Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Conference Papers

Browse almost 5,000 conference papers authored by our scientists and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.

Filter Total Items: 5326

Deep-sea mining: Integrating geology, oceanography, and engineering

[No abstract available]
Authors
F.M. Meyer, P.E. Halbach, P.N. Martens, J. R. Hein, S. Scott

Deformation and stress-change modeling at Sierra Negra volcano, Galapagos, from ENVISAT INSAR and GPS observations

We use radar interferograms and GPS observations to constrain models of magma accumulation and faulting at Sierra Negra volcano, Galápagos, during the years before its 2005 eruption. The data have shown ~5 m of pre-eruption uplift and multiple trapdoor faulting events on an intra-caldera fault system. We find the pattern of uplift to be consistent with an inflating sill at 2.2 km depth under the c
Authors
Sigurjon Jonsson, W.W. Chadwick, M. Poland, D. Geist

Detecting biological responses to flow management: Missed opportunities; future directions

The conclusions of numerous stream restoration assessments all around the world are extremely clear and convergent: there has been insufficient appropriate monitoring to improve general knowledge and expertise. In the specialized field of instream flow alterations, we consider that there are several opportunities comparable to full-size experiments. Hundreds of water management decisions related t
Authors
Y. Souchon, C. Sabaton, R. Deibel, D. Reiser, J. Kershner, M. Gard, C. Katopodis, P. Leonard, N.L. Poff, W.J. Miller, B. L. Lamb

Detection of foliage-obscured vehicle using a multiwavelength polarimetric lidar

Foliage obscured man-made targets detection and identification is of great interest to many applications. In this paper, the backscattered laser signals from a multiwavelength polarimetric lidar were used to detect a vehicle hidden inside a vegetated area. The polarimetric reflectance data from the lidar at two separate laser wavelengths at 1064 nm and 532 nm revealed distinct target characteristi
Authors
S. Tan, J. Stoker, S. Greenlee

Development of hazard-compatible building fragility and vulnerability models

We present a methodology for transforming the structural and non-structural fragility functions in HAZUS into a format that is compatible with conventional seismic hazard analysis information. The methodology makes use of the building capacity (or pushover) curves and related building parameters provided in HAZUS. Instead of the capacity spectrum method applied in HAZUS, building response is estim
Authors
E. Karaca, N. Luco

Development of landsat-5 thematic mapper internal calibrator gain and offset table

The National Landsat Archive Production System (NLAPS) has been the primary processing system for Landsat data since U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation and Science Center (EROS) started archiving Landsat data. NLAPS converts raw satellite data into radiometrically and geometrically calibrated products. NLAPS has historically used the Internal Calibrator (IC) to calibrate the
Authors
J. A. Barsi, G. Chander, E. Micijevic, B. L. Markham, Md. O. Haque

Development of lunar regolith simulant: From the macro to the micro

[No abstract available]
Authors
H.A. Lowers, D. B. Stoeser, S. A. Wilson, G.P. Meeker

Development of the U.S. Geological Survey's PAGER system (Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response)

The Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response (PAGER) System plays a primary alerting role for global earthquake disasters as part of the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) response protocol. We provide an overview of the PAGER system, both of its current capabilities and our ongoing research and development. PAGER monitors the USGS’s near real-time U.S. and global earthquake origins and a
Authors
D. J. Wald, P.S. Earle, T.I. Allen, K. Jaiswal, K. Porter, M. Hearne

Disruption of the lower food web in Lake Ontario: Did it affect alewife growth or condition?

From the early 1980s to the late 1990s, a succession of non-native invertebrates colonized Lake Ontario and the suite of consequences caused by their colonization became known as "food web disruption". For example, the native burrowing amphipod Diporeia spp., a key link in the profundal food web, declined to near absence, exotic predaceous cladocerans with long spines proliferated, altering the zo
Authors
R. O'Gorman, S.E. Prindle, J.R. Lantry, B.F. Lantry

Diverse deformation patterns of Aleutian volcanoes from InSAR

Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) is capable of measuring ground-surface deformation with centimeter-to-subcentimeter precision at a spatial resolution of tens of meters over an area of hundreds to thousands of square kilometers. With its global coverage and all-weather imaging capability, InSAR has become an increasingly important measurement technique for constraining magma dynami
Authors
Z. Lu, D. Dzurisin, C. Wicks, J. Power

Dual-RiverSonde measurements of two-dimensional river flow patterns

Two-dimensional river flow patterns have been measured using a pair of RiverSondes in two experiments in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta system of central California during April and October 2007. An experiment was conducted at Walnut Grove, California in order to explore the use of dual RiverSondes to measure flow patterns at a location which is important in the study of juvenile fish migr
Authors
C.C. Teague, D.E. Barrick, P.M. Lilleboe, Ralph T. Cheng, Paul Stumpner, Jon R. Burau

Dynamic aspects of apparent attenuation and wave localization in layered media

We present a theory for multiply-scattered waves in layered media which takes into account wave interference. The inclusion of interference in the theory leads to a new description of the phenomenon of wave localization and its impact on the apparent attenuation of seismic waves. We use the theory to estimate the localization length at a CO2 sequestration site in New Mexico at sonic frequencies (2
Authors
M.M. Haney, K. Van Wijk