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Page 397, results 9901 - 9925

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Modified level II streambed-scour analysis for structure I-65-120-6016 crossing Little Eagle Creek and I-65 in Marion County, Indiana
R. L. Miller, B.A. Robinson, D. C. Voelker
1997, Open-File Report 97-305
Level II scour evaluations follow a process in which hydrologic, hydraulic, and sedient-transport data are evaluated to calculate the depth of scour that may result when given discharge is routed through a bridge opening. the results of the modified Levell II analysis for structure I-65-120-6016 on Georgetown Road crossing Little...
Modified level II streambed-scour analysis for structure I-65-85-5527 crossing Sugar Creek in Johnson County, Indiana
B.A. Robinson, D. C. Voelker, R. L. Miller
1997, Open-File Report 97-302
Level II scour evaluations follow a process in which hydrologic, hydraulic, and sediment transport data are evaluated to calculate the depth of scour that may result when a given discharge is routed through a bridge opening. The results of the modified Level II analysis for structure 1-65-85-5527 on Interstate 65...
Modified level II streambed-scour analysis for structure I-70-104-5128 crossing Brandywine Creek in Hancock County, Indiana
R. L. Miller, B.A. Robinson, D. C. Voelker
1997, Open-File Report 97-303
Level II scour evaluations follow a process in which hydrologic, hydraulic, and sedient-transport data are evaluated to calculate the depth of scour that may result when given discharge is routed through a bridge opening. the results of the modified Levell II analysis for structure I-70-104-5128 on Interstate 70 crossing Brandywine...
Hydrologic description of the Braden River watershed, west-central Florida
M.J. DelCharco, B. R. Lewelling
1997, Open-File Report 96-634
The Braden River watershed drains an 83-square mile area in west-central Florida and is the largest tributary to the Manatee River. The hydrology of the Braden River was altered in 1936 when the city of Bradenton created Ward Lake, a reservoir with an 838-foot broad-crested weir 6 miles upstream from...
Flood-hydrology data for the Potomac River and selected tributaries in the vicinity of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park, Maryland, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia
Edward J. Doheny
1997, Open-File Report 97-200
This report presents flood-hydrology data for the Potomac River and selected tributaries in the vicinity of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Park (C & O Canal NHP). Data were compiled for the floods of (1) March 17-19, 1936; (2) June 22-24, 1972; (3) November 4-7, 1985; (4) January...
Water quality in the Appalachian Valley and Ridge, the Blue Ridge, and the Piedmont Physiographic Provinces, eastern United States
L. I. Briel
1997, Professional Paper 1422-D
Chemical quality of ground water, spring water, and surface water differs substantially among the three physiographic provinces. Maps showing regional variations for 18 water properties and constituents are included in this Regional Aquifer System Analysis study report. Systematic variations in water quality are due to differences in geologic and hydrologic...
Ground-water hydrology and water quality of Irwin Basin at Fort Irwin National Training Center, California
Jill N. Densmore, Clark J. Londquist
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 97-4092
Geohydrologic data were collected from Irwin Basin at Fort Irwin National Training Center in the Mojave Desert of southern California by the U.S. Geological Survey during 199296 to deter mine the quantity and quality of ground water available in this basin. In addition to data collected from existing wells and...
Relation of hydrogeologic characteristics to distribution of radioactivity in ground water, Newark Basin, New Jersey
Zoltan Szabo, Ticie A. Taylor, Dorothy F. Payne, Tamara Ivahnenko
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4136
The distribution of radioactivity in ground water in the Newark Basin is controlled by the lithology of the aquifer and the degree of contact between the water that flows through the fractured strata and the radioactive lithologic units. The primary water-bearing lithologic units of the Newark Basin that contain elevated...
Bibliography of Regional Aquifer-System Analysis Program of the US Geological Survey, 1978-96
Ren Jen Sun, John B. Weeks, Hayes F. Grubb
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 97-4074
The Regional Aquifer-System Analysis (RASA) Program of the U.S. Geological Survey was initiated in 1978 and was completed in 1995. The purpose of this program was to define the regional geohydrology and establish a framework of background information on geology, hydrology, and geochemistry of the Nation's important aquifer systems. This...
