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Conference Papers

Browse almost 5,000 conference papers authored by our scientists and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.

Filter Total Items: 5549

Postaudit of optimal conjunctive use policies Postaudit of optimal conjunctive use policies

A simulation-optimization model was developed for the optimal management of the city of Santa Barbara's water resources during a drought; however, this model addressed only groundwater flow and not the advective-dispersive, density-dependent transport of seawater. Zero-m freshwater head constraints at the coastal boundary were used as surrogates for the control of seawater intrusion. In...
Authors
Tracy Nishikawa, Peter Martin

Proactive responses to human impacts that balance development and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) conservation: An integrative model Proactive responses to human impacts that balance development and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) conservation: An integrative model

Incorporating human impacts into conservation plans is critical to protect natural resources. Using a model that examines how anthropogenic changes might be proactively influenced to promote conservation, we argue that a denser human population does not spell inevitable doom for Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). Humans affect the Atlantic salmon ecosystem deleteriously through landscape...
Authors
M.A. Wilzbach, M. E. Mather, C.L. Folt, A. Moore, R.J. Naiman, A.F. Youngson, J. McMenemy

Rapid-estimation method for assessing scour at highway bridges Rapid-estimation method for assessing scour at highway bridges

A method was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey for rapid estimation of scour at highway bridges using limited site data and analytical procedures to estimate pier, abutment, and contraction scour depths. The basis for the method was a procedure recommended by the Federal Highway Administration for conducting detailed scour investigations, commonly referred to as the Level 2 method...
Authors
Stephen R. Holnbeck

Real-time monitoring of bluff stability at Woodway, Washington, USA Real-time monitoring of bluff stability at Woodway, Washington, USA

On January 15, 1997, a landslide of approximately 100,000-m3 from a coastal bluff swept five cars of a freight train into Puget Sound at Woodway, Washington, USA, 25 km north of downtown Seattle. The landslide resulted from failure of a sequence of dense sands and hard silts of glacial and non-glacial origin, including the Lawton Clay, a hard, jointed clayey silt that rarely fails in...
Authors
R.L. Baum, E. L. Harp, W.J. Likos, P. S. Powers, R.G. LaHusen

Relationships between Boron concentrations and trout in the firehole river, Wyoming: Historical information and preliminary results of a field study Relationships between Boron concentrations and trout in the firehole river, Wyoming: Historical information and preliminary results of a field study

The Firehole River (FHR) in Yellowstone National Park (YNP) is a world- renowned recreational fishery that predominantly includes rainbow trout (RBT, Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brown trout (BNT, Salmo trutta). The trout populations apparently are closed to immigration and have been self- sustaining since 1955. Inputs from hot springs and geysers increase the temperature and mineral content...
Authors
J.S. Meyer, A.M. Boelter, D. F. Woodward, J.N. Goldstein, A.M. Farag, W.A. Hubert

Scour measurements at contracted highway crossings in Minnesota, 1997 Scour measurements at contracted highway crossings in Minnesota, 1997

During record flooding in the Minnesota River basin in April 1997, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Federal Highway Administration, collected real-time scour measurements at contracted bridge openings and provided data collection assistance to the Minnesota Department of Transportation bridge inspectors. Weather and flood plain vegetation restricted data collection to...
Authors
David S. Mueller, Harry A. Hitchcock

Sediment transport capacity as an objective of reservoir operations Sediment transport capacity as an objective of reservoir operations

A sediment transport capacity index was developed as a part of a program to develop methods of flushing flow analysis. The index can be used to develop reservoir operation strategies that consider the movement of sediment as one of the reservoir management goals. The sedimentation transport capacity index determines the instream flow for the maintenance of the substrate below a reservoir...
Authors
Robert T. Milhous

Some trans-Iapetus conodont faunal connections in the Tremadocian Some trans-Iapetus conodont faunal connections in the Tremadocian

Paleobiogeographical barriers within the Iapetus Ocean effectively restricted conodont faunas in Baltica from contact with those in Laurentia during Tremadocian time. Only species of Cordylodus, Paltodus, Drepanodus, Paroistodus and Iapetognathus have been reported to occur on both sides of the Iapetus Ocean. Continued studies of faunas from deeper platform and slope settings of North...
Authors
A. Lofgren, J.E. Repetski, Raymond L. Ethington

Tectonic controls on fault-zone permeability in a geothermal reservoir at Dixie Valley, Nevada Tectonic controls on fault-zone permeability in a geothermal reservoir at Dixie Valley, Nevada

To determine factors controlling permeability variations within and adjacent to a fault-hosted geothermal reservoir at Dixie Valley, Nevada, we conducted borehole televiewer observations of wellbore failure (breakouts and cooling cracks) together with hydraulic fracturing stress measurements in six wells drilled into the Stillwater fault zone at depths of 2 to 3 km. Measurements in...
Authors
Stephen Hickman, Mark Zoback, Richard Benoit
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