Products by GISR Members

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PUBLICATIONS BY GISR MEMBERS since the start of the Deepwater Horizon Incident

(plain = acknowledges GoMRI support; bold = prior to GoMRI support; * = student author)

2014 (19)

  1. Bianchi, T.; Osburn, C.; Shields, M*.; Yvon-Lewis, S.; Young, J*.; Guo, L.; Zhou, Z.(2014). Deepwater Horizon Oil in Gulf of Mexico Waters after Two Years: Transformation into the Dissolved Organic Matter Pool. Environmental Science and Technology, doi: 10.1021/es501547b .
  2. Chan, G. K. Y., A. C. Chow, and E. E. Adams (2014). Effects of droplet size on intrusion of sub-surface oil spills. Environ. Fluid Mech., accepted.
  3. Chapman, P., S. Socolofsky and R. Hetland (2014). From Blowout to Beach: An Integrated Modeling Approach. Proc. 2014 Int. Oil Spill Conference, 919-932.
  4. Du*, M., S. Yvon-Lewis, F. Garcia-Tigreros*, D.L. Valentine, S.D. Mendes, J.D. Kessler, 2014. High resolution measurements of methane and carbon dioxide in surface waters over a natural seep reveal dynamics of dissolved phase air-sea flux. Environmental Science and Technology, dx.doi.org/10.1021/es5017813.
  5. Hodges, B.R. (2014). A new approach to the local time stepping problem for scalar transport. Ocean Modelling, 77, 1-19, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ocemod.2014.02.007.
  6. Hou, X and Hodges, B.R. (2014). Integrating Google Maps/Earth into an integrated automated oil spill forecast system. Marine Technology Society Journal, 48 (4), 1-7. 
  7. Joye, S., J. Montoya, S. Murawski, T. Ozgokmen, T. Wade, R. Montouro, B. Roberts, D. Hollander, W. Jeffrey and J. Chanton (2014). Fast action: a collaborative, multi-disciplinary rapid response study of the Hercules Well blowout. EOS (in press).
  8. Kourafalou V.H., P. De Mey, M. Le Hénaff, G. Charria, C.A. Edwards, R. He, M. Herzfeld, A. Pasqual, E. Stanev, J. Tintoré, N. Usui, A. van der Westhuysen, J. Wilkin, and X. Zhu (2014) Coastal Ocean Forecasting: system integration and evaluation. Journal of Operational Oceanography, accepted. 
  9. Kuehl, J., An analytic solution for barotropic flow along a variable slope topography. Geophysical Research Letters, doi: 10.1002/2014GL061188.
  10. Kuehl, J., S. DiMarco, L.Spencer* and N. Guinasso (2014). Application of the Smooth Orthogonal Decomposition to oceanographic datasets. Geophysical Research Letters, doi: 10.1002/2014GL060237.
  11. Kuehl, J and V.A. Sheremet, 2014. Two-Layer Gap-Leaping Oceanic Boundary Currents: Experimental Investigation. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 740, 97-113, doi:10.1017/jfm.2013.645.
  12. Kuehl, J., H.L. Reed, T.S. Kocian and N.B. Oliviero,  (2014?). Bandwidth Effects on Mack-Mode Instability, AIAA-2014-2777.
  13. Qian, H., Y.,Li , D. Eggleston, R. He. (2014), Potential Larval Transport and Connectivity in the Intra-Americans Seas, Marine Environmental Research (accepted), 
  14. Rosenheim, B.E., Pendergraft, M.A., Flowers G.C., Carney, R., Sericano, ,J.L, Amer, R.M.,  Chanton, J., Dincer, Z. and Wade, T.L. 2014. Employing Extant Stable Carbon Isotope Data in Gulf of Mexico Sedimentary Organic Matter for Oil Spill Studies. Deep Sea Research II (in press), doi: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2014.03.020.
  15. Xue, Z., J. Zambon, Z. Yao, Y. Liu, and R. He (2014) An integrated ocean circulation, wave, atmosphere, and marine ecosystem prediction system for the South Atlantic Bight and Gulf of Mexico, Journal of Operational Oceanography, accepted. 
  16. Zambon, J., R. He, and J. Warner (2014) Investigation of Hurricane Ivan using the Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere-Wave-Sediment Transport (COAWST) Model, Ocean Dynamics, accepted. 
  17. Zeng, X., Y. Li, R. He, and Y. Yin (2014) Clustering of the Loop Current patterns based on satellite observed sea surface height and self-organizing map, Remote Sensing Letters, accepted 
  18. Zhao, L; Boufadel, M. C.; Socolofsky, S. A.; Adams, E. E.; King, T; and Lee, K. (2014). Evolution of droplets in subsea oil and gas blowouts: Development and validation of the numerical model VDROP-J. Marine Pollution Bulletin, in press.
  19. Zhao, L., J. Torlapati, M. C. Boufadel, T. King, et al. (2014).VDROP: A Comprehensive model for generating the droplet size distribution from oils. Incorporation of interfacial tension and oil viscosity. Chem. Eng. J., in press.


2013 (7)

  1. Adams, E.E., S.A. Socolofsky and M.C. Boufadel (2013). Comment on “Evolution of the Macondo Well Blowout: Simulating the Effects of the Circulation and Synthetic Dispersants on the Subsea Oil Transport”, Environmental Science and Technology, 47, 11905−11905 (2013).
  2. Pendergraft, M.A., Zeynep, D., Sericano, J.L., Wade T.L. and Rosenheim, B.E. (2013). Linking Ramped-Pyrolysis Isotope Data to Oil Content through PAH Analysis. Environmental Research Letters 8, doi:10.1088/1748-9326/8/4/044038
  3. Putman, N.F., K.L. Mansfield, R. He, D.J. Shaver, P. Verley (2013). Predicting the distribution of oceanic-stage Kemp’s Ridley sea turtles. Biology Letters, 9, 20130345, http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2013.0345.
  4. Putman, N.F. and R. He (2013). Tracking the long-distance dispersal of marine organisms: sensitivity to ocean model resolution. J. Royal Soc. Interface 10, 20120979, http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2012.0979.
  5. Tse, I.C. and E.A. Variano (2013) Lagrangian measurement of fluid and particle motion using a field-deployable Volumetric Particle Imager (VoPI). Limnol. Oceanogr. Methods, 11, 225–238.
  6. Variano, E.A., and Cowen, E.A., (2013). "Turbulent Transport of a High-Schmidt-Number Scalar Near an Air-Water Interface," Journal of Fluid Mechanics,  731, 259–287. 
  7. Xue, Z., He, R., Fennel, K, Cai, W.-J, Lohrenz, S.,Hopkinson, C, 2013. Modeling Ocean Circulation and Biogeochemical Variability in the Gulf of Mexico, Biogeosciences 10, 7219-7234.


