Thermal infrared spectroscopy and modeling of experimentally shocked basalts
J. R. Johnson, M.I. Staid, M.D. Kraft
2007, American Mineralogist (92) 1148-1157
New measurements of thermal infrared emission spectra (250-1400 cm-1; ∼7-40 μm) of experimentally shocked basalt and basaltic andesite (17-56 GPa) exhibit changes in spectral features with increasing pressure consistent with changes in the structure of plagioclase feldspars. Major spectral absorptions in unshocked rocks between 350-700 cm-1 (due to Si-O-Si octahedral bending vibrations) and between 1000-1250 cm-1 (due to Si-O...
Postseismic relaxation and aftershocks
J.C. Savage, J. L. Svarc, S.-B. Yu
2007, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (112)
[1] Perfettini et al. (2005) suggested that the temporal dependence of surface displacements u(t) measured in the epicentral area following an earthquake is related to N(t), the cumulative number of aftershocks, by the equation u(t) = a + bt + cN(t) + d(1 − e−αt), where a, b, c, d, and α are constants chosen to fit the data and t is the postearthquake...
Probabilistic prediction models for aggregate quarry siting
G.R. Robinson Jr., P.M. Larkins
2007, Natural Resources Research (16) 135-146
Weights-of-evidence (WofE) and logistic regression techniques were used in a GIS framework to predict the spatial likelihood (prospectivity) of crushed-stone aggregate quarry development. The joint conditional probability models, based on geology, transportation network, and population density variables, were defined using quarry location and time of development data for the New...
The collapse of pelagic fishes in the upper San Francisco estuary
T. Sommer, C. Armor, R. Baxter, R. Breuer, L. Brown, M. Chotkowski, S. Culberson, F. Feyrer, M. Gingras, B. Herbold, W. Kimmerer, A. Mueller-Solger, M. Nobriga, K. Souza
2007, Fisheries (32) 270-277
Although the pelagic fish community of the upper San Francisco Estuary historically has shown substantial variability, a recent collapse has captured the attention of resource managers, scientists, legislators, and the general public. The ecological and management consequences of the decline are most serious for delta smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus), a threatened...
Quantitative mineralogy of surface sediments of the Iceland shelf, and application to down-core studies of holocene ice-rafted sediments
John T. Andrews, D. D. Eberl
2007, Journal of Sedimentary Research (77) 469-479
Quantitative X-ray diffraction analyses on the < 2 mm sediment fraction from the Iceland shelves are reported for subglacial diamictons, seafloor surface sediments, and the last 2000 cal yr BP from two cores. The overall goal of the paper is to characterize the spatial variability of the mineralogy of the...
Quantifying foodweb interactions with simultaneous linear equations: Stable isotope models of the Truckee River, USA
L. Saito, C. Redd, S. Chandra, L. Atwell, C.H. Fritsen, Michael R. Rosen
2007, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (26) 642-662
Aquatic foodweb models for 2 seasons (relatively high- [March] and low-flow [August] conditions) were constructed for 4 reaches on the Truckee River using ??13C and ??15N data from periphyton, macroinvertebrate, and fish samples collected in 2003 and 2004. The models were constructed with isotope values that included measured periphyton signatures...
Errors in acoustic doppler profiler velocity measurements caused by flow disturbance
D. S. Mueller, J.D. Abad, C.M. Garcia, J. W. Gartner, M.H. Garcia, K. A. Oberg
2007, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (133) 1411-1420
Acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCPs) are commonly used to measure streamflow and water velocities in rivers and streams. This paper presents laboratory, field, and numerical model evidence of errors in ADCP measurements caused by flow disturbance. A state-of-the-art three-dimensional computational fluid dynamic model is validated with and used to complement...
Potential effects of regional pumpage on groundwater age distribution
Brendan A. Zinn, Leonard F. Konikow
2007, Water Resources Research (43)
Groundwater ages estimated from environmental tracers can help calibrate groundwater flow models. Groundwater age represents a mixture of traveltimes, with the distribution of ages determined by the detailed structure of the flow field, which can be prone to significant transient variability. Effects of pumping on age distribution were assessed using...
Urbanization and nutrient retention in freshwater riparian wetlands
D.M. Hogan, M.R. Walbridge
2007, Ecological Applications (17) 1142-1155
Urbanization can degrade water quality and alter watershed hydrology, with profound effects on the structure and function of both riparian wetlands (RWs) and aquatic ecosystems downstream. We used freshwater RWs in Fairfax County, Virginia, USA, as a model system to examine: (1) the effects of increasing urbanization (indexed by the...
Seismic velocity structure and seismotectonics of the eastern San Francisco Bay region, California
J.L. Hardebeck, A.J. Michael, T.M. Brocher
2007, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (97) 826-842
The Hayward Fault System is considered the most likely fault system in the San Francisco Bay Area, California, to produce a major earthquake in the next 30 years. To better understand this fault system, we use microseismicity to study its structure and kinematics. We present a new 3D seismic-velocity model...
Assessing the concentration, speciation, and toxicity of dissolved metals during mixing of acid-mine drainage and ambient river water downstream of the Elizabeth Copper Mine, Vermont, USA
Laurie S. Balistrieri, R.R. Seal II, N.M. Piatak, B. Paul
2007, Applied Geochemistry (22) 930-952
The authors determine the composition of a river that is impacted by acid-mine drainage, evaluate dominant physical and geochemical processes controlling the composition, and assess dissolved metal speciation and toxicity using a combination of laboratory, field and modeling studies. Values of pH increase from 3.3 to 7.6 and the sum...
