ENSO and hydrologic extremes in the western United States
D.R. Cayan, K.T. Redmond, L.G. Riddle
1999, Journal of Climate (12) 2881-2893
Frequency distributions of daily precipitation in winter and daily stream flow from late winter to early summer, at several hundred sites in the western United States, exhibit strong and systematic responses to the two phases of ENSO. Most of the stream flows considered are driven by snowmelt. The Southern Oscillation...
GIXAFS study of Fe3+ sorption and precipitation on natural quartz surfaces
G. Waychunas, J. Davis, R. Reitmeyer
1999, Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (6) 615-617
Grazing-incidence EXAFS has been used to characterize the structure of Fe3+ sorbed onto natural single crystal quartz surfaces. Fe3+ sorption at ca. 5% monolayer coverage on a natural crystal allowed to equilibrate in air resulted in formation of hematite nuclei with strong texturing on r-and m-planes. EXAFS calculations suggests that...
The role of event water, a rapid shallow flow component, and catchment size in summer stormflow
V.A. Brown, Jeffery J. McDonnell, Douglas A. Burns, C. Kendall
1999, Journal of Hydrology (217) 171-190
Seven nested headwater catchments (8 to 161 ha) were monitored during five summer rain events to evaluate storm runoff components and the effect of catchment size on water sources. Two-component isotopic hydrograph separation showed that event-water contributions near the time of peakflow ranged from 49% to 62% in the 7...
New method for the direct determination of dissolved Fe(III) concentration in acid mine waters
T.B. To, D. Kirk Nordstrom, K.M. Cunningham, J.W. Ball, R. Blaine McCleskey
1999, Environmental Science & Technology (33) 807-813
A new method for direct determination of dissolved Fe(III) in acid mine water has been developed. In most present methods, Fe(III) is determined by computing the difference between total dissolved Fe and dissolved Fe(II). For acid mine waters, frequently Fe(II) ≫ Fe(III); thus, accuracy and precision are...
Assessing groundwater vulnerability to agrichemical contamination in the Midwest US
M. R. Burkart, D.W. Kolpin, D.E. James
1999, Water Science and Technology (39) 103-112
Agrichemicals (herbicides and nitrate) are significant sources of diffuse pollution to groundwater. Indirect methods are needed to assess the potential for groundwater contamination by diffuse sources because groundwater monitoring is too costly to adequately define the geographic extent of contamination at a regional or national scale. This paper presents examples...
Explaining spatial variability in mean annual runoff in the conterminous United States
David M. Wolock, Gregory J. McCabe
1999, Climate Research (11) 149-159
The hydrologic concepts needed in a water-balance model to estimate the spatial variation in mean annual runoff for the 344 climate divisions in the conterminous United States (U.S.) were determined. The concepts that were evaluated were the climatic supply of water (precipitation), climatic demand for water (potential evapotranspiration), seasonality in...
Influence of diameter on particle transport in a fractured shale saprolite
D.H. Cumbie, L.D. McKay
1999, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (37) 139-157
Experiments in an undisturbed, saturated column of weathered and fractured shale saprolite using fluorescent carboxylate-coated latex microspheres as tracers indicate that particle diameter plays a major role in controlling transport. In this study the optimum microsphere diameter for transport was approximately 0.5 ??m. Microspheres larger than the optimum size were...
Negative pH, efflorescent mineralogy, and consequences for environmental restoration at the iron mountain superfund site, California
D. Kirk Nordstrom, Charles N. Alpers
1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (96) 3455-3462
The Richmond Mine of the Iron Mountain copper deposit contains some of the most acid mine waters ever reported. Values of pH have been measured as low as -3.6, combined metal concentrations as high as 200 g/liter, and sulfate concentrations as high as 760 g/liter. Copious quantities of soluble metal...
Methane as a product of chloroethene biodegradation under methanogenic conditions
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle
1999, Environmental Science & Technology (33) 653-656
Radiometric detection headspace analyses of microcosms containing bed sediments from two geographically distinct sites indicated that 10-39% of the radiolabeled carbon transformed during anaerobic biodegradation of [1,2- 14C]trichloroethene (TCE) or [1,2-14C]vinyl chloride (VC) under methanogenic conditions was ultimately incorporated into 14CH4. The results demonstrate that, in addition to ethene, ethane,...
