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Page 1724, results 43076 - 43100

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Effects of core sealing methods on the preservation of pore water
Pete Striffler, Charles A. Peters
1993, Conference Paper, High Level Radioactive Waste Management
Five general core sealing methods (using Protecore, Lexan, wax, Protecore with wax, and Protecore with Lexan) were studied over a two year period to determine their moisture retention capabilities. Results indicate that the multibarrier methods (Protecore with wax and Protecore with Lexan) and the single barrier methods (Protecore and wax)...
Aquatic dissipation of triclopyr in Lake Seminole, Georgia
K.B. Woodburn, W. R. Green, H.E. Westerdahl
1993, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (41) 2172-2177
A field study was conducted to evaluate the environmental dissipation of triclopyr herbicide under aquatic-use conditions. Three 4-h plots in Lake Seminole, Georgia, were selected for use: one control, one aerial plot, and one subsurface plot; both applications were at the maximum aquatic-use rate of 2.5 mg/L. Water, sediment, plants,...
Determination of C6-C10 aromatic hydrocarbons in water by purge-and-trap capillary gas chromatography
R.P. Eganhouse, T.F. Dorsey, C.S. Phinney, A.M. Westcott
1993, Journal of Chromatography (628) 81-92
A method is described for the determination of the C6-C10 aromatic hydrocarbons in water based on purge-and-trap capillary gas chromatography with flame ionization and mass spectrometric detection. Retention time data and 70 eV mass spectra were obtained for benzene and all 35 C7-C10 aromatic hydrocarbons. With optimized chromatographic conditions and...
Effects of agricultural nutrient management on nitrogen fate and transport in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
D. W. Hall, D. W. Risser
1993, Water Resources Bulletin (29) 55-76
Nitrogen inputs to, and outputs from, a 55-acre site in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, were estimated to determine the pathways and relative magnitude of loads of nitrogen entering and leaving the site, and to compare the loads of nitrogen before and after the implementation of nutrient management. Inputs of nitrogen to...
Lesser scaup forage on zebra mussels at Cook nuclear plant, Michigan
C. A. Mitchell, J. Carlson
1993, Journal of Field Ornithology (64) 219-222
Nineteen of 21 Lesser Scaup (Aythya affinis) entrained while foraging at the water intake structures of Cook Nuclear Plant, Bridgman, Michigan had consumed zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha). The average number of zebra mussels in the upper gastrointestinal tract was 260; maximum number was 987. Migrating Lesser Scaup found this new...
Dissolved inorganic nitrogen composition, transformation, retention, and transport in naturally phosphate-rich and phosphate-poor tropical streams
F.J. Triska, C. M. Pringle, G. W. Zellweger, J.H. Duff, R.J. Avanzino
1993, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (50) 665-675
The composition, transformation, and transport of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) was compared in waters associated with two lowland streams in Costa Rica. The Salto River is enriched by geothermal-based soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP), which raises the concentration up to 200 μg/L whereas Pantano...
Estimating bridge scour in New York from historical U.S. geological survey streamflow measurements
Gerard K. Butch
Shen Hsieh WenSu S.T.Wen Feng, editor(s)
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Historical streamflow measurements by the U.S. Geological Survey an bridge-inspection reports by the New York State Department of Transportation are being used to estimate scour at 31 bridges in New York State. Streamflow measurements that were made before, during, or after high flows are used to estimate scour and to...
Geohydrologic systems in Kansas — Geohydrology of the lower aquifer unit in the western interior plains aquifer system
J. F. Kenny, Cristi V. Hansen, R. J. Wolf
1993, Hydrologic Atlas 722-H
The purpose of the investigation is to provide a description of the principal geohydrologic systems in Upper Cambrian through Lower Cretaceous rocks in Kansas. This investigation was made as part of the Central Midwest Regional Aquifer-System Analysis (CMRASA). The CMRASA is one of several major investigations by the U.S. Geological...
Refinement of the evaluation of the role of CO2 in modifying estimates of the pressure of epithermal mineralization
P.B. Barton, I.-M. Chou
1993, Economic Geology (88) 873-884
Pressure is the most important of the intensive parameters for relating epithermal mineralization to the geologic setting. This paper describes the limitations on pressure (and therefore depth) of mineralization that may reasonably be derived from simple observations of the behavior of fluid inclusions (i.e., the existence of ice or CO 2 clathrate...
Controlled photomosaic of the MTM 40312 Quadrangle, northern Arabia region of Mars
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, National Aeronautics and Space Administration
1993, IMAP 2337
This photomosaic covers part of an area of special scientific interest on Mars.  It is published in a series designed to support topical studies, which is not expected to result in systematic coverage of the plant.  The mosaic was compiled by digital methods described by Batson (1987) and Edwards (1987)....
A finite-volume Eulerian-Lagrangian Localized Adjoint Method for solution of the advection-dispersion equation
R. W. Healy, T.F. Russell
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 2399-2413
A new mass-conservative method for solution of the one-dimensional advection-dispersion equation is derived and discussed. Test results demonstrate that the finite-volume Eulerian-Lagrangian localized adjoint method (FVELLAM) outperforms standard finite-difference methods, in terms of accuracy and efficiency, for solute transport problems that are dominated by advection. For dispersion-dominated problems, the performance...
