• Adam Tallman Wins 2025 USACE Cost Engineer of the Year For Civil Works

    Adam Tallman, a Galveston District certified professional engineer, has been named the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Cost Engineer of the Year 2025 for Civil Works. The Cost Engineer of the Year Civil Works Award recognizes one individual each year for their contributions to the cost engineering profession in the last three fiscal years preceding the award.
  • U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announce change in hunting and fishing zones at Jennings Randolph Lake

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), Baltimore District, announces changes to designated hunting zones on Corps-managed lands surrounding Jennings Randolph Lake, MD and WV, effective 03 September 2025.
  • Keeping the Harbors Strong: The Breakwater Assessment Team Protects Great Lakes Infrastructure

    The Great Lakes are more than scenic, they are vital to the U.S. and Canadian economies. Together, the ports, harbors and channels that make up the Great Lakes Navigation System support nearly 238,000 jobs and generate more than $28 billion in business revenue each year. From raw materials fueling manufacturing plants to the flow of goods and tourism that sustain local communities, this system touches nearly every part of daily life in the region.
  • Sacramento District Employees Receive Prestigious Awards

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Five employees at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Sacramento District
  • Planner of the Year: Chris Stanton

    Traveling throughout the Southwest, Christopher Stanton, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Los Angeles District lead planner and Silver Jackets program manager, has built a professional reputation for dependability.
  • Army Corps announces fall drawdown elevation targets for Lake Pend Oreille

    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announces Lake Pend Oreille elevation targets for the upcoming fall 2025 drawdown, and plans to host a public meeting Oct. 7, 2025, to provide the latest updates on water management, the spillway gate replacement project, invasive species management and Springy Point Recreation area.  
  • Vibration Proof: ERDC engineer helps protect B-2 bombers

    For nearly four decades, the B-2 Spirit, commonly referred to as the stealth bomber, has been the tip of the spear in the United States’ ability to project force on a global scale. The aircraft’s capabilities – developed in secret and once thought impossible – were on full display during the recent Operation Midnight Hammer, in which the aircraft was used to dismantle assets with Iran’s nuclear weapons program.
  • Optimal Transport-Based Full-Waveform Inversion for Shallow Seismic Data

    Abstract: Full-waveform inversion is widely used to reconstruct subsurface properties at different geologic scales. For shallow land applications using surface waves, a lack of information on the source wavelet, dispersion, and presence of higher modes increases the nonlinearity of the inverse problem. The inversion can become more challenging with the presence of near-surface complexities associated with scattering, attenuation, and high-contrast variations in the elastic parameters. Compared with the least-squares formulation, GSOT provides a more convex misfit function and reduces dependence on the accuracy of the initial model. Although a few field-data applications have shown the potential and benefits of using GSOT-based FWI with body waves, there are limited real applications of the inversion with a GSOT misfit function for NS characterization. Despite considerable effort with blind benchmark tests in exploration seismology, typically synthetic FWI examples for NS applications are demonstrated through an “inverse crime” approach. Synthetic FWI examples performed compare the performance of LS- and GSOT-based FWI with more realistic scenarios. We demonstrate the GSOT misfit function improves the initial 1D velocity models and guides the updates toward the actual subsurface properties. This enables the recovery of higher-mode Rayleigh waves and reconstruction of the cavity with better precision.
  • Acute Toxicity of Carbon Nanotubes, Carbon Nanodots, and Cell-Penetrating Peptides to Freshwater Cyanobacteria

    Abstract: Synthetic non-metallic nanoparticles have been explored to treat harmful algal blooms, but their strain-specific algicidal activities have been rarely investigated. Three batches of CNDs were prepared in-house using glucose or chloroform and methanol as the substrate and one batch of single-walled CNTs. The axenic laboratory culture of each cyanobacterial strain was exposed to an NMNP at two dosage levels for 48 h, followed by measurement of five endpoints. The endpoints were optical density at 680 nm for chlorophyll-a estimation, OD at 750 nm for cell density, instantaneous pigment fluorescence emission after being excited with 450 nm blue light for chlorophyll-a or 620 nm red light for phycocyanin, and quantum yield for photosynthesis efficiency of photosystem II. The results indicate the acute toxicity was strain-, NMNP type-, dosage-, and endpoint-dependent. The two benthic strains were more resistant to NMNP treatment. SWCNTs and fraction A14 of CND-G were more toxic than CND-G and CND-C/M. The CPP was the least toxic. The high dose generally caused more severe impairment. OD750 and OD680 were more sensitive and QY was the least sensitive. The strain dependence of toxicity suggested the potential application of these NMNPs as a target-specific tool for mitigating harmful cyanobacterial blooms.
  • USACE seeking volunteers for DeQueen Lake shoreline cleanup

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is seeking volunteers to pitch in from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sept. 11, 2025, for a shoreline cleanup event at DeQueen Lake.