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Strong-acid, carboxyl-group structures in fulvic acid from the Suwannee River, Georgia. 2. Major structures
J.A. Leenheer, R.L. Wershaw, M.M. Reddy
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 399-405
Polycarboxylic acid structures that account for the strong-acid characteristics (pKa1 near 2.0) were examined for fulvic acid from the Suwannee River. Studies of model compounds demonstrated that pKa values near 2.0 occur only if the a-ether or a-ester groups were in cyclic structures with two to three additional electronegative functional...
Transport behavior of groundwater protozoa and protozoan-sized microspheres in sandy aquifer sediments
R.W. Harvey, N.E. Kinner, A. Bunn, Duncan MacDonald, D. Metge
1995, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (61) 209-217
Transport behaviors of unidentified flagellated protozoa (flagellates) and flagellate-sized carboxylated microspheres in sandy, organically contaminated aquifer sediments were investigated in a small-scale (1 to 4-m travel distance) natural-gradient tracer test on Cape Cod and in flow-through columns packed with sieved (0.5-to 1.0-mm grain size) aquifer sediments. The minute (average...
Assessment of information on ground-water/surface-water interactions in the northern midcontinent
Michael L. Strobel
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
Ground-water/surface-water interactions are important to the hydrology of shallow aquifers, streams, lakes, and wetlands. Information on ground-water/surface-water interactions in the northern midcontinent was assessed. The ground-water/surface-water interactions in physiographic and climatic areas that contain many wetlands differed from the interactions in areas that consisted predominantly of alluvial aquifers along large...
Wetland and aquatic macrophytes as indicators of anthropogenic hydrologic disturbance
Douglas A. Wilcox
1995, Natural Areas Journal (15) 240-248
Hydrologic disturbance can affect wetland and aquatic macrophyte communities by creating temporal changes in soil moisture or water depth. Such disturbances are natural and help maintain wetland diversity; however, anthropogenic changes in wetland hydrology may have negative effects on wetlands. Since plant communities respond to habitat alterations, observations...
Validation of national land-cover characteristics data for regional water-quality assessment
Ronald B. Zelt, Jesslyn F. Brown, M.S. Kelley
1995, Geocarto International (10) 69-80
Land-cover information is used routinely to support the interpretation of water-quality data. The Prototype 1990 Conterminous US Land Cover Characteristics Data Set, developed primarily from Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) data, was made available to the US Geological Survey's National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program. The study described in this...
Applications of isotopes to tracing sources of solutes and water in shallow systems
Carol Kendall, David P. Krabbenhoft
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
New awareness of the potential danger to water supplies posed by the use of agricultural chemicals has focused attention on the nature of groundwater recharge and the mobility of various solutes, especially nitrate and pesticides, in shallow systems. A better understanding of hydrologic flowpaths and solute sources is required to...
Fate of microbial metabolites of hydrocarbons in a coastal plain aquifer: The role of electron acceptors
I.M. Cozzarelli, J.S. Herman, M. Jo Baedecker
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 458-469
A combined field and laboratory study was undertaken to understand the distribution and geochemical conditions that influence the prevalence of low molecular weight organic acids in groundwater of a shallow aquifer contaminated with gasoline. Aromatic hydrocarbons from gasoline were degraded by microbially mediated oxidation-reduction reactions, including reduction of nitrate, sulfate,...
Strong-acid, carboxyl-group structures in fulvic acid from the Suwannee River, Georgia. 1. Minor structures
J.A. Leenheer, R.L. Wershaw, M.M. Reddy
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 393-398
An investigation of the strong-acid characteristics (pKa 3.0 or less) of fulvic acid from the Suwannee River, Georgia, was conducted. Quantitative determinations were made for amino acid and sulfur-containing acid structures, oxalate half-ester structures, malonic acid structures, keto acid structures, and aromatic carboxyl-group structures. These determinations were made by using...
Spatial trends in Pearson Type III statistical parameters
R.W. Lichty, M.R. Karlinger
1995, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (121) 672-678
Spatial trends in the statistical parameters (mean, standard deviation, and skewness coefficient) of a Pearson Type III distribution of the logarithms of annual flood peaks for small rural basins (less than 90 km2) are delineated using a climate factor CT, (T=2-, 25-, and 100-yr recurrence intervals), which quantifies the effects...
A comparison of two nitrification inhibitors used to measure nitrification rates in estuarine sediments
J.M. Caffrey, L.G. Miller
1995, FEMS Microbiology Ecology (17) 213-219
Nitrification rates were measured using intact sediment cores from South San Francisco Bay and two different nitrification inhibitors: acetylene and methyl fluoride. Sediment oxygen consumption and ammonium and nitrate fluxes were also measured in these cores. Four experiments were conducted in the spring, and one in the fall of 1993....
Recent advances in understanding the interaction of groundwater and surface water
Thomas C. Winter
1995, Reviews of Geophysics (33) 985-994
The most common image of the interaction of groundwater and surface water is that of the interaction of streams with a contiguous alluvial aquifer. This type of system has been the focus of study for more than 100 years, from the work of Boussinesq (1877) to the present, and stream-aquifer...
Estimating shallow subsidence in microtidal salt marshes of the southeastern United States: Kaye and Barghoorn revisited
Donald R. Cahoon, D.J. Reed, J.W. Day Jr.
