WTAQ: A Computer Program for Calculating Drawdowns and Estimating Hydraulic Properties for Confined and Water-Table Aquifers
Paul M. Barlow, Allen F. Moench
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4225
The computer program WTAQ calculates hydraulic-head drawdowns in a confined or water-table aquifer that result from pumping at a well of finite or infinitesimal diameter. The program is based on an analytical model of axial-symmetric ground-water flow in a homogeneous and anisotropic aquifer. The program allows for well-bore storage and...
A physically-based earthquake recurrence model for estimation of long-term earthquake probabilities
William L. Ellsworth, Mark V. Matthews, Robert M. Nadeau, Stuart P. Nishenko, Paul A. Reasenberg, Robert W. Simpson
1999, Open-File Report 99-522
A physically-motivated model for earthquake recurrence based on the Brownian relaxation oscillator is introduced. The renewal process defining this point process model can be described by the steady rise of a state variable from the ground state to failure threshold as modulated by Brownian motion. Failure times in this model...
USGS Map-on-Demand Printing
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1999, Fact Sheet 074-99
Currently, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) uses conventional lithographic printing techniques to produce paper copies of most of its mapping products. This practice is not economical for those products that are in low demand. With the advent of newer technologies, high-speed, large-format printers have been coupled with innovative computer software...
Comparison of methods for computing streamflow statistics for Pennsylvania streams
Marla H. Ehlke, Lloyd A. Reed
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4068
Methods for computing streamflow statistics intended for use on ungaged locations on Pennsylvania streams are presented and compared to frequency distributions of gaged streamflow data. The streamflow statistics used in the comparisons include the 7-day 10-year low flow, 50-year flood flow, and the 100-year flood flow; additional statistics are presented....
Characterization and simulation of the quantity and quality of water in the Highland Lakes, Texas, 1983-92
Timothy H. Raines, Walter Rast
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4087
The Highland Lakes, located in central Texas, are a series of seven reservoirs on the Colorado River (Lake Buchanan, Inks Lake, Lake Lyndon B. Johnson, Lake Marble Falls, Lake Travis, Lake Austin, and Town Lake). The reservoirs provide hydroelectric power for the area. In addition, Lake Austin and Town Lake...
Ground-water system, estimation of aquifer hydraulic properties, and effects of pumping on ground-water flow in Triassic sedimentary rocks in and near Lansdale, Pennsylvania
Lisa A. Senior, Daniel J. Goode
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4228
Ground water in Triassic-age sedimentary fractured-rock aquifers in the area of Lansdale, Pa., is used as drinking water and for industrial supply. In 1979, ground water in the Lansdale area was found to be contaminated with trichloroethylene, tetrachloroethylene, and other man-made organic compounds, and in 1989, the area was placed...
Perennial snow and ice volumes on Iliamna Volcano, Alaska, estimated with ice radar and volume modeling
Dennis C. Trabant
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4176
The volume of four of the largest glaciers on Iliamna Volcano was estimated using the volume model developed for evaluating glacier volumes on Redoubt Volcano. The volume model is controlled by simulated valley cross sections that are constructed by fitting third-order polynomials to the shape of the valley walls exposed...
Estimation of potential runoff-contributing areas in Kansas using topographic and soil information
Kyle E. Juracek
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4242
Digital topographic and soil information was used to estimate potential runoff-contributing areas throughout Kansas. The results then were used to compare 91 selected subbasins representing soil, slope, and runoff variability. Potential runoff-contributing areas were estimated collectively for the processes of infiltration-excess and saturation-excess overland flow using a set of environmental...
Hydrogeology, water use, and simulation of flow in the High Plains aquifer in northwestern Oklahoma, southeastern Colorado, southwestern Kansas, northeastern New Mexico, and northwestern Texas
Richard L. Luckey, Mark F. Becker
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4104
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Oklahoma Water Resources Board, began a three-year study of the High Plains aquifer in northwestern Oklahoma in 1996. The primary purpose of this study was to develop a ground-water flow model to provide the Water Board with the information it needs to...
Ground-water resources in Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park, Island of Hawaii, and numerical simulation of the effects of ground-water withdrawals
Delwyn S. Oki, Gordon W. Tribble, William R. Souza, Edward L. Bolke
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4070
Within the Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park, which was established in 1978, the ground-water flow system is composed of brackish water overlying saltwater. Ground-water levels measured in the Park range from about 1 to 2 feet above mean sea level, and fluctuate daily by about 0.5 to 1.5 feet in response...
Effects of historical land-cover changes on flooding and sedimentation, North Fish Creek, Wisconsin
Faith A. Fitzpatrick, James C. Knox, Heather E. Whitman
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4083
North Fish Creek, a Wisconsin tributary to Lake Superior, is an important recreational fishery that is potentially limited by the loss of aquatic habitat caused by accelerated flooding and sedimentation. A study of the historical flooding and sedimentation characteristics of North Fish Creek was done to determine how North Fish...
Simulated effects of projected ground-water withdrawals in the Floridan aquifer system, greater Orlando metropolitan area, east-central Florida
Louis C. Murray Jr., Keith J. Halford
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4058
Ground-water levels in the Floridan aquifer system within the greater Orlando metropolitan area are expected to decline because of a projected increase in the average pumpage rate from 410 million gallons per day in 1995 to 576 million gallons per day in 2020. The potential decline in ground-water levels and...
