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Page 359, results 8951 - 8975

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Precipitation areal-reduction factor estimation using an annual-maxima centered approach
W.H. Asquith, J.S. Famiglietti
2000, Journal of Hydrology (230) 55-69
The adjustment of precipitation depth of a point storm to an effective (mean) depth over a watershed is important for characterizing rainfall-runoff relations and for cost-effective designs of hydraulic structures when design storms are considered. A design storm is the precipitation point depth having a specified duration and frequency (recurrence...
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...
Variation in material transport and water chemistry along a large ephemeral river in the Namib Desert
P.J. Jacobson, K.M. Jacobson, P. L. Angermeier, D.S. Cherry
2000, Freshwater Biology (44) 481-491
1. The chemical characteristics of floodwaters in ephemeral rivers are little known, particularly with regard to their organic loads. These rivers typically exhibit a pronounced downstream hydrological decay but few studies have documented its effect on chemical characteristics and material transport. To develop a better understanding of the dynamics of...
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...
Development of a grid-cell topographic surface for Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia
Cynthia S. Loftin, Wiley Rasberry, Wiley M. Kitchens
2000, Wetlands (20) 487-499
The Okefenokee Swamp is a 160,000 ha freshwater wetland in Southeast Georgia, USA that developed in a landscape basin. Hydrologic variability across the swamp suggests that water-surface elevations are not uniform across the swamp. The topographic surface map discussed herein was developed to describe the swamp topography at local to...
Biodegradation of disinfection byproducts as a potential removal process during aquifer storage recovery
J. E. Landmeyer, P. M. Bradley, J. M. Thomas
2000, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (36) 861-867
The biodegradation potential of two drinking water disinfection byproducts was investigated using aquifer materials obtained from approximately 100 and 200 meters below land surface in an aerobic aquifer system undergoing aquifer storage recovery of treated surface water. No significant biodegradation of a model trihalomethane compound, chloroform, was observed in aquifer...
From safe yield to sustainable development of water resources - The Kansas experience
M. Sophocleous
2000, Journal of Hydrology (235) 27-43
This paper presents a synthesis of water sustainability issues from the hydrologic perspective. It shows that safe yield is a flawed concept and that sustainability is an idea that is broadly used but perhaps not well understood. In general, the sustainable yield of an aquifer must be considerably 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...
Colloid formation and metal transport through two mixing zones affected by acid mine drainage near Silverton, Colorado
L. E. Schemel, B. A. Kimball, K.E. Bencala
2000, Applied Geochemistry (15) 1003-1018
Stream discharges and concentrations of dissolved and colloidal metals (Al, Ca, Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, Pb, and Zn), SO4, and dissolved silica were measured to identify chemical transformations and determine mass transports through two mixing zones in the Animas River that receive the inflows from Cement and Mineral Creeks. The...
Composition of fish communities in relation to stream acidification and habitat in the Neversink River, New York
Barry P. Baldigo, G.B. Lawrence
2000, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (129) 60-76
The effects of acidification in lotic systems are not well documented. Spatial and temporal variability of habitat and water quality complicate the evaluation of acidification effects in streams and rivers. The Neversink River in the Catskill Mountains of southeastern New York, the tributaries of which vary from well buffered to...
Acetogenic microbial degradation of vinyl chloride
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 2761-2763
Under methanogenic conditions, microbial degradation of [1,2-14C]vinyl chloride (VC) resulted in significant (14 ± 3% maximum recovery) but transient recovery of radioactivity as 14C-acetate. Subsequently, 14C-acetate was degraded to 14CH4 and 14CO2 (18 ± 2% and 54 ± 3% final recoveries, respectively). In contrast, under 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid (BES) amended conditions, 14C-acetate recovery remained high...
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...
Negative pH and extremely acidic mine waters from Iron Mountain, California
D. Kirk Nordstrom, Charles N. Alpers, C.J. Ptacek, D.W. Blowes
2000, Environmental Science & Technology (34) 254-258
Extremely acidic mine waters with pH values as low as -3.6, total dissolved metal concentrations as high as 200 g/L, and sulfate concentrations as high as 760 g/L, have been encountered underground in the Richmond Mine at Iron Mountain, CA. These are the most acidic waters known. The pH measurements...