DBP formation of aquatic humic substances
M.L. Pomes, W. R. Green, E.M. Thurman, W. H. Orem, H.E. Lerch
1999, Journal - American Water Works Association (91) 103-115
Terrestrial vegetation commonly shed into reservoirs contains chemical precursors of DBPs.Aquatic humic substances (AHSs) in water generate potentially harmful disinfection by‐products (DBPs) such as haloacetic acids (HAAs) and trihalomethanes (THMs) during chlorination. AHSs from two Arkansas reservoirs were characterized to define source, identify meta‐dihydroxybenzene (m‐DHB) structures as probable DBP precursors,...
Occurrence and behavior of the herbicide Prometon in the hydrologic system
P. D. Capel, A.H. Spexet, S.J. Larson
1999, Environmental Science & Technology (33) 674-680
Prometon, a triazine herbicide, is used for total vegetation control on industrial sites, on noncrop areas on farms, in and under asphalt, and to a small extent by homeowners. Prometon has often been detected in surface water and groundwater in studies reported in the literature, but its presence is seldom...
Transport and attenuation of carboxylate-modified latex microspheres in fractured rock laboratory and field tracer tests
M.W. Becker, P.W. Reimus, P. Vilks
1999, Ground Water (37) 387-395
Understanding colloid transport in ground water is essential to assessing the migration of colloid‐size contaminants, the facilitation of dissolved contaminant transport by colloids, in situ bioremediation, and the health risks of pathogen contamination in drinking water wells. Much has been learned through laboratory and field‐scale colloid...
Component flow processes at four streams in the Catskill Mountains, New York, analysed using episodic concentration/discharge relationship
C. Evans, T.D. Davies, Peter S. Murdoch
1999, Hydrological Processes (13) 563-575
Plots of solute concentration against discharge have been used to relate stream hydrochemical variations to processes of flow generation, using data collected at four streams in the Catskill Mountains, New York, during the Episodic Response Project of the US Environmental Protection Agency. Results suggest that a two-component system of shallow...
Coupling groundwater and riparian vegetation models to assess effects of reservoir releases
Abraham E. Springer, Julie M. Wright, Patrick B. Shafroth, Juliet C. Stromberg, Duncan T. Patten
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 3621-3630
Although riparian areas in the arid southwestern United States are critical for maintaining species diversity, their extent and health have been declining since Euro‐American settlement. The purpose of this study was to develop a methodology to evaluate the potential for riparian vegetation restoration and groundwater recharge. A numerical groundwater flow...
Estimating lake-atmosphere CO2 exchange
D.E. Anderson, Robert G. Striegl, D.I. Stannard, C.M. Michmerhuizen, T.A. McConnaughey, J. W. LaBaugh
1999, Limnology and Oceanography (44) 988-1001
Lake‐atmosphere CO2 flux was directly measured above a small, woodland lake using the eddy covariance technique and compared with fluxes deduced from changes in measured lake‐water CO2 storage and with flux predictions from boundary‐layer and surface‐renewal models. Over a 3‐yr period, lake‐atmosphere exchanges of CO2 were measured over 5 weeks...
A method for nitrate collection for δ15N and δ18O analysis from waters with low nitrate concentrations
Cecily C.Y. Chang, J. Langston, M. Riggs, K. Campbell, S. R. Silva, C. Kendall
1999, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (56) 1856-1864
Recently, methods have been developed to analyze NO3- for δ15N and δ18O, improving our ability to identify NO3- sources and transformations. However, none of the existing methods are suited for waters with low NO3- concentrations (0.7-10 µM). We describe an improved method for collecting and recovering NO3- on exchange columns....
Development of a comprehensive watershed model applied to study stream yield under drought conditions
S.P. Perkins, M. Sophocleous
1999, Groundwater (37) 418-426
We developed a model code to simulate a watershed's hydrology and the hydraulic response of an interconnected stream-aquifer system, and applied the model code to the Lower Republican River Basin in Kansas. The model code links two well-known computer programs: MODFLOW (modular 3-D flow...
