Basic Requirements for Collecting, Documenting, and Reporting Precipitation and Stormwater-Flow Measurements
Peter E. Church, Gregory E. Granato, David W. Owens
1999, Open-File Report 99-255
Accurate and representative precipitation and stormwater-flow data are crucial for use of highway- or urban-runoff study results, either individually or in a regional or national synthesis of stormwater-runoff data. Equally important is information on the level of accuracy and representativeness of this precipitation and stormwaterflow data. Accurate and representative measurements...
An Overview of the Factors Involved in Evaluating the Geochemical Effects of Highway Runoff on the Environment
Owen P. Bricker
1999, Open-File Report 98-630
Materials washed by rain and snowmelt from highways into adjacent surface waters, ground waters, and ecosystems can pollute water and affect biota. To understand the chemical behavior of any one of these materials and its effects on the environment requires knowledge of the chemistry of the material and how it...
Principles and Practices for Quality Assurance and Quality Control
Berwyn E. Jones
1999, Open-File Report 98-636
Quality assurance and quality control are vital parts of highway runoff water-quality monitoring projects. To be effective, project quality assurance must address all aspects of the project, including project management responsibilities and resources, data quality objectives, sampling and analysis plans, data-collection protocols, data quality-control plans, data-assessment procedures and requirements, and...
Computer Program for Point Location And Calculation of ERror (PLACER)
Gregory E. Granato
1999, Open-File Report 99-99
A program designed for point location and calculation of error (PLACER) was developed as part of the Quality Assurance Program of the Federal Highway Administration/U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Data and Methodology Synthesis (NDAMS) review process. The program provides a standard method to derive study-site locations from site maps in...
Oil
Tonie E. Rocke
1999, Information and Technology Report 1999-0001
Each year, an average of 14 million gallons of oil from more than 10,000 accidental spills flow into fresh and saltwater environments in and around the United States. Most accidental oil spills occur when oil is transported by tankers or barges, but oil is also spilled during highway, rail, and...
Anthropogenic degradation of the southern California desert ecosystem and prospects for natural recovery and restoration
J.E. Lovich, D. Bainbridge
1999, Environmental Management (24) 309-326
Large areas of the southern California desert ecosystem have been negatively affected by off-highway vehicle use, overgrazing by domestic livestock, agriculture, urbanization, construction of roads and utility corridors, air pollution, military training exercises, and other activities. Secondary contributions to degradation include the proliferation of exotic plant species and a higher...
Predatory bird populations in the east Mojave Desert, California
R.L. Knight, R.J. Camp, W.I. Boarman, H.A.L. Knight
1999, Great Basin Naturalist (59) 331-338
We surveyed 7 species of predatory birds weekly during a 12-month period (December 1992 through November 1993) in the east Mojave Desert, California. The Common Raven (Corvus corax) was the most frequently observed species with an average of 6.9 sightings per 100 km. Turkey Vultures (Cathartes aura), Red-tailed Hawks (Buteo...
Movement of road salt to a small New Hampshire lake
D.O. Rosenberry, P.A. Bukaveckas, D.C. Buso, G.E. Likens, A.M. Shapiro, T. C. Winter
1999, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (109) 179-206
Runoff of road salt from an interstate highway in New Hampshire has led to contamination of a lake and a stream that flows into the lake, in spite of the construction of a diversion berm to divert road salt runoff out of the lake drainage basin. Chloride concentration in the...
Map Accuracy Standards
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1999, Fact Sheet 171-99
An inaccurate map is not a reliable map. ?X? may mark the spot where the treasure is buried, but unless the seeker can locate ?X? in relation to known landmarks, the map is not very useful. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) publishes maps and other products at high levels of accuracy....
Numerical simulation of vertical ground-water flux of the Rio Grande from ground-water temperature profiles, central New Mexico
James R. Bartolino, Richard G. Niswonger
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4212
An important gap in the understanding of the hydrology of the Middle Rio Grande Basin, central New Mexico, is the rate at which water from the Rio Grande recharges the Santa Fe Group aquifer system. Several methodologies-including use of the Glover-Balmer equation, flood pulses, and channel permeameters- have been applied...
Level II scour analysis for bridge 35 (BURKTH00310035) on Town Highway 31, crossing the West Branch Passumpsic River, Burke, Vermont
Erick M. Boehmler, James R. Degnan
1998, Open-File Report 1998-586
This report provides the results of a detailed Level II analysis of scour potential at structure BURKTH00310035 on Town Highway 31 crossing the West Branch Passumpsic River, Burke, Vermont (figures 1-8). A Level II study is a basic engineering analysis of the site, including a quantitative analysis of stream stability...
Level II scour analysis for bridge 42 (BAKETH00060042) on Town Highway 6, crossing The Branch, Bakersfield, Vermont
Erick M. Boehmler, James R. Degnan
1998, Open-File Report 1998-585
This report provides the results of a detailed Level II analysis of scour potential at structure BAKETH00060042 on Town Highway 6 crossing The Branch, Bakersfield, Vermont (figures 1-8). A Level II study is a basic engineering analysis of the site, including a quantitative analysis of stream stability and scour (FHWA,...
Level II scour analysis for bridge 2 (WODFTH00010002) on Town Highway 1, crossing Hell Hollow Brook, Woodford, Vermont
Ronda L. Burns, James R. Degnan
1998, Open-File Report 1998-584
This report provides the results of a detailed Level II analysis of scour potential at structure WODFTH00010002 on Town Highway 1 crossing Hell Hollow Brook, Woodford, Vermont (figures 1-8). A Level II study is a basic engineering analysis of the site, including a quantitative analysis of stream stability and scour...
