Magnitude and frequency of lahars and lahar-runout flows in the Toutle-Cowlitz River system
K. M. Scott
1989, Professional Paper 1447-B
Hydrogeologic framework of the New Jersey Coastal Plain
Otto S. Zapecza
1989, Professional Paper 1404-B
This report presents the results of a water-resources, oriented subsurface mapping program within the Coastal Plain of New Jersey. The occurrence and configuration of 15 regional hydrogeologic units have been defined, primarily on the basis of an interpretation of borehole geophysical data. The nine aquifers and six...
The occurrence and geochemistry of salty ground water in the northern Atlantic Coastal Plain
Harold Meisler
1989, Professional Paper 1404-D
No abstract available....
Geochemistry of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer system in the northern Midwest, United States: D in Regional aquifer-system analysis
D. I. Siegel
1989, Professional Paper 1405-D
Distributions of solutes in aquifers of Cambrian and Ordovician age were studied in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, northwestern Indiana, and northern Missouri to determine the sources of solutes and the probable chemical mechanisms that control regional variations in water quality. This work is part of the Northern Midwest Regional Aquifer-System...
Ground-water hydrology and simulated effects of development in Smith Creek valley, a hydrologically closed basin in Lander County, Nevada
J. M. Thomas, S.M. Carlton, L.B. Hines
1989, Professional Paper 1409-E
Hydrogeology, ground-water movement, and subsurface storage in the Floridan aquifer system in southern Florida
Frederick W. Meyer
1989, Professional Paper 1403-G
The Floridan aquifer system of southern Florida is composed chiefly of carbonate rocks that range in age from early Miocene to Paleocene. The top of the aquifer system in southern Florida generally is at depths ranging from 500 to 1,000 feet, and the average thickness is about 3,000 feet. It...
Estimation of the recharge area contributing water to a pumped well in a glacial-drift, river-valley aquifer
Daniel J. Morrissey
1989, Water Supply Paper 2338
The highly permeable, unconfined, glacial-drift aquifers that occupy most New England river valleys constitute the principal source of drinking water for many of the communities that obtain part or all of their public water supply from ground water. Recent events have shown that these aquifers are highly susceptible to contamination...
Use of temperature profiles beneath streams to determine rates of vertical ground-water flow and vertical hydraulic conductivity
Wayne W. Lapham
1989, Water Supply Paper 2337
The use of temperature profiles beneath streams to determine rates of vertical ground-water flow and effective vertical hydraulic conductivity of sediments was evaluated at three field sites by use of a model that numerically solves the partial differential equation governing simultaneous vertical flow of fluid and heat in the Earth....
Potential hydrologic effects of ground-water withdrawals from the Dakota Aquifer, southwestern Kansas
Kenneth R. Watts
1989, Water Supply Paper 2304
A study was conducted to evaluate the effects of potential development of the Dakota aquifer on the layered-aquifer system above Permian rocks in a 5,000-square-mile area of southwestern Kansas. This aquifer system, which consists of five layers, includes the Cheyenne aquifer, the Kiowa confining unit, the Dakota aquifer, the Niobrara-Graneros...
Quantity and quality of stormwater runoff recharged to the Floridan aquifer system through two drainage wells in the Orlando, Florida, area
E. R. German
1989, Water Supply Paper 2344
No abstract available....
Sedimentary structures and textures of Rio Orinoco channel sands, Venezuela and Colombia
Edwin Dinwiddie McKee
1989, Water Supply Paper 2326-B
Most sedimentary structures represented in sand bodies of the Rio Orinoco are tabular-planar cross-strata which, together with some wedge-planar cross-strata, are the products of sand-wave deposition. Locally, in areas of river meander where point bars characteristically form, trough structures forming festoon patterns are numerous. At a few localities, sets of...
Sand waves, bars, and wind-blown sands of the Rio Orinoco, Venezuela and Colombia
Carl F. Nordin, David Perez-Hernandez
1989, Water Supply Paper 2326-A
During March 1982, a reconnaissance study was carried out along a reach of the Rio Orinoco between Puerto Ayacucho and Ciudad Bolivar. This was the low-flow season. Samples of bed material and suspended sediments were collected, sonic records of the bed were obtained at several locations, and the exposed bars...
The significance of sediment transport in arroyo development
David F. Meyer
1989, Water Supply Paper 2349
Arroyo widening dominates postincisional arroyo development, and the manner of widening is dependent on the grain size of bed material transported by the channel. When bed material is predominantly gravel, subaqueous bars that alternate from one side of the channel to the other form during high flows in initially narrow,...
Ground-water hydrology of the central Raton Basin, Colorado and New Mexico
Arthur L. Geldon
1989, Water Supply Paper 2288
The watersheds of the Purgatoire and Apishapa Rivers contain most of the public coal lands in the Raton Basin. The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, investigated the hydrogeology of this area from 1978 to 1982, inventorying 231 wells, 38 springs, and 6 mines,...