Hydrogeologic framework and sampling design for an assessment of agricultural pesticides in ground water in Pennsylvania
Bruce D. Lindsey, Tammy M. Bickford
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4076
State agencies responsible for regulating pesticides are required by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to develop state management plans for specific pesticides. A key part of these management plans includes assessing the potential for contamination of ground water by pesticides throughout the state. As an example of how a statewide...
Simulation of ground-water flow and pumpage in Kings and Queens Counties, Long Island, New York
Paul E. Misut, Jack Monti Jr.
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4071
The potential effects of using ground water as a supplemental source of supply in Kings and Queens Counties were evaluated through a 4-layer finite-difference ground-water-flow model with a uniform grid spacing of 1,333 feet. Hydraulic properties and boundary conditions of an existing regional ground-water-flow model of Long Island with a...
Geohydrology and numerical simulation of the ground-water flow system of Kona, Island of Hawaii
Delwyn S. Oki
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4073
Prior to the early 1990's, ground-water in the Kona area, which is in the western part of the island of Hawaii, was withdrawn from wells located within about 3 mi from the coast where water levels were less than 10 feet above sea level. In 1990, exploratory drilling in the...
Relation of arsenic, iron, and manganese in ground water to aquifer type, bedrock lithogeochemistry, and land use in the New England coastal basins
Joseph D. Ayotte, Martha G. Nielsen, Gilpin R. Robinson Jr., Richard B. Moore
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4162
In a study of arsenic concentrations in public-supply wells in the New England Coastal Basins, concentrations at or above 0.005 mg/L (milligrams per liter) were detected in more samples of water from wells completed in bedrock (25 percent of all samples) than in water from wells completed in stratified drift...
Simulation of effects of wastewater discharges on Sand Creek and lower Caddo Creek near Ardmore, Oklahoma
Edwin A. Wesolowski
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4022
A streamflow and water-quality model was developed for reaches of Sand and Caddo Creeks in south-central Oklahoma to simulate the effects of wastewater discharge from a refinery and a municipal treatment plant.The purpose of the model was to simulate conditions during low streamflow when the conditions controlling dissolved-oxygen concentrations are...
Estimation of magnitude and frequency of floods for streams in Puerto Rico: New empirical models
Orlando Ramos-Gines
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4142
Flood-peak discharges and frequencies are presented for 57 gaged sites in Puerto Rico for recurrence intervals ranging from 2 to 500 years. The log-Pearson Type III distribution, the methodology recommended by the United States Interagency Committee on Water Data, was used to determine the magnitude and frequency of floods at...
A precipitation-runoff model for part of the Ninemile Creek watershed near Camillus, Onondaga County, New York
Phillip J. Zarriello
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4201
A precipitation-runoff model, HSPF (Hydrologic Simulation Program Fortran), of a 41.7 square mile part of the Ninemile Creek watershed near Camillus, in central New York, was developed and calibrated to predict the hydrological effects of future suburban development on streamflow, and the effects of stormwater detention on flooding of Ninemile...
Regional water-level changes for the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer in Iowa, 1975 to 1997
Michael J. Turco
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4134
The Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer is one of the principal sources of ground water for industry and municipalities in Iowa. The 1998 Iowa Administrative Code Chapter 52.4(3) states that water levels in the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer are not to decline more than 200 feet from the 1977 baseline. The potentiometric-surface map of the...
Processes affecting dissolved-oxygen concentrations in the lower reaches of Middle Fork and South Fork Beargrass Creek, Jefferson County, Kentucky
Kevin J. Ruhl, G. Lynn Jarrett
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4218
This report provides data on dissolved-oxygen (DO) concentrations and identifies the environmental processes that most affect DO concentrations during base-flow periods in the lower reaches of Middle Fork and South Fork Beargrass Creek in Jefferson County, Kentucky. These reaches are affected by inputs from combined-sewer overflows. Sections of the lower reaches of the two streams run through single-family...
Hydrology, geomorphology, and flood profiles of the Mendenhall River, Juneau, Alaska
Edward G. Neal, Randy H. Host
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4150
Water-surface-profile elevations for the 2-, 20-, 25-, 50-, and 100-year floods were computed for the Mendenhall River near Juneau, Alaska, using the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center River Analysis System model. The peak discharges for the selected recurrence intervals were determined using the standard log-Pearson type III...
Age, double porosity, and simple reaction modifications for the MOC3D ground-water transport model
Daniel J. Goode
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4041
This report documents modifications for the MOC3D ground-water transport model to simulate (a) ground-water age transport; (b) double-porosity exchange; and (c) simple but flexible retardation, decay, and zero-order growth reactions. These modifications are incorporated in MOC3D version 3.0. MOC3D simulates the transport of a single solute using the method-of-characteristics numerical procedure....
Conceptual Model and Numerical Simulation of the Ground-Water-Flow System in the Unconsolidated Sediments of Thurston County, Washington
B. W. Drost, D.M. Ely, W. E. Lum II
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4165
The demand for water in Thurston County has increased steadily in recent years because of a rapid growth in population. Surface-water resources in the county have been fully appropriated for many years and Thurston County now relies entirely on ground water for new supplies of water. Thurston County is underlain...
Sources of phosphorus in stormwater and street dirt from two urban residential basins in Madison, Wisconsin, 1994-95
Robert J. Waschbusch, W.R. Selbig, Roger T. Bannerman
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4021
Eutrophication is a common problem for lakes in agricultural and urban areas, such as Lakes Wingra and Mendota in Madison, Wisconsin. This report describes a study to estimate the sources of phosphorus, a major contributor to eutrophication, to Lakes Wingra and Mendota from two small urban residential drainage basins. The...