Land-Cover Trends of the Sierra Nevada Ecoregion, 1973-2000
Christian G. Raumann, Christopher E. Soulard
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5011
The U.S. Geological Survey has developed and is implementing the Land Cover Trends project to estimate and describe the temporal and spatial distribution and variability of contemporary land-use and land-cover change in the United States. As part of the Land Cover Trends project, the purpose of this study was to...
Nutrient Loads and Ground-Water Residence Times in an Agricultural Basin in North-Central Connecticut
John R. Mullaney
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5278
Nutrient loads from ground-water discharge were studied in Broad Brook Basin, a 15.8-square mile basin in north-central Connecticut, dominated by agricultural activity. Loads were calculated, along with the travel times of ground water from recharge to discharge areas, to estimate the time required for the effects of Best Management Practices...
Estimates of ground-water recharge to the Yakima River Basin aquifer system, Washington, for predevelopment and current land-use and land-cover conditions
J. J. Vaccaro, T. D. Olsen
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5007
Two models were used to estimate ground-water recharge to the Yakima River Basin aquifer system, Washington for predevelopment (estimate of natural conditions) and current (a multi-year, 1995-2004, composite) land-use and land-cover conditions. The models were the Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System (PRMS) and the Deep Percolation Model (DPM) that are contained in...
Proceedings of the First All-USGS Modeling Conference, November 14-17, 2005
Anne Frondorf, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5308
Preface: The First All-USGS Modeling Conference was held November 14-17, 2005, in Port Angeles, Washington. U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) participants at the conference came from USGS headquarters and all USGS regions and represented all four science disciplines-Biology, Geography, Geology, and Water. The conference centered on selected oral case study presentations...
Water-Level Changes in the High Plains Aquifer, Predevelopment to 2005 and 2003 to 2005
V. L. McGuire
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5324
The High Plains aquifer underlies 111.4 million acres (174,000 square miles) in parts of eight States-Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming. Water-level declines began in parts of the High Plains aquifer soon after the beginning of extensive ground-water irrigation. This report presents water-level changes in...
A Deep Percolation Model for Estimating Ground-Water Recharge: Documentation of Modules for the Modular Modeling System of the U.S. Geological Survey
J. J. Vaccaro
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5318
A daily water-budget model for estimating ground-water recharge, the Deep Percolation Model, was modularized for inclusion into the U.S. Geological Survey's Modular Modeling System. The model was modularized in order to facilitate estimation of ground-water recharge under a large range in climatic, landscape, and land-use and land-cover conditions. The model...
Ground-Water Quality of the Northern High Plains Aquifer, 1997, 2002-04
Jennifer S. Stanton, Sharon L. Qi
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5138
An assessment of ground-water quality in the northern High Plains aquifer was completed during 1997 and 2002-04. Ground-water samples were collected at 192 low-capacity, primarily domestic wells in four major hydrogeologic units of the northern High Plains aquifer-Ogallala Formation, Eastern Nebraska, Sand Hills, and Platte River Valley. Each well was...
Geostatistical Modeling of Sediment Abundance in a Heterogeneous Basalt Aquifer at the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho
John A. Welhan, Renee L. Farabaugh, Melissa J. Merrick, Steven R. Anderson
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5316
The spatial distribution of sediment in the eastern Snake River Plain aquifer was evaluated and modeled to improve the parameterization of hydraulic conductivity (K) for a subregional-scale ground-water flow model being developed by the U.S. Geological Survey. The aquifer is hosted within a layered series of permeable basalts within which...
Nutrient and Suspended-Sediment Trends in the Missouri River Basin, 1993-2003
Lori A. Sprague, Melanie L. Clark, David L. Rus, Ronald B. Zelt, Jennifer L. Flynn, Jerri V. Davis
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5231
Trends in streamflow and concentration of total nitrogen, nitrite plus nitrate, ammonia, total phosphorus, orthophosphorus, and suspended sediment were determined for the period from 1993 to 2003 at selected stream sites in the Missouri River Basin. Flow-adjusted trends in concentration (the trends that would have occurred in the absence of...