Paper plant effluent revisited-southern Lake Champlain, Vermont and New York
R.S. Haupt, D. W. Folger
1993, Environmental Geology (21) 77-83
We used geologic and geochemical techniques to document the change with time of the distribution and concentration of contaminated bottom sediments in southern Lake Champlain near an International Paper Company plant. Our work, initiated in 1972, was expanded on behalf of Vermont citizens in a class-action suit against the International...
Sensitivity of crustal deformation instruments to changes insecular rate
John O. Langbein, Eddie Quilty, Katherine Breckenridge
1993, Geophysical Research Letters (20) 85-88
A variety of instruments (including borehole strainmeters, water wells, creepmeters, laser ranging and differential magnetometers) are used to monitor crustal deformation in areas that are prone to geologic hazards such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. In monitoring the deformation, one typically examines the data for either a change in rate,...
An efficient numerical solution of the transient storage equations for solute transport in small streams
Robert L. Runkel, Steven C. Chapra
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 211-215
Several investigators have proposed solute transport models that incorporate the effects of transient storage. Transient storage occurs in small streams when portions of the transported solute become isolated in zones of water that are immobile relative to water in the main channel (e.g., pools, gravel beds). Transient storage is modeled...
The role of water exchange between a stream channel and its hyporheic zone in nitrogen cycling at the terrestrial-aquatic interface
F.J. Triska, J.H. Duff, R.J. Avanzino
1993, Hydrobiologia (251) 167-184
The subsurface riparian zone was examined as an ecotone with two interfaces. Inland is a terrestrial boundary, where transport of water and dissolved solutes is toward the channel and controlled by watershed hydrology. Streamside is an aquatic boundary, where exchange of surface water and dissolved solutes is bi-directional and flux...
Effects of small-scale vertical variations in well-screen inflow rates and concentrations of organic compounds on the collection of representative ground-water-quality samples
Jacob Gibs, G. Allan Brown, Kenneth S. Turner, Cecilia L. MacLeod, James Jelinski, Susan A. Koehnlein
1993, Ground Water (31) 201-208
Because a water sample collected from a well is an integration of water from different depths along the well screen, measured concentrations can be biased if analyte concentrations are not uniform along the length of the well screen. The resulting concentration in the sample, therefore, is a function of variations...
Particulate matter in pack ice of the Beaufort Gyre
E. Reimnitz, P. W. Barnes, W. S. Weber
1993, Journal of Glaciology (39) 186-198
Ice observations and sediment samples were collected in the Beaufort Gyre in 1988. Fine sediment occurred in very small patches of turbid ice, as thin spotty surface layers, in mud pellets or in old snowdrifts. The latter were widespread south of 74°N, containing an estimated 22 tonnes...
Selenium in soil, water, sediment, and biota of the lower Sun River area, West-Central Montana
David A. Nimick, John H. Lambing, Donald U. Palawski
1993, Conference Paper, Management of Irrigation and Drainage Systems : Integrated Perspectives
A U.S. Department of the Interior study started in 1990 examined the source, movement, fate, and possible biological effects of selenium associated with irrigation drainage from the Sun River Irrigation Project in west-central Montana. Concentrations of total selenium in soil samples ranged from 0.1 to 8.5 micrograms per gram; the...
Determination of dissolved-phase pesticides in surface water from the Yakima River basin, Washington, using the Goulden large-sample extractor and gas chromatography/mass spectrometer
Gregory D. Foster, Paul M. Gates, William T. Foreman, Stuart W. McKenzie, Frank A. Rinella
1993, Environmental Science & Technology (27) 1911-1917
Concentrations of pesticides in the dissolved phase of surface water samples from the Yakima River basin, WA, were determined using preconcentration in the Goulden large-sample extractor (GLSE) and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis. Sample volumes ranging from 10 to 120 L were processed with the GLSE, and the results from...
Factors Affecting 14C Ages of Lacustrine Carbonates: Timing and Duration of the Last Highstand Lake in the Lahontan Basin
L. Benson
1993, Quaternary Research (39) 163-174
Two processes contribute to inaccurate 14C age estimates of carbonates precipitated within the Lahontan basin, NevadaCalifornia: low initial 14C/C ratios in lake water (reservoir effect) and addition of modern carbon to calcium carbonate after its precipitation. The mast reliable set of 14C ages on carbonates from elevations > 1310 m...
Active volcanism beneath the West Antarctic ice sheet and implications for ice-sheet stability
D. D. Blankenship, R.E. Bell, S. M. Hodge, J. M. Brozena, John C. Behrendt, C. A. Finn
1993, Nature (361) 526-529
IT is widely understood that the collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet (WAIS) would cause a global sea level rise of 6 m, yet there continues to be considerable debate about the detailed response of this ice sheet to climate change1-3. Because its bed is grounded well below sea...
Seasonal relationships between planktonic microorganisms and dissolved organic material in an alpine stream
Diane M. McKnight, R. L. Smith, R.A. Harnish, C.L. Miller, K.E. Bencala
1993, Biogeochemistry (21) 39-59
The relationships between the abundance and activity of planktonic, heterotrophic microorganisms and the quantity and characteristics of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in a Rocky Mountain stream were evaluated. Peak values of glucose uptake, 2.1 nmol L−1 hr−1, and glucose concentration, 333 nM, occurred during spring snowmelt when the water temperature...