Publications
Scientific reports, journal articles, and information products produced by USGS Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center scientists.
Filter Total Items: 1420
Estimating the empirical probability of submarine landslide occurrence Estimating the empirical probability of submarine landslide occurrence
The empirical probability for the occurrence of submarine landslides at a given location can be estimated from age dates of past landslides. In this study, tools developed to estimate earthquake probability from paleoseismic horizons are adapted to estimate submarine landslide probability. In both types of estimates, one has to account for the uncertainty associated with age-dating...
Authors
Eric L. Geist, Thomas E. Parsons
Seasonal and decadal-scale channel evolution on the dammed Elwha River, Washington Seasonal and decadal-scale channel evolution on the dammed Elwha River, Washington
More than 75,000 dams exist in the continental United States to provide water storage, flood control, and hydropower generation (Graf, 1999). Many of these were built during the early twentieth century and are due for relicensing consideration now and in the near future. The cost of repairing aging dams, together with growing understanding of the ecologic effects of river regulation...
Authors
Amy E. Draut, Joshua B. Logan, Mark C. Mastin, Randall E. McCoy
Large-scale coastal change in the Columbia River littoral cell: an overview Large-scale coastal change in the Columbia River littoral cell: an overview
This overview introduces large-scale coastal change in the Columbia River littoral cell (CRLC). Covering 165 km of the southwest Washington and northwest Oregon coasts, the littoral cell is made up of wide low-sloping dissipative beaches, broad coastal dunes and barrier plains, three large estuaries, and is bounded by rocky headlands. The beaches and inner shelf are composed of fine...
Authors
Guy Gelfenbaum, George M. Kaminsky
Wind-enhanced resuspension in the shallow waters of South San Francisco Bay: Mechanisms and potential implications for cohesive sediment transport Wind-enhanced resuspension in the shallow waters of South San Francisco Bay: Mechanisms and potential implications for cohesive sediment transport
We investigated the driving forces of sediment dynamics at the shoals in South San Francisco Bay. Two stations were deployed along a line perpendicular to a 14 m deep channel, 1000 and 2000 m from the middle of the channel. Station depths were 2.59 and 2.19 m below mean lower low water, respectively. We used acoustic Doppler velocimeters for the simultaneous determination of current...
Authors
Andreas Brand, Jessica R. Lacy, Kevin Hsu, Daniel Hoover, Steve Gladding, Mark T. Stacey
Normalized velocity profiles of field-measured turbidity currents Normalized velocity profiles of field-measured turbidity currents
Multiple turbidity currents were recorded in two submarine canyons with maximum speed as high as 280 cm/s. For each individual turbidity current measured at a fixed station, its depth-averaged velocity typically decreased over time while its thickness increased. Some turbidity currents gained in speed as they traveled downcanyon, suggesting a possible self-accelerating process. The...
Authors
Jingping Xu
The tail of the Storegga Slide: Insights from the geochemistry and sedimentology of the Norwegian Basin deposits The tail of the Storegga Slide: Insights from the geochemistry and sedimentology of the Norwegian Basin deposits
Deposits within the floor of the Norwegian Basin were sampled to characterize the deposition from the Storegga Slide, the largest known Holocene-aged continental margin slope failure complex. A 29 to 67 cm thick veneer of variable-coloured, finely layered Holocene sediment caps a homogeneous, extremely well-sorted, poorly consolidated, very fine-grained, grey-coloured sediment section...
Authors
C. K. Paull, W. Ussler, W.S. Holbrook, T.M. Hill, H. Haflidason, W. Winters, T. Lorenson, I. Aiello, J.E. Johnson, E. Lundsten
Carbonate control of H2 and CH4 production in serpentinization systems at elevated P-Ts Carbonate control of H2 and CH4 production in serpentinization systems at elevated P-Ts
Serpentinization of forsteritic olivine results in the inorganic synthesis of molecular hydrogen (H2) in ultramafic hydrothermal systems (e.g., mid-ocean ridge and forearc environments). Inorganic carbon in those hydrothermal systems may react with H2 to produce methane (CH4) and other hydrocarbons or react with dissolved metal ions to form carbonate minerals. Here, we report...
Authors
L. Camille Jones, Robert Rosenbauer, Jonas I. Goldsmith, Christopher Oze
Event-driven sediment flux in Hueneme and Mugu submarine canyons, southern California Event-driven sediment flux in Hueneme and Mugu submarine canyons, southern California
Vertical sediment fluxes and their dominant controlling processes in Hueneme and Mugu submarine canyons off south-central California were assessed using data from sediment traps and current meters on two moorings that were deployed for 6 months during the winter of 2007. The maxima of total particulate flux, which reached as high as 300+ g/m2/day in Hueneme Canyon, were recorded during...
Authors
J. P. Xu, P.W. Swarzenski, M. Noble, A.-C. Li
A universal approximation to grain size from images of non-cohesive sediment A universal approximation to grain size from images of non-cohesive sediment
The two-dimensional spectral decomposition of an image of sediment provides a direct statistical estimate, grid-by-number style, of the mean of all intermediate axes of all single particles within the image. We develop and test this new method which, unlike existing techniques, requires neither image processing algorithms for detection and measurement of individual grains, nor...
Authors
D. Buscombe, D. M. Rubin, J.A. Warrick
Continental margins and the U.S. extended continental shelf project Continental margins and the U.S. extended continental shelf project
No abstract available.
Authors
Deborah R. Hutchinson, Ginger A. Barth
Dramatic beach and nearshore morphological changes due to extreme flooding at a wave-dominated river mouth Dramatic beach and nearshore morphological changes due to extreme flooding at a wave-dominated river mouth
Record flooding on the Santa Clara River of California (USA) during January 2005 injected ∼ 5 million m3 of littoral-grade sediment into the Santa Barbara Littoral Cell, approximately an order of magnitude more than both the average annual river loads and the average annual alongshore littoral transport in this portion of the cell. This event appears to be the largest sediment transport...
Authors
P.L. Barnard, J.A. Warrick
Spotlight 6: Davidson seamount Spotlight 6: Davidson seamount
Davidson Seamount is located about 80 km off the central California coast in the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. It is one of the better-explored seamounts in the world, having been sampled and observed during 32 dives by the remotely operated vehicle (ROV) Tiburon. These dives mapped the bottom substrate and biological communities, and collected over 280 rock samples and nearly...
Authors
David A. Clague, L. Lundsten, James R. Hein, Jennifer B. Paduan, Alice Davis