Lithology and fracture characterization from drilling investigations in the Mirror Lake area, Grafton County, New Hampshire
C. D. Johnson, A.H. Dunstan
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4183
The lithology and fracture network of the bedrock aquifer in the Mirror Lake area were characterized from hydrogeologic data collected from 1979-95 in Grafton County, N.H. The collection of these data is an integral part of an ongoing multidisciplinary study by the U.S. Geological Survey to characterize groundwater flow and...
Lake Hickory, North Carolina: Analysis of ambient conditions and simulation of hydrodynamics, constituent transport, and water-quality characteristics, 1993-94
J. D. Bales, M. J. Giorgino
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4149
From January 1993 through March 1994, circulation patterns and water- quality characteristics in Lake Hickory varied seasonally and were strongly influenced by inflows from Rhodhiss Dam. The upper, riverine portion of Lake Hickory was unstratified during much of the study period. Downstream from the headwaters to Oxford Dam, Lake Hickory...
Streambed stability and scour potential at selected bridge sites in Michigan
D. J. Holtschlag, R. L. Miller
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4024
Contraction scour in the main stream channel at a bridge and local scour near piers and abutments can result in bridge failure. Estimates of contraction-scour and local-scour potentials associated with the 100-year flood were computed for 13 bridge sites in Michigan by use of semi-theoretical equations and procedures recommended by...
Nutrient loading and selected water-quality and biological characteristics of Dickinson Bayou near Houston, Texas, 1995-97
Jeffery W. East, Edna M. Paul, Stephen D. Porter
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4012
Data were collected at 10 stations in the Dickinson Bayou watershed near Houston, Texas, from March 1995 through February 1997 to estimate the concentrations, loads, and yields of selected nutrients that enter the bayou; to characterize the effects on nutrient concentrations of flow conditions, seasonality, and land use; and to...
Flood of January 19-20, 1996 in New York State
Richard Lumia
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 97-4252
Heavy rain during January 18-19, 1996, combined with unseasonably warm temperatures that caused rapid snowmelt, resulted in widespread flooding throughout New York State. Damages to highways, bridges, and private property exceeded $100 million. The storm and flooding claimed 10 lives, stranded hundreds of people, destroyed or damaged thousands of homes...
Potential mineral resources, Payette National Forest, Idaho: Description and probabilistic estimation
Arthur A. Bookstrom, Bruce R. Johnson, Theresa M. Cookro, Karen Lund, Kenneth C. Watts, Harley D. King, Merlin D. Kleinkopf, James A. Pitkin, J. David Sanchez, J. Douglas Causey
1998, Open-File Report 98-219-A
The Payette National Forest (PNF), in west-central Idaho, is geologically diverse and contains a wide variety of mineral resources. Mineral deposit types are grouped into locatable, leasable, and salable categories. The PNF has substantial past production and identified resources of locatable commodities, including gold, silver, copper, zinc, tungsten, antimony, mercury,...
Flood-inundation map and water surface profiles for floods of selected recurrence intervals, Cosumnes River and Deer Creek, Sacramento County, California
Joel R. Guay, Jerry G. Harmon, Kelly R. McPherson
1998, Open-File Report 98-283
The damage caused by the January 1997 floods along the Cosumnes River and Deer Creek generated new interest in planning and managing land use in the study area. The 1997 floodflow peak, the highest on record and considered to be a 150-year flood, caused levee failures at 24 locations. In...
Crushed cement concrete substitution for construction aggregates; a materials flow analysis
Thomas Kelly
1998, Circular 1177
An analysis of the substitution of crushed cement concrete for natural construction aggregates is performed by using a materials flow diagram that tracks all material flows into and out of the cement concrete portion of the products made with cement concrete: highways, roads, and buildings. Crushed cement concrete is only...
A Review of Semivolatile and Volatile Organic Compounds in Highway Runoff and Urban Stormwater
Thomas J. Lopes, Shannon G. Dionne
1998, Open-File Report 98-409
Many studies have been conducted since 1970 to characterize concentrations of semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) in highway runoff and urban stormwater. To a lesser extent, studies also have characterized concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), estimated loads of SVOCs, and assessed potential impacts of these contaminants on receiving streams. This...
Data Quality Objectives and Criteria for Basic Information, Acceptable Uncertainty, and Quality-Assurance and Quality-Control Documentation
Gregory E. Granato, Fred G. Bank, Patricia A. Cazenas
1998, Open-File Report 98-394
The Federal Highway Administration and State transportation agencies have the responsibility of determining and minimizing the effects of highway runoff on water quality; therefore, they have been conducting an extensive program of water-quality monitoring and research during the last 25 years. The objectives and monitoring goals of highway runoff studies...
Highway to the tropics: Using satellite telemetry and the Internet to track ospreys in the Western Hemisphere
M.S. Martell, M.J. Kennedy, Charles J. Henny, P. Nye
1998, Book chapter, Migrating Birds Know No Boundaries: Scientific and Educational Aspects of Migrating Bird Conservation
No abstract available....
Level II scour analysis for Bridge 13 (BRAITH00150013) on Town Highway 15, crossing the Third Branch White River, Braintree, Vermont
Ronda L. Burns, Matthew A. Weber
1998, Open-File Report 98-290