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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A pan-Precambrian link between deglaciation and environmental oxidation
T.J. Raub, J.L. Kirschvink
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-KP-08
Despite a continuous increase in solar luminosity to the present, Earth’s glacial record appears to become more frequent, though less severe, over geological time. At least two of the three major Precambrian glacial intervals were exceptionally intense, with solid evidence for widespread sea ice on or near the equator, well...
Integration of seafloor point data in usSEABED
Jane A. Reid, S. Jeffress Williams, Mark Zimmermann, Chris Jenkins, Nadine E. Golden
2007, Conference Paper, Proceedings of Coastal Zone '07
Sediments of the beach, nearshore, and continental shelves record a complex interplay of processes including wave energy and direction , currents, beach erosion or accretion, bluff or cliff retreat, fluvial input, sediment longshore and cross-shelf transport processes, contaminant content and transport, sediment sources and sinks, and others. In turn, sediments...
Cretaceous and Tertiary extension throughout the Ross Sea, Antarctica
Robert C. Decesari, Douglas C. Wilson, Bruce P. Luyendyk, Michael Faulkner
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-SRP-098
Marine geophysical data from the deep sea adjacent to the Ross Sea, Antarctica suggest that 70 km of extension occurred between East and West Antarctica from 46 to 2 Ma. The Northern and Victoria Land Basins in the western Ross Sea adjacent to the Transantarctic Mountains accommodated 95 km of...
Coupling alongshore variations in wave energy to beach morphologic change using the SWAN wave model at Ocean Beach, San Francisco, CA
Jodi L. Eshleman, Patrick L. Barnard, Li H. Erikson, Daniel M. Hanes
2007, Conference Paper, 10th International Workshop on Wind Hindcasting and Forecasting and Coastal Hazard Symposium: North Shore, Oahu, November 11-16, 2007
Coastal managers have faced increasing pressure to manage their resources wisely over the last century as a result of heightened development and changing environmental forcing. It is crucial to understand seasonal changes in beach volume and shape in order to identify areas vulnerable to accelerated erosion. Shepard (1950) was among...
Model scenarios of shoreline change at Kaanapali Beach, Maui, Hawaii: Seasonal and extreme events
Sean Vitousek, Charles H. Fletcher, Mark A. Merrifield, Geno Pawlak, Curt D. Storlazzi
2007, Conference Paper, Coastal Sediments '07 - Proceedings of 6th International Symposium on Coastal Engineering and Science of Coastal Sediment Processes
Kaanapali beach is a well-defined littoral cell of carbonate sand extending 2 km south from Black Rock (a basalt headland) to Hanakao'o Point. The beach experiences dynamic seasonal shoreline change forced by longshore transport from two dominant swell regimes. In summer, south swells (Hs = 1–2 m Tp = 14–25...
Pliocene environments
R.Z. Poore
2007, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science
The Pliocene spans the interval of Earth history from ca. 5.3 to 1.8 million years ago (Ma). Although details are still debated there is much evidence from continental and oceanic locations indicating that conditions from 5.3 to about 3.0 Ma were often warmer than in modern times in mid- and...
Uranium(VI) release from contaminated vadose zone sediments: Estimation of potential contributions from dissolution and desorption
Deborah L. Bond, James A. Davis, John M. Zachara
2007, Book chapter, Developments in earth and environmental sciences
A key difficulty in developing accurate, science-based conceptual models for remediation of contaminated field sites is the proper accounting of multiple coupled geochemical and hydrologic processes. An example of such a difficulty is the separation of desorption and dissolution processes in releasing contaminants from sediments to groundwaters; very few studies are found...
Spatially continuous interpolation of water stage and water depths using the Everglades depth estimation network (EDEN)
Leonard Pearlstine, Aaron Higer, Monica Palaseanu, Ikuko Fujisaki, Frank Mazzotti
2007, Report
The Everglades Depth Estimation Network (EDEN) is an integrated network of real-time water-level monitoring, ground-elevation modeling, and water-surface modeling that provides scientists and managers with current (2000-present), online water-stage and water-depth information for the entire freshwater portion of the Greater Everglades. Continuous daily spatial interpolations of the EDEN network stage...
Does the late Pliocene change in the architecture of the Antarctic margin correspond to the transition to the modern Antarctic Ice Sheet?
M. Rebesco, Angelo Camerlenghi
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-SRP-021
We observe in 6 key sectors of East and West Antarctica continental margin a change in the geometry of the sedimentary deposits which is characterized by: margin-wide erosion and subsequent progradation on the continental shelf; downlap on the continental slope; major mass wasting deposits on the continental rise. The change occurs in...
