Nearshore distribution and abundance of Dungeness crabs in Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska
Charles E. O’Clair, J. Lincoln Freese, Robert P. Stone, Thomas C. Shirley, Erica H. Leder, S. James Taggart, Gordon H. Kruse
Daniel R. Engstrom, editor(s)
1995, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the third Glacier Bay science symposium
As part of an ongoing, multi-agency study to determine the effects of closure of the commercial fishery for Dungeness crabs, Cancer magister, on crab population structure we examined patterns of distribution and abundance of crabs in nearshore habitats at five locations in and near Glacier Bay National Park. Sampling was...
Water-use efficiency as monitored by dendrochemistry
R.P. Guyette, B.E. Cutter
T.E. Lewis, editor(s)
1995, Book chapter, Tree rings as indicators of ecosystem health
Water resources data, New York, water year 1994. Volume 2. Long Island
A. G. Spinello, G. Pena-Cruz, K. McGrath, V. K. Eagen
1995, Water Data Report NY-94-2
Water resources data for the 1994 water year for New York consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage, contents, and water quality of lakes and reservoirs; and water levels and water quality of ground-water wells. This volume contains records for water discharge at 20 gaging...
The role of palynology in paleoecological analyses of Tertiary coals
D. J. Nichols
1995, International Journal of Coal Geology (28) 139-159
Pollen, spores, and other plant microfossils are important constituents of Tertiary coals, both as petrographic components (the maceral sporinite) and as distinctive indicators of the nature of the depositional environment in which the coal-forming peat accumulated. Palynological analyses, which have been...
How wet is wet? Precipitation constraints on late Quaternary climate in the southern Arabian Peninsula
W.W. Wood, Jeffrey L. Imes
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 263-268
It is generally recognized that the southern Arabian Peninsula has had two wet periods in the late Quaternary. To quantify ‘wet’ a 28 000 year old capillary surface associated with a paleowater-table was mapped and used as a surrogate for the water table in a ground-water model. Analysis of this...
Areal extent of freshwater from an experimental release of Mississippi River Water into Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana, May 1994
Brian E. McCallum
1995, Conference Paper, Coastal Zone: Proceedings of the Symposium on Coastal and Ocean Management
The effects of the release of freshwater from the Mississippi river into the Lake Pontchartrain was evaluated. The study determined the delineation of the areal extent of the freshwater plume in the lake, intensively sampled lake and river water and bed sediment to determine the effects on water quality in...
Geohydrology and water quality of the North Platte River alluvial aquifer, Garden County, Western Nebraska
Gregory V. Steele, James C. Cannia
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
In 1993, a 3-year study was begun to describe the geohydrology and water quality of the North Platte River alluvial aquifer near Oshkosh, Garden County, Nebraska. The study's objectives are to evaluate the geohydrologic characteristics of the alluvial aquifer and to establish a network of observation wells for long-term monitoring...
Biotic and abiotic processes controlling water chemistry during snowmelt at rabbit ears pass, Rocky Mountains, Colorado, U.S.A.
N.E. Peters, G.H. Leavesley
1995, Conference Paper, Water, Air, and Soil Pollution
The chemical composition of snowmelt, groundwater, and streamwater was monitored during the spring of 1991 and 1992 in a 200-ha subalpine catchment on the western flank of the Rocky Mountains near Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Most of the snowmelt occurred during a one-month period annually that began in mid-May 1991 and...
Applications of isotopes to tracing sources of solutes and water in shallow systems
Carol Kendall, David P. Krabbenhoft
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
New awareness of the potential danger to water supplies posed by the use of agricultural chemicals has focused attention on the nature of groundwater recharge and the mobility of various solutes, especially nitrate and pesticides, in shallow systems. A better understanding of hydrologic flowpaths and solute sources is required to...
Variations of weekly atmospheric deposition for multiple collectors at a site on the shore of Lake Okeechobee, Florida
N.E. Peters, R.S. Reese
1995, Atmospheric Environment (29) 179-187
Eight wet/dry precipitation collectors were modified to house four additional dryfall collectors and one bulk precipitation collector to sample atmospheric deposition for 12 weeks in a small area on the southwestern shore of Lake Okeechobee; sample contamination, primarily by insects, reduced the comparison to the last nine weeks. The deposition...
Effect of ground-water/surface-water interactions on nitrate concentrations in discharge from the South Platte River alluvial aquifer, Colorado
P.B. McMahon, J.K. Böhlke
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
Concentrations of dissolved nitrate in recharge-area water from a 200-km2 segment of the South Platte River alluvial aquifer near Greeley, Colorado, range from less than 0.1 to 58 mg/l as nitrogen, and the median concentration is 26 mg/l as nitrogen. Hydraulic-head data indicate that this nitrate-enriched ground water move toward...
Effects of climate on chemical weathering in watersheds
A. F. White, A.E. Blum
1995, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (59) 1729-1747
Climatic effects on chemical weathering are evaluated by correlating variations On solute concentrations and fluxes with temperature, precipitation, runoff, and evapotranspiration (ET) for a worldwide distribution of sixty-eight watersheds underlain by granitoid rock types. Stream solute concentrations are strongly correlated with proportional ET loss, and evaporative concentration makes stream solute concentrations an...
Assessment of gully-control structures in the Rio Nutria watershed, Zuni reservation, New Mexico
Allen C. Gellis, Andres Cheama, Vanissa Laahty, Sheldon Lalio
1995, Water Resources Bulletin (31) 633-646
During the latter part of the 19th century and the early part of the 20th century, a major cycle of erosion, arroyo cutting, and gullying occurred in the southwestern United States. Since this erosion cycle began, many projects to control erosion, such as the Civilian Conservation Corps projects in the...
