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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

Time-dependent pore filling Time-dependent pore filling

Capillarity traps fluids in porous media during immiscible fluid displacement. Most field situations involve relatively long time scales, such as hydrocarbon migration into reservoirs, resource recovery, nonaqueous phase liquid remediation, geological CO2 storage, and sediment‐atmosphere interactions. Yet laboratory studies and numerical simulations of capillary phenomena rarely consider...
Authors
Zhonghao Sun, Junbong Jang, J. Santamarina

How do upwelling and El Niño impact coral reef growth? A guided, inquiry-based lesson How do upwelling and El Niño impact coral reef growth? A guided, inquiry-based lesson

This lesson uses real-world data to guide students toward understanding how climate and ocean variables impact coral reef growth. To begin this activity, students hypothesize how changes in environmental conditions could affect coral reef growth. They then compare metrics for reef growth (linear growth and percent coral cover) between two reefs in Pacific Panamá that are located in
Authors
Philip Gravinese, Lauren Toth, Carly Randall, Richard Aronson

Regional acidification trends in Florida shellfish estuaries: A 20+ year look at pH, oxygen, temperature, and salinity Regional acidification trends in Florida shellfish estuaries: A 20+ year look at pH, oxygen, temperature, and salinity

Increasing global CO2 and local land use changes coupled with increased nutrient pollution are threatening estuaries worldwide. Local changes of estuarine chemistry have been documented, but regional associations and trends comparing multiple estuaries latitudinally have not been evaluated. Rapid climate change has impacted the annual and decadal chemical trends in estuaries, with local...
Authors
Lisa Robbins, John Lisle

Morphodynamic evolution following sediment release from the world’s largest dam removal Morphodynamic evolution following sediment release from the world’s largest dam removal

Sediment pulses can cause widespread, complex changes to rivers and coastal regions. Quantifying landscape response to sediment-supply changes is a long-standing problem in geomorphology, but the unanticipated nature of most sediment pulses rarely allows for detailed measurement of associated landscape processes and evolution. The intentional removal of two large dams on the Elwha River
Authors
Andrew Ritchie, Jonathan Warrick, Amy East, Christopher Magirl, Andrew Stevens, Jennifer Bountry, Timothy Randle, Christopher Curran, Robert Hilldale, Jeffrey Duda, Ian Miller, George Pess, Emily Eidam, Melissa Foley, Randall McCoy, Andrea Ogston

Natural and human-induced variability in barrier-island response to sea level rise Natural and human-induced variability in barrier-island response to sea level rise

Storm-driven sediment fluxes onto and behind barrier islands help coastal barrier systems keep pace with sea level rise (SLR). Understanding what controls cross-shore sediment flux magnitudes is critical for making accurate forecasts of barrier response to increased SLR rates. Here, using an existing morphodynamic model for barrier island evolution, observations are used to constrain...
Authors
Jennifer Miselis, Jorge Lorenzo-Trueba

Increased sediment load during a large-scale dam removal changes nearshore subtidal communities Increased sediment load during a large-scale dam removal changes nearshore subtidal communities

The coastal marine ecosystem near the Elwha River was altered by a massive sediment influx—over 10 million tonnes—during the staged three-year removal of two hydropower dams. We used time series of bathymetry, substrate grain size, remotely sensed turbidity, scuba dive surveys, and towed video observations collected before and during dam removal to assess responses of the nearshore...
Authors
Stephen P. Rubin, Ian Miller, Melissa Foley, Helen Berry, Jeffrey J. Duda, Benjamin Hudson, Nancy Elder, Matthew Beirne, Jonathan Warrick, Michael McHenry, Andrew Stevens, Emily Eidam, Andrea Ogston, Guy Gelfenbaum, Rob Pedersen

The influence of bed friction variability due to land cover on storm-driven barrier island morphodynamics The influence of bed friction variability due to land cover on storm-driven barrier island morphodynamics

Variations in bed friction due to land cover type have the potential to influence morphologic change during storm events; the importance of these variations can be studied through numerical simulation and experimentation at locations with sufficient observational data to initialize realistic scenarios, evaluate model accuracy and guide interpretations. Two-dimensional in the horizontal...
Authors
Davina Passeri, Joseph Long, Nathaniel Plant, Matthew Bilskie, Scott Hagen

Single-beam bathymetry data collected in 2015 from Grand Bay, Alabama-Mississippi Single-beam bathymetry data collected in 2015 from Grand Bay, Alabama-Mississippi

As part of the Sea-level and Storm Impacts on Estuarine Environments and Shorelines (SSIEES) project, scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center conducted a single-beam bathymetry survey within the estuarine, open-bay, and tidal creek environments of Grand Bay, Alabama-Mississippi, from May to June 2015. The goal of the SSIEES...
Authors
Nancy DeWitt, Chelsea A. Stalk, Christopher Smith, Stanley Locker, Jake J. Fredericks, Terrence McCloskey, Cathryn Wheaton

Boiling-induced formation of colloidal gold in black smoker hydrothermal fluids Boiling-induced formation of colloidal gold in black smoker hydrothermal fluids

Gold colloids occur in black smoker fluids from the Niua South hydrothermal vent field, Lau Basin (South Pacific Ocean), confirming the long-standing hypothesis that gold may undergo colloidal transport in hydrothermal fluids. Six black smoker vents, varying in temperature from 250 °C to 325 °C, were sampled; the 325 °C vent was boiling at the time of sampling and the 250 °C fluids were...
Authors
Amy Gartman, Mark Hannington, John Jamieson, Ben Peterkin, Dieter Garbe-Schonberg, Alyssa J Findlay, Sebastian Fuchs, Tom Kwasnitschka

Distribution of foraminifera in Chincoteague Bay and the marshes of Assateague Island and the adjacent vicinity, Maryland and Virginia Distribution of foraminifera in Chincoteague Bay and the marshes of Assateague Island and the adjacent vicinity, Maryland and Virginia

Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center conducted a seasonal collection of estuarine, marsh, and sandy washover surface sediments from Chincoteague Bay, Tom’s Cove, and the surrounding Assateague Island and Delmarva Peninsula in March–April and October 2014, after Hurricane Sandy. Micropaleontology samples were collected as part...
Authors
Alisha Ellis, Jaimie Shaw, Lisa E. Osterman, Christopher Smith

A seasonal and spatial comparison of metals, and stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes, in Chincoteague Bay and the marsh deposits of Assateague Island and the adjacent vicinity, Maryland and Virginia A seasonal and spatial comparison of metals, and stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes, in Chincoteague Bay and the marsh deposits of Assateague Island and the adjacent vicinity, Maryland and Virginia

After Hurricane Sandy, scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center conducted a seasonal collection of estuarine, marsh, and sandy overwash surface sediments from Chincoteague Bay, Tom’s Cove, and the surrounding Assateague Island and Delmarva Peninsula in March–April and October 2014. Surplus surface sediment was analyzed for metals...
Authors
Alisha Ellis, Christopher Smith

Characterizing storm response and recovery using the beach change envelope: Fire Island, New York Characterizing storm response and recovery using the beach change envelope: Fire Island, New York

Hurricane Sandy at Fire Island, New York presented unique challenges in the quantification of storm impacts using traditional metrics of coastal change, wherein measured changes (shoreline, dune crest, and volume change) did not fully reflect the substantial changes in sediment redistribution following the storm. We used a time series of beach profile data at Fire Island, New York to...
Authors
Owen Brenner, Erika Lentz, Cheryl Hapke, Rachel Henderson, Kathleen Wilson, Timothy Nelson
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