Physical limits on ground motion at Yucca Mountain
D.J. Andrews, Thomas C. Hanks, J.W. Whitney
2007, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (97) 1771-1792
Physical limits on possible maximum ground motion at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, the designated site of a high-level radioactive waste repository, are set by the shear stress available in the seismogenic depth of the crust and by limits on stress change that can propagate through the medium. We find in dynamic...
Population growth of Yellowstone grizzly bears: Uncertainty and future monitoring
R.B. Harris, Gary C. White, C.C. Schwartz, M.A. Haroldson
2007, Ursus (18) 168-178
Grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem of the US Rocky Mountains have recently increased in numbers, but remain vulnerable due to isolation from other populations and predicted reductions in favored food resources. Harris et al. (2006) projected how this population might fare in the future under alternative...
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...
Barite-forming environments along a rifted continental margin, Southern California Borderland
James R. Hein, Robert A. Zierenberg, J. Barry Maynard, Mark D. Hannington
2007, Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (54) 1327-1349
The Southern California Continental Borderland (SCCB) is part of the broad San Andreas transform-fault plate boundary that consists of a series of fault-bounded, petroleum-generating basins. The SCCB has high heat flow and geothermal gradients produced by thinned continental crust and Neogene volcanism. Barite deposits in the SCCB occur along faults.Barite...
Petrology and geochemistry of primitive lower oceanic crust from Pito Deep: Implications for the accretion of the lower crust at the Southern East Pacific Rise
N.W. Perk, L.A. Coogan, J.A. Karson, E.M. Klein, H.D. Hanna
2007, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (154) 575-590
A suite of samples collected from the uppermost part of the plutonic section of the oceanic crust formed at the southern East Pacific Rise and exposed at the Pito Deep has been examined. These rocks were sampled in situ by ROV and lie beneath a complete upper crustal section providing...
Faunal re-evaluation of Mid-Pliocene conditions in the western equatorial Pacific
H. Dowsett
2007, Micropaleontology (53) 447-456
Mid-Pliocene low-latitude Pacific faunal (planktic foraminifer) sea surface temperature (SST) estimates are normally based upon the Modern Analog Technique (MAT). In the Eastern equatorial Pacific (EEP), where upwelling of cool water predominates, MAT can be used to discern both cooling and warming in Neogene records. SST today is ???30??C in...
Vapor transfer prior to the October 2004 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington
A.J.R. Kent, J. Blundy, K. V. Cashman, K.M. Copper, C. Donnelly, John S. Pallister, M. Reagan, M.C. Rowe, Carl Thornber
2007, Geology (35) 231-234
Dome lavas from the 2004 eruption of Mount St. Helens show elevated Li contents in plagioclase phenocrysts at the onset of dome growth in October 2004. These cannot be explained by variations in plagioclase-melt partitioning, but require elevated Li contents in coexisting melt, a fact confirmed by measurements of Li...
Adequacy of satellite derived rainfall data for stream flow modeling
G. Artan, Hussein Gadain, Jodie Smith, Kwasi Asante, C.J. Bandaragoda, J. P. Verdin
2007, Natural Hazards (43) 167-185
Floods are the most common and widespread climate-related hazard on Earth. Flood forecasting can reduce the death toll associated with floods. Satellites offer effective and economical means for calculating areal rainfall estimates in sparsely gauged regions. However, satellite-based rainfall estimates have had limited use in flood forecasting and hydrologic stream...
Geochemical and geophysical examination of submarine groundwater discharge and associated nutrient loading estimates into Lynch Cove, Hood Canal, WA
P.W. Swarzenski, F. W. Simonds, A.J. Paulson, S. Kruse, C. Reich
2007, Environmental Science & Technology (41) 7022-7029
Geochemical tracer data (i.e., 222Rn and four naturally occurring Ra isotopes), electromagnetic (EM) seepage meter results, and high-resolution, stationary electrical resistivity images were used to examine the bi-directional (i.e., submarine groundwater discharge and recharge) exchange of a coastal aquifer with seawater. Our study site for these experiments was Lynch Cove,...
