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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Geothermal arsenic
John G. Webster, D. Kirk Nordstrom
A. H. Welch, Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Arsenic in ground water: Geochemistry and occurrence
No abstract available. ...
Geochemical processes controlling transport of arsenic in groundwater: A review of adsorption
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk
A. H. Welch, Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Arsenic in Ground Water
Adsorption is the predominate mechanism controlling transport of arsenic in many ground water systems. Hydrous oxides of iron, aluminum, and manganese, and clay minerals are commonly associated with aquifer solids and have been shown to be significant adsorbents of arsenic. The extent of arsenic adsorption is influenced by the chemistry...
Interactions between dissolved organic matter and mercury in the Florida Everglades
G. Aiken, M. Haitzer, J. N. Ryan, K. Nagy, George Aiken
Boutron C.Ferrari C., editor(s)
2003, Journal De Physique. IV : JP (107) 29-32
Experiments were conducted using organic matter isolated from various surface waters in the Florida Everglades to study the interactions between dissolved organic matter (DOM) and Hg (II). Conditional distribution coefficients ( ), obtained using an equilibriurn dialysis ligand exchange method, were strongly affected by...
Determining temperature and thermal properties for heat-based studies of surface-water ground-water interactions: Appendix A of Heat as a tool for studying the movement of ground water near streams (Cir1260)
David A. Stonestrom, Kyle W. Blasch
David A. Stonestrom, Jim Constantz, editor(s)
2003, Report, Heat as a tool for studying the movement of ground water near streams (Cir1260)
Advances in electronics leading to improved sensor technologies, large-scale circuit integration, and attendant miniaturization have created new opportunities to use heat as a tracer of subsurface flow. Because nature provides abundant thermal forcing at the land surface, heat is particularly useful in studying stream-groundwater interactions. This appendix describes methods for...
Differences in sedge fen vegetation upstream and downstream from a managed impoundment
Kurt P. Kowalski, Douglas A. Wilcox
2003, American Midland Naturalist (150) 199-220
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed the restoration of wetlands impacted by a series of drainage ditches and pools located in an extensive undeveloped peatland in the Seney National Wildlife Refuge, Michigan. This study examined the nature and extent of degradation to the Marsh Creek wetlands caused by alteration...
The collaborative historical African rainfall model: description and evaluation
Christopher C. Funk, Joel C. Michaelsen, James P. Verdin, Guleid A. Artan, Gregory Husak, Gabriel B. Senay, Hussein Gadain, Tamuka Magadazire
2003, International Journal of Climatology (23) 47-66
In Africa the variability of rainfall in space and time is high, and the general availability of historical gauge data is low. This makes many food security and hydrologic preparedness activities difficult. In order to help overcome this limitation, we have created the Collaborative Historical African Rainfall Model (CHARM)....
Influence of the Pacific decadal oscillation on the climate of the Sierra Nevada, California and Nevada
L. Benson, B. Linsley, J. Smoot, S. Mensing, S. Lund, S. Stine, A. Sarna-Wojcicki
2003, Quaternary Research (59) 151-159
Mono Lake sediments have recorded five major oscillations in the hydrologic balance between A.D. 1700 and 1941. These oscillations can be correlated with tree-ring-based oscillations in Sierra Nevada snowpack. Comparison of a tree-ring-based reconstruction of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) index (D' Arrigo et al., 2001) with a coral-based reconstruction...
A hydrologic network supporting spatially referenced regression modeling in the Chesapeake Bay watershed
J. W. Brakebill, S. D. Preston
2003, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (81) 73-84
The U.S. Geological Survey has developed a methodology for statistically relating nutrient sources and land-surface characteristics to nutrient loads of streams. The methodology is referred to as SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes (SPARROW), and relates measured stream nutrient loads to nutrient sources using nonlinear statistical regression models. A spatially...
Applicability of tetrazolium salts for the measurement of respiratory activity and viability of groundwater bacteria
P.B. Hatzinger, P. Palmer, R. L. Smith, C.T. Penarrieta, T. Yoshinari
2003, Journal of Microbiological Methods (52) 47-58
A study was undertaken to measure aerobic respiration by indigenous bacteria in a sand and gravel aquifer on western Cape Cod, MA using tetrazolium salts and by direct oxygen consumption using gas chromatography (GC). In groundwater and aquifer slurries, the rate of aerobic respiration...
