Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

40807 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 952, results 23776 - 23800

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Invasive species and coal bed methane development in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming
E. Bergquist, P. Evangelista, T.J. Stohlgren, N. Alley
2007, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (128) 381-394
One of the fastest growing areas of natural gas production is coal bed methane (CBM) due to the large monetary returns and increased demand for energy from consumers. The Powder River Basin, Wyoming is one of the most rapidly expanding areas of CBM development with projections of the establishment of...
An age-structured population model for horseshoe crabs in the Delaware Bay area to assess harvest and egg availability for shorebirds
J. A. Sweka, D. R. Smith, M. J. Millard
2007, Estuaries and Coasts (30) 277-286
The objective of this simulation study was to create an age-structured population model for horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphenols) in the Delaware Bay region using best available estimates of age-specific mortality and recent harvest levels. Density dependence was incorporated using a spatial model relating egg mortality with abundance of spawning females....
Effects of intraborehole flow on groundwater age distribution
B.A. Zinn, Leonard F. Konikow
2007, Hydrogeology Journal (15) 633-643
Environmental tracers are used to estimate groundwater ages and travel times, but the strongly heterogeneous nature of many subsurface environments can cause mixing between waters of highly disparate ages, adding additional complexity to the age-estimation process. Mixing may be exacerbated by the presence of wells because long open intervals or...
Competition between hardwood hammocks and mangroves
L.D.S.L. Sternberg, S.Y. Teh, S.M.L. Ewe, F. Miralles-Wilhelm, D.L. DeAngelis
2007, Ecosystems (10) 648-660
The boundaries between mangroves and freshwater hammocks in coastal ecotones of South Florida are sharp. Further, previous studies indicate that there is a discontinuity in plant predawn water potentials, with woody plants either showing predawn water potentials reflecting exposure to saline water or exposure to freshwater. This abrupt concurrent change...
Development and implementation of a Bayesian-based aquifer vulnerability assessment in Florida
J. D. Arthur, H.A.R. Wood, A.E. Baker, J.R. Cichon, G. L. Raines
2007, Natural Resources Research (16) 93-107
The Florida Aquifer Vulnerability Assessment (FAVA) was designed to provide a tool for environmental, regulatory, resource management, and planning professionals to facilitate protection of groundwater resources from surface sources of contamination. The FAVA project implements weights-of-evidence (WofE), a data-driven, Bayesian-probabilistic model to generate a series of maps reflecting relative aquifer...
The relationship between productivities of salmonids and forest stands in northern California watersheds
S.L. Frazey, M.A. Wilzbach
2007, Western Journal of Applied Forestry (22) 73-80
Productivities of resident salmonids and upland and riporian forests in 22 small watersheds of coastal northern California were estimated and compared to determine whether: 1) upland site productivity predicted riparian site productivity; 2) either upland or riparian site productivity predicted salmonid productivity; and 3) other parameters explained more of the...
Forward model nonlinearity versus inverse model nonlinearity
S. Mehl
2007, Ground Water (45) 791-794
The issue of concern is the impact of forward model nonlinearity on the nonlinearity of the inverse model. The question posed is, "Does increased nonlinearity in the head solution (forward model) always result in increased nonlinearity in the inverse solution (estimation of hydraulic conductivity)?" It is shown that the two...
The geology of the Morro Velho gold deposit in the Archean Rio das Velhas greenstone belt, Quadrilátero Ferrífero, Brazil
Diogenes Scipioni Vial, Ed DeWitt, Lydia Maria Lobato, Charles H. Thorman
2007, Ore Geology Reviews (32) 511-542
The Morro Velho gold deposit, Quadrilátero Ferrífero region, Minas Gerais, Brazil, is hosted by rocks at the base of the Archean Rio das Velhas greenstone belt. The deposit occurs within a thick carbonaceous phyllite package, containing intercalations of felsic and intermediate volcaniclastic rocks and dolomites. Considering the temporal and spatial...
