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Page 2023, results 50551 - 50575

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ecological effects of rubble-mound breakwater construction and channel dredging at West Harbor, Ohio (western Lake Erie)
Bruce A. Manny, Donald W. Schloesser, Charles L. Brown, John R. P. French III
1985, Technical Report EL-85-10
The investigation reported herein indicated that breakwater construction and associated channel dredging activities by the US Army Corps of Engineers in western Lake Erie at the entrance to West Harbor (Ohio) had no detectable adverse impacts on the distributions or abundances of macrozoobenthos and fishes. Rather, increases were noted in...
Nonpoint-source discharges and water quality of the Elk Creek basin, west-central Wisconsin
S. J. Field
1985, Water-Resources Investigations Report 84-4094
The Elk Creek basin in west-central Wisconsin was studied during the 1980 water year to define the water quality in relation to streamflow. Agricultural nonpoint-source discharges were suspected of contributing significantly to degraded water quality. Two water quality and streamflow gaging stations were established--one on Elk Creek near Independence and...
Algorithm to reduce approximation error from the complex-variable boundary-element method applied to soil freezing.
T. V. Hromadka II, G. L. Guymon
1985, Numerical heat transfer (8) 115-130
An algorithm is presented for the numerical solution of the Laplace equation boundary-value problem, which is assumed to apply to soil freezing or thawing. The Laplace equation is numerically approximated by the complex-variable boundary-element method. The algorithm aids in reducing integrated relative error by providing a true measure of modeling...
Earthquake hazards to domestic water distribution systems in Salt Lake County, Utah
Lynn M. Highland
1985, Conference Paper
A magnitude-7. 5 earthquake occurring along the central portion of the Wasatch Fault, Utah, may cause significant damage to Salt Lake County's domestic water system. This system is composed of water treatment plants, aqueducts, distribution mains, and other facilities that are vulnerable to ground shaking, liquefaction, fault movement, and slope...
CHEMISTRY OF LOW-TEMPERATURE GEOTHERMAL WATERS AT KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON.
C. J. Janik, A.H. Truesdell, E.A. Sammel, A. F. White
1985, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
Chemical and isotopic analyses of well discharges indicate that in the aquifer mixing occurs between shallow cold groundwater containing 2. 0 TU tritium and a deeper tritium-free thermal groundwaer at 100 to 120 degree C. This deeper water apparently results from the mixing of old, tritium-free cold groundwater and deep...
Reducing losses from earthquakes through personal preparedness
W. J. Kockelman
1985, Earthquake Information Bulletin (USGS) (17) 50-59
Actions to reduce earthquake hazards can be divided into five phases:two occur before the event, one during the event, and two after the event. The phases are: (1) Mitigation techniques taken anywhere from 1 to 20 years before the event, (2) preparedness measures taken 1 to 20 weeks before the...
SIMULATING FLOW IN THE TIDAL POTOMAC RIVER.
Raymond W. Schaffranek
1985, Conference Paper
A one-dimensional unsteady flow model has been applied to the tidal Potomac River, including its major tributaries and marginal embayments, between Washington, D. C. and Indian Head, Md. The computer model has been calibrated to simulate the combined effects of tide, freshwater inflows, and wind conditions governing flow in the...
Low gradient permeability measurements in a triaxial system
H. W. Olsen, R. W. Nichols, T. L. Rice
1985, Geotechnique (35) 145-157
Permeability measurements were conducted with the flow-pump method on sand, sandy silt and silty clay specimens in a conventional triaxial system by introducing and withdrawing water at known constant flow rates into the base of a specimen with a flow-pump, and by monitoring the head difference induced across the length...
A policy evaluation tool: Management of a multiaquifer system using controlled stream recharge
Wesley R. Danskin, Steven M. Gorelick
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1731-1747
A model for the optimal allocation of water resources was developed for a multiaquifer groundwater and surface water system near Livermore, California. The complex groundwater system was analyzed using a transient, quasi-three-dimensional model that considers the nonlinear behavior of the unconfined aquifer. The surface water system consists of a reservoir...
Palmer Drought Severity Index as a Measure of Hydrologic Drought
William M. Alley
1985, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (21) 105-114
The Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI) for climatic divisions in New Jersey is compared to the occurrence within each climatic division of streamflows in their lower quartile for the month (streamflow index) and ground-water levels in their lower quartile for the month (ground-water index). These indices are found to have...
Chemistry of thermal and nonthermal springs in the vicinity of Lassen Volcanic National Park
J. M. Thompson
1985, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (25) 81-104
Meaningful applications of water geothermometry to thermal springs in and around Lassen Volcanic National Park (LVNP) are limited to Growler Hot Spring and Morgan Hot Springs. Most hot springs located within LVNP are low-chloride, acid-sulfate waters associated with nearby steam vents. This type of hot-spring activity is characteristically found above...
