Publications
Explore scientific publications from the USGS St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center.
Filter Total Items: 958
The global transport of dust: An intercontinental river of dust, microorganisms and toxic chemicals flows through the Earth's atmosphere The global transport of dust: An intercontinental river of dust, microorganisms and toxic chemicals flows through the Earth's atmosphere
The coral reefs in the Caribbean have been deteriorating since the 1970s, and no one is quite sure why. Such environmental devastation is usually blamed on Homo sapiens, but that doesn’t seem to be what’s going on here. Recently, some scientists at the USGS think they’ve solved the puzzle: Bacteria and fungi have been hitching trans-Atlantic rides on dust from the Sahara desert and...
Authors
Dale Griffin, Christina Kellogg, Virginia Garrison, Eugene Shinn
SHE analysis for biozonation of benthic foraminiferal assemblages from western arctic ocean SHE analysis for biozonation of benthic foraminiferal assemblages from western arctic ocean
Benthic foraminiferal species abundance in samples from three Mendeleyev Ridge box cores were analyzed by cluster analysis and the newer method of SHE analysis. Previously, the latter technique only has been used on foraminiferal data from depth transects of modern surface sediment samples. Unlike most methods, which initially compare all possible pairs of samples, the SHE procedure...
Authors
Lisa E. Osterman, Martin A Buzas, Lee-Ann C. Hayek
Applications of satellite ocean color sensors for monitoring and predicting harmful algal blooms Applications of satellite ocean color sensors for monitoring and predicting harmful algal blooms
The new satellite ocean color sensors offer a means of detecting and monitoring algal blooms in the ocean and coastal zone. Beginning with SeaWiFS (Sea Wide Field-of-view Sensor) in September 1997, these sensors provide coverage every 1 to 2 days with 1-km pixel view at nadir. Atmospheric correction algorithms designed for the coastal zone combined with regional chlorophyll algorithms...
Authors
Richard P. Stumpf
Occurrence and distribution of contaminants in bottom sediment and water of the Barron River Canal, Big Cypress National Preserve, Florida Occurrence and distribution of contaminants in bottom sediment and water of the Barron River Canal, Big Cypress National Preserve, Florida
Trace elements and organic contaminants in bottom-sediment samples collected from 10 sites on the Barron River Canal and from one site on the Turner River in October 1998 had patterns of distribution that indicated different sources. At some sites on the Barron River Canal, lead, copper, and zinc, normalized to aluminum, exceeded limits normally considered as background and may be...
Authors
Ronald L. Miller, Benjamin F. McPherson
Bayesian analysis of U.S. hurricane climate Bayesian analysis of U.S. hurricane climate
Predictive climate distributions of U.S. landfalling hurricanes are estimated from observational records over the period 1851–2000. The approach is Bayesian, combining the reliable records of hurricane activity during the twentieth century with the less precise accounts of activity during the nineteenth century to produce a best estimate of the posterior distribution on the annual rates...
Authors
James B. Elsner, Brian H. Bossak
Lasermap : Software system for processing topographic LIDAR imagery Lasermap : Software system for processing topographic LIDAR imagery
No abstract available
Authors
Amar Nayegandhi
South China Sea South China Sea
The South China Sea is poorly understood in terms of its marine biota, ecology and the human impacts upon it. What is known is most often contained in reports and workshop and conference documents that are not available to the wider scientific community. The South China Sea has an area of some 3.3 million km2 and depths range from the shallowest coastal fringe to 5377 m in the Manila...
Authors
Brian Morton, Graham Blackmore
Marine recreation and public health microbiology: Quest for the ideal indicator Marine recreation and public health microbiology: Quest for the ideal indicator
Four-fifths of the population of the United States live in close proximity to the oceans or Great Lakes, and approximately 100 million Americans use the marine environment for recreation each year (Thurman 1994). Consequently, contamination of lakes, rivers, and coastal waters raises significant public health issues. Among the leading sources of chemical and biological contamination of...
Authors
Dale W. Griffin, Erin K. Lipp, Molly R. McLaughlin, Joan B. Rose
Archive of boomer seismic reflection data collected during USGS cruise 99LCA01, Crescent Beach Spring, Florida, 26 April-27 April, 1999 Archive of boomer seismic reflection data collected during USGS cruise 99LCA01, Crescent Beach Spring, Florida, 26 April-27 April, 1999
No abstract available.
Authors
Gina M. Brewer, Shawn V. Dadisman, James G. Flocks, Dana S. Weise, Jeffrey B. Davis
Confounding factors in coral reef recovery Confounding factors in coral reef recovery
No abstract available.
Authors
Caroline S. Rogers
Bacterial indicator occurrence and the use of an F+ specific RNA coliphage assay to identify fecal sources in Homosassa Springs, Florida Bacterial indicator occurrence and the use of an F+ specific RNA coliphage assay to identify fecal sources in Homosassa Springs, Florida
A microbiological water quality study of Homosassa Springs State Wildlife Park (HSSWP) and surrounding areas was undertaken. Samples were collected in November of 1997 (seven sites) and again in November of 1998 (nine sites). Fecal bacterial concentrations (total and fecal coliforms, Clostridium perfringens, and enterococci) were measured as relative indicators of fecal contamination. F+...
Authors
Dale W. Griffin, Rodger Stokes, J.B. Rose, J.H. Paul
The use of U-Th series radionuclides and transient tracers in oceanography: an overview The use of U-Th series radionuclides and transient tracers in oceanography: an overview
No abstract available
Authors
R.E. Hester, R.M. Harrison, P.W. Swarzenski, D. Reide Corbett, Joseph M. Smoak, Brent A. McKee