Debris flow monitoring in the Acquabona watershed on the Dolomites (Italian Alps)
M. Berti, R. Genevois, R. LaHusen, A. Simoni, P.R. Tecca
2000, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Part B: Hydrology, Oceans and Atmosphere (25) 707-715
In 1997 a field monitoring system was installed in Acquabona Creek in the Dolomites (Eastern Italian Alps) to observe the hydrologic conditions for debris flow occurrence and some dynamic properties of debris flow. The monitoring system consists of three remote stations: an upper one located at the head of...
Origin of the Colorado River experimental flood in Grand Canyon
E.D. Andrews, L.A. Pizzi
2000, Hydrological Sciences Journal (45) 607-627
The Colorado River is one of the most highly regulated and extensively utilized rivers in the world. Total reservoir storage is approximately four times the mean annual runoff of −17 × 109 m3 year−1. Reservoir storage and regulation have decreased annual peak discharges and hydroelectric power generation has increased daily flow variability....
Identifying fracture‐zone geometry using simulated annealing and hydraulic‐connection data
Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Paul A. Hsieh, Steven M. Gorelick
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1707-1721
A new approach is presented to condition geostatistical simulation of high‐permeability zones in fractured rock to hydraulic‐connection data. A simulated‐annealing algorithm generates three‐dimensional (3‐D) realizations conditioned to borehole data, inferred hydraulic connections between packer‐isolated borehole intervals, and an indicator (fracture zone or background‐K bedrock) variogram model of spatial variability. We apply...
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...
Tritium/3He measurements in young groundwater: Progress in applications to complex hydrogeological systems
Peter Schlosser, Stephanie D. Shapiro, Martin Stute, Niel Plummer
2000, Conference Paper, IAHS-AISH Publication
Tritium/3He dating has been applied to many problems in groundwater hydrology including, for example, determination of circulation patterns, mean residence times, recharge rates, or bank infiltration. Here, we discuss recent progress in the application of the tritium/3He dating method to sites with complex hydrogeological settings. Specifically, we report on tritium/3He...
Integrating borehole logs and aquifer tests in aquifer characterization
Frederick L. Paillet, R.S. Reese
2000, Ground Water (38) 713-725
Integration of lithologic logs, geophysical logs, and hydraulic tests is critical in characterizing heterogeneous aquifers. Typically only a limited number of aquifer tests can be performed, and these need to be designed to provide hydraulic properties for the principle aquifers in the system. This study describes the integration of logs...
Landslide triggering by rain infiltration
Richard M. Iverson
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1897-1910
Landsliding in response to rainfall involves physical processes that operate on disparate timescales. Relationships between these timescales guide development of a mathematical model that uses reduced forms of Richards equation to evaluate effects of rainfall infiltration on landslide occurrence, timing, depth, and acceleration in diverse situations. The longest pertinent timescale...
Reactive transport of metal contaminants in alluvium: Model comparison and column simulation
J. G. Brown, R.L. Bassett, P. D. Glynn
2000, Applied Geochemistry (15) 35-49
A comparative assessment of two reactive-transport models, PHREEQC and HYDROGEOCHEM (HGC), was done to determine the suitability of each for simulating the movement of acidic contamination in alluvium. For simulations that accounted for aqueous complexation, precipitation and dissolution, the breakthrough and rinseout curves generated by each model were similar. The...
Multispecies reactive tracer test in an aquifer with spatially variable chemical conditions
J.A. Davis, D.B. Kent, J.A. Coston, K.M. Hess, J.L. Joye
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 119-134
A field investigation of multispecies reactive transport was conducted in a well‐characterized, sand and gravel aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The aquifer is characterized by regions of differing chemical conditions caused by the disposal of secondary sewage effluent. Ten thousand liters of groundwater with added tracers (Br, Cr(VI), and EDTA...