Effects of crustal stresses on fluid transport in fractured rock: Case studies from northeastern and southwestern USA
R. H. Morin, W. Z. Savage
2003, Hydrogeology Journal (11) 100-112
The link between stress and hydrologic properties was examined at two sites that are distinguished by different rock types and different stress states. This investigation is based upon the analysis and interpretation of geophysical logs obtained in water wells at the two locations. At the northeast site (Newark Basin),...
Terpenoids as major precursors of dissolved organic matter in landfill leachates, surface water, and groundwater
J.A. Leenheer, M.A. Nanny, C. McIntyre
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 2323-2331
13C NMR analyses of hydrophobic dissolved organic matter (DOM) fractions isolated from a landfill leachate contaminated groundwater near Norman, OK; the Colorado River aqueduct near Los Angeles, CA; Anaheim Lake, an infiltration basin for the Santa Ana River in Orange County, CA; and groundwater from the Tomago Sand Beds, near...
Abundance and characteristics of the recreational water quality indicator bacteria Escherichia coli and enterococci in gull faeces
L.R. Fogarty, S.K. Haack, M. J. Wolcott, R.L. Whitman
2003, Journal of Applied Microbiology (94) 865-878
Aims: To evaluate the numbers and selected phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of the faecal indicator bacteria Escherichia coli and enterococci in gull faeces at representative Great Lakes swimming beaches in the United States.Methods and Results: E. coli and enterococci were enumerated in gull faeces by membrane filtration. E. coli genotypes (rep‐PCR genomic profiles) and E. coli (Vitek® GNI+) and enterococci...
Modelling hydrologic responses in a small forested catchment (Panola Mountain, Georgia, USA): A comparison of the original and a new dynamic TOPMODEL
N.E. Peters, J. Freer, K. Beven
2003, Hydrological Processes (17) 345-362
Preliminary modelling results for a new version of the rainfall-runoff model TOPMODEL, dynamic TOPMODEL, are compared with those of the original TOPMODEL formulation for predicting streamflow at the Panola Mountain Research Watershed, Georgia. Dynamic TOPMODEL uses a kinematic wave routing of subsurface flow, which allows for dynamically variable upslope contributing...
Characterization and diagenesis of strong-acid carboxyl groups in humic substances
J.A. Leenheer, R.L. Wershaw, G.K. Brown, M.M. Reddy
2003, Applied Geochemistry (18) 471-482
A small fraction of carboxylic acid functional groups in humic substances are exceptionally acidic with pKa values as low as 0.5. A review of acid-group theory eliminated most models and explanations for these exceptionally acidic carboxyl groups. These acidic carboxyl groups in Suwannee River fulvic acid were enriched by a...
Mobilization of radionuclides from uranium mill tailings and related waste materials in anaerobic environments
E. R. Landa
2003, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry (255) 559-563
Specific extraction studies in our laboratory have shown that iron and manganese oxide- and alkaline earth sulfate minerals are important hosts of radium in uranium mill tailings. Iron- and sulfate-reducing bacteria may enhance the release of radium (and its analog barium) from uranium mill tailings, oil field pipe scale [a...
Excess nitrogen in selected thermal and mineral springs of the Cascade Range in northern California, Oregon, and Washington: Sedimentary or volcanic in origin?
Robert H. Mariner, William C. Evans, T. S. Presser, L. D. White
2003, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (121) 99-114
Anomalous N2/Ar values occur in many thermal springs and mineral springs, some volcanic fumaroles, and at least one acid-sulfate spring of the Cascade Range. Our data show that N2/Ar values are as high as 300 in gas from some of the hot springs, as...
