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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Validation of a numerical modeling method for simulating rainfall-runoff relations for headwater basins in western King and Snohomish Counties, Washington
Richard S. Dinicola
2001, Water Supply Paper 2495
The validity of a previously determined numerical modeling method was assessed. Numerical models for 11 drainage basins were constructed with the Hydrologic Simulation Program-FORTRAN (HSPF) with parameter values that were generalized for the physiographic region. Large and recurrent simulation errors were initially identified, but three systematic modifications of the models...
Soil characteristics and agrichemicals in groundwater of the Midwestern United States
M. Burkart, D.W. Kolpin, R.J. Jaquis, K. Cole
2001, Water Science and Technology (43) 251-260
A comprehensive set of soil characteristics were examined to determine the effect of soil on the transport of agrichemicals to groundwater. This paper examines the relation of soil characteristics to concentrations and occurrence nitrate, atrazine, and atrazine residue from 99 wells completed in unconsolidated aquifers across the Midwestern United States....
System and boundary conceptualization in ground-water flow simulation
T. E. Reilly
2001, Techniques of Water-Resources Investigations 03-B8
Ground-water models attempt to represent an actual ground-water system with a mathematical counterpart. The conceptualization of how and where water originates in the ground-water-flow system and how and where it leaves the system is critical to the development of an accurate model. The mathematical representation of these boundaries in the...
Numerical-simulation and conjunctive-management models of the Hunt-Annaquatucket-Pettaquamscutt stream-aquifer system, Rhode Island
Paul M. Barlow, David C. Dickerman
2001, Professional Paper 1636
Numerical-simulation and optimization techniques were used to evaluate alternatives for the conjunctive management of ground- and surface-water resources of the Hunt­-Annaquatucket­-Pettaquamscutt stream-aquifer system in central Rhode Island. Ground-water withdrawals from the Hunt-Annaquatucket-Pettaquamscutt aquifer exceeded 8 million gallons per day during months of peak water use during 1993­98, and additional withdrawals...
Model coupling intraparticle diffusion/sorption, nonlinear sorption, and biodegradation processes
Hrissi K. Karapanagioti, Chris M. Gossard, Keith A. Strevett, Randall L. Kolar, David A. Sabatini
2001, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (48) 1-21
Diffusion, sorption and biodegradation are key processes impacting the efficiency of natural attenuation. While each process has been studied individually, limited information exists on the kinetic coupling of these processes. In this paper, a model is presented that couples nonlinear and nonequilibrium sorption (intraparticle diffusion) with biodegradation kinetics. Initially, these...
Evolution of the conceptual model of unsaturated zone hydrology at Yucca Mountain, Nevada
Alan L. Flint, Lorraine E. Flint, Gudmundur S. Bodvarsson, Edward M. Kwicklis, June Fabryka-Martin
2001, Journal of Hydrology (247) 1-30
Yucca Mountain is an arid site proposed for consideration as the United States’ first underground high-level radioactive waste repository. Low rainfall (approximately 170 mm/yr) and a thick unsaturated zone (500–1000 m) are important physical attributes of the site because the quantity of water likely to reach the waste and the...
Paleohydrologic record of spring deposits in and around Pleistocene pluvial Lake Tecopa, southeastern California
Stephen T. Nelson, Haraldur R. Karlsson, James B. Paces, David G. Tingey, Stephen Ward, Mark T. Peters
2001, GSA Bulletin (113) 659-670
Tufa (spring) deposits in the Tecopa basin, California, reflect the response of arid groundwater regimes to wet climate episodes. Two types of tufa are represented, informally defined as (1) an easily disaggregated, fine-grained mixture of calcite and quartz (friable tufa) in the southwest Tecopa Valley, and (2) hard, vuggy micrite,...
Fractionation of Fe isotopes by soil microbes and organic acids
Susan L. Brantley, Laura Liermann, Thomas D. Bullen
2001, Geology (29) 535-538
Small natural variations in Fe isotopes have been attributed to biological cycling. However, without understanding the mechanism of fractionation, it is impossible to interpret such variations. Here we show that the δ56Fe of Fe dissolved from a silicate soil mineral by siderophore-producing bacteria is as much as 0.8% lighter than...
Processes controlling the episodic streamwater transport of atrazine and other agrichemicals in an agricultural watershed
Kenneth Hyer, George M. Hornberger, Janet S. Herman
2001, Journal of Hydrology (254) 47-66
Episodic streamwater transport of atrazine (a common agricultural herbicide) and nutrients has been observed throughout agricultural watersheds in the United States and poses a serious threat to the quality of its water resources. Catchment-scale atrazine and nutrient transport processes after agricultural application are still poorly understood, and predicting episodic streamwater...
