Differences in topographic characteristics computed from 100- and 1000-m resolution digital elevation model data
D.M. Wolock, G.J. McCabe
2000, Hydrological Processes (14) 987-1002
Topographic characteristics computed from 100- and 1000-m resolution digital elevation model (DEM) data are compared for 50 locations representing varied terrain in the conterminous USA. The topographic characteristics are three parameters used extensively in hydrological research and modelling - slope (S), specific catchment area (A(s)) and a wetness index computed...
Habitat conservation and creation: Invoking the flood-pulse concept to enhance fisheries in the lower Mississippi River
H.L. Schramm Jr., M.A. Eggleton, R.M. Mayo
2000, Conference Paper, Polskie Archiwum Hydrobiologii
Analysis of four years of growth data failed to identify a single temperature or hydrologic variable that consistently accounted for variation in annual growth of catfishes (Ictaluridae). Instead, a composite variable that measured duration of floodplain inundation when water temperature exceeded minima for active feeding was directly related to growth....
Timescales for migration of atmospherically derived sulphate through an alpine/subalpine watershed, Loch Vale, Colorado
Robert L. Michel, Donald H. Campbell, David W. Clow, John T. Turk
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 27-36
Sulphur 35, a cosmogenically produced radioisotope with a short half‐life (87 days), was measured in snowpack during 1993–1997 and at four locations within the Loch Vale watershed during 1995–1997. The four sites include the two main drainages in the watershed, Andrews Creek and Icy Brook, a small south facing catchment...
USGS investigations of rural Arizona watersheds; hydrogeology of the Coconino Plateau; background and current status
Donald J. Bills, M.E. Flynn, Betsy Woodhouse
2000, Conference Paper, First Coconino Plateau hydrology workshop
No abstract available....
Bioavailability of particle-associated Se to the bivalve Potamocorbula amurensis
C.E. Schlekat, P.R. Dowdle, B.-G. Lee, S. N. Luoma, R.S. Oremland
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 4504-4510
Elemental selenium, Se(0), is a prevalent chemical form in sediments, but little is known about its bioavailability. We evaluated the bioavailability of two forms of Se(0) by generating radioisotopic 75Se(0) through bacterial dissimilatory reduction of 75SeO32- by pure bacterial cultures (SES) and by an anaerobic sediment microbial consortium (SED). A...
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...
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...
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...
Age of irrigation water in ground water from the Eastern Snake River Plain Aquifer, south-central Idaho
Niel Plummer, M.G. Rupert, E. Busenberg, P. Schlosser
2000, Ground Water (38) 264-283
Stable isotope data (2H and 18O) were used in conjunction with chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) and tritium/helium-3 (3H/3He) data to determine the fraction and age of irrigation water in ground water mixtures from farmed parts of the Eastern Snake River Plain (ESRP) Aquifer in south-central Idaho. Two groups of waters were recognized:...
Occurrence of pesticides in rain and air in urban and agricultural areas of Mississippi, April-September 1995
R.H. Coupe, M.A. Manning, W.T. Foreman, D. A. Goolsby, M.S. Majewski
2000, Science of Total Environment (248) 227-240
In April 1995, the US Geological Survey began a study to determine the occurrence and temporal distribution of 49 pesticides and pesticide metabolites in air and rain samples from an urban and an agricultural sampling site in Mississippi. The study was a joint effort between the National Water-Quality Assessment and...
Occurrence and distribution of microbiological indicators in groundwater and stream water
Donna S. Francy, Dennis R. Helsel, Rebecca A. Nally
2000, Water Environment Research (72) 152-161
A total of 136 stream water and 143 groundwater samples collected in five important hydrologic systems of the United States were analyzed for microbiological indicators to test monitoring concepts in a nationally consistent program. Total coliforms were found in 99%, Escherichia coli in 97%, and Clostridium perfringens in 73% of stream water samples analyzed...
Fractured-aquifer hydrogeology from geophysical logs: Brunswick group and Lockatong Formation, Pennsylvania
Roger H. Morin, Lisa A. Senior, Edward R. Decker
2000, Ground Water (38) 182-192
The Brunswick Group and the underlying Lockatong Formation are composed of lithified Mesozoic sediments that constitute part of the Newark Basin in southeastern Pennsylvania. These fractured rocks form an important regional aquifer that consists of gradational sequences of shale, siltstone, and sandstone, with fluid transport occurring primarily in fractures. An...
A log-normal distribution model for the molecular weight of aquatic fulvic acids
S.E. Cabaniss, Q. Zhou, P.A. Maurice, Y.-P. Chin, G. R. Aiken
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 1103-1109
The molecular weight of humic substances influences their proton and metal binding, organic pollutant partitioning, adsorption onto minerals and activated carbon, and behavior during water treatment. We propose a lognormal model for the molecular weight distribution in aquatic fulvic acids to provide a conceptual framework for studying these size effects....
Tree recruitment and survival in rivers: Influence of hydrological process
J.M. Dorava, A.M. Milner
2000, Hydrological Processes (14) 3051-3074
The findings of a 14-year study of tree reproduction and survival in the Platte River, Nebraska, are presented. The study was initiated in 1985 to determine the causes and remedies of woodland expansion and channel narrowing, which have reduced potential roosting habitat for migratory avifauna such as the whooping crane...
Preface – Groundwater and microbial processes
Barbara Bekins
2000, Hydrogeology Journal (8) 2-3
No abstract available....
