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Page 357, results 8901 - 8925

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Effects of the flood of 1993 on the chemical characteristics of bed sediments in the Upper Mississippi River
J. A. Moody, J.F. Sullivan, Howard E. Taylor
2000, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (117) 329-351
Concentrations of pollutants stored in the surficial bed sediments in the navigation pools of the Upper Mississippi River showed a general decrease after the record flood of 1993. Percent clay and total organic carbon in the surficial sediments decreased as a result of an increase in the proportion of coarser...
Pesticides in the atmosphere of the Mississippi River Valley, part II: Air
W.T. Foreman, M.S. Majewski, D. A. Goolsby, F.W. Wiebe, R.H. Coupe
2000, Science of Total Environment (248) 213-226
Weekly composite air samples were collected from early April through to mid-September 1995 at three paired urban and agricultural sites along the Mississippi River region of the Midwestern United States. The paired sampling sites were located in Mississippi, Iowa, and Minnesota. A background site, removed from dense urban and agricultural...
The fate of haloacetic acids and trihalomethanes in an aquifer storage and recovery program, Las Vegas, Nevada
J. M. Thomas, W.A. McKay, E. Colec, J. E. Landmeyer, P. M. Bradley
2000, Ground Water (38) 605-614
The fate of disinfection byproducts during aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) is evaluated for aquifers in Southern Nevada. Rapid declines of haloacetic acid (HAA) concentrations during ASR, with associated little change in Cl concentration, indicate that HAAs decline primarily by in situ microbial oxidation. Dilution is only a minor contributor...
Snow crystal imaging using scanning electron microscopy: III. Glacier ice, snow and biota
A. Rango, W.P. Wergin, E.F. Erbe, E.G. Josberger
2000, Hydrological Sciences Journal (45) 357-375
Low-temperature scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to observe metamorphosed snow, glacial firn, and glacial ice obtained from South Cascade Glacier in Washington State, USA. Biotic samples consisting of algae (Chlamydomonas nivalis) and ice worms (a species of oligochaetes) were also collected and imaged. In the field, the snow and...
Determining timescales for groundwater flow and solute transport
Peter G. Cook, J.K. Bohlke
Peter G. Cook, Andrew L. Herczeg, editor(s)
2000, Book chapter, Environmental tracers in subsurface hydrology
One of the principal uses of environmental tracers is for determining the ages of soil waters and groundwaters. (We may refer to this as ‘hydrochronology’by analogy with the dating of solid materials known as geochronology.) Information on soil water and groundwater age enables timescales for a range of subsurface processes...
Sources and haloacetic acid/trihalomethane formation potentials of aquatic humic substances in the Wakarusa River and Clinton Lake near Lawrence, Kansas
M.L. Pomes, C.K. Larive, E.M. Thurman, W. R. Green, W. H. Orem, C.E. Rostad, T.B. Coplen, B.J. Cutak, A.M. Dixon
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 4278-4286
Gram quantities of aquatic humic substances (AHS) were extracted from the Wakarusa River−Clinton Lake Reservoir system, near Lawrence, KS, to support nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experimental studies, report concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and AHS, define sources of the AHS, and determine if the AHS yield...
Characterization of U(VI)-carbonato ternary complexes on hematite: EXAFS and electrophoretic mobility measurements
John R. Bargar, Rebecca Reitmeyer, John J. Lenhart, James A. Davis
2000, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (64) 2737-2749
We have measured U(VI) adsorption on hematite using EXAFS spectroscopy and electrophoresis under conditions relevant to surface waters and aquifers (0.01 to 10 μM dissolved uranium concentrations, in equilibrium with air, pH 4.5 to 8.5). Both techniques suggest the existence of anionic U(VI)-carbonato ternary complexes. Fits to EXAFS spectra indicate...
Legacy of the California Gold Rush: Environmental geochemistry of arsenic in the southern Mother Lode Gold District
K. S. Savage, D.K. Bird, R. P. Ashley
2000, International Geology Review (42) 385-415
Gold mining activity in the Sierra Nevada foothills, both recently and during the California Gold Rush, has exposed arsenic-rich pyritic rocks to weathering and erosion. This study describes arsenic concentration and speciation in three hydrogeologic settings in the southern Mother Lode Gold District: mineralized outcrops and mine waste rock (overburden);...
