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Page 1907, results 47651 - 47675

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Stable isotope geochemistry of sphalerite and other mineral matter in coal beds of the Illinois and Forest City basins
J. F. Whelan, J.C. Cobb, R. O. Rye
1988, Economic Geology (83) 990-1007
Cleat and clastic dikes of Middle Pennsylvanian-age coal beds of the Illinois and Forest City basins of Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas locally contain appreciable amounts of sphalerite within a kaolinite-pyrite-sphalerite (+ or - pyrite)-calcite paragenetic sequence. The sphalerite and associated minerals are of interest as a partial record of...
Geochemistry of groundwater in tertiary and cretaceous sediments of the southeastern Coastal Plain in eastern Georgia, South Carolina, and southeastern North Carolina
Roger W. Lee, Donald J. Strickland
1988, Water Resources Research (24) 291-303
Geochemical samples of groundwater taken along hydrologic flow paths in eastern Georgia, South Carolina, and southeastern North Carolina, from noncalcareous sand aquifers, largely of Cretaceous age, are dominated by sodium and bicarbonate ions. Calcareous sand aquifers, largely of Tertiary age, contain water whose chemistry is dominated by calcium and bicarbonate...
Areal variation in recharge to and discharge from the Floridan aquifer system in Florida
Walter R. Aucott
1988, Water-Resources Investigations Report 88-4057
This report is a revision and update of existing recharge maps of the Floridan aquifer system to include quantitative information derived from Regional Aquifer Systems Analysis models as well as other recent information and also includes information on discharge from the system. The report represents predevelopment conditions with inset map...
The representativeness of pore water samples collected from the unsaturated zone using pressure-vacuum lysimeters
Charles A. Peters, Richard W. Healy
1988, Ground Water Monitoring Review (8) 96-101
Pressure-vacuum lysimeters are an inexpensive means of collecting numerous water samples from the same location in the unsaturated zone over a period of time. However, prior studies have indicated that the chemistry of water samples may be altered by the collection technique, creating concern about the representativeness of the pore...
Effects of sulfur dioxide emissions on stream chemistry in the western United States
K. Campbell, J.T. Turk
1988, Water Resources Research (24) 871-878
A 20-year record of water chemistry for seven headwater streams in the Rocky Mountain region of the western United States is compared to estimates of local and regional sulfur dioxide emissions for the same period. Emissions from smelters in the region comprise a significant part of sulfur dioxide emissions for...
Geohydrologic aspects of water-quality problems of the San Joaquin Valley, California
S. J. Deverel
1988, Conference Paper
Salinity and selenium concentrations in shallow ground water of the western San Joaquin Valley, California, are related to the geomorphology and hydrology of the alluvial fans. High salinity and selenium concentrations are associated with ephemeral-stream deposits. Low salinity and selenium concentrations are associated with intermittent-stream deposits, which represent the major...
Sorption of vapors of some organic liquids on soil humic acid and its relation to partitioning of organic compounds in soil organic matter
G.T. Chlou, D. E. Kile, Ronald L. Malcolm
1988, Environmental Science & Technology (22) 298-303
Vapor sorption of water, ethanol, benzene, hexane, carbon tetrachloride, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, trichloroethylene, tetrachloroethylene, and 1,2-dibromoethane on (Sanhedron) soil humic acid has been determined at room temperature. Isotherms for all organic liquids are highly linear over a wide range of relative pressure, characteristic of the partitioning (dissolution) of the organic compounds in...
A finite element model for tides and currents with field applications
Roy A. Walters
1988, Communications in Applied Numerical Methods (4) 401-411
A finite element model, based upon the shallow water equations, is used to calculate tidal amplitudes and currents for two field-scale test problems. Because tides are characterized by line spectra, the governing equations are subjected to harmonic decomposition. Thus the solution variables are the real and imaginary parts of the...
Dabbling duck harvest dynamics in the Central Valley of California--implications for recruitment
M. R. Miller, J. Beam, D.P. Connelly
M.W. Weller, editor(s)
1988, Book chapter, Waterfowl in winter
Age and sex ratios and body weights were obtained for northern pintails (Anas acuta), mallards (A. platyrhynchos), American wigeon (A. americana), green-winged teal (A. crecca), and northern shovelers (A. clypeata) shot at Mendota State Wildlife Area in the San Joaquin Valley (SANJV) and at Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge in the...
Ground water and the rural homeowner
Roger M. Waller
1988, Report
As the salesmen sang in the musical The Music Man, "You gotta know the territory." This saying is also true when planning to buy or build a house. Learn as much as possible about the land, the water supply, and the septic system of the house before buying or building....
A conceptual framework for assessing cumulative impacts on the hydrology of nontidal wetlands
Thomas C. Winter
1988, Environmental Management (12) 605-620
Wetlands occur in geologic and hydrologic settings that enhance the accumulation or retention of water. Regional slope, local relief, and permeability of the land surface are major controls on the formation of wetlands by surface-water sources. However, these landscape features also have significant control over groundwater flow systems, which commonly...