Airborne laser swath mapping of the Denton Hills, Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica: Applications for structural and glacial geomorphic mapping
Terry Wilson, Beata Csatho
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-SRP-089
High-resolution digital elevation data acquired by airborne laser scanning (ALS) for the Denton Hills, along the coastal foothills of the Royal Society Range, Transantarctic Mountains, are examined for applications to bedrock and glacial geomorphic mapping. Digital elevation models (DEMs), displayed as shaded-relief images and slope maps, portray geomorphic landscape features...
Tampa Bay as a model estuary for examining the impact of human activities on biogeochemical processes: an introduction
Peter W. Swarzenski, Mark Baskaran, Carl S. Henderson, Kim Yates
2007, Marine Chemistry (104) 1-3
Tampa Bay is a shallow, Y-shaped coastal embayment that is located along the center of the Florida Platform – an expansive accumulation of Cretaceous–Tertiary shallow-water carbonates and evaporites that were periodically exposed during glacio–eustatic sea level fluctuations. As a consequence, extensive karstification likely had a controlling impact on the geologic...
Continental margin sedimentation: From sediment transport to sequence stratigraphy
Charles A. Nittrouer, James A. Austin, Michael E. Field, Joseph H. Kravitz, James P. M. Syvitski, Patricia L. Wiberg, editor(s)
2007, Book
This volume on continental margin sedimentation brings together an expert editorial and contributor team to create a state-of-the-art resource. Taking a global perspective, the book spans a range of timescales and content, ranging from how oceans transport particles, to how thick rock sequences are formed on continental margins.- Summarizes and...
The next generation Antarctic digital magnetic anomaly map
Ralph R. B. von Frese, A.V. Golynsky, H.R. Kim, L. Gaya-Pique, E. Thébault, M. Chiappinii, M. Ghidella, A. Grunow, ADMAP Working Group
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-SRP-093
Initiated in 1995, the Antarctic Digital Magnetic Anomaly Project (ADMAP) produced the first magnetic anomaly map of the Antarctic region south of 60 o S (Golynsky et al., 2001). This map synthesized over 7.1 million line-kms of survey data available up through 1999 from marine, airborne and Magsat satellite observations. Since the...
The Yellowstone hotspot, Greater Yellowstone ecosystem, and human geography
Kenneth L. Pierce, Don G. Despain, Lisa A. Morgan, John M. Good
Lisa Ann Morgan Morzel, editor(s)
2007, Professional Paper 1717-A
Active geologic processes associated with the Yellowstone hotspot are fundamental in shaping the landscapes of the greater Yellowstone ecosystem (GYE), a high volcanic plateau flanked by a crescent of still higher mountainous terrain. The processes associated with the Yellowstone hotspot are volcanism, faulting, and uplift and are observed in the...
The need for sustained and integrated high-resolution mapping of dynamic coastal environments
Hilary F. Stockdon, Jeff W. Lillycrop, Peter A. Howd, Jennifer M. Wozencraft
2007, Marine Technology Society Journal (40) 90-99
The coastal zone of the United States is a dynamic environment evolving in response to both natural processes and human activities. In order to protect coastal populations and resources, a detailed understanding of the physical setting and of the processes responsible for change is required. A sustained program of mapping...
Analysis of continuous GPS measurements from southern Victoria Land, Antarctica
Michael J. Willis
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-SRP-064
Several years of continuous data have been collected at remote bedrock Global Positioning System (GPS) sites in southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Annual to sub-annual variations are observed in the position time-series. An atmospheric pressure loading (APL) effect is calculated from pressure field anomalies supplied by the European Centre for Medium-Range...
Southern California Bight 2003 Regional Monitoring Program: V. water quality
Nikolay P. Nezlin, Paul M. DiGiacomo, Stephen B. Weisberg, Dario W. Diehl, Jonathan A. Warrick, Michael J. Mengel, Burton H. Jones, Kristen M. Reifel, Scott C. Johnson, J. Carter Ohlmann, Libe Washburn, Eric J. Terrill
2007, Technical Report 528
More than $30 million is expended annually on environmental monitoring in the Southern California Bight (SCB), yet only 5% of the Bight is monitored on an ongoing basis. Therefore, environmental managers in the SCB decided to expand their monitoring program and, starting in 1994, decided to conduct periodic regional assessments...
