Organic and inorganic nitrogen pools in talus fields and subtalus water, Green Lakes Valley, Colorado front range
M.W. Williams, T. Davinroy, P. D. Brooks
1997, Hydrological Processes (11) 1747-1760
Organic and inorganic pools of nitrogen (N) were measured in talus fines or ‘soils’ and subtalus water during the summer of 1995 in the alpine Green Lakes Valley catchment of the Colorado Front Range. Nineteen talus soil samples were divided into four classes: subtalus...
The spring runoff pulse from the Sierra Nevada
D.R. Cayan, D. H. Peterson, L. Riddle, M. D. Dettinger, R. E. Smith
1997, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter 25-28
A spring runoff pulse is identified in the Merced River record from the Sierra Nevada, that makes the transition from low streamflow conditions in winter to the high streamflow conditions in the later spring-early summer period. The timing of the pulse is delayed with greater seasonal accumulation of snow pack...
Selenium trends in north San Francisco Bay
S. N. Luoma, R. Linville
1997, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (10) 25-26
No abstract available....
Analysis of the Cape Cod tracer data
Souheil Ezzedine, Yoram Rubin
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 1-11
An analysis of the Cape Cod test was performed using several first- and higher-order theoretical models. We compare conditional and unconditional solutions of the transport equation and employ them for analysis of the experimental data. We consider spatial moments, mass breakthrough curves, and the distribution of the solute mass in...
Potential for intrinsic bioremediation of a DNT-contaminated aquifer
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle, J. E. Landmeyer, J.G. Schumacher
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (35) 12-17
Microorganisms indigenous to a shallow aquifer, which underlies an explosives-contaminated site, mineralized 28% of [U-ring-14C] 2,4–dinitrotoluene to 14CO2 within 28 days under aerobic conditions. Approximately 20% of added 2,4–dinitrotoluene remained undegraded at the end of the incubation while approximately 22% and 6% were transformed to 4–amino-2–nitrotoluene and 2–amino-4–nitrotoluene, respectively. In...
Modeling fish dynamics and effects of stress in a hydrologically pulsed ecosystem
Donald L. DeAngelis, William F. Loftus, Joel C. Trexler, Robert E. Ulanowicz
1997, Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Stress and Recovery (6) 1-13
Many wetlands undergo seasonal cycles in precipitation and water depth.This environmental seasonality is echoed in patterns of production of fishbiomass, which, in turn, influence the phenology of other components of thefood web, including wading birds. Human activities, such as drainage orother alterations of the hydrology, can exacerbate these natural cycles...
Combined-sewer overflow data and methods of sample collection for selected sites, Detroit, Michigan
M.J. Sweat, J.R. Wolf
1997, Open-File Report 96-646
The discharge of untreated sewage is illegal in Michigan unless permitted under Act 245 due to public health concerns. In October, 1992, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MDNR, now the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality) issued a discharge permit to Detroit authorizing discharge from the City's 78 combined-sewer overflows...
Vertical accretion and shallow subsidence in a mangrove forest of southwestern Florida, U.S.A
Donald R. Cahoon, J.C. Lynch
1997, Mangroves and Salt Marshes (1) 173-186
Simultaneous measurements of vertical accretion from artificial soil marker horizons and soil elevation change from sedimentation-erosion table (SET) plots were used to evaluate the processes related to soil building in range, basin, and overwash mangrove forests located in a low-energy lagoon which recieves minor inputs of terregenous sediments. Vertical accretion...
In-situ stress and fracture permeability in a fault-hosted geothermal reservoir at Dixie Valley, Nevada
Stephen Hickman, Colleen Barton, Mark Zoback, Roger Morin, John Sass, Richard Benoit
Anon, editor(s)
1997, Conference Paper, Transactions - Geothermal Resources Council
As part of a study relating fractured rock hydrology to in-situ stress and recent deformation within the Dixie Valley Geothermal Field, borehole televiewer logging and hydraulic fracturing stress measurements were conducted in a 2.7-km-deep geothermal production well (73B-7) drilled into the Stillwater fault zone. Borehole televiewer logs from well 73B-7...
Forecasting spring runoff pulses from the Sierra Nevada
M. D. Dettinger, D. H. Peterson, H.F Diaz, D.R. Cayan
1997, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (10) 32-35
No abstract available. ...
In situ stress and fracture permeability along the Stillwater fault zone, Dixie Valley Nevada
S.H. Hickman, C. A. Barton, Mark D. Zoback, R. Morin, J. Sass, R. Benoit
1997, International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences & Geomechanics Abstracts (34) 414
Borehole televiewer and hydrologic logging and hydraulic fracturing stress measurements were carried out in a 2.7-km-deep geothermal production well (73B-7) drilled into the Stillwater fault zone. Precision temperature and spinner flowmeter logs were also acquired in well 73B-7, with and without simultaneously injecting water into the well. Localized perturbations to...
In situ ecosystem effects of trace contaminants in San Francisco Bay Estuary - The necessary link to establishing water quality standards II
Francis Parcheso, C. L. Brown, J.K. Thompson, S.L. Luoma
1997, Open-File Report 97-420
No abstract available....