A topological system for delineation and codification of the Earth's river basins
K.L. Verdin, J. P. Verdin
1999, Journal of Hydrology (218) 1-12
A comprehensive reference system for the Earth's river basins is proposed as a support to fiver basin management, global change research, and the pursuit of sustainable development. A natural system for delineation and codification of basins is presented which is based upon topographic control and the topology of the fiver...
Strategies for ensuring global consistency/comparability of water-quality data
J.M. Klein
1999, Conference Paper, IAHS-AISH Publication
In the past 20 years the water quality of the United States has improved remarkably-the waters are safer for drinking, swimming, and fishing. However, despite many accomplishments, it is still difficult to answer such basic questions as: 'How clean is the water?' and 'How is it changing over time?' These...
Tracer and hydrometric study of preferential flow in large undisturbed soil cores from the Georgia Piedmont, USA
Janice McIntosh, Jeffrey J. McDonnell, Norman E. Peters
1999, Hydrological Processes (13) 139-155
We studied the temporal patterns of tracer throughput in the outflow of large (30 cm diameter by 38 cm long) undisturbed cores from the Panola Mountain Research Watershed, Georgia. Tracer breakthrough was affected by soil structure and rainfall intensity. Two rainfall intensities (20 and 40 mm hr-1) for separate Cl-...
Effects of dynamic redox zonation on the potential for natural attenuation of trichloroethylene at a fire-training-impacted aquifer
K.L. Skubal, S.K. Haack, L.J. Forney, P. Adriaens
1999, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Part B: Hydrology, Oceans and Atmosphere (24) 517-527
Hydrogeochemical and microbiological methods were used to characterize temporal changes along a transect of an aquifer contaminated by mixed hydrocarbon and solvent wastes from fire training activities at Wurtsmith Air Force Base (Oscoda, MI). Predominant terminal electron accepting processes (TEAPs) as measured by dissolved hydrogen indicated reoxygenation along the transect...
Reactive solute transport in streams: A surface complexation approach for trace metal sorption
Robert L. Runkel, Briant A. Kimball, Diane M. McKnight, Kenneth E. Bencala
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 3829-3840
A model for trace metals that considers in-stream transport, metal oxide precipitation-dissolution, and pH-dependent sorption is presented. Linkage between a surface complexation submodel and the stream transport equations provides a framework for modeling sorption onto static and/or dynamic surfaces. A static surface (e.g., an iron- oxide-coated streambed) is defined as...
Inhibition of precipitation and aggregation of metacinnabar (mercuric sulfide) by dissolved organic matter isolated from the Florida Everglades
M. Ravichandran, G. R. Aiken, J. N. Ryan, M.M. Reddy
1999, Environmental Science & Technology (33) 1418-1423
Precipitation and aggregation of metacinnabar (black HgS) was inhibited in the presence of low concentrations (≥3 mg C/L) of humic fractions of dissolved organic matter (DOM) isolated from the Florida Everglades. At low Hg concentrations (≤5 × 10-8 M), DOM prevented the precipitation of metacinnabar. At moderate Hg...
The distribution of, and relation among, mercury and methylmercury, organic carbon, carbonate, nitrogen and phosphorus, in periphyton of the south Florida ecosystem
N.S. Simon, R. Spencer, T. Cox
1999, Toxicological and Environmental Chemistry (69) 417-433
Periphyton samples from Water Conservation Areas, Big Cypress National Preserve, and Everglades National Park in south Florida were analyzed for concentrations of total mercury, methylmercury, nitrogen, phosphorus, organic carbon, and inorganic carbon. Concentrations of total mercury in periphyton decrease slightly along a gradient from north‐to‐south. Both...
Distribution of microbial physiologic types in an aquifer contaminated by crude oil
B.A. Bekins, E.M. Godsy, E. Warren
1999, Microbial Ecology (37) 263-275
We conducted a plume-scale study of the microbial ecology in the anaerobic portion of an aquifer contaminated by crude-oil compounds. The data provide insight into the patterns of ecological succession, microbial nutrient demands, and the relative importance of free-living versus attached microbial populations. The most probable number (MPN) method was...