Publications
Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff.
Filter Total Items: 1747
Sand ridges off Sarasota, Florida: A complex facies boundary on a low-energy inner shelf environment Sand ridges off Sarasota, Florida: A complex facies boundary on a low-energy inner shelf environment
The innermost shelf off Sarasota, Florida was mapped using sidescan-sonar imagery, seismic-reflection profiles, surface sediment samples, and short cores to define the transition between an onshore siliciclastic sand province and an offshore carbonate province and to identify the processes controlling the distribution of these distinctive facies. The transition between these facies is...
Authors
D. Twichell, Gillian L. Brooks, G. Gelfenbaum, V. Paskevich, Brian Donahue
Mobile fishing gear reduces benthic megafaunal production on Georges Bank Mobile fishing gear reduces benthic megafaunal production on Georges Bank
This study addresses the effect of mobile fishing gear disturbance on benthic megafaunal production on the gravel pavement of northern Georges Bank. From 1994 to 2000, we sampled benthic megafauna with a 1 m Naturalists' dredge at shallow (47 to 62 m) and deep (80 to 90 m) sites. The cessation of fishing in large areas of Georges Bank in January 1995 allowed us to monitor changes in...
Authors
J.M. Hermsen, J.S. Collie, P. C. Valentine
Importance of geology to fisheries management: Examples from the northeastern Gulf of Mexico Importance of geology to fisheries management: Examples from the northeastern Gulf of Mexico
Seafloor mapping of shelf-edge habitats in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico demonstrates how sidescan-sonar imagery, seismic-reflection profiling, video data, geologic mapping, sediment sampling, and understanding the regional geologic history can enhance, support, and guide traditional fisheries research and management. New data from the Madison Swanson and Steamboat Lumps Marine...
Authors
Kathryn M. Scanlon, Christopher C. Koenig, Felicia C. Coleman, Margaret W. Miller
Potential role of gas hydrate decomposition in generating submarine slope failures Potential role of gas hydrate decomposition in generating submarine slope failures
Gas hydrate decomposition is hypothesized to be a factor in generating weakness in continental margin sediments that may help explain some of the observed patterns of continental margin sediment instability. The processes associated with formation and decomposition of gas hydrate can cause the strengthening of sediments in which gas hydrate grow and the weakening of sediments in which...
Authors
Charles K. Pauli, William III Ussler, William P. Dillon
Gas transfer velocities measured at low wind speed over a lake Gas transfer velocities measured at low wind speed over a lake
The relationship between gas transfer velocity and wind speed was evaluated at low wind speeds by quantifying the rate of evasion of the deliberate tracer, SF6, from a small oligotrophic lake. Several possible relationships between gas transfer velocity and low wind speed were evaluated by using 1-min-averaged wind speeds as a measure of the instantaneous wind speed values. Gas transfer...
Authors
John Crusius, R. Wanninkhof
A Visual Basic program to classify sediments based on gravel-sand-silt-clay ratios A Visual Basic program to classify sediments based on gravel-sand-silt-clay ratios
Nomenclature describing size distributions is important to geologists because grain size is the most basic attribute of sediments. Traditionally, geologists have divided sediments into four size fractions that include gravel, sand, silt, and clay, and classified these sediments based on ratios of the various proportions of the fractions. Definitions of these fractions have long been...
Authors
L. J. Poppe, A.H. Eliason, M. E. Hastings
Streamer resistivity surveys in delmarva coastal bays Streamer resistivity surveys in delmarva coastal bays
No abstract available.
Authors
Frank T. Manheim, David E. Krantz, Donald S. Snyder, Brian Sturgis
Synimpact-postimpact transition inside Chesapeake Bay crater Synimpact-postimpact transition inside Chesapeake Bay crater
The transition from synimpact to postimpact sedimentation inside Chesapeake Bay impact crater began with accumulation of fallout debris, the final synimpact deposit. Evi dence of a synimpact fallout layer at this site comes from the presence of unusual, millimeter- scale, pyrite microstructures at the top of the Exmore crater-fill breccia. The porous geometry of the pyrite...
Authors
Claude (Wylie) Poag
New shoreline change data and analysis for the Massachusetts shore with emphasis on Cape Cod and the islands: Mid-1800s to 1994 New shoreline change data and analysis for the Massachusetts shore with emphasis on Cape Cod and the islands: Mid-1800s to 1994
That shorelines change, oftentimes dramatically in short periods of time, is an accepted fact for those who live along the shore. However, when two-thirds or approximately 512 miles of a state's ocean-facing shore exhibits a long-term erosional trend, in some locations eroding at an average annual rate of 12 feet per year, as is the case in Massachusetts, shoreline property owners...
Authors
James F. O’Connell, E. Robert Thieler, Courtney Schupp
The Gulf of Maine: Will the big investments in technology and science yield the return expected by investors? The Gulf of Maine: Will the big investments in technology and science yield the return expected by investors?
No abstract available.
Authors
J. R. Schubel, R. F. Lobecker, D. Jagoe, S. Snow Cotter, H. Hoskins, Christopher F. Polloni
A fresh look at glacial floods A fresh look at glacial floods
We tend to think of continental-scale ice sheets as rather ponderous affairs, inexorably advancing southward over the landscape and then slowly retreating to the north at the end of each ice age. Over the last 20 years, however, evidence has accumulated that this is a misconception. We now know that the Laurentide Ice Sheet—the largest ice-age glacier—was characterized by thin, marginal...
Authors
Steve M. Colman
Across-shelf sediment transport: Interactions between suspended and bed sediment Across-shelf sediment transport: Interactions between suspended and bed sediment
We use a two-dimensional, time-dependent sediment-transport model to quantify across-shelf transport, deposition, and sorting during wave-driven resuspension events characteristic of those that dominate sediment transport on many continental shelves. Decreases in wave-orbital velocities as water depth increases, and the resulting cross-shelf gradient in bed shear stress favor a net...
Authors
Courtney K. Harris, Patricia L. Wiberg