Processes controlling the chemistry of two snowmelt‐dominated streams in the Rocky Mountains
Donald H. Campbell, David W. Clow, George P. Ingersoll, M. Alisa Mast, Norman E. Spahr, John T. Turk
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 2811-2821
Time‐intensive discharge and chemical data for two alpine streams in the Loch Vale watershed, Colorado, were used to identify sources of runoff, flow paths, and important biogeochemical processes during the 1992 snowmelt runoff season. In spite of the paucity of soil cover the chemical composition of the streams is regulated...
Transport of chromium and selenium in a pristine sand and gravel aquifer: Role of adsorption processes
D.B. Kent, J.A. Davis, L.C.D. Anderson, B.A. Rea
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 1041-1050
Field transport experiments were conducted in an oxic sand and gravel aquifer using Br (bromide ion), Cr (chromium, injected as Cr(VI)), Se (selenium, injected as Se(VI)), and other tracers. The aquifer has mildly acidic pH values and low concentrations of dissolved salts. Within analytical errors, all mobile Cr was present as...
Effect of Triton X-100 on the rate of trichloroethene desorption from soil to water
James J. Deitsch, James A. Smith
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 1069-1080
No abstract available. ...
Debris flow, debris avalanche, and flood hazards at and downstream from Mount Rainier, Washington
Kevin M. Scott, J.W. Vallance
1995, Hydrologic Atlas 729
Mount Rainier volcano has produced many large debris flows and debris avalanches during the last 10,000 years. These flows have periodically traveled more than 100 kilometers from the volcano to inundate parts of the now-populated Puget Sound Lowland. Meteorological floods also have caused damage, but future effects will be partly...
Mechanism of formation of humus coatings on mineral surfaces 1. Evidence for multidentate binding of organic acids from compost leachate on alumina
R.L. Wershaw, J.A. Leenheer, R.P. Sperline, Yuan Song, L.A. Noll, R.L. Melvin, G.P. Rigatti
1995, Colloids and Surfaces A: Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects (96) 93-104
Measurements of the infrared linear dichroism of carboxylate groups of organic acids from compost leachate adsorbed to an alumina surface and the enthalpy of adsorption of this reaction have been made. The linear dichroism measurements indicated that the carboxylate groups are not free to rotate. This limited rotation probably results...
Large-scale atmospheric forcing of recent trends toward early snowmelt runoff in California
Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel R. Cayan
1995, Journal of Climate (8) 606-623
Since the late 1940s, snowmelt and runoff have come increasingly early in the water year in many basins in northern and central California. This subtle trend is most pronounced in moderate-altitude basins, which are sensitive to changes in mean winter temperatures. Such basins have broad areas in which winter temperatures...
Chlorofluorocarbons as tracers of groundwater transport processes in a shallow, silty sand aquifer
P.G. Cook, D. K. Solomon, Niel Plummer, E. Busenberg, S.L. Schiff
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 425-434
Detailed depth profiles of Chlorofluorocarbons CFC-11(CFCl3(, CFC-12 (CF2Cl2) and CFC-113 (C2F3Cl3) have been obtained from a well-characterized field site in central Ontario. Aquifer materials comprise predominantly silty sands, with a mean organic carbon content of 0.03%. Nearly one-dimensional flow exists at this site, and the vertical migration of a well-defined 3H...
Screening tests for assessing the anaerobic biodegradation of pollutant chemicals in subsurface environments
Joseph M. Suflita, Frank Concannon
1995, Journal of Microbiological Methods (21) 267-281
Screening methods were developed to assess the susceptibility of ground water contaminants to anaerobic biodegradation. One method was an extrapolation of a procedure previously used to measure biodegradation activity in dilute sewage sludge. Aquifer solids and ground water with no additional nutritive media were incubated anaerobically in 160-ml serum bottles...
Kinetics of oxidation of selenite to selenate in the presence of oxygen, titania and light
Karen A. Gruebel, James A. Davis, James O. Leckie
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 586-594
No abstract available....
Groundwater transport of crater-lake brine at Poa´s Volcano, Costa Rica
Ward E. Sanford, Leonard F. Konikow, Gary L. Rowe Jr., Susan L. Brantley
1995, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (64) 269-293
Poa´s Volcano is an active stratovolcano in Costa Rica that has a lake in its active crater. The crater lake has high temperatures (50–90 °C), high acidity (pH ≈ 0.0), and a high dissolved-solids content (100 g/kg). The volcano has numerous freshwater springs on its flanks, but a few on...
Using borehole flow logging to optimize hydraulic-test procedures in heterogeneous fractured aquifers
F.L. Paillet
1995, Hydrogeology Journal (3) 4-20
Hydraulic properties of heterogeneous fractured aquifers are difficult to characterize, and such characterization usually requires equipment-intensive and time-consuming applications of hydraulic testing in situ. Conventional coring and geophysical logging techniques provide useful and reliable information on the distribution of bedding planes, fractures and solution openings along boreholes, but it is...
XAS study of AsO43− and SeO42− substituted schwertmannites
G.A. Waychunas, Ning Xu, C. C. Fuller, J.A. Davis, J.M. Bigham
1995, Physica B: Condensed Matter (208-209) 481-483
Synthetic schwertmannite samples with varying amounts of arsenate and selenate substituting for sulfate were examined by XAS methods in an attempt to characterize the location of the anion complexes. Selenate appears to both substitute directly for sulfate within tunnels in the structure, and sorb onto the outside of crystallites. No...