Probabilistic seismic demand analysis using advanced ground motion intensity measures
P. Tothong, N. Luco
2007, Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics (36) 1837-1860
One of the objectives in performance-based earthquake engineering is to quantify the seismic reliability of a structure at a site. For that purpose, probabilistic seismic demand analysis (PSDA) is used as a tool to estimate the mean annual frequency of exceeding a specified value of a structural demand parameter (e.g....
Free zinc ion and dissolved orthophosphate effects on phytoplankton from Coeur d'Alene Lake, Idaho
James S. Kuwabara, Brent R. Topping, Paul F. Woods, James L. Carter
2007, Environmental Science & Technology (41) 2811-2817
Coeur d'Alene Lake in northern Idaho is fed by two major rivers: the Coeur d'Alene River from the east and the St. Joe River from the south, with the Spokane River as its outlet to the north. This phosphorus-limited lake has been subjected to decades of mining (primarily for zinc...
Deriving a light use efficiency model from eddy covariance flux data for predicting daily gross primary production across biomes
W. Yuan, S. Liu, G. Zhou, L.L. Tieszen, D. Baldocchi, C. Bernhofer, H. Gholz, Allen H. Goldstein, M. L. Goulden, D.Y. Hollinger, Y. Hu, B. E. Law, Paul C. Stoy, T. Vesala, S.C. Wofsy
2007, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology (143) 189-207
The quantitative simulation of gross primary production (GPP) at various spatial and temporal scales has been a major challenge in quantifying the global carbon cycle. We developed a light use efficiency (LUE) daily GPP model from eddy covariance (EC) measurements. The model, called EC-LUE, is driven by only four variables:...
Holocene sea-level oscillations and environmental changes on the Eastern Black Sea shelf
E.V. Ivanova, I.O. Murdmaa, A.L. Chepalyga, T. M. Cronin, I.V. Pasechnik, O.V. Levchenko, S. S. Howe, A.V. Manushkina, E.A. Platonova
2007, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (246) 228-259
A multi-proxy study of four sediment cores from the Eastern (Caucasian) Black Sea shelf revealed five transgressive-regressive cycles overprinted on the general trend of glacioeustatic sea-level rise during the last 11,000??14C yr. These cycles are well represented in micro-and macrofossil assemblages, sedimentation rates, and grain size variations. The oldest recovered...
Developing methods to assess and predict the population level effects of environmental contaminants.
J.M. Emlen, K.R. Springman
2007, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (3) 157-165
The field of ecological toxicity seems largely to have drifted away from what its title implies--assessing and predicting the ecological consequences of environmental contaminants--moving instead toward an emphasis on individual effects and physiologic case studies. This paper elucidates how a relatively new ecological methodology, interaction assessment (INTASS), could be useful...
Global warming and climate forcing by recent albedo changes on Mars
L.K. Fenton, P.E. Geissler, R.M. Haberle
2007, Nature (446) 646-649
For hundreds of years, scientists have tracked the changing appearance of Mars, first by hand drawings and later by photographs. Because of this historical record, many classical albedo patterns have long been known to shift in appearance over time. Decadal variations of the martian surface albedo are generally attributed to...
A post-Calumet shoreline along southern Lake Michigan
D.K. Capps, T.A. Thompson, R.K. Booth
2007, Journal of Paleolimnology (37) 395-409
The southern shore of Lake Michigan is the type area for many of ancestral Lake Michigan's late Pleistocene lake phases, but coastal deposits and features of the Algonquin phase of northern Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, and Lake Superior are not recognized in the area. Isostatic rebound models suggest that Algonquin...
Assessment of exploration bias in data-driven predictive models and the estimation of undiscovered resources
M.F. Coolbaugh, G. L. Raines, R. E. Zehner
2007, Natural Resources Research (16) 199-207
The spatial distribution of discovered resources may not fully mimic the distribution of all such resources, discovered and undiscovered, because the process of discovery is biased by accessibility factors (e.g., outcrops, roads, and lakes) and by exploration criteria. In data-driven predictive models, the use of training sites (resource occurrences) biased...
