Publications
Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff.
Filter Total Items: 1747
Historical trace metal accumulation in the sediments of an urbanized region of the Lake Champlain watershed, Burlington, Vermont Historical trace metal accumulation in the sediments of an urbanized region of the Lake Champlain watershed, Burlington, Vermont
This study documents the history of pollution inputs in the Burlington region of Lake Champlain, Vermont using measurements of anthropogenic metals (Cu, Zn, Cr, Pb, Cd, and Ag) in four age-dated sediment cores. Sediments record a history of contamination in a region and can be used to assess the changing threat to biota over time and to evaluate the effectiveness of discharge regulations...
Authors
E.L. Mecray, J.W. King, P.G. Appleby, A.S. Hunt
Amplitude blanking related to the pore-filling of gas hydrate in sediments Amplitude blanking related to the pore-filling of gas hydrate in sediments
Seismic indicators of gas-hydrate-bearing sediments include elevated interval velocities and amplitude reduction of seismic reflections owing to the presence of gas hydrate in the sediment's pore spaces. However, large amplitude blanking with relatively low interval velocities observed at the Blake Ridge has been enigmatic because realistic seismic models were absent to explain the...
Authors
Myung W. Lee, William P. Dillon
Salt diapirs in the Dead Sea basin and their relationship to Quaternary extensional tectonics Salt diapirs in the Dead Sea basin and their relationship to Quaternary extensional tectonics
Regional extension of a brittle overburden and underlying salt causes differential loading that is thought to initiate the rise of reactive diapirs below and through regions of thin overburden. We present a modern example of a large salt diapir in the Dead Sea pull-apart basin, the Lisan diapir, which we believe was formed during the Quaternary due to basin transtension and subsidence...
Authors
A. Al-Zoubi, Uri S. ten Brink
Protection of fish spawning habitat for the conservation of warm temperate reef fish fisheries of shelf-edge reefs of Florida Protection of fish spawning habitat for the conservation of warm temperate reef fish fisheries of shelf-edge reefs of Florida
We mapped and briefly describe the surficial geology of selected examples of shelf-edge reefs (50–120 m deep) of the southeastern United States, which are apparently derived from ancient Pleistocene shorelines and are intermittently distributed throughout the region. These reefs are ecologically significant because they support a diverse array of fish and invertebrate species, and they...
Authors
Christopher C. Koenig, Felicia C. Coleman, Churchill B. Grimes, Gary R. Fitzhugh, Kathryn M. Scanlon, Christopher T. Gledhill, Mark Grace
Predicting coastal evolution at societally-relevant time and space scales Predicting coastal evolution at societally-relevant time and space scales
No abstract available.
Authors
E. Robert Thieler
GHASTI-determining physical properties of sediment containing natural and laboratory-formed gas hydrate: Chapter 24 GHASTI-determining physical properties of sediment containing natural and laboratory-formed gas hydrate: Chapter 24
No abstract available.
Authors
William J. Winters, William P. Dillon, I.A. Pecher, D.H. Mason
The modern Earth narrative: Natural and human history of the Earth The modern Earth narrative: Natural and human history of the Earth
No abstract available.
Authors
R. J. Williams
Louisiana coastal wetlands: a resource at risk Louisiana coastal wetlands: a resource at risk
Approximately half the Nation's original wetland habitats have been lost over the past 200 years. In part, this has been a result of natural evolutionary processes, but human activities, such as dredging wetlands for canals or draining and filling for agriculture, grazing, or development, share a large part of the responsibility for marsh habitat alteration and destruction. Louisiana's...
Authors
S. Jeffress Williams
Urban seismic experiments investigate Seattle fault and basin Urban seismic experiments investigate Seattle fault and basin
In the past decade, Earth scientists have recognized the seismic hazards that crustal faults and sedimentary basins pose to Seattle, Washington (Figure 1). In 1998, the US. Geological Survey and its collaborators initiated a series of urban seismic studies of the upper crust to better map seismogenic structures and sedimentary basins in the Puget Lowland. These studies are called the...
Authors
Thomas M. Brocher, Thomas L. Pratt, Ken C. Creager, Robert S. Crosson, William P. Steele, Craig S. Weaver, Arthur D. Frankel, Anne Trohu, Catherine M. Snelson, Kate C. Miller, Steven H. Harder, Uri S. ten Brink
Workshop discusses community models for coastal sediment transport Workshop discusses community models for coastal sediment transport
Numerical models of coastal sediment transport are increasingly used to address problems ranging from remediation of contaminated sediments, to siting of sewage outfalls and disposal sites, to evaluating impacts of coastal development. They are also used as a test bed for sediment-transport algorithms, to provide realistic settings for biological and geochemical models, and for a variety...
Authors
Christopher R. Sherwood, Richard P. Signell, Courtney K. Harris, Bradford Butman
Relationships among sea-floor structure and benthic communities in Long Island Sound at regional and benthoscape scales Relationships among sea-floor structure and benthic communities in Long Island Sound at regional and benthoscape scales
Long Island Sound is comprised of a rich and spatially heterogeneous mix of sea-floor environments which provide habitat for an equally diverse set of assemblages of soft-sediment communities. Information from recent research on the geomorphological and chemical attributes of these environments, as well as from studies of the hydrodynamics of the Sound, provide the opportunity to develop...
Authors
Roman N. Zajac, Ralph S. Lewis, Larry J. Poppe, David C. Twichell, Joseph Vozarik, Mary L. DiGiacomo-Cohen
Comment on “Sea level rise shown to drive coastal erosion” Comment on “Sea level rise shown to drive coastal erosion”
In a recent article (Eos, Trans., AGU, February 8, 2000, p.55), Leatherman et al. [2000] state that they have confirmed an association between sea-level rise and coastal erosion. Applying their results to the New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland coasts and using a projected sea-level rise, the authors predict that by 2050 the shoreline will recede 60 m, about two times the average beach...
Authors
Sallenger, Robert Morton, Charles Fletcher, E. Robert Thieler, Peter Howd