2012 (3)

  1. Du*, M. and J.D. Kessler, 2012. Assessment of the Spatial and Temporal Variability of Bulk Hydrocarbon Respiration Following the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Environmental Science and Technology, 46, 1049-1057. Doi: 10.1021/es301363k
  2. Hu*, l., S.A. Yvon-Lewis, J.D. Kessler, and I.R. MacDonald. (2012) “Methane fluxes to the atmosphere from deepwater hydrocarbon seeps in the northern Gulf of Mexico.” J Geophys Res-Oceans. 117 (C1), C01009 doi:10.1029/2011JC007208. 
  3. Ryerson, T.B., R. Camilli, J.D. Kessler, E.B. Kujawinski, C.M. Reddy, D.L. Valentine, E. Atlas, D.R. Blake, J. de Gouw, S. Meinardi, D.D. Parrish, J. Peischl, J.S. Seewald, and C. Warneke (2012). “Chemical data quantify Deepwater Horizon hydrocarbon flow rate and environmental distribution.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, doi: 10.1073/pnas.1110564109. 

2011 (7)

  1. Kessler, J.D., D.L. Valentine, M.C. Redmond, M. Du*, E.W. Chan*, S.D. Mendes*, E.W. Quiroz, C.J. Villanueva*, S.S. Shusta*, L.M. Werra*, S.A. Yvon-Lewis, T.C. Weber (2011). "A Persistent Oxygen Anomaly Reveals the Fate of Spilled Methane in the Deep Gulf of Mexico." Science, 331, 312-315, doi:10.1126/science.1199697. 
  2. Kessler, J.D., D.L. Valentine, M.C. Redmond, M. Du* (2011). "Response to Comment on ‘A Persistent Oxygen Anomaly Reveals the Fate of Spilled Methane in the Deep Gulf of Mexico’." Science, 332, 1033, doi:10.1126/science.1203428. 
  3. North, E. W., Adams, E. E., Schlag, Z., Sherwood, C. R., He, R., Hyun, K. H., and Socolofsky, S. A. (2011), “Simulating oil droplet dispersal from the Deepwater Horizon spill with a Lagrangian approach.” In Monitoring and Modeling the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill:  A Record-Breaking Enterprise, Yonggang Liu, editor, Geophysical Monograph Series, Vol. 195, American Geophysical Union.
  4. Socolofsky, S. A., Adams, E. E., and Sherwood C. R. (2011), “Formation dynamics of subsurface hydrocarbon intrusions following the Deepwater Horizon blowout,” Geophysical Research Letters, 38, paper L09602, doi:10.1029/2011GL047174.  (Selected as a Research Highlight in EOS, the weekly publication of the American Geophysical Union.)
  5. Wade, T. L., S. T. Sweet, J. N. Walpert, J. L. Sericano, J. J. Singer, and N. L. Guinasso Jr. (2011), Evaluation of possible inputs of oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill to the Loop Current and associated eddies in the Gulf of Mexico, in Monitoring and Modeling the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: A Record-Breaking Enterprise, Geophys. Monogr. Ser., vol. 195, edited by Y. Liu et al., pp. 83–90, AGU, Washington, D. C., doi:10.1029/2011GM001095.
  6. Wade, T. L., et al. (2011), Analyses of water samples from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Documentation of the subsurface plume, in Monitoring and Modeling the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: A Record-Breaking Enterprise, Geophys. Monogr. Ser., vol. 195, edited by Y. Liu et al., pp. 77–82, AGU, Washington, D. C., doi:10.1029/2011GM001103.
  7. S.A. Yvon-Lewis, L. Hu, J.D. Kessler (2011).  Methane flux to the atmosphere from the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster.  Geophysical Research Letters, 38, L01602, doi: 10.1029/2010GL045928.


2010 (2)

  1. Diercks, A. R., R. C. Highsmith, V. L.. Asper, D. Joung, Z. Zhou, L. Guo, A. M. Shiller, S. B. Joye, A. P. Teske, N. L. Guinasso Jr., T. L. Wade, and S. E. Lohrenz (2010), Characterization of subsurface polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons at the Deepwater Horizon site, Geophys. Res. Lett., 37, L20602, doi:10.1029/2010GL045046
  2. Valentine, D.L., J.D. Kessler, M.C. Redmond, S.D. Mendes, M.B. Heintz, C. Farwell, L. Hu*, F.S. Kinnaman, S.A. Yvon-Lewis, M. Du*, E.W. Chan*, F. Garcia-Tigreros*, C.J. Villanueva (2010). Propane respiration jump-starts microbial response to a deep oil spill.  Science, 330, 208-211, doi:10.1126/science.1196830.

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THESES AND DISSERTATIONS from GoMRI Support

  1. Christiansen, D. (2013) Flow around a dredge spoil island in a shallow estuary during peak tidal current, MS Thesis, Department of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, 71 pgs, Dec. 2013. https://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/bitstream/handle/2152/23641/CHRISTIANSEN-THESIS-2013.pdf
  2. Du, M. (2014) Determining the Fate of Methane Released from the Seafloor in Deep and Shallow Water Environments. Ph.D. Dissertation, Texas A&M University, June 2014, 141 pgs.
  3. Hou, X. (2013) Evaluating hydrodynamic uncertainty in oil spill modeling. M.S. Thesis, Department of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, May 2013, 58 pgs. http://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/bitstream/handle/2152/22502/HOU-THESIS-2013.pdf
  4. Nagamine, I. (2014) M.S. Thesis, University of Hawaii.

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PRESENTATIONS ACKNOWLEDGING GoMRI SUPPORT

2014 (56)

