Publications
Scientific literature and information products produced by Woods Hole Coastal and Marine Science Center staff.
Filter Total Items: 1740
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
Urban seismic experiments investigate Seattle fault and basin Urban seismic experiments investigate Seattle fault and basin
In the past decade, Earth scientists have recognized the seismic hazards that crustal faults and sedimentary basins pose to Seattle, Washington (Figure 1). In 1998, the US. Geological Survey and its collaborators initiated a series of urban seismic studies of the upper crust to better map seismogenic structures and sedimentary basins in the Puget Lowland. These studies are called the...
Authors
Thomas M. Brocher, Thomas L. Pratt, Ken C. Creager, Robert S. Crosson, William P. Steele, Craig S. Weaver, Arthur D. Frankel, Anne Trohu, Catherine M. Snelson, Kate C. Miller, Steven H. Harder, Uri S. ten Brink
Workshop discusses community models for coastal sediment transport Workshop discusses community models for coastal sediment transport
Numerical models of coastal sediment transport are increasingly used to address problems ranging from remediation of contaminated sediments, to siting of sewage outfalls and disposal sites, to evaluating impacts of coastal development. They are also used as a test bed for sediment-transport algorithms, to provide realistic settings for biological and geochemical models, and for a variety...
Authors
Christopher R. Sherwood, Richard P. Signell, Courtney K. Harris, Bradford Butman
Relationships among sea-floor structure and benthic communities in Long Island Sound at regional and benthoscape scales Relationships among sea-floor structure and benthic communities in Long Island Sound at regional and benthoscape scales
Long Island Sound is comprised of a rich and spatially heterogeneous mix of sea-floor environments which provide habitat for an equally diverse set of assemblages of soft-sediment communities. Information from recent research on the geomorphological and chemical attributes of these environments, as well as from studies of the hydrodynamics of the Sound, provide the opportunity to develop...
Authors
Roman N. Zajac, Ralph S. Lewis, Larry J. Poppe, David C. Twichell, Joseph Vozarik, Mary L. DiGiacomo-Cohen
Comment on “Sea level rise shown to drive coastal erosion” Comment on “Sea level rise shown to drive coastal erosion”
In a recent article (Eos, Trans., AGU, February 8, 2000, p.55), Leatherman et al. [2000] state that they have confirmed an association between sea-level rise and coastal erosion. Applying their results to the New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland coasts and using a projected sea-level rise, the authors predict that by 2050 the shoreline will recede 60 m, about two times the average beach...
Authors
Sallenger, Robert Morton, Charles Fletcher, E. Robert Thieler, Peter Howd
Late-stage development of the Bryant Canyon turbidite pathway on the Louisiana continental slope Late-stage development of the Bryant Canyon turbidite pathway on the Louisiana continental slope
GLORIA sidescan imagery, multibeam bathymetry, seismic profiles, and piston cores (3–5 m penetration) reveal the near-surface geology of the Bryant Canyon turbidite pathway on the continental margin of Louisiana. This pathway extends from the continental shelf edge, across the continental slope, to a deep-sea fan on the continental rise. The pathway is narrow (
Authors
David C. Twichell, Hans Nelson, John E. Damuth
Stratigraphic and structural evolution of the Selenga Delta Accommodation Zone, Lake Baikal Rift, Siberia Stratigraphic and structural evolution of the Selenga Delta Accommodation Zone, Lake Baikal Rift, Siberia
Seismic reflection profiles from the Lake Baikal Rift reveal extensive details about the sediment thickness, structural geometry and history of extensional deformation and syn-rift sedimentation in this classic continental rift. The Selenga River is the largest single source of terrigenous input into Lake Baikal, and its large delta sits astride the major accommodation zone between the...
Authors
C.A. Scholz, D. R. Hutchinson
A review of the geologic framework of the Long Island Sound Basin, with some observations relating to postglacial sedimentation A review of the geologic framework of the Long Island Sound Basin, with some observations relating to postglacial sedimentation
Most of the papers in this thematic section present regional perspectives that build on more than 100 years of geologic investigation in Long Island Sound. When viewed collectively, a common theme emerges in these works. The major geologic components of the Long Island Sound basin (bedrock, buried coastal-plain strata, recessional moraines, glacial-lake deposits, and the remains of a...
Authors
Ralph S. Lewis, Mary L. DiGiacomo-Cohen
Sea-floor environments within Long Island Sound: A regional overview Sea-floor environments within Long Island Sound: A regional overview
Modern sea-floor sedimentary environments within the glaciated, topographically complex Long Island Sound estuary have been interpreted and mapped from an extensive collection of sidescan sonographs, bottom samples, and video-camera observations together with supplemental bathymetric, marine-geologic, and bottom-current data. Four categories of environments are present that reflect the...
Authors
Harley J. Knebel, Lawrence J. Poppe
Regional processes, conditions, and characteristics of the Long Island Sound sea floor Regional processes, conditions, and characteristics of the Long Island Sound sea floor
No abstract available.
Authors
Harley J. Knebel, Ralph S. Lewis, Johan C. Varekamp
Evaluation of remote-sensing techniques to measure decadal-scale changes of Hofsjokull ice cap, Iceland Evaluation of remote-sensing techniques to measure decadal-scale changes of Hofsjokull ice cap, Iceland
Dynamic surficial changes and changes in the position of the firn line and the areal extent of Hofsjökull ice cap, Iceland, were studied through analysis of a time series (1973–98) of synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) and Landsat data. A digital elevation model of Hofsjökull, which was constructed using SAR interferometry, was used to plot the SAR backscatter coefficient (σ°) vs elevation...
Authors
D.K. Hall, R.S. Williams, J.S. Barton, O. Sigurdsson, L.C. Smith, J.B. Garvin
Portable coastal observatories Portable coastal observatories
Ocean observational science is in the midst of a paradigm shift from an expeditionary science centered on short research cruises and deployments of internally recording instruments to a sustained observational science where the ocean is monitored on a regular basis, much the way the atmosphere is monitored. While satellite remote sensing is one key way of meeting the challenge of real...
Authors
Daniel Frye, Bradford Butman, Mark Johnson, Keith von der Heydt, Steven Lerner