Remediation of uranium contaminated soils with bicarbonate extraction and microbial U(VI) reduction
Elizabeth Philips, Edward R. Landa, Derek R. Lovely
1995, Journal of Industrial Microbiology (14) 203-207
A process for concentrating uranium from contaminated soils in which the uranium is first extracted with bicarbonate and then the extracted uranium is precipitated with U(VI)-reducing microorganisms was evaluated for a variety of uranuum-contaminated soils. Bicarbonate (100 mM) extracted 20–94% of the uranium that was extracted with nitric acid. The...
Effects of agricultural land-management practices on water quality in northeastern Guilford County, North Carolina, 1985-90
Douglas A. Harned
1995, Water Supply Paper 2435
The effects of selected agricultural land-management practices on water quality were assessed in a comparative study of four small basins in the Piedmont province of North Carolina. Agricultural practices, such as tillage and applications of fertilizer and pesticides, are major sources of sediment, nutrients, and pesticides in surface water, and...
Modeling the effects of variable groundwater chemistry on adsorption of molybdate
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 347-357
Laboratory experiments were used to identify and quantify processes having a significant effect on molybdate (MoO42−) adsorption in a shallow alluvial aquifer on Cape Cod, assachusetts. Aqueous chemistry in the aquifer changes as a result of treated sewage effluent mixing with groundwater. Molybdate adsorption decreased as pH, ionic strength, and the...
Sorption and coprecipitation of trace concentrations of thorium with various minerals under conditions simulating an acid uranium mill effluent environment
Edward R. Landa, Anh H. Le, Rudy L. Luck, Philip J. Yeich
1995, Inorganica Chimica Acta (229) 247-252
Sorption of thorium by pre-existing crystals of anglesite (PbSO4), apatite (Ca5(PO4)3(HO)), barite (BaSO4), bentonite (Na0.7Al3.3Mg0.7Si8O20(OH)4), celestite (SrSO4), fluorite (CaF2), galena (PbS), gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O), hematite (Fe2O3), jarosite (KFe3(SO4)2(OH)6), kaolinite (Al2O3·2SiO2·2H2O), quartz (SiO2) and sodium feldspar (NaAlSi3O8) was studied under conditions that simulate an acidic uranium mill effluent environment. Up to 100%...
Deducing the distribution of terminal electron-accepting processes in hydrologically diverse groundwater systems
Francis H. Chapelle, Peter B. McMahon, Neil M. Dubrovsky, Roger F. Fujii, Edward T. Oaksford, Don A. Vroblesky
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 359-371
The distribution of microbially mediated terminal electron-accepting processes (TEAPs( was investigated in four hydrologically diverse groundwater systems by considering patterns of electron acceptor (nitrate, sulfate) consumption, intermediate product (hydrogen (H2)) concentrations, and final product (ferrous iron, sulfide, and methane) production. In each hydrologic system a determination of predominant TEAPs could...
An updated model of induced airflow in the unsaturated zone
Arthur L. Baehr, Craig J. Joss
1995, Water Resources Research (31) 417-421
Simulation of induced movement of air in the unsaturated zone provides a method to determine permeability and to design vapor extraction remediation systems. A previously published solution to the airflow equation for the case in which the unsaturated zone is separated from the atmosphere by a layer of lower permeability...
Aquifer test in a complex drift aquifer system, west-central Minnesota
G. N. Delin
1995, Hydrological Science and Technology (11) 1-13
No abstract available....
Water quality and agricultural runoff: monitoring results from two Tennessee hydrologic unit areas
Tom D. Byl
1995, Proceedings of the annual meeting - Tennessee Forage and Grassland Council 23-28
Geology, hydrology, and mechanics of a slow-moving, clay-rich landslide, Honolulu, Hawaii
Rex L. Baum, Mark E. Reid
William C. Haneberg, Scott A. Anderson, editor(s)
1995, Book chapter, Clay and shale slope instability
The Alani-Paty landslide has damaged streets, utilities, and homes built on a debris apron in Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii. Failure of weathered, crudely stratified, highly plastic, debris-apron deposits has created several similar landslides in southeastern Oahu. The Alani-Paty landslide affects about 60 residential lots. It is about 300 m long, 160...
Geohydrologic framework, historical development of the ground-water system and general hydrologic and water-quality condiitons in 1990, south San Francisco Bay and peninsula area, California
John L. Fio, David A. Leighton
1995, Water Supply Paper 2467
No abstract available....
Applications of the transient tracers tritium/helium-3, and chlorofluorocarbons for tracing and age-dating yound ground water: Field examples from the USA and Germany
S. Drenkard, Niel Plummer, Eurybiades Busenberg, P. Schlosser, M. Stute, H. Dorr
1995, Book chapter, Contaminated soil '95: Soils & environment
The transient tracers tritium/helium-3 (3H/3He) and chlorofluorocarbons (CFC-11, CFC-12, CFC-113) are well suited for tracing and age-dating young ground water. Their detection in ground water indicates waters recharged within the past 30 (3H/3He, CFC-113) to 50 (CFC-11, CFC-12) years, or ground water mixtures that contain at least a portion of...
Interpreting spatial profiles of concentration in acid mine drainage streams
R. E. Broshears, Briant A. Kimball, Robert L. Runkel
W. R. Hotchkiss, J. S. Downey, E. D. Gutentag, editor(s)
1995, Book chapter, Water resources at risk, Denver, Colorado
No abstract available. ...
The value of postaudits in groundwater model applications
Leonard F. Konikow
1995, Book chapter, Groundwater models for resources analysis and management
No abstract available....