Relative influence of streamflows in assessing temporal variability in stream habitat
R. M. Goldstein, M. R. Meador, K.E. Ruhl
2007, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (43) 642-650
The effects of streamflows on temporal variation in stream habitat were analyzed from the data collected 6-11 years apart at 38 sites across the United States. Multiple linear regression was used to assess the variation in habitat caused by streamflow at the time of sampling and high flows between sampling....
Regression models for estimating coseismic landslide displacement
R.W. Jibson
2007, Engineering Geology (91) 209-218
Newmark's sliding-block model is widely used to estimate coseismic slope performance. Early efforts to develop simple regression models to estimate Newmark displacement were based on analysis of the small number of strong-motion records then available. The current availability of a much larger set of strong-motion records dictates that these regression...
Automated classifications of topography from DEMs by an unsupervised nested-means algorithm and a three-part geometric signature
J. Iwahashi, R.J. Pike
2007, Geomorphology (86) 409-440
An iterative procedure that implements the classification of continuous topography as a problem in digital image-processing automatically divides an area into categories of surface form; three taxonomic criteria–slope gradient, local convexity, and surface texture–are calculated from a square-grid digital elevation model (DEM)....
Predicting the potential distribution of invasive exotic species using GIS and information-theoretic approaches: A case of ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia L.) distribution in China
Chen Hao, Chen LiJun, Thomas P. Albright
2007, Chinese Science Bulletin (52) 1223-1230
Invasive exotic species pose a growing threat to the economy, public health, and ecological integrity of nations worldwide. Explaining and predicting the spatial distribution of invasive exotic species is of great importance to prevention and early warning efforts. We are investigating the potential distribution of invasive exotic species, the environmental...
The Northern end of the Dead Sea Basin: Geometry from reflection seismic evidence
A. S. Al-Zoubi, T. Heinrichs, I. Qabbani, Uri S. ten Brink
2007, Tectonophysics (434) 55-69
Recently released reflection seismic lines from the Eastern side of the Jordan River north of the Dead Sea were interpreted by using borehole data and incorporated with the previously published seismic lines of the eastern side of the Jordan River. For the first time, the lines from the eastern side...
Modeling of gas generation from the Barnett Shale, Fort Worth Basin, Texas
R.J. Hill, E. Zhang, B.J. Katz, Y. Tang
2007, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (91) 501-521
The generative gas potential of the Mississippian Barnett Shale in the Fort Worth Basin, Texas, was quantitatively evaluated by sealed gold-tube pyrolysis. Kinetic parameters for gas generation and vitrinite reflectance (Ro) changes were calculated from pyrolysis data and the results used to estimate the amount of gas generated from the...
On using surface-source downhole-receiver logging to determine seismic slownesses
D.M. Boore, E.M. Thompson
2007, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering (27) 971-985
We present a method to solve for slowness models from surface-source downhole-receiver seismic travel-times. The method estimates the slownesses in a single inversion of the travel-times from all receiver depths and accounts for refractions at layer boundaries. The number and location of layer interfaces in the model can be selected...
Rapid sea level rise and ice sheet response to 8,200-year climate event
T. M. Cronin, P.R. Vogt, Debra A. Willard, R. Thunell, J. Halka, M. Berke, J. Pohlman
2007, Geophysical Research Letters (34)
The largest abrupt climatic reversal of the Holocene interglacial, the cooling event 8.6–8.2 thousand years ago (ka), was probably caused by catastrophic release of glacial Lake Agassiz-Ojibway, which slowed Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) and cooled global climate. Geophysical surveys and sediment cores from Chesapeake Bay reveal the pattern of...
Beyond SaGMRotI: Conversion to SaArb, SaSN, and SaMaxRot
J. A. Watson-Lamprey, D.M. Boore
2007, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (97) 1511-1524
In the seismic design of structures, estimates of design forces are usually provided to the engineer in the form of elastic response spectra. Predictive equations for elastic response spectra are derived from empirical recordings of ground motion. The geometric mean of the two orthogonal horizontal components of motion is often...