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Page 338, results 8426 - 8450

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Selected field and analytical methods and analytical results in the Dutch Flats area, western Nebraska, 1995-99
Ingrid M. Verstraeten, G. V. Steele, J. C. Cannia, J. K. Bohlke, T.E. Kraemer, D.E. Hitch, K.E. Wilson, A.E. Carnes
2001, Open-File Report 2000-413
A study of the water resources of the Dutch Flats area in the western part of the North Platte Natural Resources District, western Nebraska, was conducted from 1995 through 1999 to describe the surface water and hydrogeology, the spatial distribution of selected water-quality constituents in surface and ground water, and...
Techniques for estimating flood-frequency discharges for streams in Iowa
David A. Eash
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4233
A statewide study was conducted to develop regression equations for estimating flood-frequency discharges for ungaged stream sites in Iowa. Thirty-eight selected basin characteristics were quantified and flood-frequency analyses were computed for 291 streamflow-gaging stations in Iowa and adjacent States. A generalized-skew-coefficient analysis was conducted to determine whether generalized skew coefficients...
Updating flood maps efficiently using existing hydraulic models, very-high-accuracy elevation data, and a geographic information system: A pilot study on the Nisqually River, Washington
Joseph L. Jones, Tana Haluska, David L. Kresch
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001-4051
A method of updating flood inundation maps at a fraction of the expense of using traditional methods was piloted in Washington State as part of the U.S. Geological Survey Urban Geologic and Hydrologic Hazards Initiative. Large savings in expense may be achieved by building upon previous Flood Insurance Studies and...
The Kiowa core, a continuous drill core through the Denver Basin bedrock aquifers at Kiowa, Elbert County, Colorado
Robert G.H. Raynolds, Kirk R. Johnson, L. Rick Arnold, Timothy M. Farnham, R. Farley Fleming, Jason F. Hicks, Shari A. Kelley, Laura A. Lapey, Douglas J. Nichols, John D. Obradovich, Michael D. Wilson
2001, Open-File Report 2001-185
The Kiowa core was obtained as a component of the Denver Basin Project, a cooperative research effort to study the evolution of the Denver Basin, Colorado. The Kiowa core provides a virtually continuous stratigraphic record of the Upper Cretaceous and lower Tertiary strata of the Denver Basin. The upper portion...
Methods of analysis by the U.S. Geological Survey Organic Geochemistry Research Group--Update and additions to the determination of chloroacetanilide herbicide degradation compounds in water using high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry
E.A. Lee, J.L. Kish, L.R. Zimmerman, E. Thurman
2001, Open-File Report 2001-10
An analytical method using high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (HPLC/MS) was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey in 1999 for the analysis of selected chloroacetanilide herbicide degradation compounds in water. These compounds were acetochlor ethane sulfonic acid (ESA), acetochlor oxanilic acid (OXA), alachlor ESA, alachlor OXA, metolachlor ESA, and metolachlor OXA....
Selected hydrologic and water-quality data for Kamas Valley and vicinity, Summit County, Utah, 1997-2000
Peter L. Haraden, L.E. Spangler, L.E. Brooks, Bernard J. Stolp
2001, Open-File Report 2001-155
This report contains hydrologic and water-quality data collected in the Kamas Valley vicinity during a study from 1997 to 2000. The study area is in Summit County in north-central Utah and is part of the Middle Rocky Mountains Physiographic Province described by Fenneman (1931). Data were collected in Kamas Valley...
Variations in river flow to the Gulf of Mexico: implications for paleoenvironmental studies of Gulf of Mexico marine sediments
Richard Z. Poore, Jessica Darling, Harry J. Dowsett, Liana Wright
2001, Bulletin 2187
Analyses of selected gaging station records from the Mississippi River and Rio Grande show that variations in discharge of these rivers into the Gulf of Mexico reflect major flood events and regional-scale drought intervals known from the historical record. Variations in Rio Grande discharge show good correlation with El Ni?o/Southern...
