Flow paths in the Edwards aquifer, northern Medina and northeastern Uvalde Counties, Texas, based on hydrologic identification and geochemical characterization and simulation
Allan K. Clark, Celeste A. Journey
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5200
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the San Antonio Water System, conducted a 4-year study during 2001– 04 to identify major ground-water flow paths in the Edwards aquifer in northern Medina and northeastern Uvalde Counties, Texas. The study involved use of geologic structure, surfacewater and ground-water data, and geochemistry...
Section 5. Procedures for Developing Models To Predict Exceedances of Recreational Water-Quality Standards at Coastal Beaches
Donna S. Francy, Robert A. Darner
2006, Techniques and Methods 6-B5
Simulation of constituent transport in the Red River of the North basin, North Dakota and Minnesota, during unsteady-flow conditions, 1977 and 2003-04
Rochelle A. Nustad, Jerad D. Bales
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5296
The Bureau of Reclamation identified eight water-supply alternatives for the Red River Valley Water Supply Project. Of those alternatives, six were considered for this study. Those six alternatives include a no-action alternative, two in-basin alternatives, and three interbasin alternatives. To address concerns of stakeholders and to provide information for an...
Database for the east half of "Preliminary Geologic Map of the Blythe 30' by 60' quadrangle, California and Arizona"
Paul Stone
2006, Data Series 225
This digital map database was prepared from the published Preliminary Geologic Map of the Blythe 30' by 60' Quadrangle, California and Arizona (U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 90-497). This database represents the east half of the original published map. The database contains exactly the same scientific content as...
A review of methods to estimate cause-specific mortality in presence of competing risks
Dennis M. Heisey, Brent R. Patterson
2006, Journal of Wildlife Management (70) 1544-1555
Estimating cause-specific mortality is often of central importance for understanding the dynamics of wildlife populations. Despite such importance, methodology for estimating and analyzing cause-specific mortality has received little attention in wildlife ecology during the past 20 years. The issue of analyzing cause-specific, mutually exclusive events in time is not unique...
Perspectives on LANDFIRE Prototype Project accuracy assessment
James Vogelmann, Zhiliang Zhu, Jay R. Kost, Brian L. Tolk, Donald O. Ohlen
2006, General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-175-13
The purpose of this chapter is to provide a general overview of the many aspects of accuracy assessment pertinent to the Landscape Fire and Resource Management Planning Tools Prototype Project (LANDFIRE Prototype Project). The LANDFIRE Prototype formed a large and complex research and development project with many broad-scale data sets...
Mapping existing vegetation composition and structure for the LANDFIRE Prototype Project
Zhiliang Zhu, James Vogelmann, Donald O. Ohlen, Jay R. Kost, Xuexia Chen, Brian L. Tolk
2006, General Technical Report RMRS-GTR-175-8
The Landscape Fire and Resource Management Planning Tools Prototype Project, or LANDFIRE Prototype Project, required the mapping of existing vegetation composition (cover type) and structural stages at a 30-m spatial resolution to provide baseline vegetation data for the development of wildland fuel maps and for comparison to simulated historical vegetation...
Range condition as input to water quality monitoring in the northern Plains
Eric C. Wood, Bruce K. Wylie, Jesslyn F. Brown, David J. Meyer, Susan Maxwell, Bradley C. Reed
2006, Conference Paper, Prospecting for geospatial information integration
Federal Clean Water Act requires that states develop Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) for water bodies. Once the state has developed an inventory of TMDLs, it is required to provide public notice of the report and have it approved by the Environmental Protection Agency. The South Dakota Department of Environment...
Analysis of urban land use change in the Las Vegas metropolitan area using multi-temporal satellite imagery
George Z. Xian, Mike Crane, C. McMahon
2006, Conference Paper, Prospecting for geospatial information integration
Urban development has expanded rapidly in Las Vegas, Nevada, over the last fifty years. To assess urban land use change in the area, a sub-pixel change detection approach has been used to map urban extent and its temporal changes by determining sub-pixel level impervious surface areas from Landsat satellite remote...
