Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

16506 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 316, results 7876 - 7900

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
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...
Geomorphic and hydrologic assessment of erosion hazards at the Norman municipal landfill, Canadian River floodplain, central Oklahoma
Jennifer A. Curtis, John W. Whitney
2003, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (9) 241-252
The Norman, Oklahoma, municipal landfill closed in 1985 after 63 years of operation, because it was identified as a point source of hazardous leachate composed of organic and inorganic compounds. The landfill is located on the floodplain of the Canadian River, a sand-bed river characterized by erodible channel boundaries and...
The sedimentary record of climatic and anthropogenic influence on the Patuxent estuary and Chesapeake Bay ecosystems
T. M. Cronin, C.D. Vann
2003, Estuaries (26) 196-209
Ecological and paleoecological studies from the Patuxent River mouth reveal dynamic variations in benthic ostracode assemblages over the past 600 years due to climatic and anthropogenic factors. Prior to the late 20th century, centennial-scale changes in species dominance were influenced by climatic and hydrological factors that primarily affected salinity and...
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...
Kinetic dissolution of carbonates and Mn oxides in acidic water: Measurement of in situ field rates and reactive transport modeling
J. G. Brown, P. D. Glynn
2003, Applied Geochemistry (18) 1225-1239
The kinetics of carbonate and Mn oxide dissolution under acidic conditions were examined through the in situ exposure of pure phase samples to acidic ground water in Pinal Creek Basin, Arizona. The average long-term calculated in situ dissolution rates for calcite and dolomite were 1.65??10-7 and 3.64??10-10 mmol/(cm2 s), respectively,...
The site-scale saturated zone flow model for Yucca Mountain: Calibration of different conceptual models and their impact on flow paths
G. Zyvoloski, E. Kwicklis, A.-A. Eddebbarh, B. Arnold, C. Faunt, B.A. Robinson
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (62-63) 731-750
This paper presents several different conceptual models of the Large Hydraulic Gradient (LHG) region north of Yucca Mountain and describes the impact of those models on groundwater flow near the potential high-level repository site. The results are based on a numerical model of site-scale saturated zone beneath Yucca Mountain. This model is used for performance assessment predictions of radionuclide transport...
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...
The saturated zone at Yucca Mountain: An overview of the characterization and assessment of the saturated zone as a barrier to potential radionuclide migration
A.-A. Eddebbarh, G.A. Zyvoloski, B.A. Robinson, E. M. Kwicklis, P.W. Reimus, B.W. Arnold, T. Corbet, S.P. Kuzio, C. Faunt
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (62-63) 477-493
The US Department of Energy is pursuing Yucca Mountain, Nevada, for the development of a geologic repository for the disposal of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste, if the repository is able to meet applicable radiation protection standards established by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the US Environmental...
Simplified method for detecting tritium contamination in plants and soil
Brian J. Andraski, Mark W. Sandstrom, R. L. Michel, J.C. Radyk, David A. Stonestrom, M. J. Johnson, C.J. Mayers
2003, Journal of Environmental Quality (32) 988-995
Cost-effective methods are needed to identify the presence and distribution of tritium near radioactive waste disposal and other contaminated sites. The objectives of this study were to (i) develop a simplified sample preparation method for determining tritium contamination in plants and (ii) determine if plant data could be used as...
Inorganic nitrogen transformations in the bed of the Shingobee River, Minnesota: Integrating hydrologic and biological processes using sediment perfusion cores
R.W. Sheibley, J.H. Duff, A. P. Jackman, F.J. Triska
2003, Limnology and Oceanography (48) 1129-1140
Inorganic N transformations were examined in streambed sediments from the Shingobee River using sediment perfusion cores. The experimental design simulated groundwater-stream water mixing within sediment cores, which provided a well-defined one-dimensional representation of in situ hydrologic conditions. Two distinct hydrologic and chemical settings were preserved in the sediment cores: the...
Bioreactors for removing methyl bromide following contained fumigations
Laurence G. Miller, Shaun Baesman, Ronald S. Oremland
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 1698-1704
Use of methyl bromide (MeBr) as a quarantine, commodity, or structural fumigant is under scrutiny because its release to the atmosphere contributes to the depletion of stratospheric ozone. A closed-system bioreactor consisting of...
Comparison of approaches for simulating reactive solute transport involving organic degradation reactions by multiple terminal electron acceptors
Gary P. Curtis
2003, Computers & Geosciences (29) 319-329
Reactive solute transport models are useful tools for analyzing complex geochemical behavior resulting from biodegradation of organic compounds by multiple terminal electron acceptors (TEAPs). The usual approach of simulating the reactions of multiple TEAPs by an irreversible Monod rate law was compared with simulations that assumed a partial local equilibrium...
Herbicides and herbicide degradation products in upper midwest agricultural streams during august base-flow conditions
S. J. Kalkhoff, K. E. Lee, S. D. Porter, P. J. Terrio, E.M. Thurman
2003, Journal of Environmental Quality (32) 1025-1035
Herbicide concentrations in streams of the U.S. Midwest have been shown to decrease through the growing season due to a variety of chemical and physical factors. The occurrence of herbicide degradation products at the end of the growing season is not well known. This study was conducted to document the...
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...
Using noble gases to investigate mountain-front recharge
A. H. Manning, D. K. Solomon
2003, Conference Paper, Journal of Hydrology
Mountain-front recharge is a major component of recharge to inter-mountain basin-fill aquifers. The two components of mountain-front recharge are (1) subsurface inflow from the mountain block (subsurface inflow), and (2) infiltration from perennial and ephemeral streams near the mountain front (stream seepage). The magnitude of subsurface inflow is of central...
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...
Estimation of past seepage volumes from calcite distribution in the Topopah Spring Tuff, Yucca Mountain, Nevada
B.D. Marshall, L.A. Neymark, Z. E. Peterman
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (62-63) 237-247
Low-temperature calcite and opal record the past seepage of water into open fractures and lithophysal cavities in the unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, site of a proposed high-level radioactive waste repository. Systematic measurements of calcite and opal coatings in the Exploratory Studies Facility (ESF) tunnel at the proposed repository...
Chlorine-36 data at Yucca Mountain: Statistical tests of conceptual models for unsaturated-zone flow
K. Campbell, A. Wolfsberg, J. Fabryka-Martin, D. Sweetkind
2003, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (62-63) 43-61
An extensive set of chlorine-36 (36Cl) data has been collected in the Exploratory Studies Facility (ESF), an 8-km-long tunnel at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, for the purpose of developing and testing conceptual models of flow and transport in the unsaturated zone (UZ) at this site. At several locations, the measured values...
Effects of stormwater infiltration on quality of groundwater beneath retention and detention basins
D. Fischer, Emmanuel G. Charles, Arthur L. Baehr
2003, Journal of Environmental Engineering (129) 464-471
Infiltration of storm water through detention and retention basins may increase the risk of groundwater contamination, especially in areas where the soil is sandy and the water table shallow, and contaminants may not have a chance to degrade or sorb onto soil particles before reaching the saturated zone. Groundwater from...
Hydrological alteration along the Missouri River Basin: A time series approach
M.A. Pegg, C.L. Pierce, A. Roy
2003, Aquatic Sciences (65) 63-72
Human alteration of large rivers is common-place, often resulting in significant changes in flow characteristics. We used a time series approach to examine daily mean flow data from locations throughout the main-stem Missouri River. Data from a pre-alteration period (1925-1948) were compared with a post-alteration period (1967-1996), with separate analyses...