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Page 19, results 451 - 475

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Observed and predicted pier scour in Maine
Glenn A. Hodgkins, Pamela J. Lombard
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4229
Pier-scour and related data were collected and analyzed for nine high river flows at eight bridges across Maine from 1997 through 2001. Six bridges had multiple piers. Fifteen of 23 piers where data were measured during a high flow had observed maximum scour depths ranging from 0.5 feet (ft) to...
The National Flood Frequency Program, version 3 : a computer program for estimating magnitude and frequency of floods for ungaged sites
Kernell G. Ries III, Michele Y. Crouse
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4168
For many years, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has been developing regional regression equations for estimating flood magnitude and frequency at ungaged sites. These regression equations are used to transfer flood characteristics from gaged to ungaged sites through the use of watershed and climatic characteristics as explanatory or predictor variables....
Bed-material entrainment potential, Roaring Fork River at Basalt, Colorado
John G. Elliott
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4223
The Roaring Fork River at Basalt, Colorado, has a frequently mobile streambed composed of gravel, cobbles, and boulders. Recent urban and highway development on the flood plain, earlier attempts to realign and confine the channel, and flow obstructions such as bridge openings and piers have altered the hydrology, hydraulics, sediment...
Evolution of the landscape along the Clear Creek Corridor, Colorado: Urbanization, aggregate mining and reclamation
Belinda Arbogast, Daniel H. Knepper, Roger A. Melick, John Hickman
2002, IMAP 2760
Prime agricultural land along the Clear Creek floodplain, Colorado, attracted settlement in the 1850's but the demand for sand and gravel for 1900's construction initiated a sequence of events that exceeded previous interests and created the modified landscape and urban ecosystem that exists today. The Clear Creek valley corridor...
Use of electrical resistivity to detect underground mine voids in Ohio
Rodney A. Sheets
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4041
Electrical resistivity surveys were completed at two sites along State Route 32 in Jackson and Vinton Counties, Ohio. The surveys were done to determine whether the electrical resistivity method could identify areas where coal was mined, leaving air- or water-filled voids. These voids can be local sources of potable water...
Estimated flood flows in the Lake Tahoe basin, California and Nevada
E. James Crompton, Glen W. Hess, Rhea P. Williams
2002, Fact Sheet 035-02
Lake Tahoe, the largest alpine lake in North America, covers about 192 square miles (mi2) of the 506-mi2 Lake Tahoe Basin, which straddles the border between California and Nevada (Fig. 1). In cooperation with the Nevada Department of Transportation (NDOT), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) estimates the flood frequencies of...
Effects of highway-deicer application on ground-water quality in a part of the Calumet Aquifer, northwestern Indiana
Lee R. Watson, E. Randall Bayless, Paul M. Buszka, John T. Wilson
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001–4260
The effects of highway-deicer application on ground-water quality were studied at a site in northwestern Indiana using a variety of geochemical indicators. Site characteristics such as high snowfall rates; large quantities of applied deicers; presence of a high-traffic highway; a homogeneous, permeable, and unconfined aquifer; a shallow water table; a...
Effectiveness of three best management practices for highway-runoff quality along the Southeast Expressway, Boston, Massachusetts
Kirk P. Smith
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4059
Best management practices (BMPs) near highways are designed to reduce the amount of suspended sediment and associated constituents, including debris and litter, discharged from the roadway surface. The effectiveness of a deep-sumped hooded catch basin, three 2-chambered 1,500-gallon oil-grit separators, and mechanized street sweeping in reducing sediment and associated constituents...
Magnetotelluric data along the Tangle Lakes profile, Alaska
Jay A. Sampson, Brian D. Rodriguez
2002, Open-File Report 2002-177
The 89 km long Tangle Lakes profile of 14 magnetotelluric (MT) stations begins 4 km south of the confluence of Augustana Creek and the Delta River in south central Alaska. The northernmost station, TLM13, is located just south of the Denali Fault in the rugged Clearwater Mountains. The north-south profile...
Simulation of a proposed emergency outlet from Devils Lake, North Dakota
Aldo V. Vecchia
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4042
From 1993 to 2001, Devils Lake rose more than 25 feet, flooding farmland, roads, and structures around the lake and causing more than $400 million in damages in the Devils Lake Basin. In July 2001, the level of Devils Lake was at 1,448.0 feet above sea level1, which was...
Tar Creek study, Sargent oil field, Santa Clara County, California
David L. Wagner, Bill Fedasko, J.R. Carnahan, Ross Brunetti, Leslie B. Magoon, Paul G. Lillis, T.D. Lorenson, Richard G. Stanley
2002, Report
Field work in the Tar Creek area of Sargent oil field was performed June 26 to 28, 2000. The Santa Clara County study area is located in Sections, 30, 31, and 32, Township 11 South, Range 4 East, M.D.B&M; and in Sections 25 and 36, Township 11 South, Range 3...
