Surface water supply of the United States, 1966-70, part 16, Hawaii and other Pacific areas
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Water Supply Paper 2137
Elements needed in design of a ground-water-quality monitoring network in the Hawaiian Islands
Kiyoshi J. Takasaki
1977, Water Supply Paper 2041
The elements needed in the design of a ground-water-quality monitoring network in the Hawaiian Islands are described and summarized. The elements are given by geohydrologie units which represent areas where there are similarities in the occurrence of ground water or in the geology pertinent to the occurrence of ground water....
Hydrologic changes after logging in two small Oregon coastal watersheds
David Dell Harris
1977, Water Supply Paper 2037
Effects of clearcut, cable logging on the hydrologic characteristics of a small coastal stream in Oregon indicate an average 181-percent increase in sediment yield over a 7-year postlogging period. Annual runoff and high-flow volumes increased 19 and 1.1 inches (480 and 28 mm), respectively, after logging in the watershed. Clearcutting...
Ground-water levels in the United States, 1971-74, southwestern states
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Water Supply Paper 2162
Ground-water levels in the United States, 1974, southeastern states
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Water Supply Paper 2165
Geohydrology of North Eastern Province, Kenya
W.V. Swarzenski, Maurice John Mundorff
1977, Water Supply Paper 1757-N
Ground-water levels in the United States, 1973-74, northeastern states
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Water Supply Paper 2164
Maximum floodflows in the conterminous United States
John R. Crippen, Conrad D. Bue
1977, Water Supply Paper 1887
Peak floodflows from thousands of observation sites within the conterminous United States were studied to provide a guide for estimating potential maximum floodflows. Data were selected from 883 sites with drainage areas of less than 10,000 square miles (25,900 square kilometers) and were grouped into regional sets. Outstanding floods for...
Ground-water levels in the United States, 1971-74, northwestern states
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Water Supply Paper 2161
Ground-water levels in the United States, 1972-74, north-central states
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1977, Water Supply Paper 2163
Publication of ground-water level data for the United States in water-supply papers was begun by the Geological Survey in 1935. From 1935 through 1939, a single water-supply paper for each year covering the entire nation was issued (Water-Supply Papers 777, 817, 840, 845, and 886). Since then water-supply papers have...
Relation of bulk precipitation and evapotranspiration to water quality and water resources, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands
Donald George Jordan, Donald W. Fisher
1977, Water Supply Paper 1663-I
St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, lies in what can be considered a true maritime regime, being 600 miles (1000 kilometers) from the nearest continental landmass. The island is composed almost entirely of volcanic rocks mantled by a thin soil seldom more than 2 feet (60 centimeters) thick. Rainfall, averaging about 40...
Ground-water resources of Cambodia
William Charles Rasmussen, Gary M. Bradford
1977, Water Supply Paper 1608-P
Cambodia (now the Khmer Republic), in tropical, humid southeast Asia, has an area of 175,630 km and a population of about 5 million. The Mekong River, one of the world's largest rivers, flows through Cambodia. Also, the Tonle Sap (Grand Lac), a highly productive fresh-water lake, functions as a huge...
Modeling chloride movement in the alluvial aquifer at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, Colorado
Leonard F. Konikow
1977, Water Supply Paper 2044
A solute-transport model that can be used to predict the movement of dissolved chemicals in flowing ground water was applied to a problem of ground-water contamination at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, near Denver, Colo. The model couples a finite-difference solution to the ground-water flow equation with the method-of-characteristics solution to...
Hydrology and environmental aspects of Erie Canal (1817-99)
Walter Basil Langbein
1976, Water Supply Paper 2038
As the first major water project in the United States, the old Erie Canal provides an example of the hydrological and environmental consequences of water development. The available record shows that the project aroused environmental fears that the canal might be impaired by the adverse hydrologic effects of land development...
An appraisal of ground water for irrigation in the Appleton area, west-central Minnesota
Steven P. Larson
1976, Water Supply Paper 2039-B
Supplemental irrigation of well-drained sandy soils has prompted an evaluation of ground water in the Appleton area. Glacial drift aquifers are the largest source of ground water. The surficial outwash sand and gravel is the most readily available and the most areally extensive drift aquifer, and it underlies much of...
Surface water supply of the United States, 1966-1970, Part 11, Pacific slope basins in California, v. 1, basins from Tijuana River to Santa Maria River
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1976, Water Supply Paper 2128
Water in carbonate rocks of the Madison Group in southeastern Montana: A preliminary evaluation
W. Roger Miller
1976, Water Supply Paper 2043
The Madison Group of Mississippian age comprises, from oldest to youngest, the Lodgepole and Mission Canyon Limestones and the Charles Formation. The Madison crops out in the Bighorn and Pryor Mountains and in the mountains west of the study area. These rocks consist of cyclically deposited normal-marine carbonates and restricted-marine...
Surface water supply of the United States, 1966-70, Part 1, North Atlantic slope basins, v. 3, Basins from Maryland to York River
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1976, Water Supply Paper 2103
Quality of surface waters of the United States, 1970, Parts 9 and 10, Colorado River basin and The Great Basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1976, Water Supply Paper 2158
Surface water supply of the United States, 1966-70, Part 5, Hudson Bay and upper Mississippi River basins, v. 1, Hudson Bay basin
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1976, Water Supply Paper 2113
Hydrology and sedimentation of Bixler Run Basin, central Pennsylvania
Lloyd A. Reed
1976, Water Supply Paper 1798-N
Rainfall, streamflow, stream chemical, and sediment discharge data were collected from Bixler Run near Loysville, Pa., during the period from February 1954 to September 1969 as part of a project to evaluate sediment discharge from an agricultural area in which soil-conservation techniques were being adopted at a moderate rate. The...
Surface water supply of the United States, 1966-70, Part 11, Pacific slope basins in California, v. 2, Basins from Arroyo Grande to Oregon State Line except Central Valley
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1976, Water Supply Paper 2129
Hydrologic evaluation of salinity control and reclamation projects in the Indus Plain, Pakistan--A summary
Maurice John Mundorff, P.H. Carrigan Jr., T.D. Steele, A. D. Randall
1976, Water Supply Paper 1608-Q
This report summarizes the observations and findings of a team of four specialists from the U.S. Geological Survey assigned to Pakistan under the auspices of the U.S. Agency for International Development during May to August 1972 for a hydrologic evaluation of Salinity Control and Reclamation Projects in the Indus Plain...
Sediment characteristics of five streams near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, before highway construction
Lloyd A. Reed
1976, Water Supply Paper 1798-M
Rainfall, streamflow, sediment, and turbidity data are being collected as part of a study to evaluate the effects of highway construction on sediment discharge. The study is also designed to determine the effectiveness of different erosion-control measures in reducing sediment discharges. The study area, near Enola, Pa., consists of five...
Organic carbon and nitrogen concentrations and annual organic carbon load of six selected rivers of the United States
Ronald L. Malcolm, W. H. Durum
1976, Water Supply Paper 1817-F
The organic carbon load during 1969-70 of each of the six rivers in this study is substantial. The 3.4-billion-kilogram (3.7-million-ton) and 47-million-kilogram (52-thousandton) annual organic carbon loads of the Mississippi River and the Brazos River (Tex.), respectively, were approximately equally distributed between dissolved and suspended phases, whereas the 725-million-kilogram (79.8-million-ton)...