1995, Marine Geology (128) 1-9
Simultaneous measurements of vertical accretion and change in surface elevation relative to a shallow (3-5 m) subsurface datum were made in selected coastal salt marshes of Louisiana, Florida, and North Carolina to quantitatively test Kaye and Barghoorn's contention that vertical accretion is not a good surrogate for surface elevation change...
Use of hydrologic budgets and hydrochemistry to determine ground-water and surface-water interactions for Rapid Creek, Western South Dakota
Mark T. Anderson
1995, Conference Paper, International Symposium on Groundwater Management - Proceedings
The study of ground-water and surface-water interactions often employs streamflow-gaging records and hydrologic budgets to determine ground-water seepage. Because ground-water seepage usually is computed as a residual in the hydrologic budget approach, all uncertainty of measurement and estimation of budget components is associated with the ground-water seepage. This uncertainty can...
Methylmercury oxidative degradation potentials in contaminated and pristine sediments of the Carson River, Nevada
R.S. Oremland, L.G. Miller, P. Dowdle, T. Connell, T. Barkay
1995, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (61) 2745-2753
Sediments from mercury-contaminated and uncontaminated reaches of the Carson River, Nevada, were assayed for sulfate reduction, methanogenesis, denitrification, and monomethylmercury (MeHg) degradation. Demethylation of [14C]MeHg was detected at all sites as indicated by the formation of 14CO2 and 14CH4. Oxidative demethylation was indicated by the formation of 14CO2 and was...
Partition of nonpolar organic pollutants from water to soil and sediment organic matters
Daniel E. Kile, C. T. Chiou, H. Zhou
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 1401-1406
The partition coefficients (Koc) of carbon tetrachloride and 1,2-dichlorobenzene between normal soil/sediment organic matter and water have been determined for a large set of soils, bed sediments, and suspended solids from the United States and the People's Republic of China. The Koc values for both solutes are quite invariant either...
Sewage contamination in the upper Mississippi River as measured by the fecal sterol, coprostanol
J.H. Writer, J.A. Leenheer, L. B. Barber, G.L. Amy, S.C. Chapra
1995, Water Research (29) 1427-1436
The molecular sewage indicator, coprostanol, was measured in bed sediments of the Mississippi River for the purpose of determining sewage contamination. Coprostanol is a non-ionic, non-polar, organic molecule that associates with sediments in surface waters, and concentrations of coprostanol in bed sediments provide an indication of long-term sewage loads. Because...
Frequent outburst floods from South Tahoma Glacier, Mount Rainier, USA: Relation to debris flows, meteorological origin, and implications for subglacial hydrology
J. S. Walder, C. L. Driedger
1995, Journal of Glaciology (41) 1-10
Destructive debris flows occur frequently at glacierized Mount Rainier volcano, Washington, U.S.A. Twenty-three such flows have occurred in the Tahoma Creek valley since 1967. Hydrologic and geomorphic evidence indicate that all or nearly all of these flows began as outburst floods from South Tahoma Glacier. Flood waters...
Effects of hydrology on zooplankton communities in high-mountain ponds, Mount Rainier National Park, USA
Scott Girdner, Gary L. Larson
1995, Journal of Plankton Research (17) 1731-1755
Ten high-mountain ponds in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington State, were studied from ice-out in June through September1992 to investigate the influences of fluctuating pond volumes on zooplankton communities. All of the ponds were at maximum volume immediately after ice-out. The temporary pond with the shortest wet phase was inhabited...
Use of isotopic data to estimate water residence times of the Finger Lakes, New York
Robert L. Michel, Thomas F. Kraemer
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 1-18
Water retention times in the Finger Lakes, a group of 11 lakes in central New York with similar hydrologic and climatic characteristics, were estimated by use of a tritium-balance model. During July 1991, samples were collected from the 11 lakes and selected tributary streams and were analyzed for tritium, deuterium,...
Mantle helium in ground waters of eastern North America: Time and space constraints on sources
T. Torgersen, S. Drenkard, M. Stute, P. Schlosser, A. Shapiro
1995, Geology (23) 675-678
Mantle helium in continental environments is generally considered to be the result of active volcanism and/or active extension. The latest episodes of volcanism in northeastern North America are the track of the New England hotspot (95–190 Ma) and the closure of the Iapetus sea (before 300 Ma). Thus, the identification...
Characterization of a high-transmissivity zone by well test analysis: Steady state case
Claire R. Tiedeman, Paul A. Hsieh, Sarah B. Christian
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 27-37
A method is developed to analyze steady horizontal flow to a well pumped from a confined aquifer composed of two homogeneous zones with contrasting transmissivities. Zone 1 is laterally unbounded and encloses zone 2, which is elliptical in shape and is several orders of magnitude more transmissive than zone 1....
Fluxes of water and solute in a coastal wetland sediment. l. The contribution of regional groundwater discharge
William K. Nuttle, Judson W. Harvey
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 89-107
Upward discharge of fresh groundwater into a mid-Atlantic intertidal wetland contributed 62% of the water needed to replace evapotranspiration losses from the sediment during an 11 day period in September. Infiltration during flooding by tides provided most of the balance; thus there was a net advection of salt into the...