Scott A Wright (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 59
Research Furthers Conservation of Grand Canyon Sandbars
Grand Canyon National Park lies approximately 25 km (15 mi) down-river from Glen Canyon Dam, which was built on the Colorado River just south of the Arizona-Utah border in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. Before the dam began to regulate the Colorado River in 1963, the river carried such large quantities of red sediment, for which the Southwest is famous, that the Spanish named the...
Authors
Theodore Melis, David Topping, David M. Rubin, Scott Wright
Chronic Wasting Disease Positive Tissue Bank
In 2005, the USGS National Wildlife Health Center entered into an agreement with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department and the Department of Veterinary Sciences at the University of Wyoming to produce a collection of positive tissues from cervids intentionally infected with chronic wasting disease. This agreement was facilitated through the University of Wyoming Cooperative Fish and...
Authors
Scott Wright
High-resolution measurements of suspended-sediment
No abstract available.
Authors
David Topping, Scott Wright, Theodore Melis, David M. Rubin
Sediment supply and demand for salt pond restoration
No abstract available.
Authors
David H. Schoellhamer, James L. Orlando, Scott Wright, Larry A. Freeman
Use of sediment rating curves and optical backscatter data to characterize sediment transport in the Upper Yuba River watershed, California, 2001-03
Sediment transport in the upper Yuba River watershed, California, was evaluated from October 2001 through September 2003. This report presents results of a three-year study by the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the California Ecosystem Restoration Program of the California Bay-Delta Authority and the California Resources Agency. Streamflow and suspended-sediment...
Authors
Jennifer A. Curtis, Lorraine E. Flint, Charles N. Alpers, Scott Wright, Noah P. Snyder
Bay sediment budget: Sediment accounting 101
Comparison of a budget developed for 1955-1990 with a budget developed for 1995- 2002 showed decreasing sediment inflow and increased amounts leaving the Bay to upland disposal and sand mining, resulting in an increased rate of erosion of sediment from the Bay floor Finding a way to shift disposal from the Ocean back to the Bay could provide sediment for restoration projects and decrease...
Authors
David H. Schoellhamer, Megan L. Lionberger, Bruce Jaffe, Neil Kamal Ganju, Scott Wright, Gregory Shellenbarger
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 59
Research Furthers Conservation of Grand Canyon Sandbars
Grand Canyon National Park lies approximately 25 km (15 mi) down-river from Glen Canyon Dam, which was built on the Colorado River just south of the Arizona-Utah border in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area. Before the dam began to regulate the Colorado River in 1963, the river carried such large quantities of red sediment, for which the Southwest is famous, that the Spanish named the...
Authors
Theodore Melis, David Topping, David M. Rubin, Scott Wright
Chronic Wasting Disease Positive Tissue Bank
In 2005, the USGS National Wildlife Health Center entered into an agreement with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department and the Department of Veterinary Sciences at the University of Wyoming to produce a collection of positive tissues from cervids intentionally infected with chronic wasting disease. This agreement was facilitated through the University of Wyoming Cooperative Fish and...
Authors
Scott Wright
High-resolution measurements of suspended-sediment
No abstract available.
Authors
David Topping, Scott Wright, Theodore Melis, David M. Rubin
Sediment supply and demand for salt pond restoration
No abstract available.
Authors
David H. Schoellhamer, James L. Orlando, Scott Wright, Larry A. Freeman
Use of sediment rating curves and optical backscatter data to characterize sediment transport in the Upper Yuba River watershed, California, 2001-03
Sediment transport in the upper Yuba River watershed, California, was evaluated from October 2001 through September 2003. This report presents results of a three-year study by the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the California Ecosystem Restoration Program of the California Bay-Delta Authority and the California Resources Agency. Streamflow and suspended-sediment...
Authors
Jennifer A. Curtis, Lorraine E. Flint, Charles N. Alpers, Scott Wright, Noah P. Snyder
Bay sediment budget: Sediment accounting 101
Comparison of a budget developed for 1955-1990 with a budget developed for 1995- 2002 showed decreasing sediment inflow and increased amounts leaving the Bay to upland disposal and sand mining, resulting in an increased rate of erosion of sediment from the Bay floor Finding a way to shift disposal from the Ocean back to the Bay could provide sediment for restoration projects and decrease...
Authors
David H. Schoellhamer, Megan L. Lionberger, Bruce Jaffe, Neil Kamal Ganju, Scott Wright, Gregory Shellenbarger