Model-data fusion in the studies of terrestrial carbon sink
G.A. Alexandrov, D. Chan, M. Chen, K. Gurney, K Higuchi, A Ito, C.D. Jones, A Komarov, K Mabuchi, D.M. Matross, F Veroustraete, W.W. Verstreten
2006, Conference Paper
Current uncertainty in quantifying the global carbon budget remains a major contributing source of uncertainty in reliably projecting future climate change. Furthermore, quantifying the global carbon budget and characterizing uncertainties have emerged as critical to a successful implementation of United National Framework Convention on Climate Change and its Kyoto Protocol....
Impacts of Tioga Road on groundwater flow in Tuolumne Meadows: Preliminary conceptual model and numerical analysis
David J. Cooper, Jessica D. Lundquist, Fred C. Lott, Alan L. Flint, Lorraine E. Flint, James Roche
2006, Book chapter, Effects of the Tioga Road on hydrologic processes and Lodgepole pine invasion into Tuolumne Meadows, Yosemite National Park
No abstract available....
Remote sensing observations of landslides and ground deformation from the 2004 Niigata Ken Chuetsu earthquake
Ellen M. Rathje, Robert E. Kayen, Kyu-Seok Woo
2006, Soils and Foundations (46) 831-842
In recent years, major developments in remote sensing have made it possible to use these technologies to document the effects of earthquakes. Specifically, high-resolution satellite imagery and three-dimensional laser scanning (LIDAR) can provide important observations of earthquake damage that supplement traditional observations from field reconnaissance. The 2004 Niigata Ken Chuetsu...
Conceptual ecological model for management of breeding shrubland birds in the Mid-Atlantic Region
Bruce G. Peterjohn
2006, Technical Report NPS/NER/NRTR--2006/043
While grassland birds have become the focus of increased conservation activities, the status of birds occupying shrubland habitats has received relatively little attention (Hunter et al. 2001). Yet, in eastern North America, shrubland birds exhibited consistent population declines during the past 40 years, based on data from the North American...
Denitrification across landscapes and waterscapes: A synthesis
S. Seitzinger, J. A. Harrison, J.K. Böhlke, A.F. Bouwman, R. Lowrance, B. Peterson, C. Tobias, G. Van Drecht
2006, Ecological Applications (16) 2064-2090
Denitrification is a critical process regulating the removal of bioavailable nitrogen (N) from natural and human-altered systems. While it has been extensively studied in terrestrial, freshwater, and marine systems, there has been limited communication among denitrification scientists working in these individual systems. Here, we compare rates of denitrification and controlling...
Bottom instrumented tripods: History, applications, and impacts
D.A. Cacchione, R.W. Sternberg, A S Ogston
2006, Continental Shelf Research (26) 2319-2334
Instrumented bottom tripods have provided important data on sediment transport processes on continental shelves and in estuaries for four decades. Since the initial deployment in a tidal channel in Puget Sound, WA, in 1965 numerous tripods have been constructed to investigate bottom boundary layer and sediment dynamics worldwide. Tripod data have...
Atlas of relations between climatic parameters and distributions of important trees and shrubs in North America - Alaska species and ecoregions
Robert S. Thompson, Katherine H. Anderson, Laura E. Strickland, Sarah L. Shafer, Richard T. Pelltier, Patrick J. Bartlein
2006, Professional Paper 1650-D
Climate is the primary factor in controlling the continental-scale distribution of plant species, although the relations between climatic parameters and species' ranges is only now beginning to be quantified. Preceding volumes of this atlas explored the continental-scale relations between climatic parameters and the distributions of woody plant species across all...