Transportation impacts to wildlife on state route 37 in northern San Pablo Bay, California
Bryan R. Winton, John Y. Takekawa
2002, Transactions of the Western Section of the Wildlife Society (37) 55-60
State Route 37 bisects conservation lands managed by San Pablo Bay National Wildlife Refuge (U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service) and Napa-Sonoma Marshes Wildlife Area (California Department of Fish and Game) in Solano and Sonoma Counties. The 2-lane highway connects Interstates 101 and 80 in northern San Francisco Bay and experiences...
Landscapes to riverscapes: bridging the gap between research and conservation of stream fishes
Kurt D. Fausch, Christian E. Torgersen, Colden V. Baxter, Hiram W. Li
2002, BioScience (52) 483-498
Rivers and streams, by their very nature long ribbons of aquatic habitat, are inherently difficult to study. Approaching the banks of a flowing-water (lotic) system, one can see only a short fragment of the entire stream, from one bend to another, and can gain little appreciation for important features that lie...
Ground temperatures across the old and new roads at mile 130, Richardson highway during 1954-62
H. Jin, M.C. Brewer, R.A. Perkins
Merrill K.S.Merrill K.S., editor(s)
2002, Conference Paper, Cold Regions Engineering Cold Regions Impacts on Transportation and Infrastructure: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference
Year-round studies of the geothermal impacts of road construction in a "warm" permafrost area were undertaken during 1954-1962 at six road sections across the Richardson and Glenn Highways, in the vicinity of Glennallen, Alaska. As a result, significant information was obtained regarding the temperatures, and changes in temperatures, in the...
Streamflow and Suspended-Sediment Loads Before, During, and After H-3 Highway Construction, North Halawa, Haiku, South Fork Kapunahala, and Kamooalii Drainage Basins, Oahu, Hawaii, 1983-99
Michael F. Wong, Daniel S. Yeatts
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4005
A long-term study (1983?99) was conducted to determine the effects of the H-3 Highway construction on streamflow and suspended-sediment transport on Oahu, Hawaii. Data were collected at five streamflow-gaging stations before, during, and after construction and at two stream-gaging stations during and after construction. Drainage areas at the seven streamflow-gaging...
Traveltime characteristics of Gore Creek and Black Gore Creek, upper Colorado River basin, Colorado
Jason J. Gurdak, Norman E. Spahr, Richard J. Szmajter
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4037
In the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, major highways are often constructed in stream valleys. In the event of a vehicular accident involving hazardous materials, the close proximity of highways to the streams increases the risk of contamination entering the streams. Recent population growth has contributed to increased traffic volume along...
Relationships between ambient geochemistry, watershed land-use and trace metal concentrations in aquatic invertebrates living in stormwater treatment ponds
N.K. Karouna-Renier, D. W. Sparling
2001, Environmental Pollution (112) 183-192
Stormwater treatment ponds receive elevated levels of metals from urban runoff, but the effects of these pollutants on organisms residing in the ponds are unknown. We investigated the accumulation of Cu, Zn, and Pb by macroinvertebrates collected from stormwater treatment ponds in Maryland serving commercial, highway, residential and open-space...
Data Model and Relational Database Design for Highway Runoff Water-Quality Metadata
Gregory E. Granato, Steven Tessler
2001, Open-File Report 2000-480
A National highway and urban runoff waterquality metadatabase was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Federal Highway Administration as part of the National Highway Runoff Water-Quality Data and Methodology Synthesis (NDAMS). The database was designed to catalog available literature and to document results of the synthesis...
Methodology and significance of studies of atmospheric deposition in highway runoff
John A. Colman, Karen C. Rice, Timothy C. Willoughby
2001, Open-File Report 2001-259
Atmospheric deposition and the processes that are involved in causing and altering atmospheric deposition in relation to highway surfaces and runoff were evaluated nationwide. Wet deposition is more easily monitored than dry deposition, and data on wet deposition are available for major elements and water properties (constituents affecting acid deposition)...
Surficial geologic map of the greater Omaha area, Nebraska and Iowa
R. R. Shroba, T. R. Brandt, J.C. Blossom
2001, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2391
Geologic mapping, in support of the USGS Omaha-Kansas City Geologic Mapping Project, shows the spatial distribution of artificial-fill, alluvial, eolian, and glacial deposits and bedrock in and near Omaha, Nebraska. Artificial fill deposits are mapped chiefly beneath commercial structures, segments of interstate highways and other major highways, railroad tracks, airport...
Lahar-hazard zonation for San Miguel volcano, El Salvador
J. J. Major, S. P. Schilling, C.R. Pullinger, C.D. Escobar, C.A. Chesner, M.M. Howell
2001, Open-File Report 2001-395
San Miguel volcano, also known as Chaparrastique, is one of many volcanoes along the volcanic arc in El Salvador. The volcano, located in the eastern part of the country, rises to an altitude of about 2130 meters and towers above the communities of San Miguel, El Transito, San Rafael Oriente,...
Surficial geology of the lower Comb Wash, San Juan County, Utah
Claire I. Longpre
2001, Open-File Report 2001-424
The surficial geologic map of lower Comb Wash was produced as part of a master’s thesis for Northern Arizona University Quaternary Sciences program. The map area includes the portion of the Comb Wash alluvial valley between Highway 163 and Highway 95 on the Colorado Plateau in southeastern Utah. The late...