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Publications

The Coastal and Marine Hazards and Resources Program publications are listed here. Search by topics and by year.

Filter Total Items: 2189

Field evidence of subsidence and faulting induced by hydrocarbon production in coastal southeast Texas Field evidence of subsidence and faulting induced by hydrocarbon production in coastal southeast Texas

Three large, mature hydrocarbon fields in coastal southeast Texas were examined to evaluate competing hypotheses of wetland losses and to characterize subaerial and submerged surfaces near reactivated faults and zones of subsidence. Detailed topographic and bathymetric profiles and shallow cores at the Port Neches, Clam Lake, and Caplen Fields provide a basis for distinguishing between...
Authors
Robert A. Morton, Noreen A. Purcell, Russell L. Peterson

How are climate and marine biological outbreaks functionally linked? How are climate and marine biological outbreaks functionally linked?

Since the mid-1970s, large-scale episodic events such as disease epidemics, mass mortalities, harmful algal blooms and other population explosions have been occurring in marine environments at an historically unprecedented rate. The variety of organisms involved (host, pathogens and other opportunists) and the absolute number of episodes have also increased during this period. Are these...
Authors
Marshall L. Hayes, Joseph Bonaventura, Todd P. Mitchell, Joseph M. Prospero, Eugene A. Shinn, Frances Van Dolah, Richard T. Barber

Dust in the wind: long range transport of dust in the atmosphere and its implications for global public and ecosystem health Dust in the wind: long range transport of dust in the atmosphere and its implications for global public and ecosystem health

Movement of soil particles in atmospheres is a normal planetary process. Images of Martian dust devils (wind-spouts) and dust storms captured by NASA's Pathfinder have demonstrated the significant role that storm activity plays in creating the red atmospheric haze of Mars. On Earth, desert soils moving in the atmosphere are responsible for the orange hues in brilliant sunrises and...
Authors
Dale W. Griffin, Christina A. Kellogg, Eugene A. Shinn

Coastal storms and shoreline change: signal or noise? Coastal storms and shoreline change: signal or noise?

A linear regression (studentized) residual analysis was used to identify potential shoreline position outliers and to investigate the effect of the outliers on shoreline rate-of-change values for transects along the Outer Banks, North Carolina. Results from this analysis showed that, over a 134 year period, storm-influenced data contribute statistically significant information to the...
Authors
Michael S. Fenster, Robert Dolan, Robert A. Morton

Sea-level and environmental changes since the last interglacial in the Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia: an overview Sea-level and environmental changes since the last interglacial in the Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia: an overview

The Gulf of Carpentaria is an epicontinental sea (maximum depth 70 m) between Australia and New Guinea, bordered to the east by Torres Strait (currently 12 m deep) and to the west by the Arafura Sill (53 m below present sea level). Throughout the Quaternary, during times of low sea-level, the Gulf was separated from the open waters of the Indian and Pacific Oceans, forming Lake...
Authors
Allan R. Chivas, Adriana Garcı́a, Sander van der Kaars, Martine Couapel, Sabine Holt, Jessica M. Reeves, David J. Wheeler, Adam D. Switzer, Colin V. Murray-Wallace, Debabrata Banerjee, David M. Price, Sue X. Wang, Grant Pearson, N. Terry Edgar, Luc Beaufort, Patrick de Deckker, Ewan Lawson, C. Blaine Cecil

Fish species and community distributions as proxies for sea-floor habitat distributions: the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary example (northwest Atlantic, Gulf Of Maine) Fish species and community distributions as proxies for sea-floor habitat distributions: the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary example (northwest Atlantic, Gulf Of Maine)

Defining the habitats of fishes and associated fauna on outer continental shelves is problematic given the paucity of data on the actual types and distributions of seafloor habitats. However many regions have good data on the distributions of fishes from resource surveys or catch statistics because of the economic importance of the fisheries. Fish distribution data (species or...
Authors
Peter J. Auster, Kevin Joy, Page C. Valentine

Quantifying the relative importance of flow regulation and grain size regulation of suspended sediment transport α and tracking changes in grain size of bed sediment β Quantifying the relative importance of flow regulation and grain size regulation of suspended sediment transport α and tracking changes in grain size of bed sediment β

To predict changes in sediment transport, it is essential to know whether transport is regulated mainly by changes in flow or by changes in grain size of sediment on the bed. In flows where changes in suspended sediment transport are regulated purely by changes in flow (grain size of bed sediment is constant), increases in flow strength cause increases in both concentration and grain...
Authors
David M. Rubin, David J. Topping

U.S. Geological Survey Karst Interest Group: proceedings, St Petersburg, Florida February 13-16, 2001 U.S. Geological Survey Karst Interest Group: proceedings, St Petersburg, Florida February 13-16, 2001

Karst and similar landscapes are found in a wide range of biogeographic classes. In the U.S. for example, Everglades, Mammoth Cave, and Hawaii Volcanoes National Parks have little in common - except karst or pseudokarst, and a cultural past (even though these are very different). This diversity of geologic settings makes karst difficult to categorize and work with when designing a...
Authors
Eve L. Kuniansky

Louisiana coastal wetlands: a resource at risk Louisiana coastal wetlands: a resource at risk

Approximately half the Nation's original wetland habitats have been lost over the past 200 years. In part, this has been a result of natural evolutionary processes, but human activities, such as dredging wetlands for canals or draining and filling for agriculture, grazing, or development, share a large part of the responsibility for marsh habitat alteration and destruction. Louisiana's...
Authors
S. Jeffress Williams
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