The microbial arsenic cycle in Mono Lake, California
Ronald S. Oremland, John F. Stolz, James T. Hollibaugh
2004, FEMS Microbiology Ecology (48) 15-27
Significant concentrations of dissolved inorganic arsenic can be found in the waters of a number of lakes located in the western USA and in other water bodies around the world. These lakes are often situated in arid, volcanic terrain. The highest concentrations of arsenic occur in hypersaline, closed basin soda...
Effect of Fe(III) on 1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane degradation and vinyl chloride accumulation in wetland sediments of the Aberdeen Proving Ground
Elizabeth Jones, Mary Voytek, Michelle Lorah
2004, Bioremediation Journal (8) 31-45
1,1,2,2-Tetrachloroethane (TeCA) contaminated groundwater at the Aberdeen Proving Ground discharges through an anaerobic wetland in West Branch Canal Creek (MD), where dechlorination occurs. Two microbially mediated pathways, dichloroelimination and hydrogenolysis, account for most of the TeCA degradation at this site. The dichloroelimination pathways lead to the formation of vinyl chloride...
Atlas of depth-duration frequency of precipitation annual maxima for Texas
William H. Asquith, Meghan C. Roussel
2004, Texas Department of Transportation Project Summary Report 5–1301–01–S
The objective of this Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) cooperatively funded project was to develop a simple-to-use atlas of precipitation depths in Texas for selected storm durations and frequencies on the basis of the research results and unpublished digital archives of Asquith (1998). The selected...
In situ expression of nifD in Geobacteraceae in subsurface sediments
Dawn E. Holmes, Kelly P. Nevin, Derek R. Lovely
2004, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (70) 7251-7259
In order to determine whether the metabolic state of Geobacteraceae involved in bioremediation of subsurface sediments might be inferred from levels of mRNA for key genes, in situ expression of nifD, a highly conserved gene involved in nitrogen fixation, was investigated. When Geobacter sulfurreducens was grown without a source of...
Degradates provide insight to spatial and temporal trends of herbicides in ground water
D.W. Kolpin, D.J. Schnoebelen, E.M. Thurman
2004, Groundwater (42) 601-608
Since 1995, a network of municipal wells in Iowa, representing all major aquifer types (alluvial, bedrock/karst region, glacial drift, bedrock/nonkarst region), has been repeatedly sampled for a broad suite of herbicide compounds yielding one of the most comprehensive statewide databases of such compounds currently available in the United States. This...
Drainage effects on stream nitrate-N and hydrology in south-central Minnesota (USA)
J.A. Magner, G. A. Payne, J. Steffen
2004, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (91) 183-198
Excessive nitrate-N in south-central Minnesota ditches and streams is related to land-use change, and may be contributing to the development of the zone of hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico. Intensive land-use (agricultural management) has progressively increased as subsurface drainage has improved crop productivity over the past 25 years. We...
Genotoxicity in native fish associated with agricultural runoff events
Andrew Whitehead, Kathryn Kuivila, James L. Orlando, S. Kotelevtsev, Susan L. Anderson
2004, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (23) 2868-2877
The primary objective of the present study was to test whether agricultural chemical runoff was associated with in-stream genotoxicity in native fish. Using Sacramento sucker (Catostomus occidentalis), we combined field-caging experiments in an agriculturally dominated watershed with controlled laboratory exposures to field-collected water samples, and we coupled genotoxicity biomarker measurements...
Evidence for increased latent heat transport during the Cretaceous (Albian) greenhouse warming
David F. Ufnar, Luis A. Gonzalez, Greg A. Ludvigson, Richard L. Brenner, B.J. Witzke
2004, Geology (32) 1049-1052
Quantitative estimates of increased heat transfer by atmospheric H 2O vapor during the Albian greenhouse warming suggest that the intensified hydrologic cycle played a greater role in warming high latitudes than at present and thus represents a viable alternative to oceanic heat transport. Sphaerosiderite ??18O values in paleosols of the...
