Hydrology and cycling of nitrogen and phosphorus in Little Bean Marsh: A remnant riparian wetland along the Missouri River in Platte County, Missouri, 1996–97
Dale W. Blevins
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5171
The lack of concurrent water-quality and hydrologic data on riparian wetlands in the Midwestern United States has resulted in a lack of knowledge about the water-quality functions that these wetlands provide. Therefore, Little Bean Marsh, a remnant riparian wetland along the Missouri River, was investigated in 1996 and 1997 primarily...
Loads and yields of selected constituents in streams and rivers of Monroe County, New York, 1984-2001
Donald A. Sherwood
2004, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4197
Hydrologic data collected in Monroe County since the 1980s and earlier, including long-term records of streamflow and chemical loads, provide a basis for assessment of water-management practices. All monitored streams except Northrup Creek showed a slight (nonsignificant) overall decrease in annual streamflow over their period of record; Northrup Creek showed...
Effects of flow modification on a cattail wetland at the mouth of Irondequoit Creek near Rochester, New York: Water levels, wetland biota, sediment, and water quality
William F. Coon
2004, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4224
An 11-year (1990-2001) study of the Ellison Park wetland, a 423-acre, predominantly cattail (Typha glauca) wetland at the mouth of Irondequoit Creek, was conducted to document the effects that flow modifications, including installation of a flow-control structure (FCS) in 1997 and increased diversion of stormflows to the backwater areas of...
Chloroform in the hydrologic system--sources, transport, fate, occurrence, and effects on human health and aquatic organisms
Tamara Ivahnenko, Jack E. Barbash
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5137
Chloroform is one of the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) detected most frequently in both ground and surface water. Because it is also one of the four trihalomethanes (THMs) produced in the highest concentrations during the chlorination of drinking water and wastewater, the frequent detection of this compound in ground and...
Development of a long-term sampling network to monitor restoration success in the southwest coastal Everglades: Vegetation, hydrology, and sediments
Thomas J. Smith III
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3015
Introduction and HistoryHurricane Andrew, a Category 5 storm, crossed the southern Florida peninsula on the morning of August 24, 1992. Following the storm, the National Park Service conducted an environmental damage assessment to gauge the storm's impacts on the natural resources of south Florida Park Service holdings. Although hurricanes have...
Integrated monitoring of hydrogeomorphic, vegetative, and edaphic conditions in riparian ecosystems of Great Basin National Park, Nevada
Erik A. Beever, D.A. Pyke
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5185
In semiarid regions such as the Great Basin, riparian areas function as oases of cooler and more stable microclimates, greater relative humidity, greater structural complexity, and a steady flow of water and nutrients relative to upland areas. These qualities make riparian areaʼs attractive not only to resident and migratory wildlife,...
Hydrologic and geochemical controls on pesticide and nutrient transport to two streams on the Delmarva Peninsula
Scott W. Ator, Judith M. Denver, Michael J. Brayton
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5051
Pesticides and nutrients move from application areas through ground water and surface runoff to streams on the Delmarva Peninsula. The relative importance of different transport media to the movement of these compounds in different watersheds is related to locally variable hydrologic and geochemical conditions among areas of regionally similar land...
Global change impacts on mangrove ecosystems
Karen L. McKee
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3125
Mangroves are tropical/subtropical communities of primarily tree species that grow in the intertidal zone. These tidal forests are important coastal ecosystems that are valued for a variety of ecological and societal goods and services. Major local threats to mangrove ecosystems worldwide include clearcutting and trimming of forests for urban, agricultural,...
Migration stopover ecology of western avian populations: A southwestern migration workshop
Susan K. Skagen, Cynthia P. Melcher, Rob Hazelwood
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1452
The importance of migration stopover sites in ensuring that migratory birds successfully accomplish their journeys between breeding and non-breeding ranges has come to the forefront of avian research. Migratory birds that breed in western United States (US) and Canada and overwinter primarily in western Mexico migrate across the arid region...
Two-dimensional hydrodynamic simulation of surface-water flow and transport to Florida Bay through the Southern Inland and Coastal Systems (SICS)
Eric D. Swain, Melinda A. Wolfert, Jerad D. Bales, Carl R. Goodwin
2004, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4287
Successful restoration of the southern Florida ecosystem requires extensive knowledge of the physical characteristics and hydrologic processes controlling water flow and transport of constituents through extremely low-gradient freshwater marshes, shallow mangrove-fringed coastal creeks and tidal embayments, and near-shore marine waters. A sound, physically based numerical model can provide simulations of...
Combined use of borehole geophysics and packers to site potable wells in a contaminated area in Montville, Connecticut
A. Green, John W. Lane Jr., Carole D. Johnson, John H. Williams, Remo A. Mondazzi, Peter K. Joesten
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings: 2004 U.S. EPA/NGWA Fractured Rock Conference
A leaking underground gasoline tank contaminated a crystalline bedrock aquifer in Montville, Connecticut, USA with MTBE and benzene. At the original residential bedrock supply wells, the median MTBE concentration was 165 micrograms per liter (mg/L), and the median benzene concentration was 320 mg/L. The maximum concentrations of MTBE and...
Time-series monitoring in fractured-rock aquifers
Carole D. Johnson, John W. Lane Jr., Frederick D. Day-Lewis
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings: 2004 U.S. EPA/NGWA fractured rock conference: State of the science and measuring success in remediation
Time-lapse monitoring of subsurface processes is an emerging and promising area of hydrogeophysics. The combined use of non-invasive or minimally invasive geophysical methods with hydraulic and geochemical sampling is a cost-effective approach for aquifer characterization, long-term aquifer monitoring, and remediation monitoring. Time-lapse geophysical surveys can indirectly measure time-varying hydrologic parameters...