Ground Water Atlas of the United States: Segment 11, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia
Henry Trapp Jr., Marilee A. Horn
1997, Hydrologic Atlas 730-L
Segment 11 consists of the States of Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, West Virginia, and the Commonwealths of Pennsylvania and Virginia. All but West Virginia border on the Atlantic Ocean or tidewater. Pennsylvania also borders on Lake Erie. Small parts of northwestern and north-central Pennsylvania drain to Lake Erie...
Ground Water Atlas of the United States: Segment 3, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska
James A. Miller, Cynthia L. Appel
1997, Hydrologic Atlas 730-D
The three States-Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska-that comprise Segment 3 of this Atlas are in the central part of the United States. The major rivers that drain these States are the Niobrara, the Platte, the Kansas, the Arkansas, and the Missouri; the Mississippi River is the eastern boundary of the area....
Hydrological and biogeochemical research in the Shingobee River headwaters area, north-central Minnesota
Thomas C. Winter
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4215
No abstract available....
Development of an 11- and 14-Digit Hydrologic Unit Boundary Layer for the Lower Mississippi-Memphis Basin Using a Geographic Information System
Hugh L. Nelson, Aimee C. Downs, Steve D. Crabtree, Doug H. Hines
1997, Open-File Report 97-624
U. S. Geological Survey Program on the south Florida ecosystem - Proceedings of the technical symposium in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, August 25-27, 1997
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
1997, Open-File Report 97-385
No abstract available....
Dissolved nutrient data for the San Francisco Bay Estuary, California, January through November 1995
Stephen W. Hager, Laurence E. Schemel
1997, Open-File Report 97-359
The U.S. Geological Survey conducted hydrologic investigations in San Francisco Bay between January and November of 1995. Dissolved inorganic plant nutrients, nitrate, nitrite, ammonium, silica, and reactive phosphorus were measured in surface and in near-bottom waters at previously established locations in the channel portions of both northern and southern reaches...
Rock-stratigraphic nomenclature, lithology, and subcrop area of the Galena-Platteville bedrock unit in Illinois and Wisconsin
W. G. Batten, T.A. Brown, P. C. Mills, T. J. Sabin
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 97-4054-B
The Galena-Platteville bedrock unit is a dependable source of ground water for many private well owners and some municipal-water-supply systems in northern Illinois (Hackett, 1960) and in Wisconsin. The carbonate lithology of the unit contributes to the availability of ground water and also to the susceptibility of the unit to...
Delineation of flooding within the upper Mississippi River Basin — Flood of July 10 and 27, 1993, in Kansas City Missouri, and Kansas City, Kansas, and vicinity
Charles A. Perry, Ralph W. Clement, Seth E. Studley
1997, Hydrologic Atlas 735-E
During spring and summer 1993, record flooding inundated many of the stream and river valleys in the upper Mississippi and the Missouri River Basins. The flooding was the result of widespread and numerous intense thunderstorms that, together with saturated soils, produced large volumes of runoff. The magnitude of flooding exceeded...
Near field receiving water monitoring of trace metals in Clams (Macoma balthica) and sediments near the Palo Alto and San Jose/Sunnyvale Water Quality Control Plants in South San Francisco Bay: 1996
S. N. Luoma, D.J. Cain, C. Brown, M. Hornberger, R. Bouse
1997, Open-File Report 97-585
No abstract available....
Water resources data, Massachusetts and Rhode Island, water year 1996
R.S. Socolow, D. Murino Jr., R.G. Casey, L.R. Ramsbey
1997, Water Data Report MA-RI-96-1
Water resources data for the 1996 water year for Massachusetts and Rhode Island consists of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; contents of lakes and reservoirs; and ground-water levels. This report contains discharge records for 88 gaging stations, month end contents of 4 lakes and reservoirs, water...
Simulation of ground-water flow in the Coastal Plain aquifer system of North Carolina
G.I. Giese, J. L. Eimers, R. W. Coble
1997, Professional Paper 1404-M
A three-dimensional finite-difference digital model was used to simulate ground-water flow in the 25,000-square-mile aquifer system of the North Carolina Coastal Plain. The model was developed from a hydrogeologic framework that is based on an alternating sequence of 10 aquifers and 9 confining units, which make up a seaward-thickening wedge...
Water-resources activities of the U.S. Geological Survey in Alaska, 1997
Elisabeth F. Snyder
1997, Fact Sheet 028-97
The overall mission of the U.S. Geological Survey's Water Resources Division is to provide the hydrologic information and understanding needed for wise use and management of the Nation's water resources. For nearly 100 years, the U.S. Geological Survey has studied the occurrence, quantity, quality, distribution, and movement of the surface and ground water that constitutes the Nation's water resources. As the...
Hydrologic and hydrochemical data for the Ob-Irtysh and Yenisey River systems of central Russia, 1954-1988
N.N. Bobrovitskaya, B.G. Skakalsky, K.M. Zubkova, G.I. Dobrotvorskaya, I.V. Petrova, M.V. Tsivjyan, N.I. Chistyakova, V.G. Yanuta
1997, Open-File Report 97-232