Hydrogeologic setting, hydraulic properties, and ground-water flow at the O-Field area of Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland
William S.L. Banks, Barry S. Smith, Colleen A. Donnelly
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4248
The U.S. Army disposed chemical agents, laboratory materials, and unexploded ordnance at O-Field in the Edgewood Area of Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, from before World War II until at least the 1950's. Soil, ground water, surface water, and wetland sediments in the O-Field area were contaminated from the disposal activity....
Sample analysis and modeling to determine GPR capability for mapping fluvial mine tailings in the Coeur d'Alene River channel
Michelle L. Roth
1996, Open-File Report 96-515
Prediction of traveltime and longitudinal dispersion in rivers and streams
Harvey E. Jobson
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4013
The possibility of a contaminant being accidentally or intentionally spilled upstream from a water supply is a constant concern to those diverting and using water from streams and rivers. Although many excellent models are available to estimate traveltime and dispersion, none can be used with confidence before calibration and verification...
Simulation of tidal-flow, circulation, and flushing of the Charlotte Harbor Estuarine System, Florida
C. R. Goodwin
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4153
A two-dimensional circulation and constituent- transport model, SIMSYS2D, was used to simulate tidal-flow, circulation, and flushing characteristics in Charlotte Harbor. The model was calibrated and verified against field observations of stage,discharge, and velocity. Standard errors averaged about 3 percent of the range in stage at the tide stations and between...
Surface-water quality assessment of the Clover Creek basin, Pierce County, Washington, 1991-92
K. A. McCarthy
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4181
Increasing urbanization in the 67-square-mile Clover Creek Basin has generated interest in the effects of land-use changes on local water quality. To investigate these effects, water-quality and streamflow data were collected from 19 surface-water sites in the basin over a 16-month period from January 1991 through April 1992. These data...
Modelling of a magnetic and gravity anomaly profile from the Dragoon Mountains to Sierra Vista, southeastern Arizona
P.E. Gettings, M. E. Gettings
1996, Open-File Report 96-288
Numerical Analysis of Ground-Water Flow and Salinity in the Ewa Area, Oahu, Hawaii
Delwyn S. Oki, William R. Souza, Edward I. Bolke, Glenn R. Bauer
1996, Open-File Report 96-442
The coastal plain in the Ewa area of southwestern Oahu, Hawaii, is part of a larger, nearly continuous sedimentary coastal plain along Oahu's southern coast. The coastal sediments are collectively known as caprock because they impede the free discharge of ground water from the underlying volcanic aquifers. The caprock is...
Tidal-flow, circulation, and flushing characteristics of Kings Bay, Citrus County, Florida
K.M. Hammett, C. R. Goodwin, G.L. Sanders
1996, Open-File Report 96-230
Kings Bay is an estuary on the gulf coast of peninsular Florida with a surface area of less than one square mile. It is a unique estuarine system with no significant inflowing rivers or streams. As much as 99 percent of the freshwater entering the bay originates from multiple spring...
Geohydrology of alluvium and terrace deposits of the Cimarron River from freedom to Guthrie, Oklahoma
G. P. Adams, D. L. Bergman
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4066
Ground water in 1,305 square miles of Quaternary alluvium and terrace deposits along the Cimarron River from Freedom to Guthrie, Oklahoma, is used for irrigation, municipal, stock, and domestic supplies. As much as 120 feet of clay, silt, sand, and gravel form an unconfined aquifer with an average saturated thickness...
Flexible digestion strategies and trace metal assimilation in marine bivalves
Alan W. Decho, Samuel N. Luoma
1996, Limnology and Oceanography (41) 568-572
Pulse-chase experiments show that two marine bivalves take optimal advantage of different types of particulate food by varying food retention time in a flexible two-phase digestive system. For example, carbon is efficiently assimilated from bacteria by subjecting nearly all the ingested bacteria to prolonged digestion. Prolonging digestion also enhances assimilation...
San Francisco Bay salinity: observations, numerical simulation, and statistical models
D. H. Peterson, D.R. Cayan, M. D. Dettinger, M. Noble, L.G. Riddle, L. E. Schemel, R. E. Smith, R.J. Uncles, R. Walters
J.T. Hollibaugh, editor(s)
1996, Book chapter, San Francisco Bay: the ecosystem
No abstract available....
Analysis of tests of subsurface injection, storage, and recovery of freshwater in the lower Floridan aquifer, Okeechobee County, Florida
Vicente Quinones-Aponte, Kevin Kotun, J. F. Whitley
1996, Open-File Report 95-765
A series of freshwater subsurface injection, storage, and recovery tests were conducted at an injection-well site near Lake Okeechobee in Okeechobee County, Florida, to assess the recoverability of injected canal water from the Lower Floridan aquifer. At the study site, the Lower Floridan aquifer is characterized as having four local,...
A spatial decision support system for coastal management: A research project at the National Wetlands Research Center of the U.S. Geological Survey
Wei Ji, James B. Johnston
1996, Conference Paper, GIS application for fisheries and coastal resources management
Environmental resource managers and scientists are being challenged in developing strategies to manage complex coastal systems. From an ecological perspective, there are myriad dynamic, interrelated natural and human-induced processes that affect the health and stability of coastal systems. However, the problems associated with managing coastal resources usually transcend purely ecological...