Geometrical analysis of structural data collected at high South latitude: A modular arithmetic method that addresses meridional convergence
C.S. Siddoway, M.F. Siddoway
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-SRP-061
The convergence of meridians toward the South Pole causes unique problems for geometrical comparison of structural geological and geophysical datasets from Antarctica. The true North reference direction ordinarily is used for measuring and reporting vector data (strike, trend) in Antarctica, as elsewhere. However, over a latitude distance of just 100...
Vertical motions in Northern Victoria Land inferred from GPS: A comparison with a glacial isostatic adjustment model
F. Mancini, M. Negusini, A. Zanutta, A. Capra
2007, Open-File Report 2007-1047-SRP-073
Following the densification of GPS permanent and episodic trackers in Antarctica, geodetic observations are playing an increasing role in geodynamics research and the study of the glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA). The improvement in geodetic measurements accuracy suggests their use in constraining GIA models. It is essential to have a deeper...
Burial history, thermal maturity, and oil and gas generation history of petroleum systems in the Wind River Basin Province, central Wyoming: Chapter 6 in Petroleum systems and geologic assessment of oil and gas resources in the Wind River Basin Province, Wyoming
Laura N.R. Roberts, Thomas M. Finn, Michael D. Lewan, Mark A. Kirschbaum
2007, Data Series 69-J-6
Burial history, thermal maturity, and timing of oil and gas generation were modeled for eight key source rock units at nine well locations throughout the Wind River Basin Province. Petroleum source rocks include the Permian Phosphoria Formation, the Cretaceous Mowry Shale, Cody Shale, and Mesaverde, Meeteetse, and Lance Formations, and...
Transport of microorganisms in the terrestrial subsurface: In situ and laboratory methods
Ronald W. Harvey, Hauke Harms, Lee L. Landkamer
C. J. Hurst, R. Crawford, J. Garland, D.A. Lipson, A. Mills, L.D. Stetzenbach, editor(s)
2007, Book chapter, Manual of environmental microbiology
This chapter describes and discusses laboratory and field techniques for studying microbial transport behavior in aquifer materials and model porous media. Changes in ionic strength (I) during transport studies may occur inadvertently as a result of using halides as conservative tracers and may lead to density-induced sinking of the tracer...
Climate matching as a tool for predicting potential North American spread of Brown Treesnakes
Gordon H. Rodda, Robert N. Reed, Catherine S. Jarnevich
G.W. Witmer, W. C. Pitt, K.A. Fagerstone, editor(s)
2007, Conference Paper, Managing Vertebrate Invasive Species – Proceedings of a Symposium
Climate matching identifies extralimital destinations that could be colonized by a potential invasive species on the basis of similarity to climates found in the species’ native range. Climate is a proxy for the factors that determine whether a population will reproduce enough to offset mortality. Previous climate matching models (e.g.,...
Plumbing the global carbon cycle: Integrating inland waters into the terrestrial carbon budget
J. J. Cole, Y.T. Prairie, N.F. Caraco, W. H. McDowell, L.J. Tranvik, Robert G. Striegl, C.M. Duarte, Pirkko Kortelainen, J. A. Downing, J. J. Middelburg, J. Melack
2007, Ecosystems (10) 171-184
Because freshwater covers such a small fraction of the Earth's surface area, inland freshwater ecosystems (particularly lakes, rivers, and reservoirs) have rarely been considered as potentially important quantitative components of the carbon cycle at either global or regional scales. By taking published estimates of gas exchange, sediment accumulation, and carbon...
Diet niches of major forage fish in Lake Michigan
R. Douglas Hunter, J.F. Savino, L.M. Ogilvie
Jankun M.Brzuzan P.Hliwa P.Luczynski M., editor(s)
2007, Conference Paper, Advances in Limnology
A large complex of coregonine species historically dominated the fish community of Lake Michigan. The current species complex is simplified with one remaining coregonine, bloater (Coregonus hoyi), deepwater sculpin (Myoxocephalus thompsoni), slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus), and two dominant invaders, alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) and rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax). To better understand...
Sensitivity of estuarine turbidity maximum to settling velocity, tidal mixing, and sediment supply
J.C. Warner, C. R. Sherwood, W.R. Geyer
Maa J.P.Y.Sanford L.P.Schoellhamer D.H., editor(s)
2007, Proceedings in Marine Science (8) 355-376
Estuarine turbidity maximum, numerical modeling, settling velocity, stratification The spatial and temporal distribution of suspended material in an Estuarine Turbidity Maxima (ETM) is primarily controlled by particle settling velocity, tidal mixing, shear-stress thresholds for resuspension, and sediment supply. We vary these parameters in numerical experiments of an idealized two-dimensional (x-z)...