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Chemical and biological quality of surface water at the U.S. Army Atterbury Reserve Forces Training Area near Edinburgh, Indiana, September 2000 through July 2001
Martin R. Risch
2004, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4149
A base-wide assessment of surface-water quality at the U.S. Army Atterbury Reserve Forces Training Area near Edinburgh, Indiana, examined short-term and long-term quality of surface water flowing into, across, and out of a 33,760-acre study area. The 30-day geometric-mean concentrations of fecal-indicator bacteria (Escherichia coli) in water samples from all...
Mineral commodity profiles: Cadmium
W. C. Butterman, Jozef Plachy
2004, Open-File Report 2002-238
Overview -- Cadmium is a soft, low-melting-point metal that has many uses. It is similar in abundance to antimony and bismuth and is the 63d element in order of crustal abundance. Cadmium is associated in nature with zinc (and, less closely, with lead and copper) and is extracted mainly as...
Mineral, Energy, and Fertilizer Resources of the North Coast of Peru: Perspective from the Santa Rita B Archaeological Site
William E. Brooks, Jonathan D. Kent, Jason C. Willett
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1024
The Santa Rita B archaeological site is in the Chao Valley, approximately 65 km southeast of Trujillo, northern Peru. Location of Santa Rita B at the emergence of several drainages from the Andean cordillera is an important factor in the almost continuous occupation of the site over the past 3,000...
Influence of multiple water-quality characteristics on copper toxicity to fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas)
K.L. Sciera, J. Jeffery Isely, J.R. Tomasso Jr., S.J. Klaine
2004, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (23) 2900-2905
Water quality influences the bioavailability and toxicity of copper to aquatic organisms. Understanding the relationships between water-quality parameters and copper toxicity may facilitate the development of site-specific criteria for water quality and result in better protection of aquatic biota. Many studies have examined the influence of a single water-quality parameter...
Differential spring migration by male and female Western Sandpipers at interior and coastal stopover sites
Mary Anne Bishop, Nils Warnock, John Y. Takekawa
2004, Ardea (92) 185-196
Western Sandpipers Calidris mauri are differential migrants on their non-breeding areas, with females wintering farther south. Earlier passage of males in the spring has been explained by sexual differences in winter latitude (male-biased sex ratios at more northerly areas) and onset of migration (males departing earlier). We investigated sex differences...
Stable metal isotopes reveal copper accumulation and loss dynamics in the freshwater bivalve Corbucula
M.-N. Croteau, S. N. Luoma, B.R. Topping, C.B. Lopez
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 5002-5009
Characterization of uptake and loss dynamics is critical to understanding risks associated with contaminant exposure in aquatic animals. Dynamics are especially important in addressing questions such as why coexisting species in nature accumulate different levels of a contaminant. Here we manipulated copper (Cu) stable isotopic ratios (as...
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...
Measuring mercury and other elemental components in tree rings
C. Gillan, W.A. Hollerman, T.W. Doyle, T.E. Lewis
2004, Conference Paper, Technical Papers of ISA
There has been considerable interest in measuring heavy metal pollution, such as mercury, using tree ring analysis. Since 1970, this method has provided a historical snapshot of pollutant concentrations near hazardous waste sites. Traditional methods of analysis have long been used with heavy metal pollutants such as mercury. These methods,...
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...
Stable isotopic constraints on fluid-rock interaction and Cu-PGE-S redistribution in the Sonju Lake intrusion, Minnesota
Y.-R. Park, E.M. Ripley, J.D. Miller Jr., C. Li, J. Mariga, P. Shafer
2004, Economic Geology (99) 325-338
The Sonju Lake intrusion, part of the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent rift-related Beaver Bay Complex, is a 1,200-m-thick, strongly differentiated, layered sequence of mafic cumulates located in northeastern Minnesota. Basal melatroctolite and dunite layers are overlain by troctolite, gabbro, Fe-Ti oxide-rich gabbro, apatite diorite, and monzodiorite. Stratigraphic intervals rich in Pt...
Concentrations of arsenic, cadmium, copper, lead, selenium, and zinc in fish from the Mississippi River Basin, 1995
Christopher J. Schmitt
2004, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (90) 289-321
Fish were collected in late 1995 from 34 National Contaminant Biomonitoring Program (NCBP) stations and 12 National Water Quality Assessment Program (NAWQA) stations in the Mississippi River basin (MRB), and in late 1996 from a reference site in West Virginia. The NCBP sites represented key points (dams, tributaries, etc.) in...
Mineral resource of the month: copper
Daniel L. Edelstein
2004, Geotimes (2004)
Beryllium metal is lighter than aluminum and stiffer than steel. These and other properties, including its strength, dimensional stability, thermal properties and reflectivity, make it useful for aerospace and defense applications, such as satellite and space-vehicle structural components. Beryllium’s nuclear properties, combined with its low density, make it useful as...
Influence of natural organic matter source on copper speciation as demonstrated by Cu binding to fish gills, by ion selective electrode, and by DGT gel sampler
C.D. Luider, John Crusius, R.C. Playle, P.J. Curtis
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 2865-2872
Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss, 2 g) were exposed to 0−5 μM total copper in ion-poor water for 3 h in the presence or absence of 10 mg C/L of qualitatively different natural organic matter (NOM) derived from water spanning a large gradient in hydrologic residence time. Accumulation of Cu by...
A hydrogeologic model of stratiform copper mineralization in the Midcontinent Rift System, Northern Michigan, USA
J.B. Swenson, M. Person, Jeff P. Raffensperger, W.F. Cannon, L. G. Woodruff, M.E. Berndt
2004, Geofluids (4) 1-22
This paper presents a suite of two-dimensional mathematical models of basin-scale groundwater flow and heat transfer for the middle Proterozoic Midcontinent Rift System. The models were used to assess the hydrodynamic driving mechanisms responsible for main-stage stratiform copper mineralization of the basal Nonesuch Formation during the post-volcanic/pre-compressional phase of basin...
