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Hydrogeology and ground-water-flow simulation of the Cave Springs area, Hixson, Tennessee
Connor J. Haugh
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4091
The ground-water resource in the Cave Springs area is used by the Hixson Utility District as a water supply and is one of the more heavily stressed in the Valley and Ridge Physiographic Province. In 1999, ground-water withdrawals by the Hixson Utility District averaged about 6.4 million gallons per day...
Base (100-year) flood elevations for selected sites in Livingston County, Missouri
Rodney E. Southard, Joseph M. Richards
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4265
The primary criteria for community participation in the National Flood Insurance Program is the adoption and enforcement of floodplain management requirements that minimize the potential for flood damages to existing and proposed development in flood-hazard areas. This report provides base flood elevations (BFE) for a 100-year recurrence-interval flood for use...
User guide for the drawdown-limited, multi-node well (MNW) package for the U.S. Geological Survey's modular three-dimensional finite-difference ground-water flow model, versions MODFLOW-96 and MODFLOW-2000
Keith J. Halford, Randall T. Hanson
2002, Open-File Report 02-293
A computer program called the drawdown-limited, Multi-Node Well (MNW) Package was developed for the U.S. Geological Survey three-dimensional finite-difference modular ground-water flow model, commonly referred to as MODFLOW. The MNW Package allows MODFLOW users to simulate wells that extend beyond a single model node. Multi-node wells can simulate wells that...
Occurrence and status of volatile organic compounds in ground water from rural, untreated, self-supplied domestic wells in the United States, 1986-99
Michael J. Moran, Wayne W. Lapham, Barbara L. Rowe, John S. Zogorski
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4085
Samples of untreated ground water from 1,926 rural, self-supplied domestic wells were analyzed for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) during 1986-99. This information was used to characterize the occurrence and status of VOCs in domestic well water. The samples were either collected as part of the U.S. Geological Survey?s National Water-Quality...
Use of isotopes to identify sources of ground water, estimate ground-water-flow rates, and assess aquifer vulnerability in the Calumet region of northwestern Indiana and northeastern Illinois
Robert T. Kay, E. Randall Bayless, Robert A. Solak
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4213
Isotope data collected in the Calumet Region of northwestern Indiana and northeastern Illinois, one of the most heavily industrialized regions of the United States, indicated that water in the surficial Calumet aquifer is well mixed. The Calumet aquifer is recharged areally by precipitation and locally may be recharged by surface...
Ground-water availability in part of the Borough of Carroll Valley, Adams County, Pennsylvania, and the establishment of a drought-monitor well
Dennis J. Low, Randall W. Conger
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4273
Continued population growth in the Borough of Carroll Valley (Borough) coupled with the drought of 2001 have increased the demand for ground water in the Borough. This demand has led Borough officials to undertake an effort to evaluate the capability of the crystalline-bedrock aquifers to meet future, projected growth and...
Method of analysis and quality-assurance practices by the U.S. Geological Survey Organic Geochemistry Research Group: Determination of geosmin and methylisoborneol in water using solid-phase microextraction and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
L.R. Zimmerman, A.C. Ziegler, E.M. Thurman
2002, Open-File Report 2002-337
A method for the determination of two common odor-causing compounds in water, geosmin and 2-methylisoborneol, was modified and verified by the U.S. Geological Survey's Organic Geochemistry Research Group in Lawrence, Kansas. The optimized method involves the extraction of odor-causing compounds from filtered water samples using a divinylbenzene-carboxen-polydimethylsiloxane cross-link coated solid-phase...
A bibliography of terrain modeling (geomorphometry), the quantitative representation of topography: Supplement 4.0
Richard J. Pike
2002, Open-File Report 2002-465
Terrain modeling, the practice of ground-surface quantification, is an amalgam of Earth science, mathematics, engineering, and computer science. The discipline is known variously as geomorphometry (or simply morphometry), terrain analysis, and quantitative geomorphology. It continues to grow through myriad applications to hydrology, geohazards mapping, tectonics, sea-floor and planetary exploration, and...
