Covariance of bacterioplankton composition and environmental variables in a temperate delta system
R. Stepanauskas, M.A. Moran, B.A. Bergamaschi, J.T. Hollibaugh
2003, Aquatic Microbial Ecology (31) 85-98
We examined seasonal and spatial variation in bacterioplankton composition in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta (CA) using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis. Cloned 16S rRNA genes from this system were used for putative identification of taxa dominating the T-RFLP profiles. Both cloning and T-RFLP analysis indicated that Actinobacteria, Verrucomicrobia, Cytophaga-Flavobacterium and Proteobacteria were the...
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...
Potential effects of climate change on ground water in Lansing, Michigan
T.E. Croley II, C. L. Luukkonen
2003, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (39) 149-163
Computer simulations involving general circulation models, a hydrologic modeling system, and a ground water flow model indicate potential impacts of selected climate change projections on ground water levels in the Lansing, Michigan, area. General circulation models developed by the Canadian Climate Centre and the Hadley Centre generated meteorology estimates for...
Characterization and copper binding of humic and nonhumic organic matter isolated from the South Platte River: Evidence for the presence of nitrogenous binding site
J.-P. Croue, M.F. Benedetti, D. Violleau, J.A. Leenheer
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 328-336
Humic substances typically constitute 40−60% of the dissolved organic matter (DOM) in surface waters. However, little information is available regarding the metal binding properties of the nonhumic hydrophilic portion of the DOM. In this study, humic and nonhumic DOM samples were isolated from the South Platte River...
Seasonal movement of the Slumgullion landslide determined from global positioning system surveys and field instrumentation, July 1998-March 2002
J. A. Coe, W. L. Ellis, J. W. Godt, W. Z. Savage, J. E. Savage, J. A. Michael, J.D. Kibler, P. S. Powers, D. J. Lidke, S. Debray
2003, Engineering Geology (68) 67-101
Measurements of landslide movement made by global positioning system surveys and extensometers over a 3.5-year period show that the Slumgullion landslide in the San Juan Mountains of southwest Colorado moved throughout the monitoring period, but that daily velocities varied on a seasonal basis. Landslide velocities peaked in the early spring...
Hydric soils in a southeastern Oregon vernal pool
D. Clausnitzer, J.H. Huddleston, E. Horn, Michael Keller, C. Leet
2003, Soil Science Society of America Journal (67) 951-960
Vernal pools on the High Lava Plain of the northern Great Basin become ponded in most years, but their soils exhibit weak redoximorphic features indicative of hydric conditions. We studied the hydrology, temperature, redox potentials, soil chemistry, and soil morphology of a vernal pool to determine if the soils are...
Ostracode-based reconstruction from 23,300 to about 20,250 cal yr BP of climate, and paleohydrology of a groundwater-fed pond near St. Louis, Missouri
B. Curry, D. Delorme
2003, Journal of Paleolimnology (29) 199-207
The water chemistry of a groundwater-fed sinkhole-pond near St. Louis, Missouri, and its associated climate during the last glaciation are reconstructed by comparison with autecological data of modern ostracodes from about 5,500 sites in Canada. A 4.8-m succession of fossiliferous sediment yielded ostracode assemblages that collectively are generally found today...
Conjunctive-management models for sustained yield of stream-aquifer systems
P. M. Barlow, D.P. Ahlfeld, D.C. Dickerman
2003, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (129) 35-48
Conjunctive-management models that couple numerical simulation with linear optimization were developed to evaluate trade-offs between groundwater withdrawals and streamflow depletions for alluvial-valley stream-aquifer systems representative of those of the northeastern United States. A conjunctive-management model developed for a hypothetical stream-aquifer system was used to assess the effect of interannual hydrologic...
Characterization of lake water and ground water movement in the littoral zone of Williams Lake, a closed-basin lake in North central Minnesota
P. F. Schuster, M.M. Reddy, J. W. LaBaugh, R.S. Parkhurst, D.O. Rosenberry, T. C. Winter, Ronald C. Antweiler, W.E. Dean
2003, Hydrological Processes (17) 823-838
Williams Lake, Minnesota is a closed‐basin lake that is a flow‐through system with respect to ground water. Ground‐water input represents half of the annual water input and most of the chemical input to the lake. Chemical budgets indicate that the lake is a sink for calcium, yet surficial sediments contain...
Diel cycles in dissolved metal concentrations in streams: Occurrence and possible causes
David A. Nimick, Chris Gammons, Tom Cleasby, James P. Madison, Don Skaar, Christine M. Brick
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 2-1-2-17
Substantial diel (24‐hour) cycles in dissolved (0.1‐μm filtration) metal concentrations were observed during low flow for 18 sampling episodes at 14 sites on 12 neutral and alkaline streams draining historical mining areas in Montana and Idaho. At some sites, concentrations of Cd, Mn, Ni, and Zn increased as much as...
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)....
History and ecology of chloroethene biodegradation: A review
Paul M. Bradley
2003, Bioremediation Journal (7) 81-109
No abstract available....
Comment on “Isotopic fractionation between Fe(III) and Fe(II) in aqueous solutions” by Clark Johnson et al., [Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 195 (2002) 141–153]
Thomas D. Bullen, Arthur F. White, Cyril W. Childs
2003, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (206) 229-232
In a recent contribution [1], Johnson et al. reported the equilibrium isotope fractionation factor between dissolved Fe(II) and Fe(III) in aqueous solutions at pH=2.5 and 5.5. They suggest that because the iron isotope fractionation observed in their experiments spans virtually the entire range observed in...