Evapotranspiration and microclimate at a low-level radioactive-waste disposal site in northwestern Illinois
R. W. Healy, M.P. DeVries, Alex M. Sturrock Jr.
1989, Water Supply Paper 2327
From July 1982 through June 1984, a study was made of the evapotranspiration and microclimate at a low-level radioactive-waste disposal site near Sheffield, Bureau County, Illinois. Vegetation at the site consists of mixed pasture grasses, primarily awnless brome (Bromus inermis) and red clover (Trifoleum pratense). Three methods were used to...
Evaluation of nonpotable ground water in the desert area of southeastern California for powerplant cooling
Anne C. Steinemann
1989, Water Supply Paper 2343
Powerplant siting is dependent upon many factors; in southern California the prevailing physical constraint is water availability. Increasing land-use and other environmental concerns preclude further sites along the coast. A review of available hydrologic data was made of 142 ground-water basins in the southeast California desert area to ascertain if...
Evaluation of methods used from 1965 through 1982 to determine inorganic constituents in water samples
Linda C. Friedman, Marvin J. Fishman
1989, Water Supply Paper 2293
Since 1962, the U.S. Geological Survey has prepared and distributed Standard Reference Water Samples (SRWS) to participating laboratories in order to alert them to possible analytical deficiencies. This report marks the first time that a concentrated effort has been made to examine and compare the SRWS data for each constituent...
Using geophysical logs to estimate porosity, water resistivity, and intrinsic permeability
Donald G. Jorgensen
1989, Water Supply Paper 2321
Abstract contains content that can not be displayed, please see the publication for abstract...
Water movement in the unsaturated zone at a low-level radioactive-waste burial site near Barnwell, South Carolina
Kevin F. Dennehy, Peter B. McMahon
1989, Water Supply Paper 2345
Four unsaturated-zone monitoring sites and a meteorologic station were installed at the low-level radioactive-waste burial site near Barnwell, S.C., to investigate the geohydrologic and climatologic factors affecting water movement in the unsaturated zone. The study site is located in the Atlantic Coastal Plain. The unsaturated zone consists of a few...
Sources of coal-mine drainage and their effects on surface-water chemistry in the Claybank Creek basin and vicinity, north-central Missouri, 1983-84
Dale W. Blevins
1989, Water Supply Paper 2305
Eighteen sources of drainage related to past coal-mining activity were identified in the Claybank Creek, Missouri, study area, and eight of them were considered large enough to have detectable effects on receiving streams. However, only three sources (two coal-waste sites and one spring draining an underground mine) significantly affected the...
Alluvial and bedrock aquifers of the Denver Basin — Eastern Colorado's dual ground-water resource
Stanley G. Robson
1989, Water Supply Paper 2302
Large volumes of ground water are contained in alluvial and bedrock aquifers in the semiarid Denver basin of eastern Colorado. The bedrock aquifer, for example, contains 1.2 times as much water as Lake Erie of the Great Lakes, yet it supplies only about 9 percent of the ground water used...
Simulation of rainfall-runoff response in mined and unmined watersheds in coal areas of West Virginia
Celso Puente, John T. Atkins
1989, Water Supply Paper 2298
Meteorologic and hydrologic data from five small watersheds in the coal areas of West Virginia were used to calibrate and test the U.S. Geological Survey Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System for simulating streamflow under various climatic and land-use conditions. Three of the basins--Horsecamp Run, Gilmer Run, and Collison Creek--are primarily forested and...
Evapotranspiration estimates using remote-sensing data, Parker and Palo Verde valleys, Arizona and California
Lee H. Raymond, Kelly V. Rezin
1989, Water Supply Paper 2334
In 1981 the U.S. Geological Survey established an experimental project to assess the possible and practical use of remote-sensing data to estimate evapotranspiration as an approximation of consumptive use of water in the lower Colorado River flood plain. The project area was in Parker Valley, Arizona. The approach selected was...
Statistical analysis relating well yield to construction practices and siting of wells in the Piedmont and Blue Ridge provinces of North Carolina
Charles C. Daniel
1989, Water Supply Paper 2341-A
A statistical analysis was made of data from more than 6,200 water wells drilled in the fractured crystalline rocks of the Blue Ridge, Piedmont, and western edge of the Coastal Plain where crystalline rocks underlie sediments at shallow depths. The study area encompassed 65 counties in western North Carolina, an...
Rainfall and runoff quantity and quality characteristics of four urban land-use catchments in Fresno, California, October 1981 to April 1983
Richard N. Oltmann, Michael V. Shulters
1989, Water Supply Paper 2335
Rainfall and runoff quantity and quality were monitored for industrial, single-dwelling residential, multiple-dwelling residential, and commercial land-use catchments during the 1981-82 and 1982-83 rain seasons. Storm-composite rainfall and discrete run6ff samples were analyzed for numerous inorganic, biological, physical, and organic constituents. Atmospheric dry-deposition and street-surface particulate samples also were collected...