Delineation of the Troy Bedrock Valley and particle-tracking analysis of ground-water flow underlying Belvidere, Illinois
P.C. Mills, Keith J. Halford, R.P. Cobb
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4062
The U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and Illinois Environmental Protection Agency began a study of the hydrogeology, flow system, and distribution of contaminants in the aquifers underlying Belvidere, Ill., and vicinity in 1992. As part of the study, the ancestral Troy Bedrock Valley, located about 1.5 miles west...
Assimilation and retention of selenium and other trace elements from crustacean food by juvenile striped bass (Morone saxatilis)
Stephen B. Baines, Nicholas S. Fisher, A. Robin Stewart
2002, Limnology and Oceanography (47) 647-655
 Estimates of the assimilation and retention of trace elements from food by fish are useful for linking toxicity with the biogeochemical cycling of these elements through aquatic food webs. Here we use pulse-chase radiotracer techniques to estimate the assimilation and retention of Se and four trace metals, Ag, Am, Zn,...
Detection and mapping of fractures and cavities using borehole radar
F.P. Haeni, Lucien Halleux, Carole D. Johnson, John W. Lane Jr.
2002, Conference Paper, Proceedings: Fractured Rock 2002
Borehole radar can be used in a single-hole reflection mode or in a cross-hole tomography mode. In the reflection mode, radar provides an image of discontinuities in the bedrock surrounding a borehole, including bedding planes, lithologic contacts, fractures, and cavities. The measurements are either directional or omni-directional, depending upon...
Evaluating the performance of a crop water balance model in estimating regional crop production
Gabriel B. Senay, James Verdin
2002, Conference Paper, ISPRS archives – Volume XXXIV part 1, 2002
The comparison between a spatially distributed crop index and reported yield was evaluated. The crop index was generated by a crop water balance model that simulates the reduction of crop yield (as a percentage of the potential) due to water deficit. This model is currently operational as a monitoring and...
Geologic information for aggregate resource planning
William H. Langer, David A. Lindsey, Daniel H. Knepper
2002, Book chapter, Deposit and geoenvironmental models for resource exploitation and environmental security
Construction and maintenance of the infrastructure is dependent on such raw materials as aggregate (crushed stone, sand, and gravel). Despite this dependence, urban expansion often works to the detriment of the production of those essential raw materials. The failure to plan for the protection and extraction of aggregate resources...
Estimating the potential for submergence for two wetlands in the Mississippi River Delta
J.M. Rybczyk, Donald R. Cahoon
2002, Estuaries (25) 985-998
We used a combined field and modeling approach to estimate the potential for submergence for one rapidly deteriorating (Bayou Chitigue Marsh) and one apparently stable (Old Oyster Bayou Marsh) saltmarsh wetland in coastal Louisiana, given two eustatic sea level rise scenarios: the current rate (0.15 cm year−1); and the central...
Across-shelf sediment transport: Interactions between suspended and bed sediment
Courtney K. Harris, Patricia L. Wiberg
2002, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (107) 8-1-8-12
We use a two-dimensional, time-dependent sediment-transport model to quantify across-shelf transport, deposition, and sorting during wave-driven resuspension events characteristic of those that dominate sediment transport on many continental shelves. Decreases in wave-orbital velocities as water depth increases, and the resulting cross-shelf gradient in bed shear stress favor a net offshore...
West Florida shelf circulation and temperature budget for the 1999 spring transition
Ruoying He, Robert H. Weisberg
2002, Continental Shelf Research (22) 719-748
Mid-latitude continental shelves undergo a spring transition as the net surface heat flux changes from cooling to warming. Using in situ data and a numerical circulation model we investigate the circulation and temperature budget on the West Florida Continental Shelf (WFS) for the spring transition of 1999. The model is...
Sea otter (Enhydra lutris) perspective: Part C. Trophic linkages among sea otters and bivalve prey in Prince William Sound, Alaska, in the aftermath of the Exxon Valdez oil spill: Implications for community models in sedimentary habitats
Glenn R. VanBlaricom, Allan K. Fukuyama, Charles E. O’Clair, Daniel H. Monson, Stephen C. Jewett, Tamara K. Gage, Thomas A. Dean, James L. Bodkin
Leslie E. Holland-Bartels, editor(s)
2002, Report, Mechanisms of impact and potential recovery of nearshore vertebrate predators following the 1989 <i>Exxon Valdez</i> oil spill
We exploited the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound (PWS), Alaska, to evaluate effects of reduced sea otter densities on prey populations in sedimentary habitats. We considered the need for and characteristics of new models for trophic effects of sea otters on coastal marine benthic communities. We viewed...