Evaluation and use of a diffusion-controlled sampler for determining chemical and dissolved oxygen gradients at the sediment-water interface
N.S. Simon, M.M. Kennedy, C.S. Massoni
1985, Hydrobiologia (126) 135-141
Field and laboratory evaluations were made of a simple, inexpensive diffusion-controlled sampler with ports on two sides at each interval which incorporates 0.2-??m polycarbonate membrane to filter samples in situ. Monovalent and divalent ions reached 90% of equilibrium between sampler contents and the external solution within 3 and 6 hours,...
Movement of volatile organics through a fractured rock aquifer
S.E. Spayd
1985, Groundwater (23) 496-502
In response to the detection of contaminants in several municipal water supply wells in a northern New Jersey community, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) undertook a detailed assessment of the movement of volatile organics through the Brunswick fractured rock aquifer. Understanding the...
Multisample conversion of water to hydrogen by zinc for stable isotope determination
C. Kendall, T.B. Coplen
1985, Analytical Chemistry (57) 1437-1440
Two techniques for the conversion of water to hydrogen for stable isotope ratio determination have been developed that are especially suited for automated multisample analysis. Both procedures involve reaction of zinc shot with a water sample at 450 ??C. in one method designed for water samples in bottles, the water...
Field determination of the three-dimensional hydraulic conductivity tensor of anisotropic media: 2. Methodology and application to fractured rocks
Paul A. Hsieh, Shlomo P. Neuman, Gary K. Stiles, Eugene S. Simpson
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1667-1676
The analytical solutions developed in the first paper can be used to interpret the results of cross-hole tests conducted in anisotropic porous or fractured media. In the particular case where the injection and monitoring intervals are short relative to the distance between them, the test results can be analyzed graphically....
Time scales of circulation and mixing processes of San Francisco Bay waters
R. A. Walters, R. T. Cheng, T. J. Conomos
1985, Hydrobiologia (129) 13-36
Conceptual models for tidal period and low-frequency variations in sea level, currents, and mixing processes in the northern and southern reaches of San Francisco Bay describe the contrasting characteristics and dissimilar processes and rates in these embayments: The northern reach is a partially mixed estuary whereas the southern reach...
Geochemistry of Great Salt Lake, Utah I: Hydrochemistry since 1850
R. J. Spencer, H.P. Eugster, B.F. Jones, S.L. Rettig
1985, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (49) 727-737
The hydrochemistry of Great Salt Lake, Utah, has been defined for the historic period, 1850 through 1982, from published data combined with new observations. The water balance depends largely on river inflow, atmospheric precipitation onto the lake surface and evaporation. Input of the major solutes can best be accounted for...
Harmonic analysis of tides and tidal currents in South San Francisco Bay, California
R. T. Cheng, J. W. Gartner
1985, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (21) 57-74
Water level observations from tide stations and current observations from current-meter moorings in South San Francisco Bay (South Bay), California have been harmonically analysed. At each tide station, 13 harmonic constituents have been computed by a least-squares regression without inference. Tides in South Bay are typically mixed; there is a...
A quantitative analysis of the Lassen hydrothermal system, north central California
S. E. Ingebritsen, M.L. Sorey
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 853-868
Our conceptual model of the Lassen system is termed a liquid-dominated hydrothermal system with a parasitic vapor-dominated zone. The essential feature of this model is that steam and steam-heated discharge at relatively high altitudes in Lassen Volcanic National Park (LVNP) and liquid discharge with high chloride concentrations at relatively low...
Remotely sensed limonite anomaly on Lordsburg Mesa, New Mexico: Possible implications for uranium deposits
G. L. Raines, J. A. Erdman, J. H. McCarthy, G.M. Reimer
1985, Economic Geology (80) 575-590
We have identified a large, anomalously limonitic area in Cenozoic gravels on Lordsburg Mesa near Lordsburg, New Mexico, using Landsat images. Our interpretation of the geophysical and geochemical data suggests the exploration hypothesis that the Lordsburg Mesa limonite anomaly is the surface expression of a chemical trap that may contain...
Errors and parameter estimation in precipitation-runoff modeling: 1. Theory
Brent M. Troutman
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1195-1213
Errors in complex conceptual precipitation-runoff models may be analyzed by placing them into a statistical framework. This amounts to treating the errors as random variables and defining the probabilistic structure of the errors. By using such a framework, a large array of techniques, many of which have been presented in...
LIQUEFACTION POTENTIAL OF SEDIMENT IN THE NORTHERN BERING SEA.
William J. Winters
Chaney Ronald C.Demars Kenneth R., editor(s)
1985, Conference Paper, ASTM Special Technical Publication
The liquefaction potential of sediment in Norton Sound and the northern Bering Sea was evaluated by estimating the liquefaction susceptibility of the material from in-situ and laboratory tests in terms of earthquake and wave loads required to liquefy the material, and then comparing estimated behavior with anticipated loadings caused by...