Hydrogeology of the Coconino Plateau and adjacent areas, Coconino and Yavapai Counties, Arizona
Donald J. Bills, Marilyn E. Flynn, Stephen A. Monroe
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5222
Two large, regional ground-water flow systems occur in the Coconino Plateau and adjacent areas: the C aquifer and the Redwall-Muav aquifer. The C aquifer occurs mainly in the eastern and southern parts of the 10,300-square-mile Coconino Plateau study area, and the Redwall-Muav aquifer underlies the entire study area. The C...
Tectonic setting and metallogenesis of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits in the Bonnifield Mining District, Northern Alaska Range: Chapter B in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, John N. Aleinikoff, Wayne R. Premo, Suzanne Paradis, Ilana Lohr-Schmidt
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-B
This paper summarizes the results of field and laboratory investigations, including whole-rock geochemistry and radiogenic isotopes, of outcrop and drill core samples from volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposits and associated metaigneous rocks in the Wood River area of the Bonnifield mining district, northern Alaska Range (see fig. 1 of Editors’...
Mapping known and potential mineral occurrences and host rocks in the Bonnifield Mining District using minimal cloud- and snow-cover ASTER data: Chapter E in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Bernard E. Hubbard, Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, Lawrence C. Rowan, Robert G. Eppinger
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-E
On July 8, 2003, the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) sensor acquired satellite imagery of a 60-kilometer-wide swath covering a portion of the Bonnifield mining district within the southernmost part of the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, under unusually favorable conditions of minimal cloud and snow cover. Although...
The biogeochemistry and occurrence of unusual plant species inhabiting acidic, metal-rich water, Red Mountain, Bonnifield district, Alaska Range: Chapter J in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Larry P. Gough, Robert G. Eppinger, Paul H. Briggs
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-J
This report presents results on the occurrence and biogeochemistry of unusual plant species, and of their supporting sediment, in an undisturbed volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit in the Tintina Gold Province (see fig. 1 of Editors’ Preface and Overview). The extraordinary plant assemblage found growing in the acidic metal-rich waters that...
Environmental geochemical study of Red Mountain--an undisturbed volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit in the Bonnifield District, Alaska range, east-central Alaska: Chapter I in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Robert G. Eppinger, Paul H. Briggs, Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, Stuart A. Giles, Larry P. Gough, Jane M. Hammarstrom, Bernard E. Hubbard
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-I
The Red Mountain volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposit exhibits well-constrained examples of acid-generating, metal-leaching, metal-precipitation, and self-mitigation (via co-precipitation, dilution, and neutralization) processes that occur in an undisturbed natural setting, a rare occurrence in North America. The unmined pyrite-rich deposit displays a remarkable environmental footprint of natural acid generation, high...
The Black Mountain tectonic zone--a reactivated northeast-trending crustal shear zone in the Yukon-Tanana Upland of east-central Alaska: Chapter D in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
J. Michael O’Neill, Warren C. Day, John N. Alienikoff, Richard W. Saltus
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-D
The Black Mountain tectonic zone in the YukonTanana terrane of east-central Alaska is a belt of diverse northeast-trending geologic features that can been traced across Black Mountain in the southeast corner of the Big Delta 1°×3° degree quadrangle. Geologic mapping in the larger scale B1 quadrangle of the Big Delta...
Matching magnetic trends and patterns across the Tintina fault, Alaska and Canada--evidence for offset of about 490 kilometers: Chapter C in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Richard W. Saltus
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-C
Magnetic anomaly patterns on opposite sides of the mapped Tintina fault in eastern Alaska and western Canada show an apparent offset of about 490 kilometers (km), probably of Eocene age. This estimate is compared with previous geologically based estimates of 400 to 430 km and paleomagnetically based estimates of more...
Landscape geochemistry near mineralized areas of eastern Alaska: Chapter H in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Bronwen Wang, Larry P. Gough, Richard B. Wanty, James G. Crock, Gregory K. Lee, Warren C. Day, Jim Vohden
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-H
The Pogo lode gold deposit was discovered in eastern Alaska in the early 1990s and provided the opportunity to study elemental distribution and mobility in the natural environment prior to mine development. Studying mineralized systems prior to mining allows us to compare the natural biogeochemical signature in mineralized versus nonmineralized...