Redox transformations of arsenic oxyanions in periphyton communities
T.R. Kulp, S.E. Hoeft, R.S. Oremland
2004, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (70) 6428-6434
Periphyton (Cladophora sp.) samples from a suburban stream lacking detectable dissolved As were able to reduce added As(V) to As(III) when incubated under anoxic conditions and, conversely, oxidized added As(III) to As(V) with aerobic incubation. Both types of activity were abolished in autoclaved controls, thereby demonstrating its...
The estuarine chemistry and isotope systematics of 234,238U in the Amazon and Fly Rivers
P. Swarzenski, P. Campbell, D. Porcelli, B. McKee
2004, Continental Shelf Research (24) 2357-2372
Natural concentrations of 238U and ??234U values were determined in estuarine surface waters and pore waters of the Amazon and Fly (Papua New Guinea) Rivers to investigate U transport phenomena across river-dominated land-sea margins. Discharge from large, tropical rivers is a major source of dissolved and solid materials transported to...
Identifying storm flow pathways in a rainforest catchment using hydrological and geochemical modelling
D.A. Kinner, R.F. Stallard
2004, Hydrological Processes (18) 2851-2875
The hydrological model TOPMODEL is used to assess the water balance and describe flow paths for the 9??73 ha Lutz Creek Catchment in Central Panama. Monte Carlo results are evaluated based on their fit to the observed hydrograph, catchment-averaged soil moisture and stream chemistry. TOPMODEL, with a direct-flow mechanism that...
Effects of nutrient enrichment on the decomposition of wood and associated microbial activity in streams
V. Gulis, A.D. Rosemond, K. Suberkropp, H.S. Weyers, J.P. Benstead
2004, Freshwater Biology (49) 1437-1447
1. We determined the effects of nutrient enrichment on wood decomposition rates and microbial activity during a 3-year study in two headwater streams at Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, NC, U.S.A. After a 1-year pretreatment period, one of the streams was continuously enriched with inorganic nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) for 2 years...
Air temperature and snowmelt discharge characteristics, Merced River at Happy Isles, Yosemite National Park, Central Sierra Nevada
D. Peterson, R. Smith, S. Hager, D. Cayan, M. Dettinger
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Pacific Climate Workshop
No abstract available....
A walk through the hydroclimate network in Yosemite National Park: River chemistry
Dave Peterson, Richard Smith, Stephen Hager
2004, Sierra Nature Notes (4) 1-16
Visitors to Yosemite National Park (YNP) are fully aware of the weather, snowmelt, waterfalls (Photo 1), and river discharge and river and lake water temperature. They are not, however, thinking about river chemistry because you can’t see, hear, or feel it. So a river chemistry article in Nature Notes needs...
Use of qualitative and quantitative information in neural networks for assessing agricultural chemical contamination of domestic wells
A. Mishra, C. Ray, D.W. Kolpin
2004, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (9) 502-511
A neural network analysis of agrichemical occurrence in groundwater was conducted using data from a pilot study of 192 small-diameter drilled and driven wells and 115 dug and bored wells in Illinois, a regional reconnaissance network of 303 wells across 12 Midwestern states, and a study of 687 domestic wells...
The origin and mechanisms of salinization of the Lower Jordan River
E. Farber, A. Vengosh, I. Gavrieli, Amarisa Marie, T.D. Bullen, B. Mayer, R. Holtzman, M. Segal, U. Shavit
2004, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (68) 1989-2006
The chemical and isotopic (87Sr/86Sr, ??11B, ??34Ssulfate, ??18Owater, ??15Nnitrate) compositions of water from the Lower Jordan River and its major tributaries between the Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea were determined in order to reveal the origin of the salinity of the Jordan River. We identified three separate hydrological...
Monitoring radionuclide contamination in the unsaturated zone - Lessons learned at the Amargosa Desert Research Site, Nye County, Nevada
David A. Stonestrom, Jared D. Abraham, Brian J. Andraski, Ronald J. Baker, C. Justin Mayers, Robert L. Michel, David E. Prudic, Robert G. Striegl, Michelle Ann Walvoord
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings, Workshop on long-term performance monitoring of metals and radionuclides in the subsurface
Contaminant-transport processes are being investigated at the U.S. Geological Survey’s Amargosa Desert Research Site (A DRS), adjacent to the Nation’s first commercial disposal facility for low-level radioactive waste. Gases containing tritium and radiocarbon are migrating through a 110-m thick unsaturated zone from unlined trenches that received waste from 1962 to...
