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Page 301, results 7501 - 7525

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Degradation of methyl bromide and methyl chloride in soil microcosms: Use of stable C isotope fractionation and stable isotope probing to identify reactions and the responsible microorganisms
L.G. Miller, K.L. Warner, S.M. Baesman, R.S. Oremland, I.R. McDonald, S. Radajewski, J.C. Murrell
2004, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (68) 3271-3283
Bacteria in soil microcosm experiments oxidized elevated levels of methyl chloride (MeCl) and methyl bromide (MeBr), the former compound more rapidly than the latter. MeBr was also removed by chemical reactions while MeCl was not. Chemical degradation dominated the early removal of MeBr and...
Effect of cell physicochemical characteristics and motility on bacterial transport in groundwater
M.W. Becker, S.A. Collins, D.W. Metge, R.W. Harvey, A.M. Shapiro
2004, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (69) 195-213
The influence of physicochemical characteristics and motility on bacterial transport in groundwater were examined in flow-through columns. Four strains of bacteria isolated from a crystalline rock groundwater system were investigated, with carboxylate-modified and amidine-modified latex microspheres and bromide as reference tracers. The bacterial isolates included a gram-positive rod (ML1), a...
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...
A resampling procedure for generating conditioned daily weather sequences
Martyn P. Clark, Subhrendu Gangopadhyay, David Brandon, Kevin Werner, Lauren E. Hay, Balaji Rajagopalan, David Yates
2004, Water Resources Research (40)
A method is introduced to generate conditioned daily precipitation and temperature time series at multiple stations. The method resamples data from the historical record “nens” times for the period of interest (nens = number of ensemble members) and reorders the ensemble members to reconstruct the observed spatial (intersite) and temporal...
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...
Rare earth element partitioning between hydrous ferric oxides and acid mine water during iron oxidation
P. L. Verplanck, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Howard E. Taylor, B. A. Kimball
2004, Applied Geochemistry (19) 1339-1354
Ferrous iron rapidly oxidizes to Fe (III) and precipitates as hydrous Fe (III) oxides in acid mine waters. This study examines the effect of Fe precipitation on the rare earth element(REE) geochemistry of acid mine waters to determine the pH range over which REEs behave conservatively and the range...
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...
Importance of storm events in controlling ecosystem structure and function in a Florida Gulf Coast estuary
Stephen E Davis, J.E. Cable, D.L. Childers, C. Coronado-Molina, J.W. Day, C.D. Hittle, C.J. Madden, E. Reyes, D. Rudnick, F. Sklar
2004, Journal of Coastal Research (20) 1198-1208
From 8/95 to 2/01, we investigated the ecological effects of intra- and inter-annual variability in freshwater flow through Taylor Creek in southeastern Everglades National Park. Continuous monitoring and intensive sampling studies overlapped with an array of pulsed weather events that impacted physical, chemical, and biological attributes of this region. We...
Biotransformation of tributyltin to tin in freshwater river-bed sediments contaminated by an organotin release
J. E. Landmeyer, T.L. Tanner, B.E. Watt
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 4106-4112
The largest documented release of organotin compounds to a freshwater river system in the United States occurred in early 2000 in central South Carolina. The release consisted of an unknown volume of various organotin compounds such tetrabutyltin (TTBT), tributyltin (TBT), tetraoctyltin (TTOT), and trioctyl tin (TOT) and resulted in a...
Re-evaluation of heat flow data near Parkfield, CA: Evidence for a weak San Andreas Fault
P.M. Fulton, D.M. Saffer, Reid N. Harris, B.A. Bekins
2004, Geophysical Research Letters (31)
Improved interpretations of the strength of the San Andreas Fault near Parkfield, CA based on thermal data require quantification of processes causing significant scatter and uncertainty in existing heat flow data. These effects include topographic refraction, heat advection by topographically-driven groundwater flow, and uncertainty in thermal conductivity. Here, we re-evaluate...
Surface complexation model of uranyl sorption on Georgia kaolinite
T.E. Payne, J.A. Davis, G.R. Lumpkin, R. Chisari, T.D. Waite
2004, Applied Clay Science (26) 151-162
The adsorption of uranyl on standard Georgia kaolinites (KGa-1 and KGa-1B) was studied as a function of pH (3–10), total U (1 and 10 μmol/l), and mass loading of clay (4 and 40 g/l). The uptake of uranyl in air-equilibrated systems increased with pH and reached...
Linear model describing three components of flow in karst aquifers using 18O data
Andrew J. Long, L.D. Putnam
2004, Journal of Hydrology (296) 254-270
The stable isotope of oxygen, 18O, is used as a naturally occurring ground-water tracer. Time-series data for ??18O are analyzed to model the distinct responses and relative proportions of the conduit, intermediate, and diffuse flow components in karst aquifers. This analysis also describes mathematically the dynamics of the transient fluid...
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...
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...