Compilation of water-resources data and hydrogeologic setting for Brunswick County, North Carolina, 1933-2000
Jason M. Fine, William L. Cunningham
2001, Open-File Report 2001-240
Water-resources data were compiled for Brunswick County, North Carolina, to describe the hydrologic conditions of the County. Hydrologic data collected by the U.S. Geological Survey as well as data collected by other governmental agencies and reviewed by the U.S. Geological Survey are presented. Data from four weather stations and two...
Quantification of mine-drainage inflows to Little Cottonwood Creek, Utah, using a tracer-injection and synoptic-sampling study
B. Kimball, R. Runkel, L. Gerner
2001, Environmental Geology (40) 1390-1404
Historic mining in Little Cottonwood Canyon in Utah has left behind many mine drainage tunnels that discharge water to Little Cottonwood Creek. To quantify the major sources of mine drainage to the stream, synoptic sampling was conducted during a tracer injection under low flow conditions (September 1998). There were distinct...
Evaluation of the streamflow-gaging network of Texas and a proposed core network
Raymond M. Slade Jr., Teresa Howard, Roberto Anaya
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001-4155
The U.S. Geological Survey streamflowgaging network in Texas is operated as part of the National Streamgaging Program and is jointly funded by the Geological Survey and Federal, State, and local agencies. This report documents an evaluation of the existing (as of October 1, 1999) network with regard to four major objectives of streamflow data; and on the...
Hydrologic budgets for the Madison and Minnelusa aquifers, Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming, water years 1987-96
Janet M. Carter, Daniel G. Driscoll, Ghaith R. Hamade, Gregory J. Jarrell
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001-4119
The Madison and Minnelusa aquifers are two of the most important aquifers in the Black Hills area of South Dakota and Wyoming. Quantification and evaluation of various hydrologic budget components are important for managing and understanding these aquifers. Hydrologic budgets are developed for two scenarios, including an overall budget for the...
Ground-water-level monitoring and the importance of long-term water-level data
Charles J. Taylor, William M. Alley
2001, Circular 1217
Water-level measurements from observation wells are the principal source of information about the effects of hydrologic stresses on ground-water systems. Long-term water-level data are required to address the effects of aquifer development and to compile a hydrologic record of water-level monitoring, uses of long-term water-level data, and improvements in the...
The importance of propagule establishment and physical factors in mangrove distributional patterns in a Costa Rican estuary
P. Delgado, P.F. Hensel, J.W. Day
2001, Aquatic Botany (71) 157-178
Establishment of Laguncularia racemosa, Avicennia germinans, and A. bicolor was measured along intertidal gradients (mud bank (MB), lower intertidal (LI), and upper intertidal (UI)) on point bars and islands in a Costa Rican tropical estuary. Successful establishment showed the following order — Laguncularia: LI (73%)>MB (52%)>UI (18%), with UI significantly lower than LI and MB; Avicennia spp.: LI (66%)>UI (51%)>MB...
Frequently co‐occurring pesticides and volatile organic compounds in public supply and monitoring wells, southern New Jersey, USA
Paul E. Stackelberg, Leon J. Kauffman, Mark A. Ayers, Arthur L. Baehr
2001, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (20) 853-865
One or more pesticides were detected with one or more volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in more than 95% of samples collected from 30 public supply and 95 monitoring wells screened in the unconsolidated surficial aquifer system of southern New Jersey, USA. Overall, more than 140,000 and...
Occurrence of selected radionuclides in ground water used for drinking water in the United States: A reconnaissance survey, 1998
Michael J. Focazio, Zoltan Szabo, Thomas F. Kraemer, Ann H. Mullin, Thomas H. Barringer, Vincent T. dePaul
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4273
The U.S. Geological Survey, in collaboration with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the American Water Works Association, and the American Water Works Service Company, completed a targeted national reconnaissance survey of selected radionuclides in public ground-water supplies. Radionuclides analyzed included radium-224 (Ra-224), radium-226 (Ra-226), radium-228 (Ra-228), polonium-210 (Po-210) and lead-210...