Water-quality trend analysis and sampling design for the Devils Lake Basin, North Dakota, January 1965 through September 2003
Karen R. Ryberg, Aldo V. Vecchia
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5238
This report presents the results of a study conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the North Dakota State Water Commission, the Devils Lake Basin Joint Water Resource Board, and the Red River Joint Water Resource District, to analyze historical water-quality trends in three dissolved major ions, three...
Statistical characteristics of storm interevent time, depth, and duration for eastern New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas
William H. Asquith, Meghan C. Roussel, Theodore G. Cleveland, Xing Fang, David B. Thompson
2006, Professional Paper 1725
The design of small runoff-control structures, from simple floodwater-detention basins to sophisticated best-management practices, requires the statistical characterization of rainfall as a basis for cost-effective, risk-mitigated, hydrologic engineering design. The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Texas Department of Transportation, has developed a framework to estimate storm statistics including...
Soil Data from a Moderately Well and Somewhat Poorly Drained Fire Chronosequence near Thompson, Manitoba, Canada
K.L. Manies, J.W. Harden, Hugo Veldhuis, Sue Trumbore
2006, Open-File Report 2006-1291
The U.S. Geological Survey project Fate of Carbon in Alaskan Landscapes (FOCAL) is studying the effect of fire and soil drainage on soil carbon storage in the boreal forest. As such this group was invited to be a part of a NSF-funded project (Fire, Ecosystem and Succession - Experiment Boreal...
Selected Well Data Used in Determining Ground-Water Availability in the North and South Carolina Atlantic Coastal Plain Aquifer Systems
Larry G. Harrelson, Jason M. Fine
2006, Open-File Report 2006-1298
The data presented in this report are for selected wells in North and South Carolina that are located in the Atlantic Coastal Plain aquifer system. The data represent a partial inventory of wells in the study area and are to be used to update a regional flow model for North...
Long-term population monitoring: Lessons learned from an endangered passerine in Hawai‘i
Luanne Johnson, Richard J. Camp, Kevin W. Brinck, Paul C. Banko
2006, Wildlife Society Bulletin (34) 1055-1063
Obtaining reliable population estimates is crucial to monitoring endangered species and developing recovery strategies. The palila (Loxioides bailleui) is an endangered seed-eating Hawaiian honeycreeper restricted to the subalpine forests of Mauna Kea, a volcano on the island of Hawai‘i, USA. The species is vulnerable to extinction primarily because >90% of...
Land-Cover Trends of the Central Basin and Range Ecoregion
Christopher E. Soulard
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5288
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Land Cover Trends research project is focused on understanding the amounts, rates, trends, causes, and implications of contemporary land-use and land-cover (LU/LC) change in the United States. This project is supported by the USGS Geographic Analysis and Monitoring Program in collaboration with the U.S. Environmental...
Hydrogeologic framework and ground-water Flow in quaternary deposits at the U.S. Army Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center near Edinburgh, Indiana, 2002-2003
Bret A. Robinson, Martin R. Risch
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5172
A hydrogeologic framework was developed for unconsolidated Quaternary deposits at the U.S. Army Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center. The framework describes the potential for the occurrence of ground water on the basis of physiography and the distribution of geologic materials within the study area. Four geologic units-the Jessup, Trafalgar, Atherton,...
Polar Bear Population Status in the Southern Beaufort Sea
Eric V. Regehr, Steven C. Amstrup, Ian Stirling
2006, Open-File Report 2006-1337
Polar bears depend entirely on sea ice for survival. In recent years, a warming climate has caused major changes in the Arctic sea ice environment, leading to concerns regarding the status of polar bear populations. Here we present findings from long-term studies of polar bears in the southern Beaufort Sea...
Volcano and Earthquake Monitoring Plan for the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, 2006-2015
Yellowstone Volcano Observatory
2006, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5276
To provide Yellowstone National Park (YNP) and its surrounding communities with a modern, comprehensive system for volcano and earthquake monitoring, the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory (YVO) has developed a monitoring plan for the period 2006-2015. Such a plan is needed so that YVO can provide timely information during seismic, volcanic, and...