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30

  1. E. Adams, S. A. Socolofsky, M. Boufadel; 2014. 8-322 - Evaluation of Droplet/Bubble Models for Subsurface Dispersant Application. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  2. T. S. Bianchi, C. Osburn, S. Yvon-Lewis, M. Shields*, J. Young, L. Guo, Z. Zho; 2014. 3-41 - Deep Water Horizon Oil in Gulf of Mexico Waters after TwoYears: Transformation into the Dissolved Organic Matter Pool. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  3. S. F. DiMarco, L. Spencer*, J. Kuehl, N. L. Guinasso, C. Nygren*, P. Chapman, R. Montuoro, J. Kurian, V. Khade, P. Chang, J. R. Ledwell; 2014. Volume and mass transport on the continental slope near the Macondo spill site from a moored deepwater current meter array. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  4. G. Drozd, D. Worton, E. Variano, A. Goldstein; 2014. 5-200 - Using Detailed Chemical Composition of Surfaced Oil to Model Evaporative Weathering and Predict Secondary Aerosol Formation Potential. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  5. M. Du*, S. Yvon-Lewis, D. Valentine, S. Mendes*, J. Kessler; 2014. 3-78 - High resolution flux measurements of methane and carbon dioxide reveal the influence of the depth of release on emission rates to the atmosphere,. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  6. M. R. Foster, E. Variano; 2014. 3-52 - Wetland Surface Water Motion Due To Waving Vegetation. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  7. R. He, Z. Xue, K. Fennel, W. Cai, S. Lohrenz, C. Hopkinson; (2014) 3-39 - Modeling ocean circulation and biogeochemical variability in the Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  8. R. Hetland; 2014. 3-70 - A submesoscale eddy field along the Mississippi/ Atchafalaya River plume front. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  9. M. K. Howard1, F. C. Gayanilo2, C. A. Rueda3, T. A. Chavez4, J. C. Gibeaut5; 2014. What’s in a Name? Vocabularies for Search, Browse and Interoperability. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  10. I. JUN*, A. Dissanayake, S. Socolofsky; 2014. 3-20 - The fate and transport properties of rising oil droplets & gas bubbles with hydrates from the deep ocean. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  11. J. D. Kessler, S. Mau, S. Sylva; 2014. 10-386 - Quantifying hydrocarbon emission and biodegradation rates with measurements of natural stable isotopes and current velocity. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30. 
  12. V. Khade1, P. Chang1, I. Szunyogh2, R. Montuoro1, J. Kurian1, K. Thyng1; 2014. 3-8 - Quantification of the uncertainty in the BP oil spill using a mesoscale coupled model: An ensemble based approach. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  13. J. Kuehl, L. Spencer*, S. DiMarco, N. Guinasso, C. Nygren*; 2014. 3-93 - Deepwater variability as seen by the GISR mooring array. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  14. J. Kuehl1, K. Thyng2, P. Chapman2, 2014. 5-211 - GISR Drift Card Program: Surface Transport Observation. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  15. J. R. Ledwell, R. He, Z. Xuo, P. Chang, R. Montuoro, J. Olascoaga, J. J. Kuehl, S. Dimarco, L. Spencer*, P. Chapman; 2014. Tracer dispersion at mid-depth in the Gulf of Mexico: Field experiment and simulations. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  16. Y. Lee, E. North, A. Thessen, S. McGinnis, E. Adams, R. He, M. Du*, J. Kessler; 2014. 3-45 - Integrating Models and Observations to Estimate Subsurface Degradation Rates and Oil Transport. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  17. I. Mitchell1, E. North1, R. He2, R. Hetland3, P. Chang3, R. Montuoro3; 2014. 3-43 - The Influence of Grid Resolution and Wind Specification on the Prediction of Transport of Oil at the Surface. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  18. R. Montuoro, J. Kurian, P. Chang, R. Saravanan; 2014. 3-96 - Oil Spill Forecast in the Gulf of Mexico Using a High Resolution Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Model. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  19. M. D. Rayson1, E. S. Gross1, R. D. Hetland2, O. B. Fringer1; 2014. 3-63 - Tracer age as a diagnostic for understanding the relationship between surface and boundary forcing and estuarine circulation. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  20. D. Shi*, T. L. Wade, S. T. Sweet, N. L. Guinasso; 2014. 10-395 - Estimated Oil Equivalents in the Water Column three years after the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  21. A. M. Shiller1, D. Joung1, T. Wade2; 2014. 5-228 - Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Distribution and Modification in the Sub-surface Plume Near the Deepwater Horizon Wellhead. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  22. L. J. Spencer*, S. F. DiMarco, J. Kuehl, R. Montuoro, V. M. Khade, J. Kurian, P. Chang; 2014. 3-49 - Water Column Inertial and Sub-Inertial Oceanic Response to Hurricane Isaac in the Deepwater Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  23. J. M. Testa1, E. Adams2, E. North3; 2014. Quantifying the transport and surface expression of oil under different dispersant treatments using a particle tracking model. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  24. A. E. Thessen, S. McGinnis, E. North, I. Mitchell; 2014. Gulf of Mexico hydrocarbon database: Integrating heterogeneous data for improved model development. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  25. K. M. Thyng, R. D. Hetland; 2014. 3-90 - Texas-Louisiana shelf connectivity and time variability using particle tracking. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  26. E. A. V. Variano, R. A. Lambert; 2014. Collision Rates and Mechanisms for Oil Droplets and Marine Snow. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  27. E. A. Variano, L. J. Mazzaro, I. C. Tse; 2014. 3-13 - Turbulent Diffusion of Droplets - Effect of Buoyancy. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  28. Wade T.L. 2014 (Invited Workshop Presenter) NOAA Status and Trend and Other Programs: Quality Assurance/Quality Control. GoMRI Hydrocarbon Analyses QA/QC Workshop. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill & Ecosystem Science Conference. Mobile Al. January 26 to 30, 2014
  29. T. L. Wade, J. L. Sericano, S. T. Sweet, N. L. Guinasso; 2014. 10-391 - Distribution of Water Column Hydrocarbon from the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  30. T. L. Wade, D. Shi*, P. Chapman, S. T. Sweet, N. L. Guinasso; 2014. 10-390 - Hercules 252 Gas Blowout Rapid Response: Water Sample Estimated Oil Equivalents. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  31. B. Wang, A. L. Dissanayake, S. A. Socolofsky; 2014. 3-17 - Design of in situ measurements for validation of near field blowout models. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  32. Z. Wang, S. F. DiMarco; 2014. 3-35 - The Role of Turbulence in the Mixing and Diffusion of Oil in the Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  33. S. Watson, C. Simoniello, A. E. Jochens, M. K. Howard, R. L. Mullins-Perry*, L. Bernard; 2014. GCOOS Contributions to the Deepwater Horizon Response and Collaborative Planning for a Gulf Regional Observing System. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  34. D. R. Worton1, H. Zhang1, C. Aeppli2, C. M. Reddy2, J. de Gouw3, K. R. Wilson4, A. H. Goldstein1; 2014. 5-156 - Comprehensive Characterization Of The Formerly ‘Unresolved Complex Mixture’ Reveals Evolution Of Chemical Composition During Weathering Of Crude Oil In The Gulf Of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.
  35. J. Young*, S. Yvon-Lewis, T. Bianchi, M. Shields*, R. Reddig, M. Du*; 2014. 3-30 - Linkages with dissolved inorganic/organic carbon, pH, and oil and gas emissions in the Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, Mobile, January 27-30.

Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28

  1. Brandon, J. A.; Goldstein, M. C.; 2014. LONG-TERM AGING AND DEGRADATION OF MICROPLASTIC PARTICLES: COMPARING NATURAL AND EXPERIMENTAL WEATHERING PATTERNS Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  2. Ledwell, J. R.; He, R.; Montuoro, R.; Olascoaga, J.; Xue, Z.; 2014. TRACER DISPERSION IN THE MID-DEPTH GULF OF MEXICO Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  3. Liu, Y.; Thornton, D. C.; Yvon-Lewis, S. A.; Bianchi, T. S.; Shields, M.; 2014. MARINE DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER (DOM) COMPOSITION DRIVES THE PRODUCTION AND CHEMICAL SPECIATION OF BROMINATED VERY SHORT-LIVED SUBSTANCES Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  4. Rayson, M. D.; Fringer, O. B.; Gross, E. S.; Hetland, R. D.; 2014. APPLICATION OF A NESTED, UNSTRUCTURED MESH HYDRODYNAMIC MODEL TO A BAY IN THE GULF OF MEXICO Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  5. Spencer, L.; DiMarco, S.; Khuel, J.; Kurian, J.; Chang, P.; 2014. WATER COLUMN INERTIAL AND SUB-INERTIAL OCEANIC RESPONSE TO HURRICANE ISAAC IN THE DEEPWATER GULF OF MEXICO Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  6. Thyng, K. M.; Hetland, R. D.; 2014. TEXAS-LOUISIANA CROSS-SHELF TRANSPORT DUE TO SUBMESOSCALE EDDIES Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  7. Wade, T. L.; Chapman, P.; Sweet, S. T.; Shi, D.; Guinasso, N. L.; 2014. PETROLEUM IN THE WATER COLUMN IN THE VICINITY OF THE DEEPWATER HORIZON SPILL AND HERCULES 252 GAS BLOWOUT Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  8. Wang, Z.; DiMarco, S.; 2014 OBSERVATIONS AND ANALYSIS OF TURBULENT MIXING NEAR THE SITE OF THE BP DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL IN THE GULF OF MEXICO  Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  9. Xue, Z.; He, R.; Fennel, K.; Cai, W.; Lohrenz, S.; 2014. MODELING OCEAN CIRCULATION AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL VARIABILITY IN THE GULF OF MEXICO Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.
  10. Zhang, w.; Hetland, R.; DiMarco, S.; 2014.  PROCESSES CONTROLLING A MID-WATER COLUMN OXYGEN MINIMUM OVER THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA SHELF Ocean Sciences Meeting, Honolulu, February 24-28.

7th International Symposium on Environmental Hydraulics, Singapore, January

  1. Rezvani, M., C.C-K.Lai, and S.A. Socolofsky (2014). PIV experiments of bubble plumes in crossflows, 7th International Symposium on Environmental Hydraulics, Singapore, January. (C-IMAGE)
  2. Rezvani, M. and S.A. Socolofsky (2014). PIV measurement of coherent structures at the bubble wake, 7th International Symposium on Environmental Hydraulics, Singapore, January. (C-IMAGE)
  3. Variano, E. A.; Mazzar,  L. J.; Tse, L.C.;  Adams, E., S. Socolofsky, G. Chan, S. Masutani, 2014. How much oil came directly to the surface at Macondo? 7th International Symposium on Environmental Hydraulics, 7-9 January 2014, Singapore.
  4. International Oil Spill Conference, Savannah, Georgia, May 5-8, 2014.
  5. Chapman P., S. Socolofsky and R. Hetland 2014: From Blowout to Beach: An integrated Modeling Approach. International Oil Spill Conference, Savannah, Georgia, May 5-8, 2014.
  6. Hou*, X. and B.R. Hodges, Visualizing hydrodynamic uncertainty in operational oil spill modeling.  International Oil Spill Conference, Savannah, Georgia, May 5-8, 2014.
  7. Zhao, L., M.C. Boufadel, E.E.Adams, S.A.Socolofsky, K. Lee: A numerical model for oil droplet evolution emanating from blowouts. International Oil Spill Conference, Savannah, GA, May 5-9, 2014.

Other

  1. Chapman, P. 2014. Deep Water Oil Spills: New Threats and New Research. Invited talk at UTMSI, Port Aransas, April 11, 2014.
  2. Rezvani, M. and S.A. Socolofsky (2012). Turbulence properties in bubble plumes in presence of currents, Hydraulic Measurement & Experimental Methods Conference, Snowbird, Utah, August. (C-IMAGE)
  3. Variano, E.A, et al 2014a.  How large particles filter the motions of ambient turbulence. Talk given at NORDITA workshop on particles in flows, Stockholm, 4 June 2014.
  4. Variano, E. A.; Mazzar,  L. J.; Tse, L.C.;  et al 2014b.  Kinematics of large, non-spherical particles. . Talk given at NORDITA workshop on particles in flows, Stockholm, 11 June 2014.

2013 (48)

Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013

  1. Eric Adams, Godine Chen, Aaron Chow, Scott Socolofsky, 2013. Near field oil droplet behavior with application to sub-surface dispersant effectiveness. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  2. Steven DiMarco, Piers Chapman, Norman Guinasso, Laura Spencer*, Joseph Kuehl, 2013. Deepwater mooring deployment and oceanographic conditions on the continental shelf and slope of the north central Gulf of Mexico – July 2012. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  3. Dincer, Z., Pendergraf, M., Sericano, J.L., Marcantonio, F., Wade, T.L., Bianchi, T.S., Rosenheim, B.E. and Kolker, A.S. 2013 Relating PAH Content to Overall Stability of Organic Matter Containing DWH Oil. Gulf of Mexico: Oil Spill & Ecosystem Science Conference. New Orleans LA, January 21-23, 2013
  4. Ruoying He, George Xue, Joseph Zambon, 2013. Wave, Atmosphere and Marine Ecosytem Prediction System for the Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  5. Robert Hetland, Xiaoqian Zhang, Martinho Marta-Almeida, 2013. Freshwater Pathways in the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Plume System. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  6. Ben Hodges, Xianlong Hou*, 2013. Uncertainty estimation in operational oil spill modeling for bays and estuaries. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  7. Matthew Howard, Fabio Moretzsohn, Gayanilo Felimon, 2013. Controlled vocabularies, metadata content standrds and the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative Information and Data Cooperative (GRIIDC) data system. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  8. Hyland, J., Cooksey, C. Fulton, M. Wirth, E. and Wade T. 2013. Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: Assessment of Potential Impacts to the Offshore Benthos along the Northeastern Gulf of Mexico Shelf. Gulf of Mexico: Oil Spill & Ecosystem Science Conference. New Orleans LA, January 21-23, 2013
  9. Dongjon Kim, Mehtap Cakmak, Thorsten Stoesser, 2013. A nested grid based Large Eddy Simulation tool to predict flow, turbulence and transport in the near field. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  10. Jaison Kurian, Rafaele Montuoro, Xu Zhao*, Ping Chang, 2013. Validation of ocean-atmosphere coupled forecasting system for Gulf of Mexico oil spill studies. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  11. James Ledwell, 2013. Initial dispersion of a deep tracer in the Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  12. Rafaele Montuoro, Jaison Kurian, Xu Zhao*, Ping Chang, R. Saravanan, 2013. A High-Resolution Operational Forecast System for the Gulf of Mexico based on the Coupled Regional Climate Model. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  13. M. Rayson, O. Fringer, E. Gross, 2013a. Development of a 3-D, high resolution, hydrodynamic model for Galveston Bay, TX. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  14. Scott Socolofsky, E. Adams, 2013. Vertical distribution of hydrocarbons and intrusion formation for the Deepwater Horizon accidental blowout. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  15. Laura Spencer*, Steven DiMarco, Norman Guinasso, 2013. Physical oceanographic conditions on the continental shelf and slope of the north central Gulf of Mexico near the Deepwater Horizon site in 2012. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  16. Variano, E. 2013. Single-Camera 3D Droplet Tracking in Color. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  17. Terry Wade,  Stephen Sweet, Jose Sericano, Dawei Shi*, Norman Guinasso, 2013a. Total Scanning Fluorescence (TSF) determination of Petroleum in the Water Column in the Vicinity of the Deepwater Horizon Spill. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.
  18. David Worton and Allen Goldstein, 2013. Comprehensive characterization of oil using gas chromatography with ‘soft’ ionization mass spectrometry. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans, January 2013.

