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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Effects of climate change on freshwater ecosystems of the south-eastern United States and the Gulf Coast of Mexico
P. J. Mulholland, G.R. Best, C.C. Coutant, G.M. Hornberger, J.L. Meyer, P.J. Robinson, J.R. Stenberg, R.E. Turner, F. Vera-Herrera, R.G. Wetzel
1997, Hydrological Processes (11) 949-970
The south-eastern United States and Gulf Coast of Mexico is physiographically diverse, although dominated by a broad coastal plain. Much of the region has a humid, warm temperate climate with little seasonality in precipitation but strong seasonality in runoff owing to high rates of summer evapotranspiration. The climate of southern...
Microorganisms as tracers in groundwater injection and recovery experiments: A review
R.W. Harvey
1997, FEMS Microbiology Reviews (20) 461-472
Modern day injection and recovery techniques designed to examine the transport behavior of microorganisms in groundwater have evolved from experiments conducted in the late 1800s, in which bacteria that form red or yellow pigments were used to trace flow paths through karst and fractured- rock aquifers. A number of subsequent...
Hydrological and chemical estimates of the water balance of a closed-basin lake in north central Minnesota
James W. LaBaugh, Thomas C. Winter, Donald O. Rosenberry, Paul F. Schuster, Michael M. Reddy, George R. Aiken
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 2799-2812
Chemical mass balances for sodium, magnesium, chloride, dissolved organic carbon, and oxygen 18 were used to estimate groundwater seepage to and from Williams Lake, Minnesota, over a 15-month period, from April 1991 through June 1992. Groundwater seepage to the lake and seepage from the lake to groundwater were determined independently...
Environment of ore deposition in the creede mining district, San Juan Mountains, Colorado: Part V. Epithermal mineralization from fluid mixing in the OH vein
D.O. Hayba
1997, Economic Geology (92) 29-44
Detailed fluid inclusion studies on coarse-grained sphalerite from the OH vein, Creede, Colorado, have shown that the abrupt color changes between growth zones correspond to abrupt changes in the nature of the ore fluids. Within each growth zone, however, the composition of the fluids remained constant. The base of a...
Tracing hydrologic pathways at the Panola Mountain research watershed, Georgia, USA
N.E. Peters, E.B. Ratcliffe
1997, Hydrochemistry. Proc. international symposium, Rabat, Morocco, 1997 (244) 275-289
An analysis of Cl- concentrations and fluxes at the Panola Mountain Research Watershed indicates that Cl- may be effectively used to differentiate 'new' and 'old' water flow through the hillslope and their respective contributions to streamwater. Rainfall and throughfall, the 'new' water inputs, are marked by low Cl- concentrations (15...
A theoretically based determination of bowen-ratio fetch requirements
D.I. Stannard
1997, Boundary-Layer Meteorology (83) 375-406
Determination of fetch requirements for accurate Bowen-ratio measurements of latent- and sensible-heat fluxes is more involved than for eddy-correlation measurements because Bowen-ratio sensors are located at two heights, rather than just one. A simple solution to the diffusion equation is used to derive an expression for Bowen-ratio fetch requirements, downwind...
Advances in ice radar studies of a temperate alpine glacier, South Cascade Glacier, Washington, U.S.A.
A. G. Fountain, R.W. Jacobel
1997, Annals of Glaciology (24) 303-308
South Cascade Glacier, Washington, U.S.A., is one of the most extensively studied glaciers in the Western Hemisphere. In addition to mass-balance measurements, which date to 1958, numerous hydrological investigations have been carried out during the last three decades, and repeated ice-thickness determinations have been made using a variety of techniques....
Modeling saltwater upconing in a freshwater aquifer in south-central Kansas
T.-S. Ma, M. Sophocleous, Y.-S. Yu, R. W. Buddemeier
1997, Journal of Hydrology (201) 120-137
The Great Bend Prairie freshwater alluvial aquifer in south-central Kansas overlies a bedrock brine aquifer of Permian age. The continuous extraction of freshwater mainly for irrigation in this area has accelerated the upward movement of the saltwater, resulting in the deterioration of water quality. Predicting saltwater upconing is critical for...
