Publications
The following list of California Water Science Center publications includes both official USGS publications and journal articles authored by our scientists.
Filter Total Items: 1811
Tectonic contraction across Los Angeles after removal of groundwater pumping effects Tectonic contraction across Los Angeles after removal of groundwater pumping effects
After the 1987 Whittier Narrows and 1994 Northridge earthquakes revealed that blind thrust faults represent a significant threat to metropolitan Los Angeles, a network of 250 continuously recording global positioning system (GPS) stations was deployed to monitor displacements associated with deep slip on both blind and surface faults. Here we augment this GPS data with interferometric...
Authors
Gerald W. Bawden, Wayne R. Thatcher, Ross S. Stein, Kenneth W. Hudnut, G. Peltzer
Hydrology of Yucca Mountain, Nevada Hydrology of Yucca Mountain, Nevada
Yucca Mountain, located in southern Nevada in the Mojave Desert, is being considered as a geologic repository for high-level radioactive waste. Although the site is arid, previous studies indicate net infiltration rates of 5-10 mm yr-1 under current climate conditions. Unsaturated flow of water through the mountain generally is vertical and rapid through the fractures of the welded tuffs...
Authors
A. L. Flint, L. E. Flint, E. M. Kwicklis, G.S. Bodvarsson, J. M. Fabryka-Martin
Hierarchical programming for data storage and visualization Hierarchical programming for data storage and visualization
Graphics software is an essential tool for interpreting, analyzing, and presenting data from multidimensional hydrodynamic models used in estuarine and coastal ocean studies. The post-processing of time-varying three-dimensional model output presents unique requirements for data visualization because of the large volume of data that can be generated and the multitude of time scales that...
Authors
John M. Donovan, Peter E. Smith
Combined use of remote sensing and continuous monitoring to analyse the variability of suspended-sediment concentrations in San Francisco Bay, California Combined use of remote sensing and continuous monitoring to analyse the variability of suspended-sediment concentrations in San Francisco Bay, California
Analysis of suspended-sediment concentration data in San Francisco Bay is complicated by spatial and temporal variability. In situ optical backscatterance sensors provide continuous suspended-sediment concentration data, but inaccessibility, vandalism, and cost limit the number of potential monitoring stations. Satellite imagery reveals the spatial distribution of surficial-suspended...
Authors
C.A. Ruhl, D. H. Schoellhamer, R. P. Stumpf, C.L. Lindsay
Effects of an agricultural drainwater bypass on fishes inhabiting the Grassland Water District and the lower San Joaquin River, California Effects of an agricultural drainwater bypass on fishes inhabiting the Grassland Water District and the lower San Joaquin River, California
The Grassland Bypass Project, which began operation in September 1996, was conceived as a means of diverting brackish selenium-contaminated agricultural drainwater away from canals and sloughs needed for transporting irrigation water to wetlands within the Grassland Water District (the Grasslands), Merced County, California. The seleniferous drainwater is now routed into the San Luis...
Authors
M. K. Saiki, B.A. Martin, S.E. Schwarzbach, T.W. May
Creation of residual flows in a partially stratified estuary Creation of residual flows in a partially stratified estuary
The creation of residual flows in estuaries is examined using acoustic Doppler current profiler data sets from northern San Francisco Bay. The data sets are analyzed using principal component analysis to examine the temporal variability of the flows which create the residual circulation. It is seen that in this periodically and partially stratified estuary the residual flows are created...
Authors
M.T. Stacey, J.R. Burau, Stephen G. Monismith
Soil N and 15N variation with time in a California annual grassland ecosystem Soil N and 15N variation with time in a California annual grassland ecosystem
The %N and ??15N values of soils and plants were measured along a chronosequence spanning 3 to 3000 Ky in a California annual grassland. Total soil N decreased with increasing soil age (1.1 to 0.4 kg N m-2) while the mean ?? 15N values of the soil N increased by several ??? from the youngest to oldest sites (+3.5 to +6.2 ???). The ?? 15N values of plants varied along the gradient...
Authors
D.L. Brenner, Ronald Amundson, W. Troy Baisden, C. Kendall, J. Harden
Ecogeochemistry of the subsurface food web at pH 0–2.5 in Iron Mountain, California, U.S.A. Ecogeochemistry of the subsurface food web at pH 0–2.5 in Iron Mountain, California, U.S.A.
Pyrite oxidation in the underground mining environment of Iron Mountain, California, has created the most acidic pH values ever reported in aquatic systems. Sulfate values as high as 120 000 mg l−1 and iron as high as 27 600 mg l−1 have been measured in the mine water, which also carries abundant other dissolved metals including Al, Zn, Cu, Cd, Mn, Sb and Pb. Extreme acidity and high...
Authors
Eleanora I. Robbins, Teresa M. Rodgers, Charles N. Alpers, D. Kirk Nordstrom
Modeling residual aquifer-system compaction--Constraining the vertical hydraulic diffusivity of thick aquitards Modeling residual aquifer-system compaction--Constraining the vertical hydraulic diffusivity of thick aquitards
No abstract available.
Authors
Michelle Sneed, Michael T. Pavelko, Devin L. Galloway
Environmental factors influencing the distribution and salvage of young delta smelt: a comparison of factors occurring in 1996 and 1999 Environmental factors influencing the distribution and salvage of young delta smelt: a comparison of factors occurring in 1996 and 1999
The delta smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus) is listed as a threatened species under both the Federal Endangered Species Act (FESA) and the California Endangered Species Act. Through formal consultation under Section 7 of the FESA, USBR and DWR received a Biological Opinion from the USFWS, which allows for the incidental take of delta smelt arising through operation of the Central Valley...
Authors
Matthew Nobriga, Zach Hymanson, Rick Oltmann
Primary food resources in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Primary food resources in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, a complex mosaic of tidal freshwater habitats, is now a focus of ecosystem rehabilitation because of changes in critical functions associated with its geographic location at the landestuary interface. One of these functions is the production, transport, and transformation of organic matter that constitutes the “primary food supply,” that is, the...
Authors
Alan D. Jassby, James E. Cloern