Use of chemical and isotopic tracers to assess nitrate contamination and ground-water age, Woodville Karst Plain, USA
B. G. Katz, A.R. Chelette, T.R. Pratt
2004, Journal of Hydrology (289) 36-61
Concerns regarding ground-water contamination in the Woodville Karst Plain have arisen due to a steady increase in nitrate-N concentrations (0.25-0.90 mg/l) during the past 30 years in Wakulla Springs, a large regional discharge point for water (9.6 m3/s) from the Upper Floridan aquifer (UFA). Multiple isotopic and chemical tracers were...
Nitrate and herbicide loading in two groundwater basins of Illinois' sinkhole plain
S.V. Panno, W.R. Kelly
2004, Journal of Hydrology (290) 229-242
This investigation was designed to estimate the mass loading of nitrate (NO3-) and herbicides in spring water discharging from groundwater basins in an agriculturally dominated, mantled karst terrain. The loading was normalized to land use and NO3- and herbicide losses were compared to estimated losses in other agricultural areas of...
SWICA-2 M3: Second conference on salt water intrusion in coastal aquifers: Monitoring, modeling, and management
L.E. Marin, C.I. Voss
2004, Groundwater (42) 318-322
No abstract available...
Spatial and temporal changes in microbial community structure associated with recharge-influenced chemical gradients in a contaminated aquifer
S.K. Haack, L.R. Fogarty, T.G. West, E.W. Alm, J.T. McGuire, D.T. Long, D.W. Hyndman, L.J. Forney
2004, Environmental Microbiology (6) 438-448
In a contaminated water‐table aquifer, we related microbial community structure on aquifer sediments to gradients in 24 geochemical and contaminant variables at five depths, under three recharge conditions. Community amplified ribsosomal DNA restriction analysis (ARDRA) using universal 16S rDNA primers and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE)...
Using dual-bacterial denitrification to improve δ15N determinations of nitrates containing mass-independent 17O
Tyler B. Coplen, J.K. Bohlke, Karen L. Casciotti
2004, Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry (18) 245-250
The bacterial denitrification method for isotopic analysis of nitrate using N2O generated from Pseudomonas aureofaciens may overestimate δ15N values by as much as 1–2‰ for samples containing atmospheric nitrate because of mass-independent 17O variations in such samples. By analyzing such samples for δ15N and δ18O using the denitrifier Pseudomonas chlororaphis,...
Relative effect of temperature and pH on diel cycling of dissolved trace elements in Prickly Pear Creek, Montana
Clain A. Jones, D. A. Nimick, R. Blaine McCleskey
2004, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (153) 95-113
Diel (24 hr) cycles in dissolved metal and As concentrations have been documented in many northern Rocky Mountain streams in the U.S.A. The cause(s) of the cycles are unknown, although temperature- and pH-dependent sorption reactions have been cited as likely causes. A light/dark experiment was conducted to isolate temperature...
Importance of the Vadose Zone in analyses of unconfined aquifer tests
A.F. Moench
2004, Ground Water (42) 223-233
Analytical models commonly used to interpret unconfined aquifer tests have been based on upper-boundary (water table) conditions that do not adequately address effects of time-varying drainage from the vadose zone. As a result, measured and simulated drawdown data may not agree and hydraulic parameters may be inaccurately estimated. A 72-hour...
Hydrology, metals, and aquatic physical habitat in the Upper Animas watershed, Colorado
R.T. Milhous
2004, Conference Paper, Watershed Management and Operations Management 2000
The Upper Animas River watershed in southwestern Colorado is a watershed with historic mining districts with many small mines and mills and a few larger mines and mills. The numbers of trout may be limited by high flows during the spring runoff period and by winter streamflows. In some locations...