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Hydrochemical tracers in the middle Rio Grande Basin, USA: 2. Calibration of a groundwater-flow model
W. E. Sanford, Niel Plummer, D. P. McAda, L. M. Bexfield, S. K. Anderholm
2004, Hydrogeology Journal (12) 389-407
The calibration of a groundwater model with the aid of hydrochemical data has demonstrated that low recharge rates in the Middle Rio Grande Basin may be responsible for a groundwater trough in the center of the basin and for a substantial amount of Rio Grande water in the regional flow...
Effectiveness of riparian buffers in controlling ground-water discharge of nitrate to streams in selected hydrogeologic settings of the North Carolina Coastal Plain
T.B. Spruill
2004, Water Science and Technology (49) 63-70
Water-quality and hydrologic information were collected along ground-water flow paths from two well-drained and two poorly drained Coastal Plain settings in North Carolina to evaluate the relative effectiveness of riparian buffers in reducing discharge of nitrate to streams. At one well-drained site with a 100 m buffer, little or no...
Hydrologic variability, water chemistry, and phytoplankton biomass in a large flood plain of the Sacramento River, CA, U.S.A.
L. E. Schemel, T.R. Sommer, A. B. Muller-Solger, W.C. Harrell
2004, Hydrobiologia (513) 129-139
The Yolo Bypass, a large, managed floodplain that discharges to the headwaters of the San Francisco Estuary, was studied before, during, and after a single, month-long inundation by the Sacramento River in winter and spring 2000. The primary objective was to identify hydrologic conditions and other factors that enhance...
A biogeochemical comparison of two well-buffered catchments with contrasting histories of acid deposition
J. B. Shanley, P. Kram, J. Hruska, T.D. Bullen
2004, Water, Air, and Soil Pollution: Focus (4) 325-342
Much of the biogeochemical cycling research in catchments in the past 25 years has been driven by acid deposition research funding. This research has focused on vulnerable base-poor systems; catchments on alkaline lithologies have received little attention. In regions of high acid loadings, however, even well-buffered catchments are susceptible...
Winter orographic precipitation ratios in the Sierra Nevada: Large-scale atmospheric circulations and hydrologic consequences
M. Dettinger, K. Redmond, D. Cayan
2004, Journal of Hydrometeorology (5) 1102-1116
The extent to which winter precipitation is orographically enhanced within the Sierra Nevada of California varies from storm to storm, and season to season, from occasions when precipitation rates at low and high altitudes are almost the same to instances when precipitation rates at middle elevations (considered...
Observed and simulated ground motions in the San Bernardino basin region for the Hector Mine, California, earthquake
R.W. Graves, D.J. Wald
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 131-146
During the MW 7.1 Hector Mine earthquake, peak ground velocities recorded at sites in the central San Bernardino basin region were up to 2 times larger and had significantly longer durations of strong shaking than sites just outside the basin. To better understand the effects of 3D structure on the...
Influence of natural organic matter source on copper speciation as demonstrated by Cu binding to fish gills, by ion selective electrode, and by DGT gel sampler
C.D. Luider, John Crusius, R.C. Playle, P.J. Curtis
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 2865-2872
Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss, 2 g) were exposed to 0−5 μM total copper in ion-poor water for 3 h in the presence or absence of 10 mg C/L of qualitatively different natural organic matter (NOM) derived from water spanning a large gradient in hydrologic residence time. Accumulation of Cu by...
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...
Albert H. Munsell: A sense of color at the interface of art and science
E. R. Landa
2004, Soil Science (169) 83-89
The color theory conceived and commercialized by Albert H. Munsell (1858-1918) has become a universal part of the lexicon of soil science. An American painter noted for his seascapes and portraits, he had a long-standing interest in the description of color. Munsell began studies aimed at standardizing color description, using...
Baseflow contribution to nitrate-nitrogen export from a large, agricultural watershed, USA
K. Schilling, Y.-K. Zhang
2004, Journal of Hydrology (295) 305-316
Nitrate-nitrogen export from the Raccoon River watershed in west-central Iowa is among the highest in the United State and contributes to impairment of downstream water quality. We examined a rare long-term record of streamflow and nitrate concentration data (1972-2000) to evaluate annual and seasonal patterns of nitrate losses in streamflow...
Identifying areas of basin-floor recharge in the Trans-Pecos region and the link to vegetation
Michelle Ann Walvoord, Fred M. Phillips
2004, Journal of Hydrology (292) 59-74
Comparative water potential and chloride profiles (∼10 m deep) collected from four vegetation communities in the Trans-Pecos region of the Chihuahuan Desert were assessed to evaluate the potential for using vegetation patterns as a means of efficiently improving large-scale estimates of basin-floor recharge in semiarid...
Radon (222Rn) in ground water of fractured rocks: A diffusion/ion exchange model
W.W. Wood, T. F. Kraemer, A. Shapiro
2004, Ground Water (42) 552-567
Ground waters from fractured igneous and high‐grade sialic metamorphic rocks frequently have elevated activity of dissolved radon (222Rn). A chemically based model is proposed whereby radium (226Ra) from the decay of uranium (238U) diffuses through the primary porosity of the rock to the water‐transmitting fracture where...
