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Page 11, results 251 - 275

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Water-quality assessment of the Rio Grande Valley, Colorado, New Mexico and Texas: Ground-water quality in the Rio Grande flood plain, Cochiti Lake, New Mexico, to El Paso, Texas, 1995
L. M. Bexfield, S. K. Anderholm
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4249
From March to May of 1995, water samples were collected from 30 wells located in the flood plain of the Rio Grande between Cochiti Lake, New Mexico, and El Paso, Texas. These samples were analyzed for a broad host of constituents, including field parameters, major constituents, nutrients, dissolved organic carbon,...
Hydrogeology and water quality of the West Valley Creek Basin, Chester County, Pennsylvania
Lisa A. Senior, Ronald A. Sloto, Andrew G. Reif
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4137
The West Valley Creek Basin drains 20.9 square miles in the Piedmont Physiographic Province of southeastern Pennsylvania and is partly underlain by carbonate rocks that are highly productive aquifers. The basin is undergoing rapid urbanization that includes changes in land use and increases in demand for public water supply and...
Interactions between ground water and surface water in the Suwannee River basin, Florida
B. G. Katz, R.S. DeHan, J.J. Hirten, J.S. Catches
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 1237-1254
Ground water and surface water constitute a single dynamic system in roost parts of the Suwannee River basin due to the presence of karat features that facilitate the interaction between the surface and subsurface. Low radon-222 concentrations (below background levels) and enriched amounts of oxygen-18 and deuterium in ground water...
Mapping the radon potential of the united states: Examples from the Appalachians
L.C.S. Gundersen, R.R. Schumann
Hopke P.K., editor(s)
1997, Conference Paper, Environment International
The geologic radon potential of the United States was recently assessed by the U.S. Geological Survey. Results indicate that approximately 33% of the U.S. population lives within geologic provinces where the average indoor radon levels have the potential to be greater than 4 pCi/L (147 Bq/m3). Rock types most commonly...
Geologic and climatic controls on the radon emanation coefficient
R.R. Schumann, L.C.S. Gundersen
Hopke P.K., editor(s)
1997, Conference Paper, Environment International
Geologic, pedologic, and climatic factors, including radium content, grain size, siting of radon parents within soil grains or on grain coatings, and soil moisture conditions, determine a soil's emanating power and radon transport characteristics. Data from field studies indicate that soils derived from similar parent rocks in different regions have...
Ground-water quality in the western part of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer in the Western Lake Michigan Drainages, Wisconsin and Michigan
D. A. Saad
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4231
Ground-water samples were collected during the summer of 1995 from 29 wells in the western part of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer in the Western Lake Michigan Drainages study unit of the National-Water Quality Assessment Program. Analyses of ground-water samples from these wells were used to provide an indication of waterquality conditions...
Ground-water and stream-water interaction in the Owl Creek basin, Wyoming
K.M. Ogle
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4253
Understanding of the interaction of ground-water and surface-water resources is vital to water management when water availability is limited.Inflow of ground water is the primary source ofwater during stream base flow. The water chemistry of streams may substantially be affected by that inflow of ground water. This report...
Water-quality assessment of the Rio Grande Valley, Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas: Shallow ground-water quality of a land-use area in the San Luis Valley, south-central Colorado, 1993
S. K. Anderholm
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4144
This report describes the quality of shallow ground water in an agricultural area in the San Luis Valley, Colorado, and discusses how natural and human factors affect the quality of shallow ground water. Thirty-five wells were installed, and water samples were collected from these wells and analyzed for selected dissolved...
Ground-water quality and its relation to hydrogeology, land use, and surface-water quality in the Red Clay Creek basin, Piedmont Physiographic Province, Pennsylvania and Delaware
Lisa A. Senior
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4288
The Red Clay Creek Basin in the Piedmont Physiographic Province of Pennsylvania and Delaware is a 54-square-mile area underlain by a structurally complex assemblage of fractured metamorphosed sedimentary and igneous rocks that form a water-table aquifer. Ground-water-flow systems generally are local, and ground water discharges to streams. Both ground water...
Shallow ground-water quality in selected agricultural areas of south-central Georgia, 1994
C. A. Crandall
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4083
The Georgia-Florida Coastal Plain National Water-Quality Assessment Program began an agricultural land-use study in March 1994. The study area is located in the upper Suwannee River basin in Tift, Turner, Worth, Irwin, Wilcox, and Crisp Counties, Ga. Twenty-three shallow monitoring wells were installed in a 1,335-square- mile area characterized by...
Water quality of surficial aquifers in the Georgia-Florida Coastal Plain
C. A. Crandall, M. P. Berndt
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4269
The National Water Quality Assessment Program of the U.S. Geological Survey established the Georgia-Florida Coastal Plain study unit in 1991. The ground-water study-unit survey was conducted in 1993 to provide a broad over-view of water quality in surficial aquifers. Three land resource provinces were included in the Georgia-Florida Coastal Plain...
