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Page 329, results 8201 - 8225

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Dynamic fuzzy modeling of storm water infiltration in urban fractured aquifers
Y.-S. Hong, Michael R. Rosen, R.R. Reeves
2002, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (7) 380-391
In an urban fractured-rock aquifer in the Mt. Eden area of Auckland, New Zealand, disposal of storm water is via "soakholes" drilled directly into the top of the fractured basalt rock. The dynamic response of the groundwater level due to the storm water infiltration shows characteristics of a strongly time-varying...
TBA biodegradation in surface-water sediments under aerobic and anaerobic conditions
P. M. Bradley, J. E. Landmeyer, F. H. Chapelle
2002, Environmental Science & Technology (36) 4087-4090
The potential for [U-14C] TBA biodegradation was examined in laboratory microcosms under a range of terminal electron accepting conditions. TBA mineralization to CO2 was substantial in surface-water sediments under oxic, denitrifying, or Mn(IV)-reducing conditions and statistically significant but low under SO4-reducing conditions. Thus, anaerobic TBA biodegradation may be a significant...
Changes in concentrations of triazine and acetamide herbicides by bank filtration, ozonation, and chlorination in a public water supply
Ingrid M. Verstraeten, E.M. Thurman, M.E. Lindsey, E.C. Lee, R.D. Smith
2002, Journal of Hydrology (266) 190-208
The changes in triazine and acetamide concentrations in water during natural and artificial treatment by bank filtration, ozonation, filtration, and chlorination were measured at the well field and drinking water treatment plant of Lincoln, Nebraska, USA. The city's groundwater supply is affected by induced infiltration and transport of triazines and...
Used motor oil as a source of MTBE, TAME, and BTEX to ground water
R.J. Baker, E.W. Best, A. L. Baehr
2002, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (22) 46-51
Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), the widely used gasoline oxygenate, has been identified as a common ground water contaminant, and BTEX compounds (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes) have long been associated with gasoline spills. Because not all instances of ground water contamination by MTBE and BTEX can be attributed to spills...
Effect of flood-induced chemical load on filtrate quality at bank filtration sites
C. Ray, T.W. Soong, Y.Q. Lian, G.S. Roadcap
2002, Journal of Hydrology (266) 235-258
Riparian municipal wells, that are located on riverbanks, are specifically designed to capture a portion of the river water through induced infiltration. Runoff from agricultural watersheds is found to carry enormous amounts of pesticides and nitrate. While the risk of contamination for a vast majority of sites with small-capacity vertical...
Functional variability of habitats within the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta: Restoration implications
L.V. Lucas, J. E. Cloern, J.K. Thompson, N.E. Monsen
2002, Ecological Applications (12) 1528-1547
We have now entered an era of large-scale attempts to restore ecological functions and biological communities in impaired ecosystems. Our knowledge base of complex ecosystems and interrelated functions is limited, so the outcomes of specific restoration actions are highly uncertain. One approach for exploring that uncertainty and anticipating the range...
Lag times of bank filtration at a well field, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
R. A. Sheets, R.A. Darner, B.L. Whitteberry
2002, Journal of Hydrology (266) 162-174
Wells placed next to surface-water bodies to induce infiltration have come under scrutiny because of the presence of the potential pathogens in surface water. Removal of pathogens and other contaminants by bank filtration is assumed, but regulatory agencies question the effectiveness of this process. To investigate transport processes of biological...
Long-term evolution of biodegradation and volatilization rates in a crude oil-contaminated aquifer
B.P. Chaplin, G. N. Delin, R.J. Baker, M.A. Lahvis
2002, Bioremediation Journal (6) 237-255
Volatilization and subsequent biodegradation near the water Table make up a coupled natural attenuation pathway that results in significant mass loss of hydrocarbons. Rates of biodegradation and volatilization were documented twice 12 years apart at a crude-oil spill site near Bemidji, Minnesota. Biodegradation rates were determined by calibrating a gas...