Geology and origin of epigenetic lode gold deposits, Tintina Gold Province, Alaska and Yukon
Richard J. Goldfarb, Erin E. Marsh, Craig J. R. Hart, John L. Mair, Marti L. Miller, Craig Johnson
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-A
More than 50 million ounces of lode gold resources have been defined in the previous 15 years throughout accreted terranes of interior Alaska and in adjacent continental margin rocks of Yukon. The major deposits in this so-called Tintina Gold Province formed around 105 to 90 million years ago in east-central...
Surface-water, ground-water, and sediment geochemistry of epizonal and shear-hosted mineral deposits in the Tintina Gold Province--arsenic and antimony distribution and mobility: Chapter G in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Seth H. Mueller, Richard J. Goldfarb, Philip L. Verplanck, Thomas P. Trainor, Richard F. Sanzolone, Monique Adams
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-G
Epigenetic mineral deposits in the Tintina Gold Province are generally characterized by high concentrations of arsenic and antimony in their mineral assemblage. A total of 347 samples (ground water, surface water, and stream sediment) were collected to investigate the distribution and mobility of arsenic and antimony in the environment near...
Aufeis accumulations in stream bottoms in arctic and subarctic environments as a possible indicator of geologic structure: Chapter F in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Richard B. Wanty, Bronwen Wang, Jim Vohden, Warren C. Day, Larry P. Gough
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-F
Thick accumulations of ice, called “aufeis,” form during winter along stream and river valleys in arctic and subarctic regions. In high-gradient alpine streams, aufeis forms mostly as a result of ground-water discharge into the stream channel. The ice occludes this discharge, perturbing the steady-state condition, and causing an incremental rise...
U.S. Geological Survey reports on the Tintina Gold Province--products of recent Mineral Resources Program studies: Chapter K in Recent U.S. Geological Survey studies in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska, United States, and Yukon, Canada--results of a 5-year project
Larry P. Gough
Larry P. Gough, Warren C. Day, editor(s)
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5289-K
Distribution of ground-nesting marine birds along shorelines in Glacier Bay, southeastern Alaska: An assessment related to potential disturbance by back-country users
Mayumi L. Arimitsu, John F. Piatt, Marc D. Romano
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5278
With the exception of a few large colonies, the distribution of ground-nesting marine birds in Glacier Bay National Park in southeastern Alaska is largely unknown. As visitor use increases in back-country areas of the park, there is growing concern over the potential impact of human activities on breeding birds. During...
Hydrology and Flood Profiles of Duck Creek and Jordan Creek Downstream from Egan Drive, Juneau, Alaska
Janet H. Curran
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5323
Hydrologic and hydraulic updates for Duck Creek and the lower part of Jordan Creek in Juneau, Alaska, included computation of new estimates of peak streamflow magnitudes and new water-surface profiles for the 10-, 50-, 100-, and 500-year floods. Computations for the 2-, 5-, 10-, 25-, 50-, 100-, 200-, and 500-year...
San Diego Multiple Species Conservation Program (MSCP) Rare Plant Monitoring Review and Revision
Kathryn McEachern, Bruce M. Pavlik, Jon Rebman, Rob Sutter
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5016
Introduction The San Diego Multiple Species Conservation Program (MSCP) was developed for the conservation of plants and animals in the south part of San Diego County, under the California Natural Community Conservation Planning Act of 1991 (California Department of Fish and Game) and the Federal Endangered Species Act of 1973, as...
Monitoring post-fire vegetation rehabilitation projects: A common approach for non-forested ecosystems
Troy A. Wirth, David A. Pyke
2007, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5048
Emergency Stabilization and Rehabilitation (ES&R) and Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) treatments are short-term, high-intensity treatments designed to mitigate the adverse effects of wildfire on public lands. The federal government expends significant resources implementing ES&R and BAER treatments after wildfires; however, recent reviews have found that existing data from monitoring...