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Earth Sciences

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School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

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2006

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Tectonic Control Of Subsidence And Southward Displacement Of Southeast Louisiana With Respect To Stable North America, Roy K. Dokka, Giovanni F. Sella, Timothy H. Dixon Dec 2006

Tectonic Control Of Subsidence And Southward Displacement Of Southeast Louisiana With Respect To Stable North America, Roy K. Dokka, Giovanni F. Sella, Timothy H. Dixon

School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

GPS data collected between 1995 and 2006 suggest that southeast Louisiana, including New Orleans and the larger Mississippi Delta, are both subsiding vertically and moving southward with respect to stable North America. Both motions are likely related due to their common tectonic setting. Subsidence in the New Orleans area occurs in part because it is located in the hanging wall of a large listric normal fault system that forms the northern boundary of a 7–10 km thick allochthon that is detached from stable North America. Southward motion of this allochthon relative to stable North America occurs at 2.2 ± 0.6 …


Local Infrasound Observations Of Large Ash Explosions At Augustine Volcano, Alaska, During January 11-28, 2006, Tanja Petersen, Silvio De Angelis, Guy Tytgat, Stephen R. Mcnutt Jun 2006

Local Infrasound Observations Of Large Ash Explosions At Augustine Volcano, Alaska, During January 11-28, 2006, Tanja Petersen, Silvio De Angelis, Guy Tytgat, Stephen R. Mcnutt

School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

We present and interpret acoustic waveforms associated with a sequence of large explosion events that occurred during the initial stages of the 2006 eruption of Augustine Volcano, Alaska. During January 11–28, 2006, 13 large explosion events created ash-rich plumes that reached up to 14 km a.s.l., and generated atmospheric pressure waves that were recorded on scale by a microphone located at a distance of 3.2 km from the active vent. The variety of recorded waveforms included sharp N-shaped waves with durations of a few seconds, impulsive signals followed by complex codas, and extended signals with emergent character and durations up …


Is There A Northern Lesser Antilles Forearc Block?, A. M. Lopez, S. Stein, Timothy H. Dixon, G. Sella, E. Calais, P. Jansma, J. Weber, P. Lafemina Apr 2006

Is There A Northern Lesser Antilles Forearc Block?, A. M. Lopez, S. Stein, Timothy H. Dixon, G. Sella, E. Calais, P. Jansma, J. Weber, P. Lafemina

School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

A systematic discrepancy exists between slip vectors of thrust fault earthquakes at the Lesser Antilles trench (LAT) and the predicted direction of North American‐Caribbean convergence. A possibility has been that the discrepancy resulted because neither was well constrained. Estimating Caribbean motion has been challenging owing to the limited data along the plate's complex boundaries. Similarly, earlier studies had few slip vectors because interplate thrust events are infrequent. To address these difficulties, we estimate a new Caribbean‐North America Euler vector using recently available GPS data from sites in the presumably stable interior of the Caribbean, and compare the predicted velocities to …


Dry Creek Long Term Watershed Study: Assessment Of Immediate Response Of Aquatic Macroinvertebrates To Watershed Level Harvesting And Thinning Of Streamside Management Zones, M. W. Griswold, R. T. Winn, Thomas Crisman, W. R. White Jan 2006

Dry Creek Long Term Watershed Study: Assessment Of Immediate Response Of Aquatic Macroinvertebrates To Watershed Level Harvesting And Thinning Of Streamside Management Zones, M. W. Griswold, R. T. Winn, Thomas Crisman, W. R. White

School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

Streamside Management Zones (SMZs) are meant to protect riparian habitat and the stream ecosystem. Benthic macroinvertebrates are recognized bioindicators of water quality in streams, typically occupying multiple trophic levels in these systems and providing food for vertebrates. Thus, it is important to understand the effects of harvest within and adjacent to the SMZ on macroinvertebrate assemblages. Benthic macroinvertebrates were sampled pre- and post-harvest from four firstorder streams draining the Dry Creek watershed in southwestern Georgia. A multi-habitat sampling procedure was used. Macroinvertebrates were identified and compared using biotic indices. Comparisons were made between streams within the pre-harvest period and between …


Strain Accumulation Across The Carrizo Segment Of The San Andreas Fault, California: Impact Of Laterally Varying Crustal Properties, Gina Schmalzle, Timothy H. Dixon, Rocco Malservisi, Rob Govers Jan 2006

Strain Accumulation Across The Carrizo Segment Of The San Andreas Fault, California: Impact Of Laterally Varying Crustal Properties, Gina Schmalzle, Timothy H. Dixon, Rocco Malservisi, Rob Govers

School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

Major strike slip faults juxtapose geologically dissimilar terrain which may vary in mechanical properties, leading to an asymmetric pattern of strain accumulation. We present new GPS data on the Carrizo segment of the San Andreas Fault, separating the Salinian block southwest of the fault from Franciscan terrane northeast of the fault, to better quantify asymmetric strain accumulation. We also present a series of finite element models to investigate the possible role of variable elastic layer thickness and material properties of the upper crust. The geodetic data are well fit with a simple model comprising a weak upper crustal zone 10–25 …


Dry Creek Long Term Watershed Study: Buffer Zone Performance As Viable Amphibian Habitat, Brooke L. Talley, Thomas Crisman Jan 2006

Dry Creek Long Term Watershed Study: Buffer Zone Performance As Viable Amphibian Habitat, Brooke L. Talley, Thomas Crisman

School of Geosciences Faculty and Staff Publications

As bioindicators, amphibians typically require both terrestrial and aquatic habitats to complete their life cycles. Pre- timber-harvest monitoring (December 2002 through September 2003) of salamander and frog (Hylidae) populations was conducted in four watersheds of Decatur County, GA. Post- timber-harvest monitoring (December 2003 through September 2004) continued in the same watersheds (two reference and two treatment watersheds). Coverboards were used to monitor adult salamanders, larval salamanders were surveyed with dipnet sweeps, and frogs were monitored with vertical PVC pipes. Six salamander species (Desmognathus apalachicolae, Eurycea cirrigera, E. guttolineata, Notophthalmus viridescens, Plethodon grobmani, and Pseudotriton ruber) and five frog species (Hyla …