Comment on “Probabilistic risk analysis for a high-level radioactive waste repository” by B. L. Cohen in risk analysis, volume 23, 909–915
R.C. Ewing, C.S. Palenik, Leonard F. Konikow
2004, Risk Analysis (24) 1417-1419
No abstract available....
Organic materials in geology
K. E. Peters, Frances D. Hostettler
Nico Nibbering, editor(s)
2004, Book chapter, Fundamentals of and applications to organic and organometallic compounds: The encyclopedia of mass spectrometry
No abstract available. ...
Hydrogeology Journal in 2004
Clifford Voss, Perry Olcott, Robert Schneider, Christine Watson
2004, Hydrogeology Journal (12) 611-612
Hydrogeology Journal continues to flourish. The increase in the size of our yearly volume attests to the success and growing international reputation of the journal. Until 2001, HJ produced about 600 printed pages each year. This number has steadily increased, and in 2005 and 2006,<i class="EmphasisTypeItalic...
Evaluating the effect of salinity on a simulated American Crocodile (Crocodylus acutus) population with applications to conservation and Everglades restoration
Paul M. Richards, Wolf M. Mooij, Donald L. DeAngelis
2004, Ecological Modelling (180) 371-394
Everglades restoration will alter the hydrology of South Florida, affecting both water depth and salinity levels in the southern fringes of the Everglades, the habitat of the endangered American crocodile (Crocodylus acutus). A key question is what the effects of these hydrologic changes will be on the crocodile population. Reliable...
A precipitation-runoff model for the analysis of the effects of water withdrawals and land-use change on streamflow in the Usquepaug–Queen River Basin, Rhode Island
Phillip J. Zarriello, Gardner C. Bent
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5139
The 36.1-square-mile Usquepaug–Queen River Basin in south-central Rhode Island is an important water resource. Streamflow records indicate that withdrawals may have diminished flows enough to affect aquatic habitat. Concern over the effect of withdrawals on streamflow and aquatic habitat prompted the development of a Hydrologic Simulation Program–FORTRAN (HSPF) model...
Ground water recharge and discharge in the central Everglades
Judson W. Harvey, Steven L. Krupa, James M. Krest
2004, Groundwater (42) 1090-1102
Rates of ground water recharge and discharge are not well known in the central Everglades. Here we report estimates of ground water recharge and discharge at 15 sites in the Everglades Nutrient Removal Project and in Water Conservation Area 2A (WCA-2A), along with measurements of hydraulic properties of peat at...
Effects of aquifer travel time on nitrogen transport to a coastal embayment
John A. Colman, John P. Masterson, Wendy J. Pabich, Donald A. Walter
2004, Groundwater (42) 1069-1078
Effects of aquifer travel time on nitrogen reaction and loading to Popponesset Bay, a eutrophic coastal embayment on western Cape Cod, Massachusetts, are evaluated through hydrologic analysis of flow and transport. Approximately 10% of the total nitrogen load to the embayment is intercepted by fresh water ponds and delivered to...
Regression equations for estimating flood flows for the 2-, 10-, 25-, 50-, 100-, and 500-Year recurrence intervals in Connecticut
Elizabeth A. Ahearn
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5160
Multiple linear-regression equations were developed to estimate the magnitudes of floods in Connecticut for recurrence intervals ranging from 2 to 500 years. The equations can be used for nonurban, unregulated stream sites in Connecticut with drainage areas ranging from about 2 to 715 square miles. Flood-frequency data and hydrologic characteristics...
Ground water beneath coastal bays of the Delmarva Peninsula: Ages and nutrients
John F. Bratton, John Karl Böhlke, Frank T. Manheim, David E. Krantz
2004, Groundwater (42) 1021-1034
To complement a large-scale geophysical investigation of occurrence and discharge of fresh water beneath Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia (Delmarva) coastal bays, we measured (1) salinity and nutrient concentrations in ground water samples from several offshore coring sites and (2) a suite of chemical and isotopic parameters, including age tracers, in...
Calibration strategies for a groundwater model in a highly dynamic alpine floodplain
L. Foglia, P. Burlando, Mary C. Hill, S. Mehl
2004, Conference Paper
Most surface flows to the 20-km-long Maggia Valley in Southern Switzerland are impounded and the valley is being investigated to determine environmental flow requirements. The aim of the investigation is the devel-opment of a modelling framework that simulates the dynamics of...
Assessing conceptual models for subsurface reactive transport of inorganic contaminants
James A. Davis, Steven B. Yabusaki, Carl Steefel, John M. Zachara, Gary P. Curtis, George D. Redden, Louise J. Criscenti, Bruce D. Honeyman
2004, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (85) 449-445
In many subsurface situations where human health and environmental quality are at risk (e.g., contaminant hydrogeology petroleum extraction, carbon sequestration, etc.),scientists and engineers are being asked by federal agency decision-makers to predict the fate of chemical species under conditions where both reactions and transport are processes of first-order importance.In 2002,...
Hydrogeology and Hydrologic Landscape Regions of Nevada
Douglas K. Maurer, Thomas J. Lopes, Rose L. Medina, J. LaRue Smith
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5131
In 1999, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency initiated a rule to protect ground water in areas other than source-water protection areas. These other sensitive ground water areas (OSGWAs) are aquifers that are not currently but could eventually be used as a source of drinking water. The OSGWA program specifically addresses...
Death Valley regional ground-water flow system, Nevada and California -- hydrogeologic framework and transient ground-water flow model
Wayne R. Belcher, editor(s)
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5205
A numerical three-dimensional (3D) transient ground-water flow model of the Death Valley region was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey for the U.S. Department of Energy programs at the Nevada Test Site and at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Decades of study of aspects of the ground-water flow system and previous less...