C-IMAGE-API Subsea Dispersant Injection Program Modeling WS, Safety Harbor, FL, June 6-7, 2013

  1. Eric Adams, Scott Socolofsky, Michel Boufadel, 2013. Modeling Phase I Overview, II Plan. C-IMAGE-API Subsea Dispersant Injection Program Modeling WS, Safety Harbor, FL, June 6-7, 2013.
  2. Eric Adams, Scott Socolofsky, Steve Masutani, 2013. Chevron Lab Efforts. C-IMAGE-API Subsea Dispersant Injection Program Modeling WS, Safety Harbor, FL, June 6-7, 2013.
  3. Chapman, P., 2013a. GISR Overview – Dispersants. C-IMAGE-API Subsea Dispersant Injection Program Modeling WS, Safety Harbor, FL, June 6-7, 2013.

International Symposium on Deep-water Oil Spills, Qingdao, China, October 28-29, 2013

  1. Chang, P. (2013). Oil spill prediction using a high-resolution coupled regional climate model of the Gulf of Mexico. International Symposium on Deep-water Oil Spills, Qingdao, China, October 28-29, 2013.
  2. Chapman, P., 2013b. Deepwater oil spills: new threats and new research. International Symposium on Deep-water Oil Spills, Qingdao, China, October 28-29, 2013.
  3. Hetland, R. (2013). Shelf circulation and oil spill trajectory prediction in the northern Gulf of Mexico. International Symposium on Deep-water Oil Spills, Qingdao, China, October 28-29, 2013.
  4. Kessler, J. (2013a). Assessing hydrocarbon degradation and release rates with natural stable isotope measurements. International Symposium on Deep-water Oil Spills, Qingdao, China, October 28-29, 2013.
  5. Socolofsky, S. (2013). Nearfield dynamics of the Deepwater Horizon accident: gas dissolution, subsurface plume formation, and dispersant effectiveness. International Symposium on Deep-water Oil Spills, Qingdao, China, October 28-29, 2013.
  6. Wade T.L., Sweet S.T., Sericano J.L., Shi* D., Knap A. H., Chapman, P. and Guinasso, N.L. Jr. 2013. Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: Chemistry Perspective. International Symposium on Deep-water Oil Spills. Qingdao, China. October 28-29, 2013.

AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, December 2013

  1. Chan*, E. and J. Kessler, 2013. Theoretical and Experimental Reevaluation of Stable Isotope Kinetics during Microbial Growth Stages. AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, December 2013.
  2. Lambert R and E. Variano, 2013. Oil droplet collisions with marine snow : effect of manipulating droplet size. AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, December 2013.
  3. E.A. Variano; M. Byron; C.R. Meyer; J. Semigran; Y. Tao; G. Bellani, 2013. Suspended Flocs and Grains in Turbulent Aquatic Environments: Settling and Rotation Rates. AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, December 2013.

Other

  1. Chapman, P., 2013c. Gulf Integrated Spill research (GISR): The TAMU BP Consortium. Talk given to IBM, College Station, TX November 14, 2013.
  2. Chapman, P., 2013d. Gulf Integrated Spill Research. Talk given to NAS Advisory Panel for the Gulf Research Program, Austin, November 21-22, 2013
  3. Hetland, R and K. Thyng, 2013. Effect of interannual and seasonal variability on oil fate along the Texas coastline. Estuarine and Coastal Modeling conference, San Diego, November 2013.
  4. Hou*, X and Hodges, B., 2013. Oil spill modeling and uncertainty forecasts with Python. Scientific Computing with Python (SciPy 2013), Austin, June 24-29, 2013.
  5. Kessler, J. 2013b. Oceanic Secrets Revealed by the Deepwater Horizon Disaster. Syracuse University, Department of Earth Sciences, 24 January 2013.
  6. Kessler, J. 2013c. Oceanic Secrets Revealed by the Deepwater Horizon Disaster. University of Rochester, Sustainability Seminar Series, 8 February 2013.
  7. Kessler, J. 2013d. Oceans and Rapid Climate Change: A Look at the Greenhouse Effect. University of Rochester, Faculty Perspectives Seminar Series, 13 February 2013.
  8. Kessler, J. 2013e. Challenges when Assessing Hydrocarbon Degradation via Isotopic Fractionation.Stony Brook University, 5 April 2013.
  9. Kessler, J. 2013f. Fairchild Colloquium: The Adventure of the Geosciences: Atmospheric and Oceanographic Expeditions into Climate Change. University of Rochester: Meliora Weekend , 11 October, 2013.
  10. Kessler, J. 2013g. Big Data in the Ocean Sciences: from ultra-fast instrumentation to global data integration. University of Rochester: Big Data Forum , 18 October 2013.
  11. Kessler, J. 2013h. What the Deepwater Horizon Disaster taught us about Global Climate Change. University of Rochester: Laboratory for Laser Energetics, 6 December 2013.
  12. V. Khade, P. Chang, I. Szunyogh, R. Montuoro, J. Kurian, K. Thyng; 2013. An ensemble based approach to simulate the uncertainty of the BP oil spill using a high resolution mesoscale ocean model. AMS 15th Conference on Mesoscale Processes. Portland, OR, August 6-9, 2013.
  13. M. Rayson, O. Fringer, E. Gross, 2013b. Residual circulation in a micro-tidal estuary – Galveston Bay, TX. Gordon Research Conference – Coastal Ocean Circulation, University of New England, Biddeford, ME, June 8-14, 2013.
  14. M. Rayson, O. Fringer, E. Gross, 2013c. Predicting estuarine transport in Galveston Bay – challenges with modeling a complex real world system. Invited seminar, MIT, June 6, 2013.
  15. M. Rayson, O. Fringer, e. Gross, 2013d. Age as a diagnostic for understanding the link between forcing and estuarine circulation. 12th International wWorkshop on Multi-scale (Un)-structured mesh numerical Modeling for coastal, shelf, and global ocean dynamics, Austin, TX, September 16-19, 2013.
  16. Thorsten Stoesser, Dongjin Kim, Mehtap Cevheri*, 2013. GISR- Nearfield Blowout-Plume Simulation using Large Eddy Simulation. IAHR Congress, Chengdu, China September 2013.
  17. E. Variano, L. Mazzaro, M. Byron, R. Allen, Y. Tao, and I. Tse, 2013. Natural Particles in Turbulent Aquatic Environments: When do they differ from fluid parcels? APS Division of Fluid Dynamics Meeting, Pittsburg, November 2013.
  18. Wade, T.L., Sweet, S.T., Sericano, J.L., Shi* D. and Guinasso, N.L. Jr., 2013b. Gulf Integrated Spill Consortium (GISR): Petroleum in the Water Column in the Vicinity of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Texas Bays and Estuaries Meeting, Port Aransas, TX, April 25-26, 2013.

