Hydrogeology and the distribution of salinity in the Floridan Aquifer system, southwestern Florida
R.S. Reese
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4253
A study was conducted to establish a detailed hydrogeologic framework in the complex Floridan aquifer system of southwestern Florida, and to evaluate and relate the distribution of salinity found in this system. The Floridan aquifer system consists of the Upper Floridan aquifer, middle confining unit, and Lower Floridan aquifer. The...
Estimation of hydraulic parameters from an unconfined aquifer test conducted in a glacial outwash deposit, Cape Cod, Massachusetts
A.F. Moench, Stephen P. Garabedian, Denis R. LeBlanc
2000, Open-File Report 2000-485
An aquifer test conducted in a sand and gravel, glacial outwash deposit on Cape Cod, Massachusetts was analyzed by means of a model for flow to a partially penetrating well in a homogeneous, anisotropic unconfined aquifer. The model is designed to account for all significant mechanisms expected to influence drawdown...
Preliminary estimate of the amplification of possible earthquake ground motion at a site in Charleston County, South Carolina
Russell L. Wheeler, Chris H. Cramer
2000, Open-File Report 2000-484
We estimate site amplification at the location of a proposed bridge near Charleston, South Carolina. Model calculations indicate that amplification at periods of 1 s and longer is likely to be strongly influenced by the effects of a large contrast in shear-wave velocity at a depth of approximately 1 km (3,000 ft). On-site...
Thermal maturity patterns (CAI and %Ro) in the Ordovician and Devonian rocks of the Appalachian basin in New York State
David J. Weary, Robert T. Ryder, Richard Nyahay
2000, Open-File Report 2000-496
The objective of this study is to enhance existing thermal maturity maps in New York State by establishing: 1) new subsurface CAI data points for the Ordovician and Devonian and 2) new %Ro and Rock Eval subsurface data points for Middle and Upper Devonian black shale units. The thermal maturity...
Transport of suspended and bedload sediment at eight stations in the Coeur d'Alene River basin, Idaho
Greg M. Clark, Paul F. Woods
2000, Open-File Report 2000-472
The Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study conducted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency within the Spokane River Basin of northern Idaho and eastern Washington included extensive data-collection activities to determine the nature and extent of trace-element contamination within the basin. As part of the investigation, the U.S. Geological Survey designed and implemented...
Towards policy relevant environmental modeling: contextual validity and pragmatic models
Scott B. Miles
2000, Open-File Report 2000-401
"What makes for a good model?" In various forms, this question is a question that, undoubtedly, many people, businesses, and institutions ponder with regards to their particular domain of modeling. One particular domain that is wrestling with this question is the multidisciplinary field of environmental modeling. Examples of environmental models...
Simulation of projected water demand and ground-water levels in the Coffee Sand and Eutaw-McShan aquifers in Union County, Mississippi, 2010 through 2050
Susan S. Hutson, E. W. Strom, D.E. Burt, M. J. Mallory
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4268
Ground water from the Eutaw-McShan and the Coffee Sand aquifers is the major source of supply for residential, commercial, and industrial purposes in Union County, Mississippi. Unbiased, scientifically sound data and assessments are needed to assist agencies in better understanding and managing available water resources as continuing development and growth...
Comparison of nitrate, pesticides, and volatile organic compounds in samples from monitoring and public-supply wells, Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system, southern New Jersey
Paul E. Stackelberg, L. J. Kauffman, A. L. Baehr, M. A. Ayers
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4123
The number and total concentration of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) per sample were significantly greater in water from public-supply wells than in water from shallow and moderate-depth monitoring wells in the surficial Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system in the Glassboro area of southern New Jersey. In contrast, concentrations of nitrate (as nitrogen) and the number and total concentration of pesticides per...
MORPH-II, a software package for the analysis of scanning-electron-micrograph images for the assessment of the fractal dimension of exposed stone surfaces
Victor G. Mossotti, A. Raouf Eldeeb
2000, Open-File Report 2000-13
Turcotte, 1997, and Barton and La Pointe, 1995, have identified many potential uses for the fractal dimension in physicochemical models of surface properties. The image-analysis program described in this report is an extension of the program set MORPH-I (Mossotti and others, 1998), which provided the fractal analysis of electron-microscope images...
Hydrogeology of the Beaver Kill Basin in Sullivan, Delaware, and Ulster Counties, New York
Richard J. Reynolds
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4034
The hydrogeology of the 299-square-mile Beaver Kill basin in the southwestern Catskill Mountains of southeastern New York is depicted in a surficial geologic map and five geologic sections, and is summarized through an analysis of low-flow statistics for the Beaver Kill and its major tributary, Willowemoc Creek. Surficial geologic data...
Preliminary hydraulic analysis and implications for restoration of Noyes Slough, Fairbanks, Alaska
Robert L. Burrows, Dustin E. Langley, David M. Evetts
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4227
The present-day channels of the Chena River and Noyes Slough in downtown Fairbanks, Alaska, were formed as sloughs of the Tanana River, and part of the flow of the Tanana River occupied these waterways. Flow in these channels was reduced after the completion of Moose Creek Dike in 1945, and...
Regional evaluation of evapotranspiration in the Everglades
E. R. German
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4217
Nine sites in the Florida Everglades were selected and instrumented for collection of data necessary for evapotranspiration-determination using the Bowen-ratio energy-budget method. The sites were selected to represent the sawgrass or cattail marshes, wet prairie, and open-water areas that constitute most of the natural Everglades system. At each site, measurements...