Isotope-abundance variations of selected elements (IUPAC technical report)
T.B. Coplen, J.K. Böhlke, P. De Bievre, T. Ding, N.E. Holden, J.A. Hopple, H.R. Krouse, A. Lamberty, H.S. Peiser, K. Revesz, S.E. Rieder, K.J.R. Rosman, E. Roth, P.D.P. Taylor, R.D. Vocke Jr., Y.K. Xiao
2002, Pure and Applied Chemistry (74) 1987-2017
Documented variations in the isotopic compositions of some chemical elements are responsible for expanded uncertainties in the standard atomic weights published by the Commission on Atomic Weights and Isotopic Abundances of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. This report summarizes reported variations in the isotopic compositions of 20...
Use of regional climate model output for hydrologic simulations
L.E. Hay, M.P. Clark, R.L. Wilby, W.J. Gutowski, G.H. Leavesley, Z. Pan, R.W. Arritt, E.S. Takle
2002, Journal of Hydrometeorology (3) 571-590
Daily precipitation and maximum and minimum temperature time series from a regional climate model (RegCM2) configured using the continental United States as a domain and run on a 52-km (approximately) spatial resolution were used as input to a distributed hydrologic model for one rainfall-dominated basin (Alapaha River at Statenville, Georgia)...
15N NMR investigation of the covalent binding of reduced TNT amines to soil humic acid, model compounds, and lignocellulose
K. A. Thorn, K. R. Kennedy
2002, Environmental Science & Technology (36) 3787-3796
The five major reductive degradation products of TNT-4ADNT (4-amino-2,6-dinitrotoluene), 2ADNT (2-amino-4,6-dinitrotoluene), 2,4DANT (2,4-diamino-6-nitrotoluene), 2,6DANT (2,6-diamino-4-nitrotoluene), and TAT (2,4,6-triaminotoluene)-labeled with 15N in the amine positions, were reacted with the IHSS soil humic acid and analyzed by 15N NMR spectrometry. In the absence of catalysts, all five amines underwent nucleophilic addition reactions...
Linker-assisted immunoassay and liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry for the analysis of glyphosate
E.A. Lee, L.R. Zimmerman, B.S. Bhullar, E.M. Thurman
2002, Analytical Chemistry (74) 4937-4943
A novel, sensitive, linker-assisted enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (L'ELISA) was compared to on-line solidphase extraction (SPE) with high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (HPLC/MS) for the analysis of glyphosate in surface water and groundwater samples. The L'ELISA used succinic anhydride to derivatize glyphosate, which mimics the epitotic attachment of glyphosate to horseradish peroxidase...
Mid-Holocene hydrologic model of the Shingobee watershed, Minnesota
S.K. Filby, Sharon M. Locke, M.A. Person, T. C. Winter, D.O. Rosenberry, J.L. Nieber, W.J. Gutowski, E. Ito
2002, Quaternary Research (58) 246-254
A hydrologifc model of the Shingobee Watershed in north-central Minnesota was developed to reconstruct mid-Holocene paleo-lake levels for Williams Lake, a surface-water body located in the southern portion of the watershed. Hydrologic parameters for the model were first estimated in a calibration exercise using a 9-yr historical record (1990-1998) of...
Recruitment variation of crappies in response to hydrology of Tennessee reservoirs
S.M. Sammons, P.W. Bettoli, D.A. Isermann, T.N. Churchill
2002, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (22) 1393-1398
Black crappies Pomoxis nigromaculatus and white crappies P. annularis were sampled to index recruitment in seven Tennessee reservoirs (four main-stem and three tributary storage impoundments). Crappie recruitment in tributary storage impoundments appeared to be consistently higher in years of high discharge during the prespawn period (1 January-31 March). A similar...
Distribution and significance of small, artificial water bodies across the United States landscape
S. V. Smith, W. H. Renwick, J.D. Bartley, R. W. Buddemeier
2002, Science of the Total Environment (299) 21-36
At least 2.6 million small, artificial water bodies dot the landscape of the conterminous United States; most are in the eastern half of the country. These features account for approximately 20% of the standing water area across the United States, and their impact on hydrology, sedimentology, geochemistry, and ecology is...
The role of bedrock topography on subsurface storm flow
Jim Freer, Jeffery J. McDonnell, K.J. Beven, N.E. Peters, Douglas A. Burns, R. P. Hooper, B. Aulenbach, C. Kendall
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 5-1-5-16
We conducted a detailed study of subsurface flow and water table response coupled with digital terrain analysis (DTA) of surface and subsurface features at the hillslope scale in Panola Mountain Research Watershed (PMRW), Georgia. Subsurface storm flow contributions of macropore and matrix flow in different sections along an artificial trench...