First documentation of tidal-channel sponge biostromes (upper Pleistocene, southeastern Florida)
K.J. Cunningham, J.K. Rigby, M.A. Wacker, H.A. Curran
2007, Geology (35) 475-478
Sponges are not a common principal component of Cenozoic reefs and are more typically dominant in deep-water and/or cold-water localities. Here we report the discovery of extensive upper Pleistocene shallow-marine, tropical sponge biostromes from the Mami Limestone of southeastern Florida built by a new ceractinomorph demosponge. These upright, barrel- to...
Groundwater noble gas, age, and temperature signatures in an Alpine watershed: Valuable tools in conceptual model development
Andrew H. Manning, Jonathan S. Caine
2007, Water Resources Research (43)
Bedrock groundwater in alpine watersheds is poorly understood, mainly because of a scarcity of wells in alpine settings. Groundwater noble gas, age, and temperature data were collected from springs and wells with depths of 3–342 m in Handcart Gulch, an alpine watershed in Colorado. Temperature profiles indicate active groundwater circulation...
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...
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...
Young cumulate complex beneath Veniaminof caldera, Aleutian arc, dated by zircon in erupted plutonic blocks
C. R. Bacon, T.W. Sison, F.K. Mazdab
2007, Geology (35) 491-494
Mount Veniaminof volcano, Alaska Peninsula, provides an opportunity to relate Quaternary volcanic rocks to a coeval intrusive complex. Veniaminof erupted tholeiitic basalt through dacite in the past ∼260 k.y. Gabbro, diorite, and miarolitic granodiorite blocks, ejected 3700 14C yr B.P. in the most recent...
Statistical analysis of water-quality data containing multiple detection limits II: S-language software for nonparametric distribution modeling and hypothesis testing
L. Lee, D. Helsel
2007, Computers & Geosciences (33) 696-704
Analysis of low concentrations of trace contaminants in environmental media often results in left-censored data that are below some limit of analytical precision. Interpretation of values becomes complicated when there are multiple detection limits in the data-perhaps as a result of changing analytical precision over time. Parametric and semi-parametric methods,...
Generating an image of dispersive energy by frequency decomposition and slant stacking
J. Xia, Y. Xu, R. D. Miller
2007, Pure and Applied Geophysics (164) 941-956
We present a new algorithm for calculating an image of dispersive energy in the frequency-velocity (f-v) domain. The frequency decomposition is first applied to a shot gather in the offset-time domain to stretch impulsive data into pseudo-vibroseis data or frequency-swept data. Because there is a deterministic relationship between frequency and...
Sub-sampling genetic data to estimate black bear population size: A case study
C.A. Tredick, M.R. Vaughan, D.F. Stauffer, S.L. Simek, T. Eason
2007, Ursus (18) 179-188
Costs for genetic analysis of hair samples collected for individual identification of bears average approximately US$50 [2004] per sample. This can easily exceed budgetary allowances for large-scale studies or studies of high-density bear populations. We used 2 genetic datasets from 2 areas in the southeastern United States to explore how...
Improving the accuracy of sediment-associated constituent concentrations in whole storm water samples by wet-sieving
W.R. Selbig, R. Bannerman, G. Bowman
2007, Journal of Environmental Quality (36) 226-232
Sand-sized particles (>63 ??m) in whole storm water samples collected from urban runoff have the potential to produce data with substantial bias and/or poor precision both during sample splitting and laboratory analysis. New techniques were evaluated in an effort to overcome some of the limitations associated with sample splitting and...
Implications of the 26 December 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake on tsunami forecast and assessment models for great subduction-zone earthquakes
Eric L. Geist, Vasily V. Titov, Diego Arcas, Fred F. Pollitz, Susan L. Bilek
2007, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (97) S249-S270
Results from different tsunami forecasting and hazard assessment models are compared with observed tsunami wave heights from the 26 December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Forecast models are based on initial earthquake information and are used to estimate tsunami wave heights during propagation. An empirical forecast relationship based only on seismic...
Conditions for coexistence of freshwater mussel species via partitioning of fish host resources
Brenda Rashleigh, D.L. DeAngelis
2007, Ecological Modelling (201) 171-178
Riverine freshwater mussel species can be found in highly diverse communities where many similar species coexist. Mussel species potentially compete for food and space as adults, and for fish host resources during the larval (glochidial) stage. Resource partitioning at the larval stage may promote coexistence. A model of resource utilization...
A simple scheme to determine potential aquatic metal toxicity from mining wastes
T.R. Wildeman, K. S. Smith, J. F. Ranville
2007, Conference Paper, Environmental Forensics
A decision tree (mining waste decision tree) that uses simple physical and chemical tests has been developed to determine whether effluent from mine waste material poses a potential toxicity threat to the aquatic environment. For the chemical portion of the tree, leaching tests developed by the United States Geological Survey,...
Effects of wastewater disinfection on waterborne bacteria and viruses
E. R. Blatchley III, W.-L. Gong, J.E. Alleman, J.B. Rose, D.E. Huffman, M. Otaki, J.T. Lisle
2007, Water Environment Research (79) 81-92
Wastewater disinfection is practiced with the goal of reducing risks of human exposure to pathogenic microorganisms. In most circumstances, the efficacy of a wastewater disinfection process is regulated and monitored based on measurements of the responses of indicator bacteria. However, inactivation of indicator bacteria does not guarantee an acceptable degree...
Uncertainty in age-specific harvest estimates and consequences for white-tailed deer management
B.A. Collier, D.G. Krementz
2007, Ecological Modelling (201) 194-204
Age structure proportions (proportion of harvested individuals within each age class) are commonly used as support for regulatory restrictions and input for deer population models. Such use requires critical evaluation when harvest regulations force hunters to selectively harvest specific age classes, due to impact on the underlying population age structure....