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...
9000 years of salmon fishing on the Columbia River, North America
V.L. Butler, J. E. O’Connor
2004, Quaternary Research (62) 1-8
A large assemblage of salmon bones excavated 50 yr ago from an ???10,000-yr-old archaeological site near The Dalles, Oregon, USA, has been the primary evidence that early native people along the Columbia River subsisted on salmon. Recent debate about the human role in creating the deposit prompted excavation of additional...
Are big basins just the sum of small catchments?
J. Shaman, M. Stieglitz, D. Burns
2004, Hydrological Processes (18) 3195-3206
Many challenges remain in extending our understanding of how hydrologic processes within small catchments scale to larger river basins. In this study we examine how low-flow runoff varies as a function of basin scale at 11 catchments, many of which are nested, in the 176 km2 Neversink River watershed in...
Preservation of water samples for arsenic(III/V) determinations: An evaluation of the literature and new analytical results
R. Blaine McCleskey, D. Kirk Nordstrom, A.S. Maest
2004, Applied Geochemistry (19) 995-1009
Published literature on preservation procedures for stabilizing aqueous inorganic As(III/V) redox species contains discrepancies. This study critically evaluates published reports on As redox preservation and explains discrepancies in the literature. Synthetic laboratory preservation experiments and time stability experiments were conducted for natural water samples from several field sites. Any field...
Fate of volatile organic compounds in constructed wastewater treatment wetlands
S.H. Keefe, L. B. Barber, R.L. Runkel, J. N. Ryan
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 2209-2216
The fate of volatile organic compounds was evaluated in a wastewater-dependent constructed wetland near Phoenix, AZ, using field measurements and solute transport modeling. Numerically based volatilization rates were determined using inverse modeling techniques and hydraulic parameters established by sodium bromide tracer experiments. Theoretical volatilization rates were calculated...
Climate and hydrology of the last interglaciation (MIS 5) in Owens Basin, California: Isotopic and geochemical evidence from core OL-92
H.-C. Li, J. L. Bischoff, T.-L. Ku, Z.-Y. Zhu
2004, Quaternary Science Reviews (23) 49-63
??18O, ??13C, total organic carbon, total inorganic carbon, and acid-leachable Li, Mg and Sr concentrations on 443 samples from 32 to 83 m depth in Owens Lake core OL-92 were analyzed to study the climatic and hydrological conditions between 60 and 155 ka with a resolution of ???200 a. The...
A review of models and micrometeorological methods used to estimate wetland evapotranspiration
J.Z. Drexler, R.L. Snyder, D. Spano, U.K.T. Paw
2004, Hydrological Processes (18) 2071-2101
Within the past decade or so, the accuracy of evapotranspiration (ET) estimates has improved due to new and increasingly sophisticated methods. Yet despite a plethora of choices concerning methods, estimation of wetland ET remains insufficiently characterized due to the complexity of surface characteristics and the diversity of wetland types. In...
Simulated long-term changes in river discharge and soil moisture due to global warming
S. Manabe, P. C. D. Milly, R. Wetherald
2004, Hydrological Sciences Journal (49) 625-642
By use of a coupled ocean atmosphere-land model, this study explores the changes of water availability, as measured by river discharge and soil moisture, that could occur by the middle of the 21st century in response to combined increases of greenhouse gases and sulphate aerosols based upon the "IS92a" scenario....
Geographic variation in patterns of nestedness among local stream fish assemblages in Virginia
R.R. Cook, P. L. Angermeier, D.S. Finn, N.L. Poff, K.L. Krueger
2004, Oecologia (140) 639-649
Nestedness of faunal assemblages is a multiscale phenomenon, potentially influenced by a variety of factors. Prior small-scale studies have found freshwater fish species assemblages to be nested along stream courses as a result of either selective colonization or extinction. However, within-stream gradients in temperature and other factors are correlated with...
Soil science and geology: Connects, disconnects and new opportunities in geoscience education
E. R. Landa
2004, Journal of Geoscience Education (52) 191-196
Despite historical linkages, the fields of geology and soil science have developed along largely divergent paths in the United States during much of the mid- to late- twentieth century. The shift in recent decades within both disciplines to greater emphasis on environmental quality issues and a systems approach has created...
The Modular Modeling System (MMS): A modeling framework for water- and environmental-resources management
G.H. Leavesley, S.L. Markstrom, Roland J. Viger
2004, Conference Paper, Bridging the Gap: Meeting the World's Water and Environmental Resources Challenges - Proceedings of the World Water and Environmental Resources Congress 2001
The interdisciplinary nature and increasing complexity of water- and environmental-resource problems require the use of modeling approaches that can incorporate knowledge from a broad range of scientific disciplines. The large number of distributed hydrological and ecosystem models currently available are composed of a variety of different conceptualizations of the associated...