Assessing hydrogeochemical heterogeneity in natural and constructed wetlands
R. J. Hunt, D. P. Krabbenhoft, Marilyn P. Anderson
1997, Biogeochemistry (39) 271-293
While 'water quality function' is cited as an important wetland function to design for and preserve, we demonstrate that the scale at which hydrochemical samples are collected can significantly influence interpretations of biogeochemical processes in wetlands. Subsurface, chemical profiles for both nutrients and major ions were determined at a site...
Regional interpretation of water-quality monitoring data
Richard A. Smith, Gregory E. Schwarz, Richard B. Alexander
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 2781-2798
We describe a method for using spatially referenced regressions of contaminant transport on watershed attributes (SPARROW) in regional water-quality assessment. The method is designed to reduce the problems of data interpretation caused by sparse sampling, network bias, and basin heterogeneity. The regression equation relates measured transport rates in streams to...
Effect of nitrate, organic carbon, and temperature on potential denitrification rates in nitrate-rich riverbed sediments
K.S. Pfenning, P.B. McMahon
1997, Journal of Hydrology (187) 283-295
A study conducted in 1994 as part of the US Geological Survey's National Water-Quality Assessment Program, South Platte River Basin investigation, examined the effect of certain environmental factors on potential denitrification rates in nitrate-rich riverbed sediments. The acetylene block technique was used to measure nitrous oxide (N2O) production rates in...
Application of two direct runoff prediction methods in Puerto Rico
N. Sepulveda
1997, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (2) 10-17
Two methods for predicting direct runoff from rainfall data were applied to several basins and the resulting hydrographs compared to measured values. The first method uses a geomorphology-based unit hydrograph to predict direct runoff through its convolution with the excess rainfall hyetograph. The second method shows how the resulting hydraulic...
Physiological considerations in applying laboratory-determined buoyant densities to predictions of bacterial and protozoan transport in groundwater: Results of in-situ and laboratory tests
R.W. Harvey, D.W. Metge, N. Kinner, N. Mayberry
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 289-295
Buoyant densities were determined for groundwater bacteria and microflagellates (protozoa) from a sandy aquifer (Cape Cod, MA) using two methods: (1) density-gradient centrifugation (DGC) and (2) Stoke's law approximations using sedimentation rates observed during natural-gradient injection and recovery tests. The dwarf (average cell size, 0.3 μm), unattached...
Differential cytochrome content and reductase activity in Geospirillum barnesii strain SeS3
J.F. Stolz, T. Gugliuzza, Blum J. Switzer, R. Oremland, Murillo F. Martinez
1997, Archives of Microbiology (167) 1-5
The protein composition, cytochrome content, and reductase activity in the dissimilatory selenate-reducing bacterium Geospirillum barnesii strain SeS3, grown with thiosulfate, nitrate, selenate, or fumarate as the terminal electron acceptor, was investigated. Comparison of seven high-molecular-mass membrane proteins (105.3, 90.3, 82.6, 70.2, 67.4, 61.1, and 57.3 kDa) by SDS-PAGE showed that...
Nearly synchronous climate change in the Northern Hemisphere during the last glacial termination
L. Benson, J. Burdett, S. Lund, Michaele Kashgarian, S. Mensing
1997, Nature (388) 263-265
The climate of the North Atlantic region underwent a series of abrupt cold/warm oscillations when the ice sheets of the Northern Hemisphere retreated during the last glacial termination (17.711.5 kyr ago). Evidence for these oscillations, which are recorded in European terrestrial sediments as the Oldest Dryas/Bolling/Older Dryas/Allerod/Younger Dryas vegetational sequence,...