Assessing the Kansas water-level monitoring program: An example of the application of classical statistics to a geological problem
J.C. Davis
2000, The Compass: Earth Science Journal of Sigma Gamma Epsilon (75) 116-121
Geologists may feel that geological data are not amenable to statistical analysis, or at best require specialized approaches such as nonparametric statistics and geostatistics. However, there are many circumstances, particularly in systematic studies conducted for environmental or regulatory purposes, where traditional parametric statistical procedures can be beneficial. An example is...
Metal-sulfate salts from sulfide mineral oxidation
J.L. Jambor, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Charles N. Alpers
2000, Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry (40) 302-350
The observation of “efflorescences,” or the flowering of salts, associated with periods of dryness in soils, in closed-basin lakes, in rock outcrops, and in mines and mine wastes has been noted since early antiquity. The formation of metal-sulfate salts, in connection with the mining of metals, was a phenomenon well...
Concentrations and characteristics of organic carbon in surface water in Arizona: Influence of urbanization
P. Westerhoff, D. Anning
2000, Journal of Hydrology (236) 202-222
Dissolved (DOC) and total (TOC) organic carbon concentrations and compositions were studied for several river systems in Arizona, USA. DOC composition was characterized by ultraviolet and visible absorption and fluorescence emission (excitation wavelength of 370 nm) spectra characteristics. Ephemeral sites had the highest DOC concentrations, and unregulated perennial sites had...
Microbial degradation of chloroethenes in groundwater systems
Paul M. Bradley
2000, Hydrogeology Journal (8) 104-111
The chloroethenes, tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE) are among the most common contaminants detected in groundwater systems. As recently as 1980, the consensus was that chloroethene compounds were not significantly biodegradable in groundwater. Consequently, efforts to remediate chloroethene-contaminated groundwater were limited to largely unsuccessful pump-and-treat attempts. Subsequent investigation revealed that...
Methodology and application of combined watershed and ground-water models in Kansas
M. Sophocleous, S.P. Perkins
2000, Journal of Hydrology (236) 185-201
Increased irrigation in Kansas and other regions during the last several decades has caused serious water depletion, making the development of comprehensive strategies and tools to resolve such problems increasingly important. This paper makes the case for an intermediate complexity, quasi-distributed, comprehensive, large-watershed model, which falls between the fully distributed,...
Hydrological responses to dynamically and statistically downscaled climate model output
R.L. Wilby, L.E. Hay, W.J. Gutowski Jr., R.W. Arritt, E.S. Takle, Z. Pan, G.H. Leavesley, M.P. Clark
2000, Geophysical Research Letters (27) 1199-1202
Daily rainfall and surface temperature series were simulated for the Animas River basin, Colorado using dynamically and statistically downscaled output from the National Center for Environmental Prediction/National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCEP/NCAR) re-analysis. A distributed hydrological model was then applied to the downscaled data. Relative to raw NCEP output, downscaled...
Sorption of selected organic compounds from water to a peat soil and its humic-acid and humin fractions: Potential sources of the sorption nonlinearity
C. T. Chiou, D. E. Kile, D.W. Rutherford, G. Sheng, S.A. Boyd
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 1254-1258
The sorption isotherms of ethylene dibromide (EDB), diuron (DUN), and 3,5-dichlorophenol (DCP) from water on the humic acid and humin fractions of a peat soil and on the humic-acid of a muck soil have been measured. The data were compared with those of the solutes with the whole peat from...
Use of isotopically labeled fertilizer to trace nitrogen fertilizer contributions to surface, soil, and ground water
D.H. Wilkison, D. W. Blevins, S. R. Silva
2000, Journal of Environmental Hydrology (8)
The fate and transport of a single N fertilizer application through plants, soil, runoff, and the unsaturated and saturated zones was determined for four years at a field site under continuous corn (Zea mays L.) management. Claypan soils, which underlie the site, were hypothesized to restrict the movement of agrichemicals...