Pesticides in surface and ground water of the San Joaquin-Tulare basins, California: Analysis of available data, 1966 Through 1992
Joseph L. Domagalski
1997, Water Supply Paper 2468
Available pesticide data (1966-92) for surface and ground water were analyzed for the San Joaquin-Tulare Basins, California, one of 60 large hydrologic systems being studied as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment Program of the U.S. Geological Survey. Most of the pesticide data were for the San Joaquin Valley, one...
Pollen and geochronological data from South Florida; Taylor Creek Site 2
Debra A. Willard, C. W. Holmes
1997, Open-File Report 97-35
Many recent changes in plant and animal communities of the Everglades have been attributed to human alteration of the environment, such as changes in the hydrologic regime and increased agricultural activity, but cause-and-effect relationships between environmental and biotic changes have not been documented scientifically. This report on pollen and geochronological...
Effects of El Nino on streamflow, lake level, and landslide potential
Richard L. Reynolds, Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel Cayan, Doyle Stephens, Lynn M. Highland, Raymond C. Wilson
1997, Conference Paper, Impact of climate change and land use in the southwestern United States
One of the most important sources of year-to-year climate variation in the Southwest is the El Niño phenomenon of the tropical Pacific Ocean. El Niño is a natural but largely unpredictable condition that results from complex interplay among clouds and storms, regional winds, oceanic temperatures, and ocean currents along the...
Hydrologic inferences from strontium isotopes in pore water from the unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain, Nevada
Brian D. Marshall, Kiyoto Futa, Zell E. Peterman
1997, Conference Paper, Proceedings of FTAM: Field testing and associated modeling of potential high-level nuclear waste geologic disposal sites
Calcite is ubiquitous at Yucca Mountain, occurring in the soils and as fracture and cavity coatings within the volcanic tuff section. Strontium is a trace element in calcite, generally at the tens to hundreds of ppm level. Because calcite contains very little rubidium and the half-life of the 87Rb parent...
Comparing nocturnal eddy covariance measurements to estimates of ecosystem respiration made by scaling chamber measurements at six coniferous boreal sites
M.B. Lavigne, M. G. Ryan, D.E. Anderson, D. D. Baldocchi, P.M. Crill, D.R. Fitzjarrald, M. L. Goulden, S.T. Gower, J.M. Massheder, J.H. McCaughey, M. Rayment, Robert G. Striegl
1997, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (102) 28977-28985
During the growing season, nighttime ecosystem respiration emits 30–100% of the daytime net photosynthetic uptake of carbon, and therefore measurements of rates and understanding of its control by the environment are important for understanding net ecosystem exchange. Ecosystem respiration can be measured at night by eddy covariance methods, but the...
Overview of the Mars Pathfinder Mission and assessment of landing site predictions
M. P. Golombek, R. A. Cook, T. Economou, W. M. Folkner, A. F. C. Haldemann, P. H. Kallemeyn, J. M. Knudsen, R. M. Manning, H. J. Moore, T. J. Parker, R. Rieder, J. T. Schofield, P. H. Smith, R. M. Vaughan
1997, Science (278) 1743-1748
Chemical analyses returned by Mars Pathfinder indicate that some rocks may be high in silica, implying differentiated parent materials. Rounded pebbles and cobbles and a possible conglomerate suggest fluvial processes that imply liquid water in equilibrium with the atmosphere and thus a warmer and wetter past. The moment of inertia...
Anaerobic aquifer transformations of 2,4-Dinitrophenol under different terminal electron accepting conditions
L.R. Krumholz, J.M. Suflita
1997, Anaerobe (3) 399-403
We evaluated the susceptibility of 2,4-dinitrophenol (2,4-DNP) and 2,4-diaminophenol to anaerobic biodegradation in aquifer slurries. Aquifer microorganisms depleted 2,4-DNP at rates of 25, 9 and 0.4 μM/day under methanogenic, sulfate-reducing and nitrate-reducing conditions, respectively. Rates of abiotic, 2,4-DNP loss in autoclaved control incubations were 7.2, 6.2 and 0.95 μM/day respectively....
Simulation of ground-water flow in southeastern Coastal Plain clastic aquifers in Georgia and adjacent parts of Alabama and South Carolina
Robert E. Faye, Gregory C. Mayer
1997, Professional Paper 1410-F
Ground-water-flow systems within the clastic sediments of the southeastern Coastal Plain have been described and quantified through the application of digital ground-water-flow models. Results indicate that the rates and distribution of flow are highly variable, and that regional flowpaths in two aquifers traverse several States. A hydrologic budget was developed...