sequence of Oligocene rhyolitic ignimbrites is preserved across the...
Geologic columns for the ICDP-USGS Eyreville A and C cores, Chesapeake Bay impact structure: Postimpact sediments, 444 to 0 m depth
Lucy E. Edwards, David S. Powars, J.V. Browning, P.P. McLaughlin Jr., K.G. Miller, Self-Trail J.M., A.A. Kulpecz, T. Elbra
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 91-114
A 443.9-m-thick, virtually undisturbed section of postimpact deposits in the Chesapeake Bay impact structure was recovered in the Eyreville A and C cores, Northampton County, Virginia, within the "moat" of the structure's central crater. Recovered sediments are mainly fine-grained marine siliciclastics, with the exception of Pleistocene sand, clay, and gravel....
Mid-Wisconsinan environments on the eastern Great Plains
R. G. Baker, E. Arthur Bettis III, R.D. Mandel, J.A. Dorale, G. G. Fredlund
2009, Quaternary Science Reviews (28) 873-889
Few sites on the eastern Great Plains contain paleobotanical records for the mid-Wisconsin. We report on four sites, two stream cutbanks and two quarry exposures, ranging in age from >50 to ???23.4 ka. The oldest site at >50 ka contains a suite of macrofossils from prairie and disturbed ground habitats,...
Characterization of flux-grown Trace-element-doped titanite using the high-mass-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP-RG)
F.K. Mazdab
2009, Canadian Mineralogist (47) 813-831
Crystals of titanite can be readily grown under ambient pressure from a mixture of CaO, TiO2 and SiO2 in the presence of molten sodium tetraborate. The crystals produced are euhedral and prismatic, lustrous and transparent, and up to 5 mm in length. Titanite obtained by this method contains approximately 4300...
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...
Arc-continent collision and the formation of continental crust: A new geochemical and isotopic record from the Ordovician Tyrone Igneous Complex, Ireland
Amy E. Draut, Peter D. Clift, Jeffrey M. Amato, Jerzy Blusztajn, Hans Schouten
2009, Journal of the Geological Society (166) 485-500
Collisions between oceanic island-arc terranes and passive continental margins are thought to have been important in the formation of continental crust throughout much of Earth's history. Magmatic evolution during this stage of the plate-tectonic cycle is evident in several areas of the Ordovician Grampian-Taconic orogen, as we demonstrate in the...
Distribution, density, and biomass of introduced small mammals in the southern mariana islands
A.S. Wiewel, A.A.Y. Adams, G.H. Rodda
2009, Pacific Science (63) 205-222
Although it is generally accepted that introduced small mammals have detrimental effects on island ecology, our understanding of these effects is frequently limited by incomplete knowledge of small mammal distribution, density, and biomass. Such information is especially critical in the Mariana Islands, where small mammal density is inversely related to...
Movements of juvenile Gyrfalcons from western and interior Alaska following departure from their natal areas
Carol L. McIntyre, David C. Douglas, Layne G. Adams
2009, Journal of Raptor Research (43) 99-109
Juvenile raptors often travel thousands of kilometers from the time they leave their natal areas to the time they enter a breeding population. Documenting movements and identifying areas used by raptors before they enter a breeding population is important for understanding the factors that influence their survival. In North America,...
Long-term survival despite low genetic diversity in the critically endangered Madagascar fish-eagle
J. A. Johnson, R.E. Tingay, M. Culver, F. Hailer, M.L. Clarke, D.P. Mindell
2009, Molecular Ecology (18) 54-63
The critically endangered Madagascar fish-eagle (Haliaeetus vociferoides) is considered to be one of the rarest birds of prey globally and at significant risk of extinction. In the most recent census, only 222 adult individuals were recorded with an estimated total breeding population of no more than 100-120 pairs. Here, levels...
Effect of experimental manipulation on survival and recruitment of feral pigs
L.B. Hanson, M.S. Mitchell, J.B. Grand, D.B. Jolley, B.D. Sparklin, S.S. Ditchkoff
2009, Wildlife Research (36) 185-191
Lethal removal is commonly used to reduce the density of invasive-species populations, presuming it reduces population growth rate; the actual effect of lethal removal on the vital rates contributing to population growth, however, is rarely tested. We implemented a manipulative experiment of feral pig (Sus scrofa) populations at Fort Benning,...