Frequent outburst floods from South Tahoma Glacier, Mount Rainier, USA: Relation to debris flows, meteorological origin, and implications for subglacial hydrology
J. S. Walder, C. L. Driedger
1995, Journal of Glaciology (41) 1-10
Destructive debris flows occur frequently at glacierized Mount Rainier volcano, Washington, U.S.A. Twenty-three such flows have occurred in the Tahoma Creek valley since 1967. Hydrologic and geomorphic evidence indicate that all or nearly all of these flows began as outburst floods from South Tahoma Glacier. Flood waters...
Fluxes of water and solute in a coastal wetland sediment. 2. Effect of macropores on solute exchange with surface water
J. W. Harvey, W.K. Nuttle
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 109-125
Chloride was highly concentrated relative to seawater in matrix porewater but was comparatively dilute in macropores. Concentration differences in pore-size classes declined with depth until indistinguishable below 10 cm. The segregated chloride distribution can be explained if recharge to the sediment occurred by downward infiltration in macropores and discharge occurred...
Relation between stream-water quality and geohydrology during base-flow conditions, Roberts creek watershed, Clayton County, Iowa
Stephen J. Kalkhoff
1995, Water Resources Bulletin (31) 593-604
An investigation to determine the relation between stream water quality and geohydrology in the Roberts Creek watershed, Clayton County, Iowa, was conducted during selected base-flow periods in 1988-90. Discharge measurements were made and water samples collected for analyses of nutrients and selected herbicides in 19 subbasins along the main stem...
Mercury cycling in the Allequash Creek watershed, northern Wisconsin
D. P. Krabbenhoft, J.M. Benoit, Christopher L. Babiarz, J.P. Hurley, A.W. Andren
1995, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (80) 425-433
Although there have been recent significant gains in our understanding of mercury (Hg) cycling in aquatic environments, few studies have addressed Hg cycling on a watershed scale in particular, attention to Hg species transfer between watershed components (upland soils, groundwater, wetlands, streams, and lakes) has been lacking. This study describes...
Concentrations, transport and biological effects of dormant spray pesticides in the San Francisco Estuary, California
K.M. Kuivila, C.G. Foe
1995, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (14) 1141-1150
The transport and biological effects of dormant spray pesticides were examined in the San Francisco Estuary, California, by measuring dissolved- pesticide concentrations and estimating toxicity using bioassays at a series of sites in January and February 1993. Distinct pulses of pesticides, including diazinon, methidathion, and chlorpyrifos, were detected in the...
An earthquake instability model based on faults containing high fluid-pressure compartments
D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee
1995, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (145) 717-745
It has been proposed that large strike-slip faults such as the San Andreas contain water in seal-bounded compartments. Arguments based on heat flow and stress orientation suggest that in most of the compartments, the water pressure is so high that the average shear strength of the fault is less than...
North Atlantic deepwater temperature change during late pliocene and late quaternary climatic cycles
Gary S. Dwyer, T. M. Cronin, P.A. Baker, M.E. Raymo, Jeffrey S. Buzas, T. Correge
1995, Science (270) 1347-1351
Variations in the ratio of magnesium to calcium (Mg/Ca) in fossil ostracodes from Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 607 in the deep North Atlantic show that the change in bottom water temperature during late Pliocene 41,000-year obliquity cycles averaged 1.5°C between 3.2 and 2.8 million years ago (Ma) and increased...
Slug tests in unconfined formations: An assessment of the bouwer and rice technique
Z. Hyder, J.J. Butler Jr.
1995, Groundwater (33) 16-22
The slug test is one of the most common techniques for the in situ estimation of hydraulic conductivity in unconfined flow systems. Recently, a mathematical model describing the flow of ground water in response to a slug test in an unconfined flow system has been...
Modeling photosynthetically active radiation in water of Tampa Bay, Florida, with emphasis on the geometry of incident irradiance
R. L. Miller, B. F. McPherson
1995, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (40) 359-377
A model is developed that uses a simplified geometric description of incident direct solar beam and diffuse skylight. The model incorporates effects of solar elevation angle and cloudiness on the amount of in-air photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) that passes through the air-water interface and on K0 in waters of relatively...
Fluid-inclusion evidence for past temperature fluctuations in the Kilauea East Rift Zone geothermal area, Hawaii
Keith E. Bargar, Terry E.C. Keith, Frank A. Trusdell
1995, Geothermics (24) 639-659
Heating and freezing data were obtained for fluid inclusions in hydrothermal quartz, calcite, and anhydrite from several depths in three scientific observation holes drilled along the lower East Rift Zone of Kilauea volcano, Hawaii. Compositions of the inclusion fluids range from dilute meteoric water to highly modified sea water concentrated...
Computational scheme for the prediction of metal ion binding by a soil fulvic acid
J.A. Marinsky, M.M. Reddy, J.H. Ephraim, A.S. Mathuthu
1995, Analytica Chimica Acta (302) 309-322
The dissociation and metal ion binding properties of a soil fulvic acid have been characterized. Information thus gained was used to compensate for salt and site heterogeneity effects in metal ion complexation by the fulvic acid. An earlier computational scheme has been modified by incorporating an additional step which improves...
A survey of natural aggregate properties and characteristics important in remote sensing and airborne geophysics
D. H. Knepper Jr., W. H. Langer, S. Miller
1995, Nonrenewable Resources (4) 99-120
Natural aggregate is vital to the construction industry. Although natural aggregate is a high volume/low value commodity that is abundant, new sources are becoming increasingly difficult to find and develop because of rigid industry specifications, political considerations, development and transportation costs, and environmental concerns. There are two primary sources of...