Velocity and stage data collected in a laboratory flume for water-surface slope determination using a pipe manometer
Jonathan K. Lee, H. M. Visser, H. L. Jenter, M. P. Duff
2000, Open-File Report 2000-393
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) hydrologists and ecologist are conducting studies to quantify vegetative flow resistance in order to improve numerical models of surface-water flow in the Florida Everglades. Water-surface slope is perhaps the most difficult of the flow resistance parameters to measure in the Everglades due to the very low...
Application of nonlinear least-squares regression to ground-water flow modeling, west-central Florida
D. K. Yobbi
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4094
A nonlinear least-squares regression technique for estimation of ground-water flow model parameters was applied to an existing model of the regional aquifer system underlying west-central Florida. The regression technique minimizes the differences between measured and simulated water levels. Regression statistics, including parameter sensitivities and correlations, were calculated for reported parameter...
Documentation of a computer program to simulate lake-aquifer interaction using the MODFLOW ground water flow model and the MOC3D solute-transport model
Michael L. Merritt, Leonard F. Konikow
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4167
Heads and flow patterns in surficial aquifers can be strongly influenced by the presence of stationary surface-water bodies (lakes) that are in direct contact, vertically and laterally, with the aquifer. Conversely, lake stages can be significantly affected by the volume of water that seeps through the lakebed that separates the...
Simulation of ground-water flow in an unconfined sand and gravel aquifer at Marathon, Cortland County, New York
Todd S. Miller
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4026
The Village of Marathon, in Cortland County, N.Y., has three municipal wells that tap a relatively thin (25 to 40 feet thick) and narrow (less than 0.25 mile wide) unconfined sand and gravel aquifer in the Tioughnioga River valley. Only one of the wells is in use because water from...
Delineation and Analysis of Uncertainty of Contributing Areas to Wells at the Southbury Training School, Southbury, Connecticut
J. Jeffrey Starn, Janet Radway Stone, John R. Mullaney
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4158
Contributing areas to public-supply wells at the Southbury Training School in Southbury, Connecticut, were mapped by simulating ground-water flow in stratified glacial deposits in the lower Transylvania Brook watershed. The simulation used nonlinear regression methods and informational statistics to estimate parameters of a ground-water flow model using drawdown data from...
Predevelopment water-level map of the Santa Fe Group aquifer system in the middle Rio Grande basin between Cochiti Lake and San Acacia, New Mexico
Laura M. Bexfield, Scott K. Anderholm
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4249
Because of its increasing population and limited water resources, the Middle Rio Grande Basin between Cochiti Lake and San Acacia, New Mexico, has recently become the subject of intense study. In particular, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation with the City of Albuquerque has constructed a series of ground-water-flow models of the Tertiary...
Statistical identification of hydrochemical response units for hydrologic monitoring and modeling in Maryland
S. D. Preston
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4232
In support of Maryland's efforts to develop statewide water-quality management plans, a statistical analysis was performed to identify a set of representative and relatively homogeneous areas referred to as Hydrochemical Response Units (HRUs). The State intends to select representative areas within each hydrochemical response unit for monitoring and model development,...
Time of travel of solutes in Buffalo Bayou and selected tributaries, Houston, Texas, August 1999
Jeffery W. East, Jasper D. Schaer
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4236
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, conducted a time-of-travel study in the Buffalo Bayou watershed during low flow in August 1999. The study was done as part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Monitoring for Public Access and Community Tracking (EMPACT) program....
Factors affecting nutrient trends in major rivers of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
Lori A. Sprague, M. J. Langland, S.E. Yochum, R. E. Edwards, J. D. Blomquist, S.W. Phillips, G.W. Shenk, S. D. Preston
2000, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4218
Trends in nutrient loads and flow-adjusted concentrations in the major rivers entering Chesapeake Bay were computed on the basis of water-quality data collected between 1985 and 1998 at 29 monitoring stations in the Susquehanna, Potomac, James, Rappahannock, York, Patuxent, and Choptank River Basins. Two computer models?the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Model...
A note on scrap in the 1992 U.S. input-output tables
George M. Swisko
2000, Open-File Report 2000-313
Introduction A key concern of industrial ecology and life cycle analysis is the disposal and recycling of scrap. One might conclude that the U.S. input-output tables are appropriate tools for analyzing scrap flows. Duchin, for instance, has suggested using input-output analysis for industrial ecology, indicating that input-output economics can trace the stocks and flows...
Fate and transport modeling of selected chlorinated organic compounds at Operable Unit 3, U.S. Naval Air Station, Jacksonville, Florida
J. Hal Davis
2000, Open-File Report 2000-255
Ground water contaminated by the chlorinated organic compounds trichloroethene (TCE), cis-dichloroethene (DCE), and vinyl chloride (VC) has been found in the surficial aquifer beneath the Naval Aviation Depot at the U.S. Naval Air Station, Jacksonville, Florida. The affected area is designated Operable Unit 3 (OU3) and covers 134 acres adjacent...
Chinese tallow: Invading the southeastern Coastal Plain
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2000, Fact Sheet 154-00
Chinese tallow is an ornamental tree with colorful autumn foliage that can survive full sunlight and shade, flooding, drought, and in some cases fire. To horticulturists this kind of tree sounds like a dream, but to ecologists, land managers, and land owners this kind of tree can be a nightmare,...
Probability models for estimation of number and costs of landslides
Robert A. Crovelli
2000, Open-File Report 2000-249