Geochemical models of metasomatism in ultramafic systems: Serpentinization, rodingitization, and sea floor carbonate chimney precipitation
J.L. Palandri, M.H. Reed
2004, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (68) 1115-1133
In a series of water-rock reaction simulations, we assess the processes of serpentinization of harzburgite and related calcium metasomatism resulting in rodingite-type alteration, and seafloor carbonate chimney precipitation. At temperatures from 25 to 300??C (P = 10 to 100 bar), using either fresh water or seawater, serpentinization simulations produce an...
Geochemical characterization of shallow ground water in the Eutaw aquifer, Montgomery, Alabama
J.L. Robinson, C.A. Journey
2004, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (40) 851-861
Ground water samples were collected from 30 wells located in, or directly down gradient from, recharge areas of the Eutaw aquifer in Montgomery, Alabama. The major ion content of the water evolves from calcium-sodium-chloride- dominated type in the recharge area to calcium-bicarbonate-dominated type in the confined portion of the aquifer....
The late cretaceous Donlin Creek gold deposit, Southwestern Alaska: Controls on epizonal ore formation
Richard J. Goldfarb, Robert A. Ayuso, Marti L. Miller, Shane W. Ebert, Erin E. Marsh, Scott A. Petsel, Lance D. Miller, Dwight Bradley, Chad Johnson, William C. McClelland
2004, Economic Geology (99) 643-671
The Donlin Creek gold deposit, southwestern Alaska, has an indicated and inferred resource of approximately 25 million ounces (Moz) Au at a cutoff grade of 1.5 g/t. The ca. 70 Ma deposit is hosted in the Late Cretaceous Kuskokwim flysch basin, which developed in the back part of the arc...
Trace elements in moose (Alces alces) found dead in Northwestern Minnesota, USA
T. W. Custer, E. Cox, B. Gray
2004, Science of the Total Environment (330) 81-87
The moose (Alces alces) population in bog and forest areas of Northwestern Minnesota has declined for more than 25 years, and more recently the decline is throughout Northwestern Minnesota. Both deficiencies and elevations in trace elements have been linked to the health of moose worldwide. The objective of this study...
Urbanization influences on aquatic communities in northeastern Illinois streams
F. A. Fitzpatrick, M.A. Harris, T.L. Arnold, K.D. Richards
2004, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (40) 461-475
Biotic indices and sediment trace element concentrations for 43 streams in northeastern Illinois (Chicago area) from the 1980s and 1990s were examined along an agricultural to urban land cover gradient to explore the relations among biotic integrity, sediment chemistry, and urbanization. The Illinois fish Alternative Index of Biotic Integrity (AIBI)...
Measuring mercury and other elemental components in tree rings
C. Gillan, W.A. Hollerman, T.W. Doyle, T.E. Lewis
2004, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the International Instrumentation Symposium
There has been considerable interest in measuring heavy metal pollution, such as mercury, using tree ring analysis. Since 1970, this method has provided a historical snapshot of pollutant concentrations near hazardous waste sites. Traditional methods of analysis have long been used with heavy metal pollutants such as mercury. These methods,...
Migration and stopover strategies of individual Dunlin along the Pacific coast of North America
N. Warnock, John Y. Takekawa, M.A. Bishop
2004, Canadian Journal of Zoology (82) 1687-1697
We radio-marked 18 Dunlin, Calidris alpina (L., 1758), at San Francisco Bay, California, and 11 Dunlin at Grays Harbor, Washington, and relocated 90% of them along the 4200 km long coastline from north of San Francisco Bay to the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska. The Copper River Delta, Alaska, was the single...
Mineralogical and geochemical controls on the release of trace elements from slag produced by base- and precious-metal smelting at abandoned mine sites
N.M. Piatak, R.R. Seal II, J. M. Hammarstrom
2004, Conference Paper, Applied Geochemistry
Slag collected from smelter sites associated with historic base-metal mines contains elevated concentrations of trace elements such as Cu, Zn and Pb. Weathering of slag piles, many of which were deposited along stream banks, potentially may release these trace elements into the environment. Slags were sampled from the Ely and...
Spectral variations in rocks and soils containing ferric iron hydroxide and(or) sulfate minerals as seen by AVIRIS and laboratory spectroscopy
Barnaby W. Rockwell
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1431
Analysis of Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS) data covering the Big Rock Candy Mountain area of the Marysvale volcanic field, west-central Utah, identified abundant rocks and soils bearing jarosite, goethite, and chlorite associated with volcanic rocks altered to propylitic grade during the Miocene (2321 Ma). Propylitically-altered rocks rich in...
Effects of surface applications of biosolids on soil, crops, ground water, and streambed sediment near Deer Trail, Colorado, 1999-2003
Tracy J.B. Yager, David B. Smith, James G. Crock
2004, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5289
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with Metro Wastewater Reclamation District and North Kiowa Bijou Groundwater Management District, studied natural geochemical effects and the effects of biosolids applications to the Metro Wastewater Reclamation District properties near Deer Trail, Colorado, during 1999 through 2003 because of public concern about potential contamination...
China?s growing appetite for minerals
David Menzie, Pui-Kwan Tse, Mike Fenton, John Jorgenson, Hendrik van Oss
2004, Open-File Report 2004-1374
During the last 15 years, China's economy and consumption have grown rapidly. This report contains figures and notes from a talk that discusses China's increasing consumption of aluminum, cement, coal, copper, iron ore, petroleum, and steel in context of its developing economy....