A tentative protocol for measurement of radon availability from the ground
A.B. Tanner
1988, Radiation Protection Dosimetry (24) 79-83
A procedure is being tested in order to determine its suitability for assessing the intrinsic ability of the ground at a particular site to supply 222Rn to a basement structure to be built on the site. Soil gas is sucked from a borehole probe through an alpha scintillation chamber and flow...
Use of aerial photography to inventory aquatic vegetation
Donald W. Schloesser, Charles L. Brown, Bruce A. Manny
1988, Journal of Aerospace Engineering (1) 142-150
This study demonstrates the feasibility of using low-altitude aerial photography to inventory submersed macrophytes in the connecting channels of the Great Lakes. For this purpose, we obtained aerial color transparencies and collateral ground truth information about submersed vegetation at 160 stations within four study sites in the St. Clair and...
Comparative biology of the sculpins of Lake Superior
James H. Selgeby
1988, Journal of Great Lakes Research (14) 44-51
The slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus), spoonhead sculpin (Cottus ricei), and deepwater sculpin (Myoxocephalus thompsoni) are abundant fishes in Lake Superior. Slimy and spoonhead sculpins occupy a zone from near shore to depths of 210 m but are generally most abundant in waters 50 to 90 m deep. Deepwater sculpins are...
A bioassay for production capacity assessment
J. W. Meade
1988, Aquacultural Engineering (7) 139-146
Given sufficient oxygen, fish production can be limited by a multiplicity of factors. Accurate determination of production capacity requires something other than an estimate of the biomass at which ambient un-ionized ammonia will reach a recommended, non-site-specific, maximum safe concentration. A chronic (1- to 2-month) bioassay can be used to...
Irrigation drainage: Green River basin, Utah
Doyle W. Stephens, Bruce Waddell, Jerry B. Miller
1988, Conference Paper
A reconnaissance of wildlife areas in the middle Green River basin of Utah during 1986-87 determined that concentrations of selenium in water and biological tissues were potentially harmful to wildlife at the Stewart Lake Waterfowl Management Area and in the Ouray National Wildlife Refuge. Concentations of selenium in irrigation drainage...
Rapid changes in dissolved humic substances in Spirit Lake and South Fork Castle Lake, Washington
Diane M. McKnight, K. A. Thorn, R.L. Wershaw, J.M. Bracewell, G.W. Robertson
1988, Limnology and Oceanography (33) 1527-1541
One major effect of the eruption of Mount St. Helens, Washington, was a large increase of dissolved organic material in the lakes of the area devastated near the volcano. Much of this material was aquatic fulvic acid derived from plants and soils from the surrounding watershed. During the 3 yr...
Partition of nonionic organic compounds in aquatic systems
James A. Smith, Patrick J. Witkowski, Cary T. Chiou
1988, Reviews of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (103) 127-151
In aqueous systems, the distribution of many nonionic organic solutes in soil-sediment, aquatic organisms, and dissolved organic matter can be explained in terms of a partition model. The nonionic organic solute is distributed between water and different organic phases that behave as bulk solvents. Factors such as polarity, composition, and...
Fluid-inclusion evidence for previous higher temperatures in the Miravalles geothermal field, Costa Rica
K.E. Bargar, R.O. Fournier
1988, Geothermics (17) 681-693
Heating and freezing data were obtained for liquid-rich secondary fluid inclusions in magmatic quartz, hydrothermal calcite and hydrothermal quartz crystals from 19 sampled depths in eight production drill holes (PGM-1, 2, 3, 5, 10, 11, 12 and 15) of the Miravalles geothermal field in northwestern Costa Rica. Homogenization temperatures for...
Instrumentation for a dry-pond detention study
L. M. Pope, M.E. Jennings, K.G. Thibodeaux
1988, Conference Paper
A 12.3-acre, fully urbanized, residential land-use catchment was instrumented by the U. S. Geological Survey in Topeka, Kansas. Hydraulic instrumentation for flow measurement includes two types of flumes, a pipe-insert flume and a culvert-inlet (manhole) flume. Samples of rainfall and runoff for water-quality analyses were collected by automatic, 3-liter, 24-sample...
FORTRAN 77 programs for conductive cooling of dikes with temperature-dependent thermal properties and heat of crystallization
P.T. Delaney
1988, Computers & Geosciences (14) 181-212
Temperature histories obtained from transient heat-conduction theory are applicable to most dikes despite potential complicating effects related to magma flow during emplacement, groundwater circulation, and metamorphic reaction during cooling. Here. machine-independent FORTRAN 77 programs are presented to calculate temperatures in and around dikes as they cool conductively. Analytical solutions can...
Contamination of estuarine water, biota, and sediment by halogenated organic compounds: A field study
W. E. Pereira, C.E. Rostad, C. T. Chiou, T.I. Brinton, L.B. Barber II, D.K. Demcheck, C. R. Demas
1988, Environmental Science & Technology (22) 772-778
Studies conducted in the vicinity of an industrial outfall in the Calcasieu River estuary, Louisiana, have shown that water, bottom and suspended sediment, and four different species of biota are contaminated with halogenated organic compounds (HOC) including haloarenes. A "salting-out" effect in the estuary moderately enhanced the partitioning tendency of...