Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

16370 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 352, results 8776 - 8800

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Enrichment of Geobacter species in response to stimulation of Fe(III) reduction in sandy aquifer sediments
O.L. Snoeyenbos-West, K.P. Nevin, R. T. Anderson, D.R. Lovely
2000, Microbial Ecology (39) 153-167
Engineered stimulation of Fe(III) has been proposed as a strategy to enhance the immobilization of radioactive and toxic metals in metal-contaminated subsurface environments. Therefore, laboratory and field studies were conducted to determine which microbial populations would respond to stimulation of Fe(III) reduction in the sediments of sandy aquifers. In laboratory...
Primary food resources in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
Alan D. Jassby, James E. Cloern
2000, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (13) 21-25
The Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta, a complex mosaic of tidal freshwater habitats, is now a focus of ecosystem rehabilitation because of changes in critical functions associated with its geographic location at the landestuary interface. One of these functions is the production, transport, and transformation of organic matter that constitutes the...
Hydrologic and geologic characteristics of the Yucca Mountain site relevant to the performance of a potential repository
R.A. Levich, R.M. Linden, R.L. Patterson, J. S. Stuckless
2000, GSA Field Guides (2) 383-414
Yucca Mountain, located ~100 mi northwest of Las Vegas, Nevada, has been designated by Congress as a site to be characterized for a potential mined geologic repository for high-level radioactive waste. This field trip will examine the regional geologic and hydrologic setting for Yucca Mountain, as well as specific results...
Can contaminant transport models predict breakthrough?
Wei-Shyuan Peng, Duane R. Hampton, Leonard F. Konikow, Kiran Kambham, Jeffery J. Benegar
2000, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (20) 104-113
A solute breakthrough curve measured during a two-well tracer test was successfully predicted in 1986 using specialized contaminant transport models. Water was injected into a confined, unconsolidated sand aquifer and pumped out 125 feet (38.3 m) away at the same steady rate. The injected water was spiked with bromide for...
Advances in the hydrogeochemistry and microbiology of acid mine waters
D. Kirk Nordstrom
2000, International Geology Review (42) 499-515
The last decade has witnessed a plethora of research related to the hydrogeochemistry and microbiology of acid mine waters and associated tailings and waste-rock waters. Numerous books, reviews, technical papers, and proceedings have been published that examine the complex bio-geochemical process of sulfide mineral oxidation, develop and apply geochemical models...
Applications of imaging spectroscopy data: A case study at Summitville, Colorado
Trude King, Roger N. Clark, Gregg A. Swayze
2000, Book chapter, Remote sensing for site characterization
From 1985 through 1992, the Summitville open-pit mine produced gold from lowgrade ore using cyanide heap-leach techniques, a method to extract gold whereby the ore pile is sprayed with water containing cyanide, which dissolves the minute gold grains. Environmental problems due to mining activity at Summitville include significant increases in...
Elements in cottonwood trees as an indicator of ground water contaminated by landfill leachate
James A. Erdman, Scott Christenson
2000, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (20) 120-126
Ground water at the Norman Landfill Research Site is contaminated by a leachate plume emanating from a closed, unlined landfill formerly operated by the city of Norman, Oklahoma, Ground water contaminated by the leachate plume is known to be elevated in the concentration of many, organic and inorganic constituents. Specific...
Hydrology
Mark H. Eisenbies, W. Brian Hughes
2000, General Technical Report SRS-38
Hydrologic process are the main determinants of the type of wetland located on a site. Precipitation, groundwater, or flooding interact with soil properties and geomorphic setting to yield a complex matrix of conditions that control groundwater flux, water storage and discharge, water chemistry, biotic productivity, biodiversity, and biogeochemical cycling. Hydroperiod...
Hydrologic and geologic characteristics of the Yucca Mountain site relevant to the performance of a potential repository: Day 1, Las Vegas, Nevada to Pahrump, Nevada: Stop 6A. Keane Wonder Spring and regional groundwater flow in the Death Valley region
W.C. Steinkampf
2000, GSA Field Guides (2) 398-398
Yucca Mountain, located ~100 mi northwest of Las Vegas, Nevada, has been designated by Congress as a site to be characterized for a potential mined geologic repository for high-level radioactive waste. This field trip will examine the regional geologic and hydrologic setting for Yucca Mountain, as well as specific results...
Ground-water microbiology and geochemistry
Francis H. Chapelle
2000, Book
Up-to-date coverage and a unique, multidisciplinary approachThe ongoing effort to protect our valuable ground-water resources necessarily involves scientists and engineers from many disciplines. Ground-Water Microbiology and Geochemistry, Second Edition is designed to bridge the historical lack of communication among these disciplines by detailing-in language that cuts across specialties-the impact of...
Hydrologic budget of the late Oligocene Lake Creede and the evolution of the upper Rio Grande drainage system
Paul B. Barton, Thomas A. Steven, Daniel O. Hayba
2000, GSA Special Papers (346) 105-126
The filling history, hydrologic budget, and geomorphic development of ancient Lake Creede and its tributary basin are evaluated to determine the factors that controlled its character. The lake filled the Creede caldera that formed in the late Oligocene as a consequence of the eruption of the Snowshoe Mountain Tuff. The...
Dissimilatory reduction of selenate and arsenate in nature
Ron Oremland, J. Stolz
Derek R. Lovley, editor(s)
2000, Book chapter, Environmental microbe-metal interactions
This chapter discusses the biogeochemical reduction of selenate (Se(VI)) and arsenate (As(V)) when they enter anoxic environments and are used as electron acceptors for the oxidation of organic matter. These reductions are of a dissimilative nature and support the anaerobic growth of selected bacteria which conserve energy from this process....
An overview of arsenic mass-poisoning in Bangladesh and West Bengal, India
D. Kirk Nordstrom
C. Young, editor(s)
2000, Book chapter, Minor elements 2000, processing and environmental aspects of As, Sb, Se, Te, and Bi
The largest mass poisoning in the world, perhaps in history, is happening in West Bengal, India, and Bangladesh. Many thousands of people suffer from arsenic skin disorders and are dying from cancer. About 19 million are estimated to be at risk. The discovery of the arsenic poisoning from tubewell drinking...
Neogene geomorphic and climatic evolution of the central San Juan Mountains, Colorado: K/Ar age and stable isotope data on supergene alunite and jarosite from the Creede mining district
Robert O. Rye, Philip M. Bethke, Marvin A. Lanphere, Thomas A. Steven
2000, GSA Special Papers (346) 95-103
K/Ar age determinations or supergene alunite and jarosite, formed during Neogene weathering of the epithermal silver and base-metal ores of the Creede mining district, have been combined with geologic evidence to estimate the timing of regional uplift of the southern Rocky Mountains and related canyon cutting. In addition, oxygen and...
Evolution of the Creede Caldera and its relation to mineralization in the Creede mining district, Colorado
Paul B. Barton, Robert O. Rye, Philip M. Bethke
2000, GSA Special Papers (346) 301-326
At 25 Ma a major epithermal silver and base metal deposit formed in rhyolitic welded tuff near Creede, Colorado. Nearly 24000 metric tons of silver, appreciable lead, and small amounts of zinc, copper, and gold, have been produced from large, crustified veins under Bachelor and Bulldog Mountains north and northwest...