A simulation of groundwater discharge and nitrate delivery to chesapeake bay from the lowermost delmarva peninsula, USA
W. E. Sanford, J.P. Pope
2007, Conference Paper, IAHS-AISH Publication
A groundwater model has been developed for the lowermost Delmarva Peninsula, USA, that simulates saltwater intrusion into local confined aquifers and nitrate delivery to the Chesapeake Bay from the surficial aquifer. A flow path and groundwater-age analysis was performed using the model to estimate the timing of nitrate delivery to...
Toward a transport-based analysis of nutrient spiraling and uptake in streams
Robert L. Runkel
2007, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods (5) 50-62
Nutrient addition experiments are designed to study the cycling of nutrients in stream ecosystems where hydrologic and nonhydrologic processes determine nutrient fate. Because of the importance of hydrologic processes in stream ecosystems, a conceptual model known as nutrient spiraling is frequently employed. A central part of the nutrient spiraling approach...
Occurrence and origin of minerals in a chamosite-bearing coal of Late Permian age, Zhaotong, Yunnan, China
S. Dai, C. L. Chou
2007, American Mineralogist (92) 1253-1261
The minerals found in the no.5 coal (Late Permian) from the Zhaotong Coalfield, Yunnan Province, southwestern China, have been examined and found to consist mainly of kaolinite, pyrite, chamosite, quartz, and calcite, with trace amounts of illite and mixed-layer illite-smectite. The proportion of chamosite in clay minerals ranges from 32...
Effects of two sediment types on the fluorescence yield of two Hawaiian scleractinian corals
G.A. Piniak
2007, Marine Environmental Research (64) 456-468
This study used non-invasive pulse-amplitude modulated (PAM) fluorometry to measure the maximum fluorescence yield (Fv/Fm) of two Hawaiian scleractinian coral species exposed to short-term sedimentation stress. Beach sand or harbor mud was applied to coral fragments in a flow-through aquarium system for 0-45 h, and changes in Fv/Fm were measured...
Conservation biology for suites of species: Demographic modeling for Pacific island kingfishers
D.C. Kesler, S. M. Haig
2007, Biological Conservation (136) 520-530
Conservation practitioners frequently extrapolate data from single-species investigations when managing critically endangered populations. However, few researchers initiate work with the intent of making findings useful to conservation efforts for other species. We presented and explored the concept of conducting conservation-oriented research for suites of geographically separated populations with similar natural...
Spatial analysis of land use and shallow groundwater vulnerability in the watershed adjacent to Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland and Virginia, USA
A.E. LaMotte, E.A. Greene
2007, Environmental Geology (52) 1413-1421
Spatial relations between land use and groundwater quality in the watershed adjacent to Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland and Virginia, USA were analyzed by the use of two spatial models. One model used a logit analysis and the other was based on geostatistics. The models were developed and compared on...
Characterization and expression profile of the ovarian cytochrome P-450 aromatase (cyp19A1) gene during thermolabile sex determination in Pejerrey, Odontesthes bonariensis
M. Karube, J.I. Fernandino, P. Strobl-Mazzulla, C.A. Strussmann, G. Yoshizaki, G.M. Somoza, R. Patino
2007, Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological Genetics and Physiology (307) 625-636
Cytochrome P450 aromatase (cyp19) is an enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of androgens to estrogens and may play a role in temperature- dependent sex determination (TSD) of reptiles, amphibians, and fishes. In this study, the ovarian P450 aromatase form (cyp19A1) of pejerrey Odontesthes bonariensis, a teleost with marked TSD, was...
Methane gas hydrate effect on sediment acoustic and strength properties
W.J. Winters, W.F. Waite, D.H. Mason, L.Y. Gilbert, I.A. Pecher
2007, Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering (56) 127-135
To improve our understanding of the interaction of methane gas hydrate with host sediment, we studied: (1) the effects of gas hydrate and ice on acoustic velocity in different sediment types, (2) effect of different hydrate formation mechanisms on measured acoustic properties (3) dependence of shear strength on pore space...