2012 (9)

  1. Dincer, Z., Sericano, J. L., Marcantonio, F., Wade, T.L., Bianchi, and T., Kolker, A.S. 2012. Tracking Oil from Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill In Barataria Bay Sediments. GSA Annual Meeting, Charlotte NC November 4-7, 2012.
  2. Kessler, J. 2012a. A Chemical Investigation of Aerobic Methane Oxidation Following a Large Water Column Methane Perturbation. Gordon Research Conference on Natural Gas Hydrate Systems, Ventura, CA, USA, March 18-23, 2012.
  3. Kessler, J. 2012b. The Biogeochemical Cycling of Dissolved Methane and Oxygen Associated with the Deepwater Horizon Disaster. American Chemical Society, San Diego, CA, USA, March 25-29, 2012.
  4. Socolofsky, S. 2012. Overview of Existing Modeling Platforms. Subsea Blowout Modeling Workshop, Berkeley, November 27-28 2012.

Invited talks

  1. Kessler, J. 2012c. The Death of a Hydrocarbon Plume. Texas A&M University, Department of Atmospheric Science, 17 April, 2012.
  2. Kessler, J. 2012d. Death of a Hydrocarbon Plume. University of Texas at Austin, Jackson School of Geosciences, 11 October, 2012.
  3. Kessler, J. 2012e. Challenges when Assessing Hydrocarbon Degradation via Isotopic Fractionation. University of Texas at Austin, Institute for Geophysics, 12 October, 2012.
  4. Kessler, J. 2012f. Death of a Hydrocarbon Plume. University of Southern Mississippi, Department of Marine Science, 9 November, 2012.
  5. Kessler, J. 2012g. Death of a Hydrocarbon Plume. University of Waterloo, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 15 November, 2012.

2011 (4)

  1. Kessler, J. 2011a. The Biogeochemical Cycling of Dissolved Methane and Oxygen Associated with the Deepwater Horizon Disaster. Deepwater Horizon (DWH) Oil Spill Principal Investigator’s One Year Update Workshop, St. Petersburg, FL, October 25-26, 2011
  2. Kessler, J. 2011b. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate Natural Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions. American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG), Houston, TX, April 10-13, 2011
  3. Kessler, J. 2011c. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate Natural Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions. PERGAMON, Brussels, Belgium, February 21-23, 2011.
  4. Kessler, J. 2011d. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate the Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions Energy Forum 2011: Energy Security and Sustainability – Global Challenges, Texas A&M Engineering Institute, February 1, 2011.

2010 (8)

  1. Kessler, J. 2010a. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate Natural Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions American Geophysical Union, San Francisco, CA, December 13-17, 2010

Invited talks:

  1. Kessler, J. 2010b. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate the Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions. Rice University, Department of Earth Science, August 26, 2010.
  2. Kessler, J. 2010c. Persistent Localized Underwater Methane Emission Study (PLUMES).  Rice University, Center for the Study of the Environment and Society, August 27, 2010.
  3. Kessler, J. 2010d. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate the Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions. Texas A&M University, Department of Oceanography, 1 November 2010.
  4. Kessler, J. 2010e.  Disaster in the Gulf: A Panel Discussion on the Deepwater Horizon Spill. Yale University, The Yale Climate & Energy Institute, 4 November, 2010.
  5. Kessler, J. 2010f. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate the Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions. Yale University Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, 5 November 2010.
  6. Kessler, J. 2010g. Using the Deepwater Horizon Disaster to Investigate the Biogeochemical Cycling Associated with Rapid Methane Emissions. Texas A&M University, Galveston, 9 November 2010.
  7. Kessler, J. 2010h. Oceanic Secrets Revealed by the Deepwater Horizon Disaster. Texas A&M University Research Foundation Councilors and Board of Trustees Meeting, 10 December, 2010 (from a ship).

----------------

PUBLICATIONS BY GISR MEMBERS related to the Gulf of Mexico and the Chemical Characterization of Oil and Residues and Processes Involved in the Study of Oil Prior to the Deepwater Horizon Incident