Harlequin duck (Histrionicus histrionicus) perspective: Harlequin duck population recovery following the Exxon Valdez oil spill: Progress, process, and constraints
Daniel Esler, Timothy D. Bowman, Kimberly A. Trust, Brenda E. Ballachey, Thomas A. Dean, Stephen C. Jewett, Charles E. O’Clair
Leslie E. Holland-Bartels, editor(s)
2002, Report, Mechanisms of impact and potential recovery of nearshore vertebrate predators following the 1989 <i>Exxon Valdez</i> oil spill
Following the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound, Alaska, we studied the status of recovery of harlequin duck (Histrionicus histrionicus) populations during 1995-1998. We evaluated potential constraints to full recovery, including (1) exposure to residual oil, (2) food limitation, and (3) intrinsic demographic limitations on population growth...
U.S. Geological Survey spatial data access
John Faundeen, Ronald L. Kanengieter, Michael D. Buswell
2002, Journal of Geospatial Engineering (4) 145-152
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has done a progress review on improving access to its spatial data holdings over the Web. The USGS EROS Data Center has created three major Web-based interfaces to deliver spatial data to the general public; they are Earth Explorer, the Seamless Data Distribution System (SDDS),...
A flood early warning system for southern Africa
Guleid A. Artan, Miguel Restrepo, Kwabena Asante, James Verdin
2002, Conference Paper, Integrated remote sensing at the global, regional, and local scale
Sizeable areas of the Southern African Region experienced widespread flooding in 2000. Deployment of hydrologic models can help reduce the human and economic losses in the regions by providing improved monitoring and forecast information to guide relief activities. In this study, we describe a hydrologic model developed for wide-area flood...
Methods and tools for the development of hydrologically conditioned elevation data and derivatives for national applications
Jay R. Kost, Kristine L. Verdin, Bruce B. Worstell, Glenn G. Kelly
2002, Conference Paper, Hydrologic modeling for the 21st Century, Second Federal Interagency Hydrologic Modeling Conference
The National Elevation Dataset (NED) contains the best publicly available elevation data merged into a seamless dataset for the entire United States. In some cases these data contain unwanted artifacts, limiting the quality of standard hydrologic derivatives. The Elevation Derivatives for National Applications (EDNA) project is an interagency effort...
Development of a circa 2000 land cover database for the United States
Collin G. Homer, Chengquan Huang, Limin Yang, Bruce Wylie
2002, Conference Paper
Multi-Resolution Land Characterization 2000 (MRLC 2000) is a second-generation federal consortium to create an updated pool of nation-wide Landsat 7 imagery, and derive a second-generation National Land Cover Database (NLCD 2000). This multi-layer, multisource database will include a suite of 30-meter resolution data that will serve as standardized ingredients for...
Application of decision-tree techniques to forest group and basal area mapping using satellite imagery and forest inventory data
George Z. Xian, Zhiliang Zhu, Michael Hoppus, Michael Fleming
2002, Conference Paper, Integrated remote sensing at the global, regional, and local scale
Accurate, current, and cost-effective fire fuel data are required by management and fire science communities for use in reducing wildland fire hazards over large areas. In this paper we present results of applying decision-tree techniques to mapping vegetation parameters (such as vegetation types and canopy structure classification) required for fire...
Plumes, or plate tectonic processes?
G.R. Foulger
2002, Astronomy and Geophysics (43) 6.19-6.23
Hotspots – large volcanic provinces – such as Iceland, Hawaii and Yellowstone, are almost universally assumed to come from plumes of hot mantle rising from deep within the Earth. At Iceland, perhaps the best-studied hotspot on Earth, this hypothesis is inconsistent with many first-order observations, such as the lack of...