Microbial control of mineral–groundwater equilibria: Macroscale to microscale
Philip C. Bennett, Franz K. Hiebert, Jennifer Roberts Roger
2000, Hydrogeology Journal (8) 47-62
Using field and laboratory experiments, the geomicrobiology of a petroleum-contaminated aquifer and the relationship between mineral alteration, groundwater chemistry, and microbial colonization were examined. Results indicate that indigenous microorganisms influence mineral weathering at two scales of interaction: macroscale processes that perturb general groundwater chemistry and therefore mineralwater equilibria; and...
First LC/MS determination of cyanazine amide, cyanazine acid, and cyanazine in groundwater samples
Imma Ferrer, E.M. Thurman, Damia Barcelo
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 714-718
Cyanazine and two of its major metabolites, cyanazine amide and cyanazine acid, were measured at trace levels in groundwater using liquid chromatography/atmospheric pressure chemical ionization/mass spectrometry (LC/APCI/MS). Solid-phase extraction was carried out by passing 20 mL of groundwater sample through a cartridge containing a polymeric phase (PLRP-s), with recoveries ranging...
Groundwater “fast paths” in the Snake River Plain aquifer: Radiogenic isotope ratios as natural groundwater tracers
Thomas M. Johnson, Robert C. Roback, Travis L. McLing, Thomas D. Bullen, Donald J. DePaolo, Christine Doughty, Randall J. Hunt, Robert W. Smith, L. DeWayne Cecil, Michael T. Murrell
2000, Geology (28) 871-874
Preferential flow paths are expected in many groundwater systems and must be located because they can greatly affect contaminant transport. The fundamental characteristics of radiogenic isotope ratios in chemically evolving waters make them highly effective as preferential flow path indicators. These ratios tend to be more easily interpreted than solute-concentration...
Transport of free and particulate-associated bacteria in karst
B.J. Mahler, J.-C. Personne, G.F. Lods, C. Drogue
2000, Journal of Hydrology (238) 179-193
Karst aquifers, because of their unique hydrogeologic characteristics, are extremely susceptible to contamination by pathogens. Here we present the results of an investigation of contamination of a karst aquifer by fecal indicator bacteria. Two wells intercepting zones with contrasting effective hydraulic conductivities, as determined by pump test, were monitored both...
Ictalurid populations in relation to the presence of a main-stem reservoir in a midwestern warmwater stream with emphasis on the threatened Neosho madtom
M. L. Wildhaber, V.M. Tabor, J.E. Whitaker, A.L. Allert, D.W. Mulhern, Peter J. Lamberson, K.L. Powell
2000, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (129) 1264-1280
Ictalurid populations, including those of the Neosho madtom Noturus placidus, have been monitored in the Neosho River basin since the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the Neosho madtom as threatened in 1991. The Neosho madtom presently occurs only in the Neosho River basin, whose hydrologic regime, physical habitat, and...
Water movement through a thick unsaturated zone underlying an intermittent stream in the western Mojave Desert, southern California, USA
J. A. Izbicki, J. Radyk, R. L. Michel
2000, Journal of Hydrology (238) 194-217
Previous studies indicated that small amounts of recharge occur as infiltration of intermittent streamflow in washes in the upper Mojave River basin, in the western Mojave <a title="Learn more about Deserts" href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/agricultural-and-biological-sciences/deserts"...
Effects of asynchronous snowmelt on flushing of dissolved organic carbon: A mixing model approach
E.W. Boyer, G.M. Hornberger, K.E. Bencala, Diane M. McKnight
2000, Hydrological Processes (14) 3291-3308
In many snowmelt-dominated catchments, stream dissolved organic carbon (DOC) levels typically increase rapidly as spring melt commences, peak before maximum discharge, and decrease quickly as melting continues. We present data from Deer Creek (Summit County, CO) that shows this distinctive flushing response of DOC during snowmelt runoff, with DOC stored...
Modeling the influence of variable pH on the transport of zinc in a contaminated aquifer using semiempirical surface complexation models
D.B. Kent, R.H. Abrams, J.A. Davis, J.A. Coston, D.R. LeBlanc
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 3411-3425
Land disposal of sewage effluent resulted in contamination of a sand and gravel aquifer (Cape Cod, Massachusetts) with zinc (Zn). The distribution of Zn was controlled by pH‐dependent adsorption; the Zn extended 15 m into the 30‐m‐thick sewage plume within approximately 100 m of the source but only 2–4 m...
Attenuation-difference radar tomography: Results of a multiple-plane experiment at the U.S. Geological Survey Fractured-Rock Research Site, Mirror Lake, New Hampshire
J.W. Lane Jr., F. D. Day-Lewis, J.M. Harris, F.P. Haeni, S.M. Gorelick
2000, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Attenuation-difference, borehole-radar tomography was used to monitor a series of sodium chloride tracer injection tests conducted within the FSE, wellfield at the U.S. Geological Survey Fractured-Rock Hydrology Research Site in Grafton County, New Hampshire, USA. Borehole-radar tomography surveys were conducted using the sequential-scanning and injection method in three boreholes that...
Characterizing multiple timescales of stream and storage zone interaction that affect solute fate and transport in streams
Jungyill Choi, Judson W. Harvey, Martha H. Conklin
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1511-1518
The fate of contaminants in streams and rivers is affected by exchange and biogeochemical transformation in slowly moving or stagnant flow zones that interact with rapid flow in the main channel. In a typical stream, there are multiple types of slowly moving flow zones in which exchange and transformation occur,...