Hydrogeology and ground-water flow in the Memphis and Fort Pillow aquifers in the Memphis area, Tennessee
J. V. Brahana, R. E. Broshears
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 89-4131
On the basis of known hydrogeology of the Memphis and Fort Pillow aquifers in the Memphis area, a three-layer, finite-difference numerical model was constructed and calibrated as the primary tool to refine understanding of flow in the aquifers. The model was calibrated and tested for accuracy in simulating measured heads...
Controls of stream chemistry and fish populations in the Neversink watershed, Catskill Mountains, New York
Gregory B. Lawrence, Douglas A. Burns, Barry P. Baldigo, Peter S. Murdoch, Gary M. Lovett
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4040
The Neversink Watershed Study was initiated in 1991 to develop an understanding of the key natural processes that control water quality within the forested, 166 km 2 (64 mi 2), Neversink River watershed; part of the New York City drinking water supply system, in the Catskill Mountain region of New...
Simulation of flow in the upper North Coast Limestone Aquifer, Manati-Vega Baja area, Puerto Rico
Gregory S. Cherry
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4266
A two-dimensional computer ground-water model was constructed of the Manati-Vega Baja area to improve the understanding of the unconfined upper aquifer within the North Coast Province of Puerto Rico. The modeled area covers approximately 79 square miles within the municipios of Manati and Vega Baja and small portions of Vega...
Droughts, epic droughts and droughty centuries - lessons from a California paleoclimatic record: a PACLIM 2001 meeting report
M. D. Dettinger
2001, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (14) 51-53
During the early 1990s (but echoing studies by S.T. Harding at the University of California, from as early as the 1930s), several lines of paleoclimate evidence in and around the Sierra Nevada Range have provided the water community in California with some real horror stories. By studying ancient tree stumps...
Analysis of water levels in the Frenchman Flat area, Nevada Test Site
D.J. Bright, S.A. Watkins, B.A. Lisle
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4272
Analysis of water levels in 21 wells in the Frenchman Flat area, Nevada Test Site, provides information on the accuracy of hydraulic-head calculations, temporal water-level trends, and potential causes of water-level fluctuations. Accurate hydraulic heads are particularly important in Frenchman Flat where the hydraulic gradients are relatively flat (less than...
Mountain Island Lake, North Carolina: Analysis of ambient conditions and simulation of hydrodynamics, constituent transport, and water-quality characteristics, 1996–97
Jerad D. Bales, Kathleen M. Sarver, Mary J. Giorgino
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001-4138
Mountain Island Lake is an impoundment of the Catawba River in North Carolina and supplies drinking water to more than 600,000 people in Charlotte, Gastonia, Mount Holly, and several other communities. The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Utilities, conducted an investigation of the reservoir to characterize hydrologic...
Hydrogeology, model description, and flow analysis of the Mississippi River alluvial aquifer in northwestern Mississippi
J. K. Arthur
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2001-4035
The Mississippi River alluvial aquifer underlies a 7,000-square-mile area of the Mississippi River alluvial plain in northwestern Mississippi, an area locally known as the Delta. The alluvial aquifer is the most heavily pumped aquifer in Mississippi, and wells yielding more than 2,000 gallons per minute are common. About 98 percent...
Water chemistry near the closed Norman Landfill, Cleveland County, Oklahoma, 1995
Jamie L. Schlottmann
2001, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2000-4238
The Norman Landfill was selected for study as part of the U.S. Geological Survey Toxic Substances Hydrology Program in 1994. The landfill is located south of the City of Norman on alluvial deposits of the Canadian River. Type of waste deposited in the landfill from 1922 to 1973 was largely...