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40818 results.

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Page 999, results 24951 - 24975

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Weak simulated extratropical responses to complete tropical deforestation
K.L. Findell, T.R. Knutson, P. C. D. Milly
2006, Journal of Climate (19) 2835-2850
The Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory atmosphere-land model version 2 (AM2/LM2) coupled to a 50-m-thick slab ocean model has been used to investigate remote responses to tropical deforestation. Magnitudes and significance of differences between a control run and a deforested run are assessed through comparisons of 50-yr time series, accounting for...
Remotely sensed data available from the US Geological Survey EROS Data Center
John L. Dwyer
J.J. Qu, W. Gao, M. Kafatos, R.E. Murphy, V.V. Salomonson, editor(s)
2006, Book chapter, Earth science satellite remote sensing— Data, computational processing, and tools
The Center for Earth Resources Observation Systems (EROS) is a field center of the geography discipline within the US geological survey (USGS) of the Department of the Interior. The EROS Data Center (EDC) was established in the early 1970s as the nation’s principal archive of remotely sensed data. Initially the...
The MODIS reprojection tool
John L. Dwyer, Gail L. Schmidt
J.J. Qu, W. Gao, M. Kafatos, R.E. Murphy, V.V. Salomonson, editor(s)
2006, Book chapter, Earth science satellite remote sensing— Data, computational processing, and tools
The MODIS Reprojection Tool (MRT) is designed to help individuals work with MODIS Level-2G, Level-3, and Level-4 land data products. These products are referenced to a global tiling scheme in which each tile is approximately 10° latitude by 10° longitude and non-overlapping (Fig. 9.1). If desired, the user may reproject...
Abrupt transitions during sustained explosive eruptions: Examples from the 1912 eruption of Novarupta, Alaska
N.K. Adams, Bruce F. Houghton, W. Hildreth
2006, Bulletin of Volcanology (69) 189-206
Plinian/ignimbrite activity stopped briefly and abruptly 16 and 45 h after commencement of the 1912 Novarupta eruption defining three episodes of explosive volcanism before finally giving way after 60 h to effusion of lava domes. We focus here on the processes leading to the termination of the second and third...
Species richness and patterns of invasion in plants, birds, and fishes in the United States
Thomas J. Stohlgren, David Barnett, Curtis Flather, Pamela L. Fuller, Bruce G. Peterjohn, John Kartesz, Lawrence L. Master
2006, Biological Invasions (8) 427-447
We quantified broad-scale patterns of species richness and species density (mean # species/km2) for native and non-indigenous plants, birds, and fishes in the continental USA and Hawaii. We hypothesized that the species density of native and non-indigenous taxa would generally decrease in northern latitudes and higher elevations following declines in...
Modelling and understanding volcanic processes using high-quality seismological data
Bernard A. Chouet
2006, Géosciences (2006) 56-63
At an active volcano, Very-Long-Period (VLP) seismicity (with typical periods in the range 2-100 s) reflects pressure fluctuations resulting from unsteady mass transport in the sub-surface plumbing system, and hence provides a glimpse of the internal dynamics of the volcanic edifice. Understanding the fundamental fluid-flow mechanisms involved in the...
Using models to manage systems subject to sustainability indicators
M. C. Hill
2006, Conference Paper, IAHS-AISH Publication
Mathematical and numerical models can provide insight into sustainability indicators using relevant simulated quantities, which are referred to here as predictions. To be useful, many concerns need to be considered. Four are discussed here: (a) mathematical and numerical accuracy of the model; (b) the accuracy of the data used in...
Rupture models for the A.D. 900-930 Seattle fault earthquake from uplifted shorelines
Uri S. ten Brink, J. Song, R.C. Bucknam
2006, Geology (34) 585-588
A major earthquake on the Seattle fault, Washington, ca. A.D. 900-930 was first inferred from uplifted shorelines and tsunami deposits. Despite follow-up geophysical and geological investigations, the rupture parameters of the earthquake and the geometry of the fault are uncertain. Here we estimate the fault geometry, slip direction, and magnitude...