Stressor interactions in ecological systems
William Clements, Samuel N. Luoma, Jeroen Gerritsen, A. Hatch, P. Jepson, Trefor B. Reynoldson, R. Thom
D.J. Baird, editor(s)
2001, Book chapter, Ecological variability: Separating natural from anthropogenic causes of ecosystem impairment
No abstract available. ...
Biogeochemical cycles
H.L. Ehrlich, Ron Oremland, J.P. Zehr
2001, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of life sciences
No abstract available....
Monitoring the effect of poplar trees on petroleum-hydrocarbon and chlorinated-solvent contaminated ground water
James Landmeyer
2001, International Journal of Phytoremediation (3) 61-85
At contaminated groundwater sites, poplar trees can be used to affect ground-water levels, flow directions, and ultimately total groundwater and contaminant flux to areas downgradient of the trees. The magnitude of the hydrologic changes can be monitored using fundamental concepts of groundwater hydrology, in addition to plant physiology-based approaches, and...
In situ spectroscopic and solution analyses of the reductive dissolution of Mn02 by Fe(II)
John E. Villinski, Peggy A. O’Day, Timothy L. Corley, Martha H. Conklin
2001, Environmental Science & Technology (35) 1157-1163
The reductive dissolution of MnO2 by Fe(II) under conditions simulating acid mine drainage (pH 3, 100 mM SO42-) was investigated by utilizing a flow-through reaction cell and synchrotron X-ray absorption spectroscopy. This configuration allows collection of in situ, real-time X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectra and bulk solution samples. Analysis...
Changes in the Onset of Spring in the Western United States
D.R. Cayan, Susan A. Kammerdiener, M. D. Dettinger, Joseph M. Caprio, D. H. Peterson
2001, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (82) 399-415
Fluctuations in spring climate in the western United States over the last 4-5 decades are described by examining changes in the blooming of plants and the timing of snowmelt-runoff pulses. The two measures of spring's onset that are employed are the timing of first bloom of lilac and honeysuckle bushes...
Effects of Land-Cover Change, Floods, and Stream Position on Geomorphic Processes - Implications for Restoration Activities
F. A. Fitzpatrick
Hayes D.F.Hayes D.F., editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2001 Wetlands Engineering and River Restoration Conference
A geomorphic study for North Fish Creek, a northern Wisconsin tributary to Lake Superior was analyzed to determine the hydrologic and geomorphic changes caused by clear-cut logging and agricultural activity. Discharge magnitude estimated with HEC-2 for full-channel capacities indicate that modern full-channel discharges are about twice as large as pre-1946...
Influence of reservoirs on solute transport: A regional-scale approach
V.J. Kelly
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1227-1249
Regional transport of water and dissolved constituents through heavily regulated river systems is influenced by the presence of reservoirs. Analysis of seasonal patterns in solute fluxes for salinity and nutrients indicates that in-reservoir processes within large storage reservoirs in the Rio Grande and Colorado basins (southwestern USA) are superimposed over...
Processes regulating watershed chemical export during snowmelt, fraser experimental forest, Colorado
R. Stottlemyer
2001, Journal of Hydrology (245) 177-195
In the Central Rocky Mountains, snowfall dominates precipitation. Airborne contaminants retained in the snowpack can affect high elevation surface water chemistry during snowmelt. At the Fraser Experimental Forest (FEF), located west of the Continental Divide in Central Colorado, snowmelt dominates the annual hydrograph, and accounts for >95% of annual stream...
Methyl tert-butyl ether biodegradation by indigenous aquifer microorganisms under natural and artificial oxic conditions
J. E. Landmeyer, F. H. Chapelle, H.H. Herlong, P. M. Bradley
2001, Environmental Science & Technology (35) 1118-1126
Microbial communities indigenous to a shallow groundwater system near Beaufort, SC, degraded milligram per liter concentrations of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) under natural and artificial oxic conditions. Significant MTBE biodegradation was observed where anoxic, MTBE-contaminated groundwater discharged to a concrete-lined ditch. In the anoxic groundwater adjacent to the...
A look inside 'black box' hydrograph separation models: A study at the hydrohill catchment
C. Kendall, Jeffery J. McDonnell, W. Gu
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1877-1902
Runoff sources and dominant flowpaths are still poorly understood in most catchments; consequently, most hydrograph separations are essentially 'black box' models where only external information is used. The well-instrumented 490 m2 Hydrohill artificial grassland catchment located near Nanjing (China) was used to examine internal catchment processes. Since groundwater levels never...