  1. Belabbassi, L., Chapman, P., Nowlin, W.D., Jr., Jochens, A.E. and Biggs, D.C. (2005). Summertime nutrient supply to near-surface waters of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico:1998, 1999, and 2000. Gulf of Mexico Science 23(2) 137-160.
  2. Bender, L.C., and S. F. DiMarco, 2009. Quality control and analysis of acoustic Doppler current profiler data collected on offshore platforms of the Gulf of Mexico. OCS Study MMS 2009-010. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Minerals Mgmt. Service, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. 63 pp.
  3. Bender, III, L. C., N. L. Guinasso, J. N. Walpert, et al. (2007). Development, operation, and results from the Texas Automated Buoy System. Gulf Mexico Sci., 1, 33-60.
  4. Bianchi, T.S., Allison, M.A., Chapman, P., Cowan, J.H., Dagg, M.J., Day, J.W., DiMarco, S.F., Hetland, R.D. and R. Powell (2010). New approaches to the Gulf hypoxia problem. EOS, 91, 173
  5. Bianchi, T.S., M. A. Allison, P. Chapman, J. H. Cowan, M. J. Dagg, J. W. Day, S. F. DiMarco, Jr., R. D. Hetland, R. W. Powell, 2010. Hypoxia in the northern Gulf of Mexico: Connecting Science with Policy. EOS. 11 May 2010.
  6. Bianchi, T.S., S. F. DiMarco, J. H. Cowan, Jr., R. D. Hetland, P. Chapman, J. W. Day, M. A. Allison, 2010. The Science of Hypoxia in the northern Gulf of Mexico: A Review. Science of the Total Environment. 408, 1471-1484.
  7. Bianchi, T.S., S. F. DiMarco, R. W. Smith, and K. M. Schreiner, 2009. A Gradient of Dissolved Organic Carbon and Lignin from Terrebonne-Timbalier Bay Estuary to the Louisiana Shelf (USA). Marine Chemistry. 117(1-4), 32-41.
  8. Bianchi, T.S., S. F. DiMarco, M. A. Allison, P. Chapman, J. C. Cowan, R. D. Hetland, J. W. Morse, G. Rowe, 2008. Controlling hypoxia on the U.S. Louisiana Shelf: Beyond the nutrient-centric view. EOS, Transactions, American Geophysical Union. 89(26), pp. 236-237.
  9. Biggs, D.C, A. E. Jochens, M. K. Howard, S. F. DiMarco, K. D. Mullin, R. R. Leben, F. E. Muller-Karger, and C. Hu, 2005. Eddy Forced Variations in On- and Off-Margin Summertime Circulation Along the 1000-m Isobath of the Northern Gulf of Mexico, 2000-2003, and Links with Sperm Whale Distributions Along the Middle Shelf. Geophysical Monograph Series, Volume 161, Circulation of the Gulf of Mexico: Observations and Models. Eds. W. Sturges and A. Lugo-Fernandez. American Geophysical Union, pp. 71 - 86.
  10. Brooks, J.M., M.A. Champ, T.L. Wade, and S.J. McDonald. 1991. GEARS: Response strategy for oil and hazardous spills. Sea Technology, April 1991, p. 25-32.
  11. Brooks, J.M., M.C. Kennicutt II, T.L. Wade, A.D. Hart, G.J. Denoux, and T.J. McDonald. 1990. Hydrocarbon distributions around a shallow water multiwell platform. ES&T, 24:1079-1085.
  12. Brooks, J.M., E.N. Powell, M.C. Kennicutt II, R.S. Carney, I. Rosman, S.J. McDonald, R.R. Bidigare, and T.L. Wade. 1988. Gulf of Mexico hydrocarbon seep ecosystem studies. NOAA Symp. Series for Undersea Research, 88(4):119-135.
  13. Brooks, J.M., M.C. Kennicutt II, R.R. Bidigare, T.L. Wade, E.N. Powell, G.J. Denoux, R.R. Fay, J.J. Childress, C.R. Fisher, I. Rosman, and G. Boland. 1987. Chemosynthetic ecosystems, hydrates, and oil seepage on the Gulf of Mexico slope: An update. EOS, 68(18):498-499.
  14. Chan, A.W.H., G. Isaacman, K.R. Wilson, D.R. Worton, C.R. Ruehl, T. Nah, D.R. Gentner, T.R. Dallmann, T.W. Kirchstetter, R.A. Harley, J.B. Gilman, W.C. Kuster, J.A. deGouw, J.H. Offenberg, T.E. Kleindienst, Y.H. Lin, C.L. Rubitschun, J.D. Surratt, P.L. Hayes, J.L. Jimenez A.H. Goldstein, Detailed Chemical Characterization of Unresolved Complex Mixtures in Atmospheric Organics: Insights into Emission Sources, Atmospheric Processing and Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation, Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol 118, 1-14, doi:10.1002/jgrd.50533, 2013.
  15. *Continental Shelf Associates, Inc., 2000. Deepwater Gulf of Mexico Environmental and Socioeconomic Data Search and Literature Synthesis. Volume I: Narrative Report. U.S. Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. OCS Study MMS 2000-049. 340 pp. Chapter 4: Physical Oceanography by W. D. Nowlin, Jr., A. E. Jochens, S. F. DiMarco, and R. O. Reid pp. 61-122.
  16. Cox J., C. Coomes, S. DiMarco, K. Donohue, P. Hamilton, G.Z. Forristall, R.R. Leben, and D.R. Watts. 2010. Study of deepwater currents in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. OCS Study BOEMRE 2010-041. 473 pp.
  17. Cole, K. L., and S. F. DiMarco, 2010. Low frequency variability and vertical current structure in the eastern Deepwater Gulf of Mexico. OCS Study 2010-015. U.S. Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. 80 pp. + appendices.
  18. DiMarco, S.F., J. Strauss, N. May, R. L. Mullins-Perry, E. Grossman, and D. Shormann, 2012. Texas coastal hypoxia linked to Brazos River discharge as revealed by oxygen isotopes. Aquatic Geochemistry. Doi:10.1007/s10498-011-9156-x 18(2), 159-181.
  19. DiMarco, S.F., P. Chapman, N. Walker, R. Hetland, 2010. Does local topography control hypoxia of the Texas-Louisiana Shelf? Journal of Marine Systems, 80(1-2) 25-35.
  20. DiMarco, S.F., A. E. Jochens, and M. K. Howard, 1997. "LATEX A Data Report: Current Meters Vol. I thru X". TAMU Dept. of Oceanography Ref. No. 97-1-T. 3800 pp. (Yes, three thousand eight hundred pages and ten volumes). Available from NODC.
  21. DiMarco, S.F., 1996. "LATEX A Data Report: SeaData 635-8 Wave Gauge". TAMU Dept. of Oceanography Ref. No. 96-7-T. 53 pp. Available from NODC.
  22. DiMarco, S.F., F.J. Kelly, and N.L. Guinasso, Jr., 1995. "LATEX A Data Report: MiniSpec Directional Wave Gauge Vol. I and II." TAMU Dept. of Oceanography Ref. No. 95-4-T. 565 pp.
  23. DiMarco, S.F., 1998. LATEX A Technical Report: On the use of the method of cyclic descent to estimate principal tidal constituents from oceanographic time series", TAMU Dept. of Oceanography. Ref. No. 98-1-T. 42 pp.
  24. DiMarco, S.F., M. K. Howard, and A. E. Jochens, 2001. Deepwater Gulf of Mexico Historical Physical Oceanography Data Report: Quality Assurance and Quality Control Procedures and Data Inventory. Texas A&M University, Department of Oceanography, Technical Report No. 01-01-D. 196 pp.
  25. DiMarco, S.F., M.K. Howard, W. D. Nowlin, Jr., and R. O. Reid, 2004. Subsurface, High-Speed Current Jets in the Deep Water Region of the Gulf of Mexico. OCS Study MMS 2004-022. U. S. Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. 97 pp.
