A comparison of surface-grab and cross sectionally integrated stream-water-quality sampling methods
G. R. Martin, J. L. Smoot, K. D. White
1992, Water Environment Research (64) 866-876
Stream sampling for water quality data has commonly employed simple surface-grab procedures as opposed to more involved, cross sectionally integrated techniques. Paired samples for analysis of selected constituents were collected over various flow conditions at four sites to evaluate differences between the two sampling methods. Concentrations of dissolved constituents were...
Modeling tidal exchange and dispersion in Boston Harbor
Richard P. Signell, Bradford Butman
1992, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (97) 15591-15606
Tidal dispersion and the horizontal exchange of water between Boston Harbor and the surrounding ocean are examined with a high-resolution (200 m) depth-averaged numerical model. The strongly varying bathymetry and coastline geometry of the harbor generate complex spatial patterns in the modeled tidal currents which are verified by shipboard acoustic...
Pliocene paleoclimatic interpretation of DSDP Site 580 (NW Pacific) using diatoms
John A. Barron
1992, Marine Micropaleontology (20) 23-44
High-resolution quantitative diatom data are tabulated for the early part of the late Pliocene (3.25 to 2.08 Ma) at DSDP Site 580 in the northwestern Pacific. Sample spacing averages 11 k.y. between 3.1 and 2.8 Ma, but increases to 14 to 19 k.y. prior to 3.1 Ma and after 2.8...
A geochemical transport model for redox-controlled movement of mineral fronts in groundwater flow systems: A case of nitrate removal by oxidation of pyrite
Peter Engesgaard, Kenneth L. Kipp
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2829-2843
A one-dimensional prototype geochemical transport model was developed in order to handle simultaneous precipitation-dissolution and oxidation-reduction reactions governed by chemical equilibria. Total aqueous component concentrations are the primary dependent variables, and a sequential iterative approach is used for the calculation. The model was verified by analytical and numerical comparisons and...
Modeling biotic uptake by periphyton and transient hyporrheic storage of nitrate in a natural stream
Brian K.A. Kim, Alan P. Jackman, Frank J. Triska
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2743-2752
To a convection-dispersion hydrologic transport model we coupled a transient storage submodel (Bencala, 1984) and a biotic uptake submodel based on Michaelis-Menten kinetics (Kim et al., 1990). Our purpose was threefold: (1) to simulate nitrate retention in response to change in load in a third-order stream, (2) to differentiate biotic...
Selenium and other elements in freshwater fishes from the irrigated San Joaquin valley, California
Michael K. Saiki, Mark R. Jennings, Thomas W. May
1992, Science of the Total Environment (126) 109-137
Arsenic (As), chromium (Cr), mercury (Hg), and selenium (Se) were measured in composite whole-body samples of five fishes — bluegill (Lepomis macrochirus), common carp (Cyprinus carpio), mosquitofish (Gambusia affinis), largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), and Sacramento blackfish (Orthodon microlepidotus) — from the San Joaquin River system to determine if concentrations were...
Determining water availability in Kansas
Kyle E. Juracek
1992, Geo Info Systems (2) 52-57
Use of chlorofluorocarbons (CCl3F and CCl2F2) as hydrologic tracers and age‐dating tools: The alluvium and terrace system of central Oklahoma
Eurybiades Busenberg, Niel Plummer
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2257-2283
The use of Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) as an age‐dating tool and tracer in shallow groundwaters has been investigated. New methodology for field sampling and preserving groundwaters containing parts per trillion concentrations of the CFCs, F‐1l and F‐12, is presented. Samples are analyzed by purge‐and‐trap gas chromatography with an electron...
Inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry as an element-specific detector for field-flow fractionation particle separation
Howard E. Taylor, John R. Garbarino, Deirdre M. Murphy, Ronald Beckett
1992, Analytical Chemistry (64) 2036-2041
An inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometer was used for the quantitative measurement of trace elements In specific,submicrometer size-fraction particulates, separated by sedimentation field-flow fractionation. Fractions were collected from the eluent of the field-flow fractionation centrifuge and nebulized, with a Babington-type pneumatic nebulizer, into an argon inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometer. Measured Ion...
Is an instream flow need a beneficial use?
Robert T. Milhous
1992, Book, Proceedings of Water Resources Session at Water Forum '92 Water Resources Planning and Management: Saving a threatened resource, in search of solutions
No abstract available....
Are high and low flow habitat values really the same?
T.J. Waddle
1992, Book, Water resources planning and management: saving a threatened resource - in search of solutions
No abstract available....
Large-scale natural gradient tracer test in sand and gravel, Cape Cod, Massachusetts: 3. Hydraulic conductivity variability and calculated macrodispersivities
Kathryn M. Hess, Steven H. Wolf, Michael A. Celia
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2011-2027
Hydraulic conductivity (K) variability in a sand and gravel aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, was measured and subsequently used in stochastic transport theories to estimate macrodispersivities. Nearly 1500 K measurements were obtained by borehole flowmeter tests and permeameter analyses of cores. The geometric mean for the flowmeter tests (0.11 cm/s)...
Relation of nickel concentrations in tree rings to groundwater contamination
Thomas M. Yanosky, Don A. Vroblesky
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 2077-2083
Increment cores were collected from trees growing at two sites where groundwater is contaminated by nickel. Proton-induced X ray emission spectroscopy was used to determine the nickel concentrations in selected individual rings and in parts of individual rings. Ring nickel concentrations were interpreted on the basis of recent concentrations of...
