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...
Applying the scientific method to small catchment studies: Areview of the Panola Mountain experience
R. P. Hooper
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 2039-2050
A hallmark of the scientific method is its iterative application to a problem to increase and refine the understanding of the underlying processes controlling it. A successful iterative application of the scientific method to catchment science (including the fields of hillslope hydrology and biogeochemistry) has been hindered by two factors....
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...
Initial hydrologic and geomorphic response following a wildfire in the Colorado front range
John A. Moody, Deborah A. Martin
2001, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (26) 1049-1070
A wildfire in May 1996 burned 4690 hectares in two watersheds forested by ponderosa pine and Douglas fir in a steep, mountainous landscape with a summer, convective thunderstorm precipitation regime. The wildfire lowered the erosion threshold in the watersheds, and consequently amplified the subsequent erosional response to shorter time interval...
Standard reference water samples for rare earth element determinations
P. L. Verplanck, Ronald C. Antweiler, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Howard E. Taylor
2001, Applied Geochemistry (16) 231-244
Standard reference water samples (SRWS) were collected from two mine sites, one near Ophir, CO, USA and the other near Redding, CA, USA. The samples were filtered, preserved, and analyzed for rare earth element (REE) concentrations (La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb,...
Effect of scale on the behavior of atrazine in surface waters
P. D. Capel, S.J. Larson
2001, Environmental Science & Technology (35) 648-657
Field runoff is an important transport mechanism by which agricultural pesticides, including atrazine, move into the hydrologic environment. Atrazine is chosen because it is widely used, is transported in runoff relatively easily, is widely observed in surface waters, and has relatively little loss in the stream network. Data on runoff...
Petrographic and geochemical evidence for the formation of primary, bacterially induced lacustrine dolomite: La Roda 'white earth' (Pliocene, Central Spain)
Del Garcia, M.A. Cura, J. P. Calvo, S. Ordonez, B.F. Jones, J.C. Canaveras
2001, Sedimentology (48) 897-915
Upper Pliocene dolomites ('white earth') from La Roda, Spain, offer a good opportunity to evaluate the process of dolomite formation in lakes. The relatively young nature of the deposits could allow a link between dolomites precipitated in modern lake systems and those present in older lacustrine formations. The La Roda...
Optimal estimation of suspended-sediment concentrations in streams
D. J. Holtschlag
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1133-1155
Optimal estimators are developed for computation of suspended-sediment concentrations in streams. The estimators are a function of parameters, computed by use of generalized least squares, which simultaneously account for effects of streamflow, seasonal variations in average sediment concentrations, a dynamic error component, and the uncertainty in concentration measurements. The parameters...
Annual suspended sediment and trace element fluxes in the Mississippi, Columbia, Colorado, and Rio Grande drainage basins
A. J. Horowitz, K. A. Elrick, J.J. Smith
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1169-1207
Suspended sediment, sediment-associated, total trace element, phosphorus (P), and total organic carbon (TOC) fluxes were determined for the Mississippi, Columbia, Rio Grande, and Colorado Basins for the study period (the 1996, 1997, and 1998 water years) as part of the US Geological Survey's redesigned National Stream Quality Accounting Network (NASQAN)...
Simulation of stream discharge and transport of nitrate and selected herbicides in the Mississippi River Basin
R. E. Broshears, G. M. Clark, H.E. Jobson
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1157-1167
Stream discharge and the transport of nitrate, atrazine, and metolachlor in the Mississippi River Basin were simulated using the DAFLOW/BLTM hydrologic model. The simulated domain for stream discharge included river reaches downstream from the following stations in the National Stream Quality Accounting Network: Mississippi River at Clinton, IA; Missouri River...
Pesticides associated with suspended sediments entering San Francisco Bay following the first major storm of water year 1996
Brian A. Bergamaschi, Kathryn Kuivila, Miranda S. Fram
2001, Estuaries (24) 368-380
Estuaries receive large quantities of suspended sediments following the first major storm of the water year. The first-flush events transport the majority of suspended sediments in any given year, and because of their relative freshness in the hydrologic system, these sediments may carry a significant amount of the sediment-associated pesticide...
Trace metal concentrations in shallow ground water
L.M. Zelewski, D. P. Krabbenhoft, D.E. Armstrong
2001, Ground Water (39) 485-491
Trace metal clean sampling and analysis techniques were used to examine the temporal patterns of Hg, Cu, and Zn concentrations in shallow ground water, and the relationships between metal concentrations in ground water and in a hydrologically connected river. Hg, Cu, and Zn concentrations in ground...
Nutrient transport to the Swan - Canning Estuary, Western Australia
N.E. Peters, R. Donohue
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 2555-2577
Catchment nutrient availability in Western Australia is primarily controlled by the disposal of animal waste and the type and rate of fertilizer application, particularly on the relatively narrow (~25 km wide), sandy coastal plain. Nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P) concentrations and fluxes during the wet season of 15 tributaries, including...