  26. DiMarco, S.F., M. K. Howard, and R. O. Reid, 2000. Seasonal variation of wind-driven diurnal cycling on the Texas-Louisiana continental shelf. Geophysical Research Letters 21(7), 1017-1020.
  27. DiMarco, S.F., and R. O. Reid, 1998. Characterization of the Principal Tidal Current Constituents on the Texas-Louisiana Shelf, J. Geophysical Research - Oceans, 103(2), 3093-3109.
  28. DiMarco,S.F., F. J. Kelly, Jun Zhang, and Norman L. Guinasso, Jr., 1995. Directional Wave Spectra on the Louisiana-Texas Shelf During Hurricane Andrew, Journal of Coastal Research, SI-21, 217-233.
  29. DiMarco, S.F., R. O. Reid, W. D. Nowlin, Jr., 2005. A Statistical Description of the Near-surface Velocity Field from Drifters in the Gulf of Mexico. Geophysical Monograph Series, Volume 161, Circulation of the Gulf of Mexico: Observations and Models. Eds. W. Sturges and A. Lugo-Fernandez. American Geophysical Union, pp. 101 - 110.
  30. E. J. D'Sa and S. F. DiMarco, 2009. Seasonal variability and controls on chromophoric dissolved organic matter in large river-dominated coastal margin. Limnology and Oceanography, 54(6), 2233-2242.
  31. Farrington, J.W., J.M. Teal, G.C. Medeiros, K.A. Burns, E.A. Robinson, Jr., J.G. Quinn, and T.L. Wade. 1976. Intercalibration of gas chromatographic analyses for hydrocarbons in tissues and extracts of marine organisms. Analyt. Chem., 48:1711-1716.
  32. Feng,Y., S. F. DiMarco, and G. A. Jackson, The relative role of upwelling favorable wind and Mississippi River forcing of the northern Gulf of Mexico hypoxia, Geophys. Res. Lett. doi:10.1029/2012GL051192, 39, L09601.
  33. K. Fennel, R. Hetland, Y. Feng, and S. F. DiMarco, 2011. A coupled physical-biological model of the northern Gulf of Mexico shelf: model description, validation, and analyses of phytoplankton variability. Biogeochemistry 8:1881-1899. doi:10.5194/bg-8-1881-2011.
  34. DR Forrest, RD Hetland, SF DiMarco, 2012. Corrigendum: Multivariable statistical regression models of the areal extent of hypoxia over the Texas–Louisiana continental shelf, Environmental Research Letters 7 (1), 019501
  35. DR Forrest, RD Hetland, SF DiMarco. 2011. Multivariate investigation of hypoxia of hypoxia of the northern Gulf of Mexico. Environmental Research Letters. 6 045002, doi:10.1088/1748-9326/6/4/045002
  36. Gearing, P.J., J.N. Gearing, R.J. Pruell, T.L. Wade, and J.G. Quinn. 1980. Partitioning of No. 2 fuel oil in controlled estuarine ecosystems: Sediments and suspended particulate matter. ES&T, 14:1129-1136.
  37. Gearing, J.N., P.J. Gearing, T.L. Wade, J.G. Quinn, H.B. McCarthy, J.W. Farrington, and R.F. Lee. 1979. The rates of transport and fates of petroleum hydrocarbons in a controlled marine ecosystem and a note on analytical variability. Proceedings of the 1979 Oil Spill Conference, American Petroleum Institute, Washington, D.C., 555-564.
  38. Hetland, R.D., and S. F. DiMarco, 2012. Skill assessment of a numerical model of the Texas-Louisiana Shelf. Ocean Modeling. 43-44, 64-76. Doi:10.1016/j.ocemod.2011.11.009
  39. Hetland. R.D., and S. F. DiMarco, 2008. How does the character of oxygen demand control the structure of hypoxia on the Texas-Louisiana continental shelf? J. of Marine Systems, 70(1-2), 49-62.
  40. Hetland, R.D., K. Fennel, CK Harris, J. Kaihatu, K. Xu, SF DiMarco 2012-044. Integrated bio-physical modeling of the Louisiana Shelf. US Dept. of the Interior, BOEMRE. 65 pp + appendices.
  41. Ho, D.T., J.R. Ledwell, W.M. Smethie, 2008. Use of SF5CF3 for ocean tracer release experiments. Geophys. Res. Lett. 35.
  42. Howard, M.K, and S. F. DiMarco, 1998. "LATEX A Data Report: Drifters and Miscellaneous Instruments". TAMU Dept. of Oceanography Ref. No. 98-2-T. 181 pp. Available from NODC.
  43. Isaacman, G., A. W. H. Chan, T. Nah, D. R. Worton, C. R. Ruehl, K. R. Wilson and A. H. Goldstein, Heterogeneous OH oxidation of motor oil particles causes selective depletion of branched and less cyclic hydrocarbons, Environmental Science and Technology, Article ASAP, DOI: 10.1021/es302768a, Publication Date (Web): September 4, 2012.
  44. Isaacman, G., K.R. Wilson, A.W.H. Chan, D.R. Worton, J.R. Kimmel, T. Nah, T. Hohaus, M. Gonin, J.H. Kroll, D.R. Worsnop, and A.H. Goldstein, Improved Resolution of Hydrocarbon Structures and Constitutional Isomers in Complex Mixtures Using Gas Chromatography-Vacuum Ultraviolet-Mass Spectrometry, Anal. Chem., 84 (5), 2335 2342, 2012.
  45. Jochens, A.E., and S. F. DiMarco, 2008. Physical oceanographic conditions in the Gulf of Mexico during 2002-2004. Deep Sea Research Part II, 55, 2541-2554.
  46. Jochens, A.E., L.C. Bender, S. F. DiMarco, J. W. Morse, M. C. Kennicutt II, M. K. Howard, and W. D. Nowlin, Jr. 2005. Understanding the Processes that Maintain the Oxygen Levels in the Deep Gulf of Mexico: Synthesis Report. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. OCS Study MMS 2005-032. 142 pp.
  47. Jochens, A.E., S. F. DiMarco, W. D. Nowlin, Jr., R. O. Reid, and M. C. Kennicutt II. 2002. Northeastern Gulf of Mexico Chemical Oceanography and Hydrography Study: Synthesis Report. U.S. Dept. of the Interior. Minerals Management Service. Gulf of Mexico OCS Region, New Orleans, LA. OCS Study MMS 2002-055. 331 pp. (+Appendices) (Science Panel reviewed)
  48. Johnson, J. and P. Chapman (2011). Deep Ocean Exchange with the Shelf (DOES). Ocean Science, 7, 101-109.
  49. Kaltenberg, A.M, D. C. Biggs, and S. F. DiMarco, 2007. Deep scattering layers of the northern Gulf of Mexico observed with a ship-board 38-kHz acoustic Doppler current Profiler (ADCP). Gulf of Mexico Science, 2, 97-108.
  50. Kennicutt, M.C. II, P.N. Booth, T.L. Wade, S.T. Sweet, R. Rezak, F.J. Kelly, J.M. Brooks, B.J. Presley, and D.A. Wiesenburg. 1996. Geochemical patterns in sediments near offshore production platforms, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 53: 2554-2566.
  51. Kennicutt II, M.C., T.L. Wade, N.L. Guinasso, Jr., J.M. Brooks, and J. Payne. 1991. The Mega Borg Incident: A comparison of response, mitigation and impact. Proceedings 23rd Annual Offshore Technology Conference, May 6-9, 1991, Houston, TX, 6524:239-247.
  52. Kennicutt, M.C. II, J.L. Sericano, T.L. Wade, F. Alcazar, and J.M. Brooks. 1987. High molecular weight hydrocarbons in Gulf of Mexico continental slope sediments. Deep-Sea Research, 34(3A):403-424.
  53. Kennicutt, M.C. II, J.M. Brooks, R.R. Bidigare, R.R. Fay, T.L. Wade, and T.J. McDonald. 1985. Vent type taxa in a hydrocarbon seep region on the Louisiana Slope. Nature, 317:351-353.
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