Scaling local species-habitat relations to the larger landscape with a hierarchical spatial count model
W.E. Thogmartin, M. G. Knutson
2007, Landscape Ecology (22) 61-75
Much of what is known about avian species-habitat relations has been derived from studies of birds at local scales. It is entirely unclear whether the relations observed at these scales translate to the larger landscape in a predictable linear fashion. We derived habitat models and mapped predicted abundances for three...
Random forests for classification in ecology
D.R. Cutler, T.C. Edwards Jr., K.H. Beard, A. Cutler, K.T. Hess, J. Gibson, J.J. Lawler
2007, Ecology (88) 2783-2792
Classification procedures are some of the most widely used statistical methods in ecology. Random forests (RF) is a new and powerful statistical classifier that is well established in other disciplines but is relatively unknown in ecology. Advantages of RF compared to other statistical classifiers include (1) very high classification accuracy;...
Effects of capillarity and microtopography on wetland specific yield
D. M. Sumner
2007, Wetlands (27) 693-701
Hydrologic models aid in describing water flows and levels in wetlands. Frequently, these models use a specific yield conceptualization to relate water flows to water level changes. Traditionally, a simple conceptualization of specific yield is used, composed of two constant values for above- and below-surface water levels and neglecting the...
Impacts of the 2004 Indian ocean tsunami on the southwest coasts of Sri Lanka
Robert A. Morton, John A. Goff, Scott L. Nichol
2007, Conference Paper, Coastal Sediments '07 - Proceedings of 6th International Symposium on Coastal Engineering and Science of Coastal Sediment Processes
The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami caused major landscape changes along the southwest coasts of Sri Lanka that were controlled by the flow, natural topography and bathymetry, and anthropogenic modifications of the terrain. Landscape changes included substantial beach erosion and scouring of return-flow channels near the beach, and deposition of sand...
Coral-gravel storm ridges: examples from the tropical Pacific and Caribbean
Bruce M. Richmond, Robert A. Morton
2007, Conference Paper, Coastal Sediments '07 - Proceedings of 6th International Symposium on Coastal Engineering and Science of Coastal Sediment Processes
Extreme storms in reef environments have long been recognized as a mechanism for depositing ridges of reef-derived coarse clastic sediment. This study revisits the storm ridges formed by Tropical Cyclone Bebe on Funafuti, Tuvalu and Tropical Cyclone Ofa on Upolu, Western Samoa in the South Pacific, and Hurricane Lenny on...
Balancing data sharing requirements for analyses with data sensitivity
C. S. Jarnevich, J.J. Graham, G.J. Newman, A.W. Crall, T.J. Stohlgren
2007, Biological Invasions (9) 597-599
Data sensitivity can pose a formidable barrier to data sharing. Knowledge of species current distributions from data sharing is critical for the creation of watch lists and an early warning/rapid response system and for model generation for the spread of invasive species. We have created an on-line system to synthesize...
Hydrology and subsurface transport of oil-field brine at the U.S. Geological Survey OSPER site "A", Osage County, Oklahoma
William N. Herkelrath, Yousif K. Kharaka, James J. Thordsen, Marvin M. Abbott
2007, Applied Geochemistry (22) 2155-2163
Spillage and improper disposal of saline produced water from oil wells has caused environmental damage at thousands of sites in the United States. In order to improve understanding of the fate and transport of contaminants at these sites, the U.S. Geological...
Seasonal variations in modern speleothem calcite growth in Central Texas, U.S.A
J.L. Banner, A. Guilfoyle, E.W. James, L.A. Stern, M. Musgrove
2007, Journal of Sedimentary Research (77) 615-622
Variations in growth rates of speleothem calcite have been hypothesized to reflect changes in a range of paleoenvironmental variables, including atmospheric temperature and precipitation, drip-water composition, and the rate of soil CO2 delivery to the subsurface. To test these hypotheses, we quantified growth rates of modern speleothem calcite on artificial...