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Featured researches published by James K. Otton.


Ecosystems | 2002

A Geochemical Trophic Cascade in Yellowstone's Geothermal Environments

Robert A. Garrott; L. Lee Eberhardt; James K. Otton; P.J. White; Maurice A. Chaffee

AbstractWe contrast the geochemistry of the Madison drainage, which has high concentrations of geothermal features, with the Lamar drainage of Yellowstone National Park, USA, and trace the consequences of geochemical differences through abiotic and biotic linkages in the ecosystem. Waters in the geothermal-dominated drainage contained anomalously high levels of fluoride (F) and silica (SiO2). Soils, stream sediments, and surface waters that interact or mix with geothermal waters, in turn, had elevated F and SiO2 concentrations compared to similar samples from the Lamar drainage. The geochemical differences were reflected in the chemistry of forage plants, with some plants from geothermally influenced areas containing four- to eightfold higher concentrations of F and SiO2 than similar plants in the Lamar drainage. Geothermal heat reduced snowpack, and we found that elk (Cervus elaphus) concentrated in these refugia as snowpack increased each winter. The consequent high dietary intake of F in animals associated with the geothermal areas was confirmed by the finding that bone samples from elk living in the Madison drainage contained sixfold higher concentrations of F than samples collected from animals wintering in the Lamar drainage. High F exposure resulted in compromised dentition due to fluoride toxicosis, which was undoubtedly exacerbated by the abrasive action of silica. The consequent accelerated and aberrant tooth wear resulted in early onset of senescence, reduced life span, and an abbreviated age structure. We speculate that these altered demographics, combined with spatial heterogeneity of snowpack, will result in increased vulnerability of this large herbivore population to wolf predation and less resiliency to compensate demographically for predation. n


Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2013

Derivation of soil-screening thresholds to protect the chisel-toothed kangaroo rat from uranium mine waste in northern Arizona.

Jo Ellen Hinck; Greg Linder; James K. Otton; Susan E. Finger; Edward E. Little; Donald E. Tillitt

Abstract.Chemical data from soil and weathered waste material samples collected from five uranium mines north of the Grand Canyon (three reclaimed, one mined but not reclaimed, and one never mined) were used in a screening-level risk analysis for the Arizona chisel-toothed kangaroo rat (Dipodomys microps leucotis); risks from radiation exposure were not evaluated. Dietary toxicity reference values were used to estimate soil-screening thresholds presenting risk to kangaroo rats. Sensitivity analyses indicated that body weight critically affected outcomes of exposed-dose calculations; juvenile kangaroo rats were more sensitive to the inorganic constituent toxicities than adult kangaroo rats. Species-specific soil-screening thresholds were derived for arsenic (137xa0mg/kg), cadmium (16xa0mg/kg), copper (1,461xa0mg/kg), lead (1,143xa0mg/kg), nickel (771xa0mg/kg), thallium (1.3xa0mg/kg), uranium (1,513xa0mg/kg), and zinc (731xa0mg/kg) using toxicity reference values that incorporate expected chronic field exposures. Inorganic contaminants in soils within and near the mine areas generally posed minimal risk to kangaroo rats. Most exceedances of soil thresholds were for arsenic and thallium and were associated with weathered mine wastes.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2001

Sources of salinity near a coal mine spoil pile, North-Central Colorado

Robert A. Zielinski; James K. Otton; Craig A. Johnson


Scientific Investigations Report | 2010

Geology, geochemistry, and geophysics of the Fry Canyon uranium/copper project site, southeastern Utah - Indications of contaminant migration

James K. Otton; Robert A. Zielinski; Robert J. Horton


Scientific Investigations Report | 2008

Uranium in Surface Waters and Sediments Affected by Historical Mining in the Denver West 1:100,000 Quadrangle, Colorado

Robert A. Zielinski; James K. Otton; R. Randall Schumann; Laurie Wirt


Applied Geochemistry | 2007

Composition of pore water in lake sediments, research site "B", Osage County, Oklahoma: Implications for lake water quality and benthic organisms

Robert A. Zielinski; William N. Herkelrath; James K. Otton


Applied Geochemistry | 2007

Preface--Environmental issues related to oil and gas exploration and production

Yousif K. Kharaka; James K. Otton


Open-File Report | 1997

Environmental effects of produced waters at oilfield production sites in the Big Sinking Creek and Schumaker Ridge areas, Lee County, Kentucky

James K. Otton; Robert A. Zielinski; Douglass E. Owen; Sigrid Asher-Bolinder; Laurel Hall


Fact Sheet | 2011

Breccia-pipe uranium mining in northern Arizona; estimate of resources and assessment of historical effects

Donald J. Bills; Kristin M. Brown; Andrea E. Alpine; James K. Otton; Bradley S. Van Gosen; Jo Ellen Hinck; Fred D. Tillman


U. S. Geological Survey | 2009

Results and Interpretations of U.S. Geological Survey Data Collected In and Around the Tuba City Open Dump, Arizona

Raymond H. Johnson; James K. Otton; Robert J. Horton

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Robert A. Zielinski

United States Geological Survey

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R. Randall Schumann

United States Geological Survey

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Jo Ellen Hinck

United States Geological Survey

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David L. Macke

United States Geological Survey

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Donald E. Tillitt

United States Geological Survey

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Donald J. Bills

United States Geological Survey

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Douglass E. Owen

United States Geological Survey

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Edward E. Little

United States Geological Survey

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Fred D. Tillman

United States Geological Survey

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