{
    "tag": 18308,
    "title": "Properties of sediment collected from two marshes and adjacent shallows in Northern San Francisco Bay, California, 2022-2023",
    "pubdate": "20240806",
    "sername": null,
    "series_name": null,
    "issue": "DOI:10.5066\/P1XZFGCX",
    "publish": null,
    "publisher_name": null,
    "onlink": "https:\/\/cmgds.marine.usgs.gov\/catalog\/pcmsc\/DataReleases\/CMGDS_DR_tool\/DR_P1XZFGCX\/NBM22_sediment_metadata.faq.html",
    "format": null,
    "email": null,
    "descript": "Bed sediment samples were collected from the intertidal, and subtidal shallows of San Pablo Bay National Wildlife Refuge and Corte Madera Bay near stations where instrumented platforms that were collecting hydrographic time-series were deployed. Sediment sediments were collected with push cores, either manually or by subsampling a Gomex box corer. Cores, which ranged in length from 5 to 18 centimeters (cm), were sectioned by depth. The top two sections from each core were 0.5 cm thick, the following sections were 1 cm thick, sections below 6 cm were often sectioned either into sections that were 1 or 2 cm thick. Additional samples were taken from sediment deposited on ceramic tiles attached to the marsh surface. Samples were analyzed for sediment properties including bulk density, particle size distribution, loss on ignition, and percent carbon.",
    "lang": null,
    "journal": null,
    "pwid": null,
    "originator": [
        {
            "name": "McGill, Samantha C.",
            "role": "Author"
        },
        {
            "name": "Tan, Angela C.",
            "role": "Author"
        },
        {
            "name": "Lacy, Jessica R.",
            "role": "Author"
        },
        {
            "name": "Ferreira, Joanne C. T.",
            "role": "Author"
        },
        {
            "name": "Nowacki, Daniel J.",
            "role": "Author"
        },
        {
            "name": "Stevens, Andrew W.",
            "role": "Author"
        }
    ],
    "index_term": [
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "1714",
            "name": "bulk density",
            "scope": "Overall density of an unconsolidated earth material."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "1420",
            "name": "carbon",
            "scope": "Nonmetal element with symbol C and atomic number 6 <http:\/\/periodic.lanl.gov\/6.shtml>"
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "2000",
            "name": "dissolved organic compounds",
            "scope": "Organic compounds present in water, typically as anthropogenic contaminants including pharmaceuticals, pesticides, and herbicides."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "2067",
            "name": "grab sampling",
            "scope": "Use of a mechanical device to seize a volume of unconsolidated surficial material for study.  This term applies when the device used is specifically crafted for grab sampling."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "493",
            "name": "grain-size analysis",
            "scope": "Method of studying soils, sediments, sands, or rock by determining the size, distribution, and proportion of selected particles."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "816",
            "name": "ocean processes",
            "scope": "Recurrent natural changes that are physical, biological, or chemical, actively affecting the seas and oceans."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "2064",
            "name": "push coring",
            "scope": "Use of a small, hand-held tube pressed into unconsolidated material for sampling."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "1025",
            "name": "sea-floor characteristics",
            "scope": "Geomorphic features and geographic, compositional, and textural variation in the materials composing the ocean floor. Includes both large-scale structures (such as seamounts and rises) and fine-scale variations in rocks and deposits on the sea floor."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "1034",
            "name": "sediment transport",
            "scope": "Transport of solid particles of unconsolidated rock and mineral fragments, chemical precipitates, or biological materials."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "1034",
            "name": "sediment transport",
            "scope": "Transport of solid particles of unconsolidated rock and mineral fragments, chemical precipitates, or biological materials."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 2,
            "code": "1199",
            "name": "unconsolidated deposits",
            "scope": "Loosely bound sediments such as sand, gravel, and silt which tend to accumulate in low areas or valleys."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 15,
            "code": "014",
            "name": "oceans",
            "scope": "Features and characteristics of salt water bodies (excluding inland waters), for example tides, tidal waves, coastal information, reefs, maritime, outer continental shelf submerged lands, shoreline"
        },
        {
            "thcode": 23,
            "code": "23",
            "name": "Substrate",
            "scope": "Represents the character and composition of the surface and near surface of the sea floor in subtidal or intertidal areas, as defined in the Substrate Component of CMECS or in similar classification systems. Distributions are records of substrate characteristics based on visual or photographic inspection or on analysis of samples and cores, and they also include interpretive maps classifying areas on the basis of combinations of observations, hydrodynamic models, or geological models. Assessments include evaluations of present ecological or economic values of substrate distributions, drivers of substrate change, and functions of substrates. Predictions are the results of models or projections of future substrate distributions, values, or ecological impacts, including predicted substrate changes due to natural and human forces including erosion, accretion, sea-level change, extraction, trawling, or other factors; and they are the results of scenario-based models of substrate changes on ecological or economic values under different management strategies or other human alterations."
        },
        {
            "thcode": 61,
            "code": "220",
            "name": "sediment",
            "scope": "unconsolidated weathering products that have been eroded, transported, and deposited in another location."
        }
    ],
    "place_term": [],
    "image": [],
    "fan": []
}
