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Featured researches published by Richard E. Smith.


Hydrobiologia | 1985

Environmental setting of San Francisco Bay

T. J. Conomos; Richard E. Smith; J. W. Gartner

San Francisco Bay, the largest bay on the California coast, is a broad, shallow, turbid estuary comprising two geographically and hydrologically distinct subestuaries: the northern reach lying between the connection to the Pacific Ocean at the Golden Gate and the confluence of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River system, and the southern reach (herein called South Bay) between the Golden Gate and the southern terminus of the bay. The northern reach is a partially mixed estuary dominated by seasonally varying river inflow, and the South Bay is a tidally oscillating lagoon-type estuary. Freshwater inflows, highest during winter, generate strong estuarine circulation and largely determine water residence times. They also bring large volumes of dissolved and particulate materials to the estuary. Tidal currents, generated by mixed semidiurnal and diurnal tides, mix the water column and, together with river inflow and basin geometry, determine circulation patterns. Winds, which are strongest during summer and during winter storms, exert stress on the bays water surface, thereby creating large waves that resuspend sediment from the shallow bay bottom and, together with the tidal currents, contribute markedly to the transport of water masses throughout the shallow estuary.


Hydrobiologia | 1985

Interannual variability in dissolved inorganic nutrients in Northern San Francisco bay estuary

David H. Peterson; Richard E. Smith; Stephen W. Hager; Dana D. Harmon; Raynol E. Herndon; Laurence E. Schemel

Nearly two decades of seasonal dissolved inorganic nutrient-salinity distributions in northern San Francisco Bay estuary (1960–1980) illustrate interannual variations in effects of river flow (a nutrient source) and phytoplankton productivity (a nutrient sink). During winter, nutrient sources dominate the nutrient-salinity distribution patterns (nutrients are at or exceed conservative mixing concentrations). During summer, however, the sources and sinks are in close competition. In summers of wet years, the effects of increased river flow often dominate the nutrient distributions (nutrients are at or less than conservative mixing concentrations), whereas in summers of dry years, phytoplankton productivity dominates (the very dry years 1976–1977 were an exception for reasons not yet clearly known). Such source/sink effects also vary with chemical species. During summer the control of phytoplankton on nutrient distributions is apparently strongest for ammonium, less so for nitrate and silica, and is the least for phosphate. Furthermore, the strength of the silica sink (diatom productivity) is at a maximum at intermediate river flows. This relation, which is in agreement with other studies based on phytoplankton abundance and enumeration, is significant to the extent that diatoms are an important food source for herbivores.The balance or lack of balance between nutrient sources and sinks varies from one estuary to another just as it can from one year to another within the same estuary. At one extreme, in some estuaries river flow dominates the estuarine dissolved inorganic nutrient distributions throughout most of the year. At the other extreme, phytoplankton productivity dominates. In northern San Francisco Bay, for example, the phytoplankton nutrient sink is not as strong as in less turbid estuaries. In this estuary, however, river effects, which produce or are associated with near-conservative nutrient distributions, are strong even at flows less than mean-annual flow. Thus, northern San Francisco Bay appears to be an estuary in between the two extremes and is shifted closer to one extreme or the other depending on interannual variations in river flow.


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2007

Anthropogenic influence on sedimentation and intertidal mudflat change in San Pablo Bay, California: 1856–1983

Bruce E. Jaffe; Richard E. Smith; Amy C. Foxgrover


Open-File Report | 1998

Sedimentation and bathymetric change in San Pablo Bay, 1856-1983

Bruce E. Jaffe; Richard E. Smith; Laura Zink Torresan


Open-File Report | 1999

Sedimentation and bathymetry changes in Suisun Bay: 1867-1990

Karen Cappiella; Chris Malzone; Richard E. Smith; Bruce E. Jaffe


Open-File Report | 2004

Deposition, erosion, and bathymetric change in South San Francisco Bay: 1858-1983

Amy C. Foxgrover; Shawn A. Higgins; Melissa K. Ingraca; Bruce E. Jaffe; Richard E. Smith


San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science | 2010

Mercury-contaminated hydraulic mining debris in San Francisco Bay

Robin M. Bouse; Christopher C. Fuller; Samuel N. Luoma; Michelle I. Hornberger; Bruce E. Jaffe; Richard E. Smith


Open-File Report | 1979

Physical and chemical properties of San Francisco Bay waters, 1969-1976

Richard E. Smith; Raynol E. Herndon; Dana D. Harmon


Ocean community conference | 1998

A NOWCAST MODEL FOR TIDES AND TIDAL CURRENTS IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY, CALIFORNIA

Ralph T. Cheng; Richard E. Smith


Open-File Report | 2005

Bathychronology: reconstructing historical sedimentation from bathymetric data in a GIS

Shawn A. Higgins; Bruce E. Jaffe; Richard E. Smith

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Bruce E. Jaffe

United States Geological Survey

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David H. Peterson

United States Geological Survey

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Raynol E. Herndon

United States Geological Survey

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Ralph T. Cheng

United States Geological Survey

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Amy C. Foxgrover

United States Geological Survey

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Dana D. Harmon

United States Geological Survey

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Laurence E. Schemel

United States Geological Survey

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Michael D. Dettinger

United States Geological Survey

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Shawn A. Higgins

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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