Peak flow responses to landscape disturbances caused by the cataclysmic 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington
Jon J. Major, Linda E. Mark
2006, Geological Society of America Bulletin (118) 938-958
Years of discharge measurements that precede and follow the cataclysmic 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington, provide an exceptional opportunity to examine the responses of peak flows to abrupt, widespread, devastating landscape disturbance. Multiple basins surrounding Mount St. Helens (300–1300 km2 drainage areas) were variously disturbed by: (1) a debris...
Comparison of selenium bioaccumulation in the clams Corbicula fluminea and Potamocorbula amurensis: A bioenergetic modeling approach
B.-G. Lee, J.-S. Lee, S. N. Luoma
2006, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (25) 1933-1940
Selenium uptake from food (assimilation efficiency) and dissolved phase (influx rate) as well as loss kinetics (efflux rate) were compared between two bivalves, Corbicula fluminea and Potamocorbula amurensis. The effects of salinity and temperature on these kinetic parameters for both clam species also were evaluated. The Asiatic clam, C. fluminea,...
Dietary exposure of largemouth bass to OCPs changes expression of genes important for reproduction
Natalia Garcia-Reyero, D.S. Barber, T. S. Gross, K. G. Johnson, M. S. Sepulveda, N.J. Szabo, N. D. Denslow
2006, Aquatic Toxicology (78) 358-369
Dieldrin and p,p???-DDE are ubiquitous contaminants known to act as endocrine disruptors, causing impaired development and reproduction in fish and wildlife. In order to elucidate the mechanisms by which dieldrin and p,p???-DDE cause endocrine disruption in largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), fish were exposed subchronically through the diet to both contaminants....
Sediment distribution and transport across the continental shelf and slope under idealized wind forcing
S.A. Condie, C. R. Sherwood
2006, Progress in Oceanography (70) 255-270
Resuspension, transport, and deposition of sediments over the continental shelf and slope are complex processes and there is still a need to understand the underlying spatial and temporal dynamical scales. As a step towards this goal, a two-dimensional slice model (zero gradients in the alongshore direction) based on the primitive...
Evaluating uncertainty in predicting spatially variable representative elementary scales in fractured aquifers, with application to Turkey Creek Basin, Colorado
Tristan P. Wellman, Eileen P. Poeter
2006, Water Resources Research (42)
Computational limitations and sparse field data often mandate use of continuum representation for modeling hydrologic processes in large‐scale fractured aquifers. Selecting appropriate element size is of primary importance because continuum approximation is not valid for all scales. The traditional approach is to select elements by identifying a single representative elementary...
Nitrogen sources and cycling in the San Francisco Bay estuary: A nitrate dual isotopic composition approach
Scott D. Wankel, C. Kendall, C.A. Francis, A. Paytan
2006, Limnology and Oceanography (51) 1654-1664
We used the dual isotopic composition of nitrate (δ15N and δ18O) within the estuarine system of San Francisco (SF) Bay, California, to explore the utility of this approach for tracing sources and cycling of nitrate (NO2−). Surface water samples from 49 sites within the estuary were sampled during July–August 2004....
Numerical simulation of tsunami generation by cold volcanic mass flows at Augustine Volcano, Alaska
C. F. Waythomas, P. Watts, J. S. Walder
2006, Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (6) 671-685
Many of the world's active volcanoes are situated on or near coastlines. During eruptions, diverse geophysical mass flows, including pyroclastic flows, debris avalanches, and lahars, can deliver large volumes of unconsolidated debris to the ocean in a short period of time and thereby generate tsunamis. Deposits of both hot and...
Nutritional condition of Pacific Black Brant wintering at the extremes of their range
D.D. Mason, P.S. Barboza, David H. Ward
2006, Condor (108) 678-690
Endogenous stores of energy allow birds to survive periods of severe weather and food shortage during winter. We documented changes in lipid, protein, moisture, and ash in body tissues of adult female Pacific Black Brant (Branta bernicla nigricans) and modeled the energetic costs of wintering. Birds were collected at the...