A dynamic landscape model for fish in the Everglades and its application to restoration
H.D. Gaff, D.L. DeAngelis, L.J. Gross, R. Salinas, M. Shorrosh
2000, Ecological Modelling (127) 33-52
A model (ALFISH) for fish functional groups in freshwater marshes of the greater Everglades area of southern Florida has been developed. Its main objective is to assess the spatial pattern of fish densities through time across freshwater marshes. This model has the capability of providing a dynamic measure of the...
Controls on nitrogen flux in alpine/subalpine watersheds of Colorado
Donald H. Campbell, Jill Baron, Kathy A. Tonnessen, Paul D. Brooks, Paul F. Schuster
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 37-47
High‐altitude watersheds in the Front Range of Colorado show symptoms of advanced stages of nitrogen excess, despite having less nitrogen in atmospheric deposition than other regions where watersheds retain nitrogen. In two alpine/subalpine subbasins of the Loch Vale watershed, atmospheric deposition of NO3− plus NH4+ was 3.2–5.5 kg N ha−1, and watershed...
Coupled atmosphere-biophysics-hydrology models for environmental modeling
R. L. Walko, L.E. Band, Jill Baron, T.G.F. Kittel, R. Lammers, T.J. Lee, D. Ojima, R.A. Pielke Sr., C. Taylor, C. Tague, C.J. Tremback, P.L. Vidale
2000, Journal of Applied Meteorology (39) 931-944
The formulation and implementation of LEAF-2, the Land Ecosystem–Atmosphere Feedback model, which comprises the representation of land–surface processes in the Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (RAMS), is described. LEAF-2 is a prognostic model for the temperature and water content of soil, snow cover, vegetation, and canopy air, and includes turbulent and...
Classification of river regimes: A context for hydroecology
W. R. Osterkamp, Jonathan M. Friedman
2000, Hydrological Processes (14) 2831-2848
Over the past 30 years, ecologists have demostrated the importance of flow and temperature as primary variables in driving running water, riparian and floodplain ecosystems. As it is important to assess the size and timing of discharge variations in relation to those in temperature, a method is proposed that uses...
REE speciation in low-temperature acidic waters and the competitive effects of aluminum
Serrano M.J. Gimeno, Sanz L.F. Auque, D. Kirk Nordstrom
2000, Chemical Geology (165) 167-180
The effect of simultaneous competitive speciation of dissolved rare earth elements (REEs) in acidic waters (pH 3.3 to 5.2) has been evaluated by applying the PHREEQE code to the speciation of water analyses from Spain, Brazil, USA, and Canada. The main ions that might affect REE are Al3+, F-, SO42-,...
Dating young groundwater with sulfur hexafluoride: Natural and anthropogenic sources of sulfur hexafluoride
Eurybiades Busenberg, Niel Plummer
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 3011-3030
Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) is primarily of anthropogenic origin but also occurs naturally. The troposphere concentration of SF6 has increased from a steady state value of 0.054±0.009 to more than 4 parts per trillion volume during the past 40 years. An analytical procedure was developed for measuring concentrations of SF6 to less than...
Determination of hydrologic pathways during snowmelt for alpine/subalpine basins, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado
Julie K. Suecker, Joseph N. Ryan, Carol Kendall, Robert D. Jarrett
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 63-75
Alpine/subalpine ecosystems in Rocky Mountain National Park may be sensitive to atmospherically derived acidic deposition. Two‐ and three‐component hydrograph separation analyses and correlation analyses were performed for six basins to provide insight into streamflow generation during snowmelt and to assess basin sensitivity to acidic deposition. Three‐component hydrograph separation results for...
Tracer transport in fractured crystalline rock: Evidence of nondiffusive breakthrough tailing
Matthew W. Becker, Allen M. Shapiro
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1677-1686
Extended tailing of tracer breakthrough is often observed in pulse injection tracer tests conducted in fractured geologic media. This behavior has been attributed to diffusive exchange of tracer between mobile fluids traveling through channels in fractures and relatively stagnant fluid between fluid channels, along fracture walls, or within the bulk...