Conference Papers
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Holocene reworking of a sand sheet in the Merrimack Embayment, Western Gulf of Maine Holocene reworking of a sand sheet in the Merrimack Embayment, Western Gulf of Maine
Recent bathymetric, backscatter, and seafloor sediment samples demonstrate that a large sand sheet was formed in the inner shelf by the reworking of the Merrimack River lowstand delta (deposited 12 kya; currently at 45 m depth) and braid plain during the Holocene transgression. Asymmetric bedforms and distinct grain size distributions suggest the sand sheet is actively being reworked by...
Authors
C.J. Hein, D. M. FitzGerald, W. Barnhardt
Overview: The Chemehuevi Formation along the lower Colorado River Overview: The Chemehuevi Formation along the lower Colorado River
A distinctive set of fine-grained deposits occurs throughout the lower Colorado River Valley, extending from just below the mouth of Grand Canyon to well into the river delta below Yuma, AZ (Figure 1), an along-channel distance of over 700 km. Upstream of Parker, Arizona, the deposits consist of scattered erosional remnants up to 150 m above the modern floodplain. Below Parker, they...
Authors
Daniel V. Malmon, Keith A. Howard
Stratigraphy of Colorado River deposits in lower Mohave Valley, Arizona and California Stratigraphy of Colorado River deposits in lower Mohave Valley, Arizona and California
Deposits in lower Mohave Valley and upper Topock Gorge near Topock, Arizona and Park Moabi, California record a succession of depositional and erosional events since late Miocene time that relate to the development of the Colorado River. Upper Miocene alluvial fans were deposited toward a depocenter east of the present valley bottom, indicating there was no valley outlet then through the...
Authors
Keith A. Howard, D.V. Malmon
Wild, scenic and rapid trip down the Colorado River trough: Desert Symposium field trip Wild, scenic and rapid trip down the Colorado River trough: Desert Symposium field trip
This rapid trip will explore wild fluvial and tectonic events resulting in scenic and rugged topography. The extreme differences in elevation caused valleys to be choked by alluvium and incised by the Colorado River drainage system.
Authors
R. E. Reynolds, J. Faulds, P.K. House, Keith A. Howard, Daniel V. Malmon, C. F. Miller, P. A. Pearthree
Integrating image and GIS processing to map a complex landscape with national vegetation classification system protocols and high spatial resolution image data Integrating image and GIS processing to map a complex landscape with national vegetation classification system protocols and high spatial resolution image data
No abstract available.
Authors
Amina Rangoonwala, Elijah Ramsey
Sources of seasonal water-supply forecast skill in the western US Sources of seasonal water-supply forecast skill in the western US
Many water supplies in the western US depend on water that is stored in snowpacks and reservoirs during the cool, wet seasons for release and use in the following warm seasons. Managers of these water supplies must decide each winter how much water will be available in subsequent seasons so that they can proactively capture and store water and can make reliable commitments for later...
Authors
Michael Dettinger
Two middle Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles from the Valle Grande, Jemez Mountains, northern New Mexico Two middle Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles from the Valle Grande, Jemez Mountains, northern New Mexico
A long-lived middle Pleistocene lake formed in the Valle Grande, a large moat valley of the Valles caldera innorthern New Mexico, when a post-caldera eruption (South Mountain rhyolite) dammed the drainage out of the caldera. Thedeposits of this lake were cored in May 2004 (GLAD5 project, hole VC-3) and 81 m of mostly lacustrine silty mud wererecovered. A tentative chronology has been...
Authors
Peter J. Fawcett, Jeff Heikoop, Fraser Goff, R. Scott Anderson, L. Donohoo-Hurley, John William Geissman, Giday WoldeGabriel, Craig D. Allen, Catrina M. Johnson, Susan J. Smith, Julianna Fessenden-Rahn
Ontological foundations of transportation data for the National Map (USA) Ontological foundations of transportation data for the National Map (USA)
No abstract available.
Authors
Dalia E. Varanka
Radiometric calibration status of Landsat-7 and Landsat-5 Radiometric calibration status of Landsat-7 and Landsat-5
Launched in April 1999, Landsat-7 ETM+ continues to acquire data globally. The Scan Line Corrector in failure in 2003 has affected ground coverage and the recent switch to Bumper Mode operations in April 2007 has degraded the internal geometric accuracy of the data, but the radiometry has been unaffected. The best of the three on-board calibrators for the reflective bands, the Full...
Authors
Julia A. Barsi, Brian L. Markham, Dennis Helder, Gyanesh Chander
Time scales and volumes of large ignimbrite-caldera eruptions in continental arc: Relation to assembly of subvolcanic batholiths Time scales and volumes of large ignimbrite-caldera eruptions in continental arc: Relation to assembly of subvolcanic batholiths
Volcanoes and upper-crustal plutons in diverse geologic settings tend to share common features of mineral and chemical compositions, emplacement age, and magmatic volume. Voluminous silicic ignimbrites associated with caldera sources, widespread components of Cordilleran arcs, have commonly been interpreted as broadly concurrent with assembly of upper-crustal batholiths. Tertiary...
Authors
Peter W. Lipman
Invasive species management and research using GIS Invasive species management and research using GIS
Geographical Information Systems (GIS) are powerful tools in the field of invasive species management. GIS can be used to create potential distribution maps for all manner of taxa, including plants, animals, and diseases. GIS also performs well in the early detection and rapid assessment of invasive species. Here, we used GIS applications to investigate species richness and invasion...
Authors
Tracy R. Holcombe, Thomas J. Stohlgren, Catherine S. Jarnevich