Estimating equation for mixed populations of floods in Massachusetts
P.J. Murphy
2001, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (6) 72-74
A single equation for estimating the peak flows of annual floods at ungauged sites in Massachusetts was developed by combining the conditional probabilities of floods caused by tropical cyclones and ice-jam releases with the conditional probability of "ordinary" floods. Regression equations for these three flood populations demonstrated that two basin...
A functional relation for field-scale nonaqueous phase liquid dissolution developed using a pore network model
L.A. Dillard, H.I. Essaid, M.J. Blunt
2001, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (48) 89-119
A pore network model with cubic chambers and rectangular tubes was used to estimate the nonaqueous phase liquid (NAPL) dissolution rate coefficient, Kdissai, and NAPL/water total specific interfacial area, ai. Kdissai was computed as a function of modified Peclet number(Pe′) for various NAPL saturations (SN) and ai during drainage and imbibition and during dissolution without displacement. The largest contributor to ai was the interfacial area in...
Regional water-quality analysis of 2,4-D and dicamba in river water using gas chromatography-isotope dilution mass spectrometry
E.M. Thurman, L.R. Zimmerman, D.S. Aga, R. J. Gilliom
2001, International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry (79) 185-198
Gas chromatography with isotope dilution mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were used in regional National Water Quality Assessment studies of the herbicides, 2,4-D and dicamba, in river water across the United States. The GC-MS method involved solid-phase extraction, derivatized with deuterated 2,4-D, and...
Natural attenuation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the leachate plume of a municipal landfill: Using alkylbenzenes as process probes
Robert P. Eganhouse, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli, Martha A. Scholl, L.L. Matthews
2001, Groundwater (39) 192-202
More than 70 individual VOCs were identified in the leachate plume of a closed municipal landfill. Concentrations were low when compared with data published for other landfills, and total VOCs accounted for less than 0.1% of the total dissolved organic carbon. The VOC concentrations in the core of the anoxic...
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...
Occurrence of cyanazine compounds in groundwater: Degradates more prevalent than the parent compound
D.W. Kolpin, E.M. Thurman, S. M. Linhart
2001, Environmental Science & Technology (35) 1217-1222
A recently developed analytical method using liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry was used to investigate the occurrence of cyanazine and its degradates cyanazine acid (CAC), cyanazine amide (CAM), deethylcyanazine (DEC), and deethylcyanazine acid (DCAC) in groundwater. This research represents some of the earliest data on the occurrence of cyanazine degradates in groundwater....
Evaluation of mixed-population flood-frequency analysis
P.J. Murphy
2001, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (6) 62-70
A mixed population of flood flows was shown to cause quality-of-fit problems if a single-population flood-frequency distribution was used to describe the flood data. The three populations in this mix were "ordinary," tropical cyclone, and ice-jam-release floods. Parametric descriptions of the single and separated flood populations were evaluated using probability-plot...
Urbanization effects on the hydrology of the Atlanta, Georgia (USA)
N.E. Peters, S. Rose
2001, IAHS-AISH Publication 109-116
For the period from 1958 to 1996, streamflow and rainfall characteristics of a highly urbanized watershed were compared with less-urbanized and non-urbanized watersheds in the vicinity of Atlanta, Georgia (USA). Water levels in several wells completed in surficial and crystalline-rock aquifers also were evaluated. Annual runoff coefficients (runoff as a...
Effect of the 1997-1998 ENSO-related drought on hydrology and salinity in a Micronesian wetland complex
J.Z. Drexler, K. C. Ewel
2001, Estuaries (24) 347-356
The potential effects of global climate change on coastal ecosystems have attracted considerable attention, but the impacts of shorter-term climate perturbations such as ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation) are lesser known. In this study, we determined the effects of the 1997–1998 ENSO-related drought on the hydrology and...
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...
Simulated limnological effects of the Shasta Lake temperature control device
J. Bartholow, R.B. Hanna, L. Saito, D. Lieberman, M. Horn
2001, Environmental Management (27) 609-626
We estimated the effects of a temperature control device (TCD) on a suite of thermodynamic and limnological attributes for a large storage reservoir, Shasta Lake, in northern California. Shasta Dam was constructed in 1945 with a fixed-elevation penstock. The TCD was installed in 1997 to improve downstream temperatures for endangered...
Erosion and sediment delivery following removal of forest roads
Mary Ann Madej
2001, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (26) 175-190
Erosion control treatments were applied to abandoned logging roads in California, with the goal of reducing road-related sediment input to streams and restoring natural hydrologic patterns on the landscape. Treatment of stream crossings involved excavating culverts and associated road fill and reshaping streambanks. A variety of techniques were applied to...