The Bumpus house sparrow data: A reanalysis using structural equation models
Bruce H. Pugesek, Adrian Tomer
1996, Evolutionary Ecology (10) 387-404
We analysed the data of H.C. Bumpus on the survival of house sparrows (Passer domesticus) using structural equation modelling techniques. Using data on seven morphological variables measured by Bumpus, we tested and confirmed a three-factor model that characterized physical attributes for general size, leg size and head size....
Small watershed studies: Analytical approaches for understanding ecosystem response to environmental change
Thomas G. Huntington, R. P. Hooper, Peter S. Murdoch
1996, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Watershed '96 Conference--Moving ahead together
Biogeochemical studies in small watersheds provide an analytical approach to understand how ecosystems respond to natural climatic variations and human-induced environmental change. Small watersheds, usually less than 5 km2, are small enough to permit characterization and understanding of ecosystem processes within relatively simple, homogeneous biological and physical settings; yet they are large enough to...
Evolution and history of incised valleys: The Mobile Bay model
Jack Kindinger
1996, Report
No abstract available....
Oxygen transport and pyrite oxidation in unsaturated coal-mine spoil
Weixing Guo, Charles A. Cravotta III,
1996, Conference Paper, Proceedings America Society of Mining and Recreation
An understanding of the mechanisms of oxygen (02) transport in unsaturated mine spoil is necessary to design and implement effective measures to exclude 02 from pyritic materials and to control the formation of acidic mine drainage. Partial pressure of oxygen (Po2) in pore gas, chemistry of pore water, and temperature...
Quality control considerations for the determination of acid-volatile sulfide and simultaneously extracted metals in sediments
William G. Brumbaugh, Jesse W. Arms
1996, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (15) 282-285
The determination of acid-volatile sulfide (AVS) and simultaneously extracted metals (SEMs) in sediment by treatment with dilute HCl shows promise as a tool for predicting the potential for metal toxicity to sediment-dwelling organisms. Effective quality control measures must be developed if this method is to become a reliable procedure and...
Estimating aquatic toxicity as determined through laboratory tests of great lakes sediments containing complex mixtures of environmental contaminants
1996, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (41) 255-289
We developed and evaluated a total toxic units modeling approach for predicting mean toxicity as measured in laboratory tests for Great Lakes sediments containing complex mixtures of environmental contaminants (e.g., polychlorinated biphenyls, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, pesticides, chlorinated dioxins, and metals). The approach incorporates equilibrium partitioning and organic carbon control of...
Selenium bioaccumulation and hazards in a fish community affected by coal fly ash effluent
John M. Besser, John P. Giesy, Russell W. Brown, Julie M. Buell, G. A. Dawson
1996, Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (35) 7-15
Bioaccumulation of selenium (Se) in the fish community of Pigeon River/Pigeon Lake, which receives inputs of Se from a coal fly ash disposal facility, was studied to assess potential hazards of Se to fish, wildlife, and humans. Se concentrations in fish from sites receiving seepage and effluents from fly ash...
Assessment of intrinsic bioremediation of gasoline contamination in the shallow aquifer, Laurel Bay Exchange, Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, South Carolina
J. E. Landmeyer, Francis Chapelle, P. M. Bradley
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4026
Laboratory, field, and digital solute-transport- modeling studies demonstrate that microorganisms indigenous to the shallow ground-water system at Laurel Bay Exchange, Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, South Carolina, can degrade petroleum hydrocarbons in gasoline released at the site. Microorganisms in aquifer sediments incubated in the laboratory under aerobic and anaerobic conditions...
Three-dimensional models of deformation near strike-slip faults
Uri S. ten Brink, Rafael Katzman, Jian Lin
1996, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (101) 16205-16220
We use three-dimensional elastic models to help guide the kinematic interpretation of crustal deformation associated with strike-slip faults. Deformation of the brittle upper crust in the vicinity of strike-slip fault systems is modeled with the assumption that upper crustal deformation is driven by the relative plate motion in the upper...
Seafloor environments in Cape Cod Bay, a large coastal embayment
H.J. Knebel, R.R. Rendigs, J. H. List, Richard P. Signell
1996, Marine Geology (133) 11-33
Cape Cod Bay is a glacial, semi-enclosed embayment that has a patchy distribution of modern seafloor sedimentary environments of erosion or nondeposition, deposition, and sediment reworking. Sidescan-sonar records and supplemental bathymetric, sedimentary, subbottom, and physical-oceanographic data indicate that the characteristics and distribution of these three categories of bottom environments are...
Late Holocene alluvial geomorphology of the Virgin River in the Zion National Park area, southwest Utah
Richard Hereford, Gordon C. Jacoby, V. Alexander McCord
1996, GSA Special Papers (310) 1-41
This study traces the geomorphic development of the alluvial valley of the Virgin River in the Zion National Park region of southwest Utah. The purpose is to identify, date, and interpret the patterns of erosion and deposition that formed the alluvial valley over the past 1,000 years. This information is...
Comment on “The stress state implied by dislocation models of subduction deformation” by J. J. Douglass and B. A. Buffett
James C. Savage
1996, Geophysical Research Letters (23) 2709-2710
No abstract available. ...