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Modeling dune response using measured and equilibrium bathymetric profiles Modeling dune response using measured and equilibrium bathymetric profiles

Coastal engineers typically use numerical models such as SBEACH to predict coastal change due to extreme storms. SBEACH model inputs include pre-storm profiles, wave heights and periods, and water levels. This study focuses on the sensitivity of SBEACH to the details of pre-storm bathymetry. The SBEACH model is tested with two initial conditions for bathymetry, including (1) measured...
Authors
Laura A. Fauver, David M. Thompson, Asbury H. Sallenger

The 17 July 2006 Tsunami earthquake in West Java, Indonesia The 17 July 2006 Tsunami earthquake in West Java, Indonesia

A tsunami earthquake (Mw = 7.7) occurred south of Java on 17 July 2006. The event produced relatively low levels of high-frequency radiation, and local felt reports indicated only weak shaking in Java. There was no ground motion damage from the earthquake, but there was extensive damage and loss of life from the tsunami along 250 km of the southern coasts of West Java and Central Java...
Authors
J. Mori, Walter D. Mooney, Afnimar, S. Kurniawan, A.I. Anaya, S. Widiyantoro

Hydrothermal fluid flow and deformation in large calderas: Inferences from numerical simulations Hydrothermal fluid flow and deformation in large calderas: Inferences from numerical simulations

[1] Inflation and deflation of large calderas is traditionally interpreted as being induced by volume change of a discrete source embedded in an elastic or viscoelastic half-space, though it has also been suggested that hydrothermal fluids may play a role. To test the latter hypothesis, we carry out numerical simulations of hydrothermal fluid flow and poroelastic deformation in calderas...
Authors
Shaul Hurwitz, L.B. Christiansen, Paul A. Hsieh

Law of the sea, the continental shelf, and marine research Law of the sea, the continental shelf, and marine research

The question of the amount of seabed to which a coastal nation is entitled is addressed in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). This treaty, ratified by 153 nations and in force since 1994, specifies national obligations, rights, and jurisdiction in the oceans, and it allows nations a continental shelf out to at least 200 nautical miles or to a maritime boundary...
Authors
Deborah R. Hutchinson, Robert W. Rowland

Long-term performance of Aanderaa optodes and sea-bird SBE-43 dissolved-oxygen sensors bottom mounted at 32 m in Massachusetts Bay Long-term performance of Aanderaa optodes and sea-bird SBE-43 dissolved-oxygen sensors bottom mounted at 32 m in Massachusetts Bay

A field evaluation of two new dissolved-oxygen sensing technologies, the Aanderaa Instruments AS optode model 3830 and the Sea-Bird Electronics, Inc., model SBE43, was carried out at about 32-m water depth in western Massachusetts Bay. The optode is an optical sensor that measures fluorescence quenching by oxygen molecules, while the SBE43 is a Clark polarographic membrane sensor...
Authors
Marinna A. Martini, Bradford Butman, Michael J. Mickelson

Subaqueous geology and a filling model for Crater Lake, Oregon Subaqueous geology and a filling model for Crater Lake, Oregon

Results of a detailed bathymetric survey of Crater Lake conducted in 2000, combined with previous results of submersible and dredge sampling, form the basis for a geologic map of the lake floor and a model for the filling of Crater Lake with water. The most prominent landforms beneath the surface of Crater Lake are andesite volcanoes that were active as the lake was filling with water...
Authors
M. Nathenson, C. R. Bacon, D.W. Ramsey

Danger lurks deep: The human impact of volcanoes Danger lurks deep: The human impact of volcanoes

Near midnight of March 28, 1982, El Chichón — an obscure, little-studied volcano in Chiapas State, southern Mexico — violently erupted, terrifying local villagers and prompting a confused, poorly executed evacuation. For the next five days, the volcano remained intermittently but only weakly active, so many evacuees were allowed to return to their homes. Then, on April 3 and 4, two...
Authors
J. Feldman, Robert I. Tilling

Relationships between reef fish communities and remotely sensed rugosity measurements in Biscayne National Park, Florida, USA Relationships between reef fish communities and remotely sensed rugosity measurements in Biscayne National Park, Florida, USA

The realization that coral reef ecosystem management must occur across multiple spatial scales and habitat types has led scientists and resource managers to seek variables that are easily measured over large areas and correlate well with reef resources. Here we investigate the utility of new technology in airborne laser surveying (NASA Experimental Advanced Airborne Research Lidar (EAARL...
Authors
Ilsa B. Kuffner, John Brock, Rikki Grober-Dunsmore, Victor E. Bonito, T. Donald Hickey, C. Wayne Wright

A catastrophic meltwater flood event and the formation of the Hudson Shelf Valley A catastrophic meltwater flood event and the formation of the Hudson Shelf Valley

The Hudson Shelf Valley (HSV) is the largest physiographic feature on the U.S. mid-Atlantic continental shelf. The 150-km long valley is the submerged extension of the ancestral Hudson River Valley that connects to the Hudson Canyon. Unlike other incised valleys on the mid-Atlantic shelf, it has not been infilled with sediment during the Holocene. Analyses of multibeam bathymetry...
Authors
E. Robert Thieler, Bradford Butman, William C. Schwab, Mead A. Allison, Neal W. Driscoll, John P. Donnelly, Elazar Uchupi

Coastal-change impacts during hurricane katrina: an overview Coastal-change impacts during hurricane katrina: an overview

As part of an ongoing cooperative effort between USGS, NASA and USACE, the barrier islands within the right-front quadrant of Hurricane Katrina were surveyed with airborne lidar both before and after landfall. Dauphin Island, AL was located the farthest from landfall and wave runup intermittently overtopped its central and western sections. The Gulf-side of the island experienced severe...
Authors
Asbury Sallenger, C. Wayne Wright, Jeff Lillycrop

A three-dimensional geophysical model of the crust in the Barents Sea region: Model construction and basement characterization A three-dimensional geophysical model of the crust in the Barents Sea region: Model construction and basement characterization

BARENTS50, a new 3-D geophysical model of the crust in the Barents Sea Region has been developed by the University of Oslo, NORSAR and the U.S. Geological Survey. The target region comprises northern Norway and Finland, parts of the Kola Peninsula and the East European lowlands. Novaya Zemlya, the Kara Sea and Franz-Josef Land terminate the region to the east, while the Norwegian...
Authors
O. Ritzmann, N. Maercklin, Faleide J. Inge, H. Bungum, Walter D. Mooney, Shane T. Detweiler

New K-Ar ages for calculating end-of-shield extrusion rates at West Maui volcano, Hawaiian island chain New K-Ar ages for calculating end-of-shield extrusion rates at West Maui volcano, Hawaiian island chain

Thirty-seven new K–Ar ages from West Maui volcano, Hawai‘i, are used to define the waning stages of shield growth and a brief episode of postshield volcanism. All but two samples from shield-stage strata have reversed polarity magnetization, so conceivably the exposed shield is not much older than the Olduvai Normal-Polarity subchron, or about 1.8 Ma. The oldest ages obtained are in the...
Authors
David R. Sherrod, T. Murai, Takahiro Tagami
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