Agricultural chemicals in groundwater of the midwestern United States: Relations to land use
D.W. Kolpin
1997, Journal of Environmental Quality (26) 1025-1037
To determine the relations between land use and concentrations of selected agricultural chemicals (nitrate, atrazine residue [atrazine (2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine) + deethylatrazinc (2-amino-4-chloro-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine) + deisopropylatrazine (2-amino-4-chloro-6-ethylamino-s-triazine)], and alachlor residue [alachlor, [2-chloro-2′,6′-diethyl-N-(methoxymethyl) acetanilide] + alachlor ethanesulfonic acid (alachlor-ESA; 2-[(2,6-diethylphenyl)(methoxymethyl)amino]-2-oxoethanesulfonic acid)] in groundwater, detailed land use information based on accurate measurements from aerial photographs...
Multiphase flow modeling of a crude-oil spill site with a bimodal permeability distribution
Leslie A. Dillard, Hedeff I. Essaid, William N. Herkelrath
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 1617-1632
Fluid saturation, particle-size distribution, and porosity measurements were obtained from 269 core samples collected from six boreholes along a 90-m transect at a subregion of a crude-oil spill site, the north pool, near Bemidji, Minnesota. The oil saturation data, collected 11 years after the spill, showed an irregularly shaped oil...
Evaluation of unconfined-aquifer parameters from pumping test data by nonlinear least squares
M. Heidari, A. Moench
1997, Journal of Hydrology (192) 300-313
Nonlinear least squares (NLS) with automatic differentiation was used to estimate aquifer parameters from drawdown data obtained from published pumping tests conducted in homogeneous, water-table aquifers. The method is based on a technique that seeks to minimize the squares of residuals between observed and calculated drawdown subject to bounds that...
Effect of flagellates on free-living bacterial abundance in an organically contaminated aquifer
N.E. Kinner, R.W. Harvey, M. Kazmierkiewicz-Tabaka
1997, FEMS Microbiology Reviews (20) 249-259
Little is known about the role of protists in the saturated subsurface. Porous media microcosms containing bacteria and protists, were used to determine whether flagellates from an organically contaminated aquifer could substantively affect the number of free- living bacteria (FLB). When flagellates were present, the 3-40% maximum breakthrough of fluorescent...
222Rn transport in a fractured crystalline rock aquifer: Results from numerical simulations
P. F. Folger, E. Poeter, R. B. Wanty, W. Day, D. Frishman
1997, Journal of Hydrology (195) 45-77
Dissolved 222Rn concentrations in ground water from a small wellfield underlain by fractured Middle Proterozoic Pikes Peak Granite southwest of Denver, Colorado range from 124 to 840 kBq m-3 (3360-22700 pCi L-1). Numerical simulations of flow and transport between two wells show that differences in equivalent hydraulic aperture of transmissive...
A watershed approach to ecosystem monitoring in Denali National Park and preserve, Alaska
L.K. Thorsteinson, D.L. Taylor
1997, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (33) 795-810
The National Park Service and the National Biological Service initiated research in Denali National Park and Preserve, a 2.4 million-hectare park in southcentral Alaska, to develop ecological monitoring protocols for national parks in the Arctic/Subarctic biogeographic area. We are focusing pilot studies on design questions, on scaling issues and regionalization,...
Effects of carbon dioxide variations in the unsaturated zone on water chemistry in a glacial-outwash aquifer
R. W. Lee
1997, Applied Geochemistry (12) 347-366
The research site at Otis Air Base, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, has been developed for hydrogeological and geochemical studies of sewage-effluent contaminated groundwater since 1982. Research of hydrologic properties, transport, and chemical and biological processes is ongoing, but the origin of background water chemistry has not been determined. The principal geochemical...
Soil-water movement under natural-site and waste-site conditions: A multiple-year field study in the Mojave Desert, Nevada
Brian J. Andraski
1997, Water Resources Research (33) 1901-1916
Soil-water movement under natural-site and simulated waste-site conditions were compared by monitoring four experimental sites in the Mojave Desert, Nevada, during a 5-year period: one vegetated soil profile, one soil profile where vegetation was removed, and two nonvegetated test trenches. Precipitation ranged from 14 to 162 mm/yr. Temporal changes in...