Aggradation of gravels in tidally influenced fluvial systems: Upper Albian (Lower Cretaceous) on the cratonic margin of the North American Western Interior foreland basin
Richard L. Brenner, Greg A. Ludvigson, B.L. Witzke, P.L. Phillips, T. S. White, David F. Ufnar, Luis A. Gonzalez, R. M. Joeckel, A. Goettemoeller, B.R. Shirk
2003, Cretaceous Research (24) 439-448
Alluvial conglomerates were widely distributed around the margin of the Early Cretaceous North American Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway (KWIS). Conglomerates, sandstones, and lesser amounts of mudstones of the upper Albian Nishnabotna Member of the Dakota Formation were deposited as fill-in valleys that were incised up to 80 m into upper...
Escherichia coli and enterococci at beaches in the Grand Traverse Bay, Lake Michigan: Sources, characteristics, and environmental pathways
S.K. Haack, L.R. Fogarty, C. Wright
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 3275-3282
This study quantified Escherichia coli(EC) and enterococci (ENT) in beach waters and dominant source materials, correlated these with ambient conditions, and determined selected EC genotypes and ENT phenotypes. Bathing-water ENT criteria were exceeded more frequently than EC criteria, providing conflicting interpretations of water quality. Dominant sources of EC and ENT...
Modeling Np and Pu transport with a surface complexation model and spatially variant sorption capacities: Implications for reactive transport modeling and performance assessments of nuclear waste disposal sites
P. D. Glynn
2003, Computers & Geosciences (29) 331-349
One-dimensional (1D) geochemical transport modeling is used to demonstrate the effects of speciation and sorption reactions on the ground-water transport of Np and Pu, two redox-sensitive elements. Earlier 1D simulations (Reardon, 1981) considered the kinetically limited dissolution of calcite and its effect on ion-exchange reactions (involving 90Sr, Ca, Na, Mg and...
Baseflow and stormflow metal fluxes from two small agricultural catchments in the Coastal Plain of the Chesapeake Bay Basin, United States
C.V. Miller, G.D. Foster, B.F. Majedi
2003, Applied Geochemistry (18) 483-501
Annual yields (fluxes per unit area) of Al, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cd, Pb, Zn, Cu, Cr, Co, As and Se were estimated for two small non-tidal stream catchments on the Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay, United States - a poorly drained dissected-upland watershed in the Nanticoke River Basin, and...
Stable isotope fractionation of selenium by natural microbial consortia
A.S. Ellis, T.M. Johnson, M.J. Herbel, T.D. Bullen
2003, Chemical Geology (195) 119-129
The mobility and bioavailability of Se depend on its redox state, and reduction of Se oxyanions to less mobile, reduced species controls transport of this potentially toxic element in the environment. Stable isotope fractionation of Se is currently being developed as an indicator of Se immobilization through reduction. In this...
Modeling flow and transport in unsaturated fractured rock: An evaluation of the continuum approach
H.-H. Liu, C.B. Haukwa, C.F. Ahlers, G.S. Bodvarsson, A. L. Flint, W.B. Guertal
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (62-63) 173-188
Because the continuum approach is relatively simple and straightforward to implement, it has been commonly used in modeling flow and transport in unsaturated fractured rock. However, the usefulness of this approach can be questioned in terms of its adequacy for representing fingering flow and transport in unsaturated fractured rock. The...
Temperature-pressure conditions in coalbed methane reservoirs of the Black Warrior basin: Implications for carbon sequestration and enhanced coalbed methane recovery
J.C. Pashin, M.R. McIntyre
2003, International Journal of Coal Geology (54) 167-183
Sorption of gas onto coal is sensitive to pressure and temperature, and carbon dioxide can be a potentially volatile supercritical fluid in coalbed methane reservoirs. More than 5000 wells have been drilled in the coalbed methane fields of the Black Warrior basin in west-central Alabama, and the hydrologic and geothermic...
Chemical analyses of pore water from boreholes USW SD-6 and USW WT-24, Yucca Mountain, Nevada
I.C. Yang, Z. E. Peterman, K.M. Scofield
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (62-63) 361-380
Analyses of pore water extracted from cores of boreholes USW SD-6 in the central part and USW WT-24 in the northern part of Yucca Mountain, Nevada, show significant vertical and lateral variations in dissolved-ion concentrations. Analyses of samples of only a few milliliters of pore water extracted by uniaxial or...