Radon in ground water of the lower Susquehanna and Potomac River basins
Bruce D. Lindsey, Scott W. Ator
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4156
Ground-water samples collected from 267 wells were analyzed for radon as part of a water-quality reconnaissance of subunits of the Lower Susquehanna and Potomac River Basins conducted by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) program. Radon is a product of the radioactive...
Selected well and ground-water chemistry data for the Boise River Valley, southwestern Idaho, 1990-95
D. J. Parliman, Linda Boyle, Sabrina Nicholls
1996, Open-File Report 96-246
Water samples were collected from 903 wells in the Boise River Valley, Idaho, from January 1990 through December 1995. Selected well information and analyses of 1,357 water samples are presented. Analyses include physical properties ad concentrations of nutrients, bacteria, major ions, selected trace elements, radon-222, volatile organic compounds, and pesticides....
Ground-water resources and water-supply alternatives in the Wawona area of Yosemite National Park, California
J. W. Borchers
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4229
Planning efforts to implement the 1980 General Management Plan, which recommends relocating park administrative facilities and employee housing from Yosemite Valley in Yosemite National Park, California, have focused on the availability of water at potential relocation sites within the park. Ground-water resources and water-supply alternatives in the Wawona area, one...
Radon in the fluvial aquifers of the White River Basin, Indiana, 1995
Joseph M. Fenelon, Rhett C. Moore
1996, Fact Sheet 1996–0124
Water samples collected in 1995 from 57 monitoring wells (48 shallow and 9 deep) in the fluvial aquifers of the White River Basin were analyzed for radon. Radon concentrations in the shallow wells ranged from 140 to 1,600 pCi/L (picocuries per liter); the median concentration was 420 pCi/L. In comparison,...
Spatial radon anomalies on active faults in California
C.-Y. King, B.-S. King, William C. Evans, W. Zhang
1996, Applied Geochemistry (11) 497-510
Radon emanation has been observed to be anomalously high along active faults in many parts of the world. We tested this relationship by conducting and repeating soil air radon surveys with a portable radon meter across several faults in California. The results confirm the existence of fault-associated radon anomalies, which...
Reconnaissance of ground-water quality in the Papio-Missouri River Natural Resources District, eastern Nebraska, July through September 1992
Ingrid M. Verstraeten, M. J. Ellis
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 94-4197
A reconnaissance of ground-water quality was conducted in the Papio-Missouri River Natural Resources District of eastern Nebraska. Sixty-one irrigation, municipal, domestic, and industrial wells completed in the principal aquifers--the unconfined Elkhorn, Missouri, and Platte River Valley alluvial aquifers, the upland area alluvial aquifers, and the Dakota aquifer--were selected for water-quality...
Radon-222 concentrations in ground water and soil gas on Indian reservations in Wisconsin
John F. DeWild, James T. Krohelski
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4088
The weighted average radon-222 concentration of indoor air in homes located on Wisconsin Indian Reservations is 5.8 picocuries per liter, which exceeds the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency action limit of 4 picocuries per liter. Ground water is the principle source of drinking water on Wisconsin Indian Reservations and generally accounts...
Natural radioactivity in, and inorganic chemistry of, ground water in the Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system, southern New Jersey, 1983-89
Jane Kozinski, Zoltan Szabo, O. S. Zapecza, T. H. Barringer
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 92-4144
The distribution of naturally occurring radionuclides in ground water of the Kirkwood- Cohansey aquifer system in southern New Jersey was assessed during 1988-89. The Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system consists of quartz-sand formations overlain by a feldspar-rich quartz-sand formation, the Bridgeton Formation, that is heavily developed agriculturally. The sum of the concentrations...
Radium and radon in ground water in the Chickies Quartzite, southeastern Pennsylvania
L.A. Senior, K.L. Vogel
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 92-4088
The Chickies Quartzite, a Lower Cambrian-age formation compromised of quartzite and slate overlying a basal conglomerate, forms a narrow ridges and crops out discontinuously over 112 square miles in the Piedmont physiographic province of southeastern Pennsylvania. The formation is a low-yielding, fractured- rock, water-table aquifer recharged primarily by local precipitation....
Geohydrology, ground-water availability, and ground-water quality of Berkeley County, West Virginia, with emphasis on the carbonate-rock area
R.A. Shultz, W.A. Hobba Jr., M.D. Kozar
1995, Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4073
Berkeley County is underlain by carbonate rocks, upon which karst topography has developed, and by noncarbonate rocks. Ground-water levels tend to follow seasonal trends, and fluctuate more in carbonate areas than in noncarbonate areas. Well yields of greater than 100 gallons per minute are possible from the carbonate rocks, but...