The geochemical evolution of riparian ground water in a forested piedmont catchment
Douglas A. Burns, Niel Plummer, Jeffrey J. McDonnell, Eurybiades Busenberg, Gerolamo C. Casile, Carol Kendall, Richard P. Hooper, James E. Freer, Norman E. Peters, Keith Beven, Peter Schlosser
2003, Groundwater (41) 913-925
The principal weathering reactions and their rates in riparian ground water were determined at the Panola Mountain Research Watershed (PMRW) near Atlanta, Georgia. Concentrations of major solutes were measured in ground water samples from 19 shallow wells completed in the riparian (saprolite) aquifer and in one borehole completed in granite,...
Temperature-profile methods for estimating percolation rates in arid environments
Jim Constantz, Scott W. Tyler, Edward Kwicklis
2003, Vadose Zone Journal (2) 12-24
Percolation rates are estimated using vertical temperature profiles from sequentially deeper vadose environments, progressing from sediments beneath stream channels, to expansive basin-fill materials, and finally to deep fractured bedrock underlying mountainous terrain. Beneath stream channels, vertical temperature profiles vary over time in response to downward heat transport, which is generally...
Immobilization of cobalt by sulfate-reducing bacteria in subsurface sediments
Lee R. Krumholz, Dwayne A. Elias, Joseph M. Suflita
2003, Geomicrobiology Journal (20) 61-72
We investigated the impact of sulfate-reduction on immobilization of metals in subsurface aquifers. Co 2+ was used as a model for heavy metals. Factors limiting sulfate-reduction dependent Co 2+ immobilization were tested on pure cultures of sulfate-reducing bacteria, and in sediment columns from a landfill leachate contaminated aquifer. In the...
Linking diurnal cycles of river flow to interannual variations in climate
Jessica D. Lundquist, Michael D. Dettinger
2003, Conference Paper, 17th Conference on Hydrology - 2003 AMS Annual Meeting
Many rivers in the Western United States have diurnal variations exceeding 10% of their mean flow in the spring and summer months. The shape and timing of the diurnal cycle is influenced by an interplay of the snow, topography, vegetation, and meteorology in a basin, and the measured result differs...
Comprehensive water quality of the Boulder Creek Watershed, Colorado, during high-flow and low-flow conditions, 2000
Sheila F. Murphy, Philip L. Verplanck, Larry B. Barber, editor(s)
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 03-4045
Executive SummaryThe Boulder Creek Watershed, Colorado, is 1160 square kilometers in area and ranges in elevation from 1480 to 4120 meters above sea level. Streamflow originates primarily as snowmelt near the Continental Divide, and thus discharge varies seasonally and annually (Chapter 1). Most of the water in Boulder Creek is...
Hydrology and ground-water quality in glacial deposits in the Nepaug Reservoir watershed, northwestern Connecticut, 1998-2000
Remo A. Mondazzi, J. Jeffrey Starn
2003, Open-File Report 2003-350
Organic carbon trends, loads, and yields to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, California, water years 1980 to 2000
Dina K. Saleh, Joseph L. Domagalski, Charles R. Kratzer, Donna L. Knifong
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4070
Organic carbon, nutrient, and suspended sediment concentration data were analyzed for the Sacramento and San Joaquin River Basins for the period 1980-2000. The data were retrieved from three sources: the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water Information System, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Storage and Retrieval System, and the California Interagency...
Simulation of the shallow aquifer in the vicinity of Silver Lake, Washington County, Wisconsin, using analytic elements
C. P. Dunning, Judith Coffman Thomas, Yu-Feng Lin
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4204
Shallow ground-water flow in the vicinity of Silver Lake, Washington County, Wisconsin, was investigated to develop an understanding of the hydrology of the shallow aquifer, define a water balance for the lake, delineate ground-water recharge areas for the lake, and to estimate solute flux toward the lake. A single-layer, steady-state,...
Sediment-water interactions affecting dissolved-mercury distributions in Camp Far West Reservoir, California
James S. Kuwabara, Charles N. Alpers, Mark Marvin-DiPasquale, Brent R. Topping, James L. Carter, A. Robin Stewart, Steven V. Fend, Francis Parcheso, Gerald E. Moon, David P. Krabbenhoft
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4140
No abstract available. ...
Near-field receiving water monitoring of a benthic community near the Palo Alto Water Quality Control Plant in South San Francisco Bay: February 1974 through December 2002
Michelle K. Shouse, Francis Parcheso, Janet K. Thompson
2003, Open-File Report 2003-224
Analyses of the benthic community structure over a 28-year period show that changes in the community have occurred concurrent with reduced concentrations of metals in the sediment and in the tissues of the biosentinal clam Macoma balthica from the same area. The community has shifted from being dominated by several...
Using water-quality profiles to characterize seasonal water quality and loading in the upper Animas River basin, southwestern Colorado
Kenneth J. Leib, M. Alisa Mast, Winfield G. Wright
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4230
One of the important types of information needed to characterize water quality in streams affected by historical mining is the seasonal pattern of toxic trace-metal concentrations and loads. Seasonal patterns in water quality are estimated in this report using a technique called water-quality profiling. Water-quality profiling allows land managers and...
Salinity and temperature in South San Francisco Bay, California, at Dumbarton Bridge: Results from the 1999-2002 water years and an overview of previous data
Laurence E. Schemel, Randall L. Brown, Norton W. Bell
2003, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4005
No abstract available. ...