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Publications

Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff

Filter Total Items: 1691

A review of the geologic framework of the Long Island Sound Basin, with some observations relating to postglacial sedimentation

Most of the papers in this thematic section present regional perspectives that build on more than 100 years of geologic investigation in Long Island Sound. When viewed collectively, a common theme emerges in these works. The major geologic components of the Long Island Sound basin (bedrock, buried coastal-plain strata, recessional moraines, glacial-lake deposits, and the remains of a large marine
Authors
Ralph S. Lewis, Mary L. DiGiacomo-Cohen

Sea-floor environments within Long Island Sound: A regional overview

Modern sea-floor sedimentary environments within the glaciated, topographically complex Long Island Sound estuary have been interpreted and mapped from an extensive collection of sidescan sonographs, bottom samples, and video-camera observations together with supplemental bathymetric, marine-geologic, and bottom-current data. Four categories of environments are present that reflect the dominant lo
Authors
Harley J. Knebel, Lawrence J. Poppe

Evaluation of remote-sensing techniques to measure decadal-scale changes of Hofsjokull ice cap, Iceland

Dynamic surficial changes and changes in the position of the firn line and the areal extent of Hofsjökull ice cap, Iceland, were studied through analysis of a time series (1973–98) of synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) and Landsat data. A digital elevation model of Hofsjökull, which was constructed using SAR interferometry, was used to plot the SAR backscatter coefficient (σ°) vs elevation and air t
Authors
D.K. Hall, R.S. Williams, J.S. Barton, O. Sigurdsson, L.C. Smith, J.B. Garvin

Portable coastal observatories

Ocean observational science is in the midst of a paradigm shift from an expeditionary science centered on short research cruises and deployments of internally recording instruments to a sustained observational science where the ocean is monitored on a regular basis, much the way the atmosphere is monitored. While satellite remote sensing is one key way of meeting the challenge of real-time monitor
Authors
Daniel Frye, Bradford Butman, Mark Johnson, Keith von der Heydt, Steven Lerner

Holocene and recent sediment accumulation rates in southern Lake Michigan

Rates of sediment accumulation in Lake Michigan are a key component of its geologic history and provide important data related to societal concerns such as shoreline erosion and the fate of anthropogenic pollutants. Previous attempts to reconstruct Holocene rates of sediment accumulation in Lake Michigan, as well as in the other Laurentian Great Lakes, have been bedeviled by the effect of refracto
Authors
Steven M. Colman, J.W. King, Glenn A. Jones, R. L. Reynolds, Michael H. Bothner

Modern pollen deposition in Long Island Sound

Palynological analyses of 20 surface sediment samples collected from Long Island Sound show a pollen assemblage dominated by Carya, Betula, Pinus, Quercus, Tsuga, and Ambrosia, as is consistent with the regional vegetation. No trends in relative abundance of these pollen types occur either from west to east or associated with modern riverine inputs throughout the basin. Despite the large-scale, lo
Authors
Kristina R.M. Beuning, Lindsey Fransen, Berna Nakityo, Ellen L. Mecray, Marilyn R. Buchholtz ten Brink

Coastal sedimentary research examines critical issues of national and global priority

An international conference was held recently in Honolulu, Hawaii, to examine and plan for coastal sedimentary research in the United States and globally. Participants agreed that sedimentary coastal environments constitute a critical national and global resource that suffers widespread degradation due to human impacts. Moreover, human population growth and inappropriate development in the coastal
Authors
Chip Fletcher, John Anderson, Keith A.W. Crook, George Kaminsky, Piers Larcombe, Colin V. Murray-Wallace, Frank Sansone, David B. Scott, Stan Riggs, Asbury Sallenger, Ian Shennan, E. Robert Thieler, John F. Wehmiller

Volumetric evolution of Surtsey, Iceland, from topographic maps and scanning airborne laser altimetry

The volumetric evolution of Surtsey has been estimated on the basis of digital elevation models derived from NASA scanning airborne laser altimeter surveys (20 July 1998), as well as digitized 1:5,000-scale topographic maps produced by the National Land Survey of Iceland and by Norrman. Subaerial volumes have been computed from co-registered digital elevation models (DEM's) from 6 July 1968, 11 Ju
Authors
J.B. Garvin, R.S. Williams, J.J. Frawley, W.B. Krabill

A modern earth narrative: What will be the fate of the biosphere?

The modern Earth Narrative is the scientific description of the natural and human history of the Earth, and it is based on two fundamental concepts: Deep (or Geologic) Time and Biological Evolution. Changes in the Earth's biosphere and geosphere are discussed from the perspective of natural variability and impacts of the rapid increase in the human population. The failure of humans to comprehend a
Authors
R.S. Williams