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

Filter Total Items: 1746

Farallon slab detachment and deformation of the Magdalena Shelf, southern Baja California Farallon slab detachment and deformation of the Magdalena Shelf, southern Baja California

Subduction of the Farallon plate beneath northwestern Mexico stalled by ~12 Ma when the Pacific-Farallon spreading-ridge approached the subduction zone. Coupling between remnant slab and the overriding North American plate played an important role in the capture of the Baja California (BC) microplate by the Pacific Plate. Active-source seismic reflection and wide-angle seismic refraction...
Authors
Daniel S. Brothers, Alistair J. Harding, Antonio Gonzalez-Fernandez, W.S. Steven Holbrook, Graham M. Kent, Neal W. Driscoll, John M. Fletcher, Daniel Lizarralde, Paul J. Umhoefer, Gary Axen

Quantifying anthropogenically driven morphologic changes on a barrier island: Fire Island National Seashore, New York Quantifying anthropogenically driven morphologic changes on a barrier island: Fire Island National Seashore, New York

Beach scraping, beach replenishment, and the presence of moderate development have altered the morphology of the dune–beach system at Fire Island National Seashore, located on a barrier island on the south coast of Long Island, New York. Seventeen communities are interspersed with sections of natural, nonmodified land within the park boundary. Beach width, dune elevation change, volume...
Authors
Meredith G. Kratzmann, Cheryl J. Hapke

State of the Earth’s cryosphere at the beginning of the 21st century: Glaciers, global snow cover, floating ice, and permafrost and periglacial environments State of the Earth’s cryosphere at the beginning of the 21st century: Glaciers, global snow cover, floating ice, and permafrost and periglacial environments

This chapter is the tenth in a series of 11 book-length chapters, collectively referred to as “this volume,” in the series U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1386, Satellite Image Atlas of Glaciers of the World. In the other 10 chapters, each of which concerns a specific glacierized region of Earth, the authors used remotely sensed images, primarily from the Landsat 1, 2, and 3...
Authors
Richard S. Williams, Thomas G. Huntington, Jane G. Ferrigno, Lonnie Thompson, M.B. Dyurgerov, Mark Meier, Bruce Raup, Jeffrey S. Kargel, Dorothy K. Hall, David A. Robinson, Claire L. Parkinson, D. Cavalieri, Martin O Jeffries, K. Morris, Claude R. Duguay, J. A. Heginbottom, Jerry Brown, Ole Humlum, Harald Svensson, Kevin M. Foley

Observations of ocean circulation and sediment transport experiment offshore of Fire Island, NY Observations of ocean circulation and sediment transport experiment offshore of Fire Island, NY

Researchers from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center (WHCMSC), in collaboration with Coastal Carolina University (CCU) and University of South Carolina (USC), conducted a scientific field study to investigate the ocean circulation and sediment transport processes offshore of Fire Island, NY. Although the physical processes along the entire...
Authors
Marinna A. Martini, John C. Warner, Brandy Armstrong, Jeffrey H. List, Ellyn Montgomery, Nicole Marshall

Minimum distribution of subsea ice-bearing permafrost on the US Beaufort Sea continental shelf Minimum distribution of subsea ice-bearing permafrost on the US Beaufort Sea continental shelf

Starting in Late Pleistocene time (~19 ka), sea level rise inundated coastal zones worldwide. On some parts of the present-day circum-Arctic continental shelf, this led to flooding and thawing of formerly subaerial permafrost and probable dissociation of associated gas hydrates. Relict permafrost has never been systematically mapped along the 700-km-long U.S. Beaufort Sea continental...
Authors
Laura L. Brothers, Patrick E. Hart, Carolyn D. Ruppel

Large submarine sand waves and gravel lag substrates on Georges Bank off Atlantic Canada Large submarine sand waves and gravel lag substrates on Georges Bank off Atlantic Canada

Georges Bank is a large, shallow, continental shelf feature offshore of New England and Atlantic Canada. The bank is mantled with a veneer of glacial debris transported during the late Pleistocene from continental areas lying to the north. These sediments were reworked by marine processes during postglacial sea-level transgression and continue to be modified by the modern oceanic regime...
Authors
B.J. Todd, Page C. Valentine

Surficial geology and benthic habitat of the German Bank seabed, Scotian Shelf, Canada Surficial geology and benthic habitat of the German Bank seabed, Scotian Shelf, Canada

To provide the scientific context for management of a newly opened scallop fishing ground, surficial geology and benthic habitats were mapped on German Bank on the southern Scotian Shelf off Atlantic Canada. To provide a seamless regional dataset, multibeam sonar surveys covered 5320 sqaure kilometres of the bank in water depths of 30–250 m and provided 5 m horizontal resolution...
Authors
Brian J. Todd, Vladimir E. Kostylev

Methane hydrate-bearing seeps as a source of aged dissolved organic carbon to the oceans Methane hydrate-bearing seeps as a source of aged dissolved organic carbon to the oceans

Marine sediments contain about 500–10,000 Gt of methane carbon1, 2, 3, primarily in gas hydrate. This reservoir is comparable in size to the amount of organic carbon in land biota, terrestrial soils, the atmosphere and sea water combined1, 4, but it releases relatively little methane to the ocean and atmosphere5. Sedimentary microbes convert most of the dissolved methane to carbon...
Authors
John W. Pohlman, William F. Waite, James E. Bauer, Christopher L. Osburn, N. Ross Chapman

A Bayesian network to predict vulnerability to sea-level rise: data report A Bayesian network to predict vulnerability to sea-level rise: data report

During the 21st century, sea-level rise is projected to have a wide range of effects on coastal environments, development, and infrastructure. Consequently, there has been an increased focus on developing modeling or other analytical approaches to evaluate potential impacts to inform coastal management. This report provides the data that were used to develop and evaluate the performance...
Authors
Benjamin T. Gutierrez, Nathaniel G. Plant, E. Robert Thieler

The biogeochemistry of anchialine caves: Progress and possibilities The biogeochemistry of anchialine caves: Progress and possibilities

Recent investigations of anchialine caves and sinkholes have identified complex food webs dependent on detrital and, in some cases, chemosynthetically produced organic matter. Chemosynthetic microbes in anchialine systems obtain energy from reduced compounds produced during organic matter degradation (e.g., sulfide, ammonium, and methane), similar to what occurs in deep ocean cold seeps...
Authors
John W. Pohlman

Summary of oceanographic and water–quality measurements in West Falmouth Harbor and Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, 2009–2010 Summary of oceanographic and water–quality measurements in West Falmouth Harbor and Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, 2009–2010

This data report presents oceanographic and water-quality observations made at six locations in West Falmouth Harbor and Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, from August 2009 to September 2010. Both Buzzards Bay and West Falmouth Harbor are estuarine embayments; the input of freshwater on the eastern margin of Buzzards Bay adjacent to Cape Cod and West Falmouth Harbor is largely due to...
Authors
Neil K. Ganju, Patrick J. Dickhudt, Jennifer A. Thomas, Jonathan Borden, Christopher R. Sherwood, Ellyn T. Montgomery, Erin R. Twomey, Marinna A. Martini
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