Groundwater vulnerability: Interactions of chemical and site properties
F. Worrall, T. Besien, D.W. Kolpin
2002, Science of the Total Environment (299) 131-143
This study brings together extensive, multi-annual groundwater monitoring datasets from the UK and Midwestern US to test the relative importance of site (e.g. land use, soil and aquifer type) and chemical factors (e.g. solubility in water) and between and within year variations in controlling groundwater contamination by pesticides. ANOVA (general...
Extracting low‐resolution river networks from high‐resolution digital elevation models
Francisco Olivera, Mary S. Lear, James S. Famiglietti, Kwabena Asante
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 13-1-13-8
Including a global river network in the land component of global climate models (GCMs) is necessary in order to provide a more complete representation of the hydrologic cycle. The process of creating these networks is called river network upscaling and consists of lowering the resolution of already available fine networks...
Anaerobic oxidation of arsenite in Mono Lake water and by a facultative, arsenite-oxidizing chemoautotroph, strain MLHE-1
Ronald S. Oremland, S.E. Hoeft, J.M. Santini, N. Bano, R.A. Hollibaugh, J.T. Hollibaugh
2002, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (68) 4795-4802
Arsenite [As(III)]-enriched anoxic bottom water from Mono Lake, California, produced arsenate [As(V)] during incubation with either nitrate or nitrite. No such oxidation occurred in killed controls or in live samples incubated without added nitrate or nitrite. A small amount of biological As(III) oxidation...
A simulation study of factors controlling white sturgeon recruitment in the Snake River
H.I. Jager, W. Van Winkle, James Angus Chandler, K.B. Lepla, P. Bates, T.D. Counihan
2002, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2002) 127-150
Five of the nine populations of white sturgeon Acipenser transmontanus, located between dams on the Middle Snake River, have declined from historical levels and are now at risk of extinction. One step towards more effectively protecting and managing these nine populations is ranking factors that influence recruitment in each of...
Hydrogeologic processes in saline systems: Playas, sabkhas, and saline lakes
Y. Yechieli, W.W. Wood
2002, Earth-Science Reviews (58) 343-365
Pans, playas, sabkhas, salinas, saline lakes, and salt flats are hydrologically similar, varying only in their boundary conditions. Thus, in evaluating geochemical processes in these systems, a generic water and solute mass-balance approach can be utilized. A conceptual model of a coastal sabkha near the Arabian Gulf is used as...
Antimicrobial residues in animal waste and water resources proximal to large-scale swine and poultry feeding operations
E.R. Campagnolo, K.R. Johnson, A. Karpati, C.S. Rubin, D.W. Kolpin, M. T. Meyer, J. Emilio Esteban, R.W. Currier, K. Smith, K.M. Thu, M. McGeehin
2002, Science of the Total Environment (299) 89-95
Expansion and intensification of large-scale animal feeding operations (AFOs) in the United States has resulted in concern about environmental contamination and its potential public health impacts. The objective of this investigation was to obtain background data on a broad profile of antimicrobial residues in animal wastes and surface water and...
Use of ICP/MS with ultrasonic nebulizer for routine determination of uranium activity ratios in natural water
T. F. Kraemer, M. W. Doughten, T.D. Bullen
2002, Environmental Science & Technology (36) 4899-4904
A method is described that allows precise determination of 234U/238U activity ratios (UAR) in most natural waters using commonly available inductively coupled plasma/mass spectrometry (ICP/MS) instrumentation and accessories. The precision achieved by this technique (±0.5% RSD, 1 sigma) is intermediate between thermal ionization mass spectrometry (±0.25% RSD, 1...
Movement of atrazine and deethylatrazine through a midwestern reservoir
J. D. Fallon, D.P. Tierney, E.M. Thurman
2002, Journal - American Water Works Association (94) 54-66
The three-dimensional visualization of atrazine and deethylatrazine in a reservoir was determined by five "snapshots" over a one-year period using immunoassay analyses, confirmed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and visualized with a three-dimensional computer program. The surveys were conducted in Perry Lake in Kansas and showed that spring runoff laden with...