Assimilation of snow covered area information into hydrologic and land-surface models
M.P. Clark, A.G. Slater, A.P. Barrett, L.E. Hay, G.J. McCabe, B. Rajagopalan, G.H. Leavesley
2006, Advances in Water Resources (29) 1209-1221
This paper describes a data assimilation method that uses observations of snow covered area (SCA) to update hydrologic model states in a mountainous catchment in Colorado. The assimilation method uses SCA information as part of an ensemble Kalman filter to alter the sub-basin distribution of snow as well as the...
Importance of wetland landscape structure to shorebirds wintering in an agricultural valley
Oriane W. Taft, Susan M. Haig
2006, Landscape Ecology (21) 169-184
Only recently has the influence of landscape structure on habitat use been a research focus in wetland systems. During non-breeding periods when food can be locally limited, wetland spatial pattern across a landscape may be of great importance in determining wetland use. We studied the influence of landscape structure on...
Evaluation of kinetic uncertainty in numerical models of petroleum generation
K. E. Peters, C.C. Walters, P.J. Mankiewicz
2006, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (90) 387-403
Oil-prone marine petroleum source rocks contain type I or type II kerogen having Rock-Eval pyrolysis hydrogen indices greater than 600 or 300-600 mg hydrocarbon/g total organic carbon (HI, mg HC/g TOC), respectively. Samples from 29 marine source rocks worldwide that contain mainly type II kerogen (HI = 230-786 mg HC/g...
Long-period effects of the Denali earthquake on water bodies in the Puget Lowland: Observations and modeling
A. Barberopoulou, A. Qamar, T. L. Pratt, W. P. Steele
2006, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (96) 519-535
Analysis of strong-motion instrument recordings in Seattle, Washington, resulting from the 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali, Alaska, earthquake reveals that amplification in the 0.2-to 1.0-Hz frequency band is largely governed by the shallow sediments both inside and outside the sedimentary basins beneath the Puget Lowland. Sites above the deep sedimentary strata...
Estimating crustal heterogeneity from double-difference tomography
J.-L. Got, V. Monteiller, J. Virieux, P. Okubo
2006, Pure and Applied Geophysics (163) 405-430
Seismic velocity parameters in limited, but heterogeneous volumes can be inferred using a double-difference tomographic algorithm, but to obtain meaningful results accuracy must be maintained at every step of the computation. MONTEILLER et al. (2005) have devised a double-difference tomographic algorithm that takes full advantage of the accuracy of cross-spectral...
Studying toxicity
A. Elkus, L. LeBlanc, C. Kim, R. Van Beneden, G. Mayer
2006, International Water Power and Dam Construction (58) 30-32
With funding from the George Mitchell Center for the Environment at the University of Maine, a team of scientists used a simple laboratory-based sediment resuspension design, and two well-established aquatic toxicology models, fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) and zebrafish (Danio rerio), to evaluate if resuspension of Penobscot river sediment significantly elevates...
Inverse approaches with lithologic information for a regional groundwater system in southwest Kansas
Ming-shu Tsou, S.P. Perkins, X. Zhan, Donald O. Whittemore, Lingyun Zheng
2006, Journal of Hydrology (318) 292-300
Two practical approaches incorporating lithologic information for groundwater modeling calibration are presented to estimate distributed, cell-based hydraulic conductivity. The first approach is to estimate optimal hydraulic conductivities for geological materials by incorporating thickness distribution of materials into inverse modeling. In the second approach, residuals for the groundwater model solution are...
Research article: Watershed management councils and scientific models: Using diffusion literature to explain adoption
M.D. King, N. Burkardt, B. T. Clark
2006, Environmental Practice (8) 125-134
Recent literature on the diffusion of innovations concentrates either specifically on public adoption of policy, where social or environmental conditions are the dependent variables for adoption, or on private adoption of an innovation, where emphasis is placed on the characteristics of the innovation itself. This article uses both the policy...
Joint analysis of refractions with surface waves: An inverse solution to the refraction-traveltime problem
J. Ivanov, R. D. Miller, J. Xia, D. Steeples, C.B. Park
2006, Geophysics (71)
We describe a possible solution to the inverse refraction-traveltime problem (IRTP) that reduces the range of possible solutions (nonuniqueness). This approach uses a reference model, derived from surface-wave shear-wave velocity estimates, as a constraint. The application of the joint analysis of refractions with surface waves (JARS) method provided a more...