The role of water in the formation of reversed micelles: An antimicellization agent
Z.-J. Yu, N.-F. Zhou, R. D. Neuman
1992, Langmuir (8) 1885-1888
Micellization of sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate in n-heptane has been studied under controlled environmental conditions by dynamic and static light scattering. The results clearly show that a trace amount of water has a very dramatic effect on reversed micellization. In contrast with results in the literature, water can function as an...
Landslides triggered by Hurricane Hugo in eastern Puerto Rico, September 1989
Matthew C. Larsen, Angel J. Torres-Sanchez
1992, Caribbean Journal of Science (28) 113-125
On the morning of September 18, 1989, a category-four hurricane struck eastern Puerto Rico with a sustained wind speed in excess of 46 m/s. The 24-h rainfall accumulation from the hurricane ranged from 100 to 339 mm. Average rainfall intensities ranging from 34 to 39 mm/h were calculated for 4...
Aluminum in soil solutions from a subalpine spruce-fir forest at Whiteface Mountain, New York
E. K. Miller, Thomas G. Huntington, A. H. Johnson, A. J. Friedland
1992, Journal of Environmental Quality (21) 345-352
Direct or indirect Al toxicity has been suggested as a principal factor in forest tree declines. We monitored ambient soil solutions in undisturbed and experimentally manipulated soils from a fir [Abies balsamea (L.) Mill.]-spruce forest on Whiteface Mountain, NY, in order to characterize soil solution Al concentrations over a range of...
Closure of the Isthmus of Panama: The near-shore marine record of Costa Rica and western Panama
Anthony G. Coates, Jeremy B. C. Jackson, Laurel S. Collins, Thomas M. Cronin, Harry J. Dowsett, Laurel M. Bybell, Peter Jung, Jorge Obando
1992, GSA Bulletin (104) 814-828
The final closure of the Isthmus of Panama at ∼3.5 Ma divided the American tropical ocean into two separate and different oceanographic regions. Consequences for the marine biota were profound, but, hitherto, correlation of the Pacific and Caribbean coastal sections has not been precise enough to track biologic patterns. We...
Precipitation estimation in mountainous terrain using multivariate geostatistics. Part I: structural analysis
Joseph Hevesi, Jonathan D. Istok, Alan L. Flint
1992, Journal of Applied Meteorology (31) 661-676
Values of average annual precipitation (AAP) are desired for hydrologic studies within a watershed containing Yucca Mountain, Nevada, a potential site for a high-level nuclear-waste repository. Reliable values of AAP are not yet available for most areas within this watershed because of a sparsity of precipitation measurements and the need...
Precipitation estimation in mountainous terrain using multivariate geostatistics. Part II: isohyetal maps
Joseph Hevesi, Alan L. Flint, Jonathan D. Istok
1992, Journal of Applied Meteorology (31) 677-688
Values of average annual precipitation (AAP) may be important for hydrologic characterization of a potential high-level nuclear-waste repository site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Reliable measurements of AAP are sparse in the vicinity of Yucca Mountain, and estimates of AAP were needed for an isohyetal mapping over a 2600-square-mile watershed containing...
Larval American shad: Effects of age and group size on swimming and feeding behavior
R. M. Ross, T. W. H. Backman
1992, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (121) 508-516
We analyzed the behavior of 3–4‐d‐old prolarval and 28–33‐d‐old metalarval American shad Alosa sapidissima in groups of 3–1,000 fish per 22‐L glass tank, to determine whether (1) previously described juvenile behavior patterns first develop in larvae, (2) group size or density alters the behavior of larvae, and (3) schooling or other forms...
Solute transport with multiple equilibrium-controlled or kinetically controlled chemical reactions
John C. Friedly, Jacob Rubin
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 1935-1953
A new approach is applied to the problem of modeling solute transport accompanied by many chemical reactions. The approach, based on concepts of the concentration space and its stoichiometric subspaces, uses elements of the subspaces as primary dependent variables. It is shown that the resulting model equations are compact in...
Fat fractal scaling of drainage networks from a random spatial network model
Michael R. Karlinger, Brent M. Troutman
1992, Water Resources Research (28) 1975-1981
An alternative quantification of the scaling properties of river channel networks is explored using a spatial network model. Whereas scaling descriptions of drainage networks previously have been presented using a fractal analysis primarily of the channel lengths, we illustrate the scaling of the surface area of the channels defining the...
Evaluation of aerial transects for counting winter mallards
Kenneth J. Reinecke, Michael W. Brown, James R. Nassar
1992, Journal of Wildlife Management (56) 515-525
Winter waterfowl surveys rarely use sampling methods, and little is known about the precision and biases of their population estimates. Consequently, we developed aerial transect surveys (n=5) in 4 strata comprising 16 substrata in the lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley during winters 1987-88 through 1989-90 to estimate mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) population...
Feeding flights of breeding double-crested cormorants at two Wisconsin colonies
T. W. Custer, C. Bunck
1992, Journal of Field Ornithology (63) 203-211
Unmarked Double-crested Cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) (n = 523) were followed by airplane from Cat Island and Spider Island, two nesting colonies in Wisconsin, to their first landing site. Cormorants flew an average of 2.0 km from Cat Island (maximum 40 km) and 2.4 km from Spider Island (maximum12 km)....
Global hypocenter data base
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1992, Report
No abstract available....