Formation of a paleothermal anomaly and disseminated gold deposits associated with the Bingham Canyon porphyry Cu-Au-Mo system, Utah
C. G. Cunningham, G.W. Austin, C. W. Naeser, R. O. Rye, G.H. Ballantyne, R.G. Stamm, C.E. Barker
2004, Economic Geology (99) 789-806
The thermal history of the Oquirrh Mountains, Utah, indicates that hydrothermal fluids associated with emplacement of the 37 Ma Bingham Canyon porphyry Cu-Au-Mo deposit extended at least 10 km north of the Bingham pit. An associated paleothermal anomaly enclosed the Barneys Canyon and Melco disseminated gold deposits and several smaller...
Food web pathway determines how selenium affects aquatic ecosystems: A San francisco Bay case study
A.R. Stewart, S. N. Luoma, C.E. Schlekat, M.A. Doblin, K.A. Hieb
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 4519-4526
Chemical contaminants disrupt ecosystems, but specific effects may be under-appreciated when poorly known processes such as uptake mechanisms, uptake via diet, food preferences, and food web dynamics are influential. Here we show that a combination of food web structure and the physiology of trace element accumulation explain why some species...
Use of an electromagnetic seepage meter to investigate temporal variability in lake seepage
D.O. Rosenberry, R. H. Morin
2004, Ground Water (42) 68-77
A commercially available electromagnetic flowmeter is attached to a seepage cylinder to create an electromagnetic seepage meter (ESM) for automating measurement of fluxes across the sediment/water interface between ground water and surface water. The ESM is evaluated through its application at two lakes in New England, one where water seeps...
Approaches to surface complexation modeling of Uranium(VI) adsorption on aquifer sediments
J.A. Davis, D.E. Meece, M. Kohler, G.P. Curtis
2004, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (68) 3621-3641
Uranium(VI) adsorption onto aquifer sediments was studied in batch experiments as a function of pH and U(VI) and dissolved carbonate concentrations in artificial groundwater solutions. The sediments were collected from an alluvial aquifer at a location upgradient of contamination from a former uranium mill...
Mechanisms of electron acceptor utilization: Implications for simulating anaerobic biodegradation
M.E. Schreiber, G.R. Carey, D. T. Feinstein, J.M. Bahr
2004, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (73) 99-127
Simulation of biodegradation reactions within a reactive transport framework requires information on mechanisms of terminal electron acceptor processes (TEAPs). In initial modeling efforts, TEAPs were approximated as occurring sequentially, with the highest energy-yielding electron acceptors (e.g. oxygen) consumed before those that yield less energy (e.g., sulfate). Within this framework in...
Sorption of 99mTc radiopharmaceutical compounds by soils
S. Jurisson, J. Gawenis, E. R. Landa
2004, Health Physics (87) 423-428
Study of the sorption of 99mTc radiopharmaceutical compounds by soils has assessed the fate of these compounds in the event of a surface spill and examined the potential of these compounds as hydrologic tracers. Sorption from deionized water, filtered Missouri River water, and artificial seawater by five surface soils was...
Transient Analysis of the Source of Water to Wells: Cape Cod, Massachusetts
John P. Masterson, D. A. Walter, D.R. LeBlanc
2004, Ground Water (42) 126-134
A transient flow modeling analysis for potential public-supply wells on western Cape Cod, Massachusetts, demonstrates the difference between transient and steady-state recharge areas can have important implications for wellhead protection. An example of a single pumping well illustrates that commonly, used steady-state time-related capture areas do not represent the recharge...
Relationships between wintering waterbirds and invertebrates, sediments and hydrology of coastal marsh ponds
F. Bolduc, A. D. Afton
2004, Waterbirds (27) 333-341
We studied relationships among sediment variables (carbon content, C:N, hardness, oxygen penetration, silt-clay fraction), hydrologic variables (dissolved oxygen, salinity, temperature, transparency, water depth), sizes and biomass of common invertebrate classes, and densities of 15 common waterbird species in ponds of impounded freshwater, oligohaline, mesohaline, and unimpounded mesohaline marshes during winters...
Denitrification and hydrologic transient storage in a glacial meltwater stream, McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
M.N. Gooseff, Diane M. McKnight, R.L. Runkel, J.H. Duff
2004, Limnology and Oceanography (49) 1884-1895
In extreme environments, retention of nutrients within stream ecosystems contributes to the persistence of aquatic biota and continuity of ecosystem function. In the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica, many glacial meltwater streams flow for only 5–12 weeks a year and yet support extensive benthic microbial communities. We investigated...
Calculation of individual isotope equilibrium constants for geochemical reactions
D.C. Thorstenson, D.L. Parkhurst
2004, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (68) 2449-2465
Theory is derived from the work of Urey (Urey H. C. [1947] The thermodynamic properties of isotopic substances. J. Chem. Soc. 562–581) to calculate equilibrium constants commonly used in geochemical equilibrium and reaction-transport models for reactions of individual isotopic species. Urey showed that equilibrium constants of isotope exchange reactions for molecules...