Conference Papers
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Relative importance of early-successional forests and shrubland habitats to mammals in the northeastern United States
The majority of the 60 native terrestrial mammal species that reside in the northeastern United States (US) utilize resources from several habitats on a seasonal basis. However, as many as 20 species demonstrate some preference for early-successional forests, shrublands, or old-field habitats. A few of these (e.g. lagomorphs) can be considered obligate users of these habitats, and the specialist c
Authors
T.K. Fuller, S. DeStefano
Remediation of acid mine drainage at the friendship hill national historic site with a pulsed limestone bed process
A new process utilizing pulsed fluidized limestone beds was tested for the remediation of acid mine drainage at the Friendship Hill National Historic Site, in southwestern Pennsylvania. A 230 liter-per-minute treatment system was constructed and operated over a fourteen-month period from June 2000 through September 2001. Over this period of time, 50,000 metric tons of limestone were used to treat
Authors
P.L. Sibrell, B. Watten, T. Boone
Remote sensing of rainfall for debris-flow hazard assessment
Recent advances in remote sensing of rainfall provide more detailed temporal and spatial data on rainfall distribution. Four case studies of abundant debris flows over relatively small areas triggered during intense rainstorms are examined noting the potential for using remotely sensed rainfall data for landslide hazard analysis. Three examples with rainfall estimates from National Weather Service
Authors
G. F. Wieczorek, J. A. Coe, J. W. Godt
Seasonal and longitudinal homogeneity of suspended sediment in San Francisco Bay, California
No abstract available.
Authors
D. H. Schoellhamer, N. K. Ganju, J. W. Gartner, M.C. Murrell, S.A. Wright
Sediment transport and deposition processes near ocean outfalls in southern California
An urbanized coastal ocean that has complex topography and large-scale atmospheric and oceanographic forcing can contain a variety of sediment and pollutant distribution patterns. For example, the central southern California Bight has two large embayments, Santa Monica and San Pedro Bays, that are connected by a short, very narrow shelf off the Palos Verdes peninsula. The complex topography causes
Authors
H.J. Lee, M.A. Noble, J. Xu
Seismic hazard exposure for the Trans-Alaska Pipeline
The discovery of oil on Alaska's North Slope and the construction of a pipeline to transport that oil across Alaska coincided with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 and a destructive Southern California earthquake in 1971 to cause stringent stipulations, state-of-the-art investigations, and innovative design for the pipeline. The magnitude 7.9 earthquake on the Denali fault in November
Authors
L.S. Cluff, R.A. Page, D.B. Slemmons, C.B. Grouse
Seismic monitoring instrumentation needs of a building owner and the solution: A cooperative effort
A specific case whereby the owner of a building, in collaboration with another federal agency with expertise in seismic monitoring of buildings, private consulting engineers, and a supplier, facilitated development of a seismic monitoring system for a 24-story building in San Francisco, California. The unique aspects of this monitoring systems include: the monitoring system must relate to rapid as
Authors
M. Çelebi, A. Sanli, M. Sinclair, S. Gallant, D. Radulescu
Soil fertility in deserts: A review on the influence of biological soil crusts and the effect of soil surface disturbance on nutrient inputs and losses
Sources of desert soil fertility include parent material weathering, aeolian deposition, and on-site C and N biotic fixation. While parent materials provide many soil nutrients, aeolian deposition can provide up to 75% of plant-essential nutrients including N, P, K, Mg, Na, Mn, Cu, and Fe. Soil surface biota are often sticky, and help retain wind-deposited nutrients, as well as providing much of t
Authors
Jayne Belnap, S. Phillips, M. Duniway, Richard L. Reynolds
Special Issue: INTERRAD IX - International Association of Radiolarian Paleontologists: Preface
[No abstract available]
Authors
C.D. Blome, A. Sanfilippo
Supporting users through integrated retrieval, processing, and distribution systems at the land processes distributed active archive center
The design of the EOS Data and Information Systems (EOSDIS) to acquire, archive, manage and distribute Earth observation data to the broadest possible user community was discussed. A number of several integrated retrieval, processing and distribution capabilities have been explained. The value of these functions to the users were described and potential future improvements were laid out for the us
Authors
T. Kalvelage, Jennifer Willems
Surge dynamics coupled to pore-pressure evolution in debris flows
Temporally and spatially varying pore-fluid pressures exert strong controls on debris-flow motion by mediating internal and basal friction at grain contacts. We analyze these effects by deriving a one-dimensional model of pore-pressure diffusion explicitly coupled to changes in debris-flow thickness. The new pore-pressure equation is combined with Iverson's (1997) extension of the depth-averaged S
Authors
S.B. Savage, R. M. Iverson
Survival and growth of Atlantic white cedar plantings in Louisiana and Missisippi
Atlantic white cedar (cedar) is a native forest dominant in isolated areas throughout the Atlantic Coastal Plain and in a portion of the Gulf of Mexico Coastal Plain. Although the range of this species extends west to southern Mississippi, stands are uncommon in this area. In addition, most of the existing Mississippi stands are privately owned and afforded little long-term protection. To examine