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Page 453, results 11301 - 11325

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Probabalistic projections for recovery of the endangered Cui-ui
John M. Emlen, Thomas A. Strekal, Chester C. Buchanan
1993, North American Journal of Aquaculture (13) 467-474
The cui-ui Chamistes cujus, a lake sucker found in only Pyramid Lake, Nevada, is listed as endangered under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, and a recovery plan has been formulated in an effort to save it. We used a population simulation model that incorporated environmental stochasticity in water availability to...
A perspective on stream-catchment connections
Kenneth E. Bencala
1993, Freshwater Science (12) 44-47
Ecological study of the hyporheic zone is leading to recognition of a need for additional hydrologic understanding. Some of this understanding can be obtained by viewing the hyporheic zone as a succession of isolated boxes adjacent to the stream. Further understanding, particularly relevant to catchment-scale ecology, may come from studies...
Using a GIS to link digital spatial data and the precipitation-runoff modeling system, Gunnison River Basin, Colorado
William A. Battaglin, Gerhard Kuhn, Randolph S. Parker
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Second international conference/workshop on Integrating geographic information systems and environmental modeling
The U.S. Geological Survey Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System, a modular, distributed-parameter, watershed-modeling system, is being applied to 20 smaller watersheds within the Gunnison River basin. The model is used to derive a daily water balance for subareas in a watershed, ultimately...
New reference materials for nitrogen-isotope-ratio measurements
J.K. Bohlke, C. J. Gwinn, T. B. Coplen
1993, Geostandards Newsletter (17) 159-164
Three new reference materials were manufactured for calibration of relative stable nitrogen‐isotope‐ratio measurements:USGS25 (ammonium sulfate) δ615″=−30 per milUSGS26 (ammonium sulfate) δ615″=+54 per milUSGS32 (potassium nitrate) δ615″=+180 per milwhere δN′, relative to atmospheric nitrogen, is an approximate value subject to change following interlaboratory comparisons. These materials are isotopically homogeneous in aliquots...
Chemical and biotic characteristics of two low-alkalinity lakes in northern Wisconsin: relation to atmospheric deposition
K.E. Webster, J.M. Eilers, J.G. Wiener, G.E. Glass, P.J. Garrison
1993, Technical Report EPA/600/A-94/208
Synoptic surveys of water chemistry in north-central Wisconsin documented the presence of many low alkalinity lakes potentially sensitive to acid deposition. Furthermore, lake hydrologic type proved to be a key factor in determining lake sensitivity: the low alkalinity systems were predominately seepage lakes. To test this hypothesis and identify the...
Geohydrologic systems in Kansas — Geohydrology of the lower aquifer unit in the western interior plains aquifer system
J. F. Kenny, Cristi V. Hansen, R. J. Wolf
1993, Hydrologic Atlas 722-H
The purpose of the investigation is to provide a description of the principal geohydrologic systems in Upper Cambrian through Lower Cretaceous rocks in Kansas. This investigation was made as part of the Central Midwest Regional Aquifer-System Analysis (CMRASA). The CMRASA is one of several major investigations by the U.S. Geological...
High-precision measurement of chlorine stable isotope ratios
A. Long, C.J. Eastoe, R.S. Kaufmann, J.G. Martin, L. Wirt, J.B. Finley
1993, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (57) 2907-2912
We present an analysis procedure that allows stable isotopes of chlorine to be analyzed with precision sufficient for geological and hydrological studies. The total analytical precision is ≤±0.09%., and the present known range of chloride in the surface and near-surface environment is 3.5‰. As Cl− is essentially nonreactive in natural aquatic...
Nonpoint source contamination of the Mississippi river and its tributaries by herbicides
W. E. Pereira, F. D. Hostettler
1993, Environmental Science & Technology (27) 1542-1552
A study of the Mississippi River and its tributaries during July-August 1991, October-November 1991, and April-May 1992 has indicated that the entire navigable reach of the river is contaminated with a complex mixture of agrochemicals and their transformation products derived from nonpoint sources. Twenty-three compounds were identified, including triazine, chloroacetanilide,...
Meromixis in hypersaline Mono Lake, California. 3. Biogeochemical response to stratification and overturn
Laurence G. Miller, R. Jellison, Ronald S. Oremland, Charles W. Culbertson
1993, Limnology and Oceanography (38) 1040-1051
Mono Lake is a terminal, saline lake that became ectogenically meromictic in 1982–1983 and remained stratified until November 1988. During this period, the monimolimnion remained anoxic and nearly isothermal, while the upper mixolimnion was well oxygenated and exhibited a seasonal thermal regime. Dissolved sulfide and methane increased...
Application of mixed-mode, solid-phase extraction in environmental and clinical chemistry. Combining hydrogen-bonding, cation-exchange and Van der Waals interactions
M. S. Mills, E.M. Thurman, M.J. Pedersen
1993, Journal of Chromatography A (629) 11-21
Silica- and styrene-divinylbenzene-based mixed-mode resins that contain C8, C18 and sulphonated cation-exchange groups were compared for their efficiency in isolation of neutral triazine compounds from water and of the basic drug, benzoylecgonine, from urine. The triazine compounds were isolated by a combination of Van der Waals and hydrogen-bonding interactions, and...
Isolation and chemical characterization of dissolved and colloidal organic matter
G. Aiken, J. Leenheer
1993, Chemistry and Ecology (8) 135-151
Commonly used techniques for the concentration and isolation of organic matter from water, such as preparative chromatography, ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis, and the methods used to analyze the organic matter obtained by these methods are reviewed. The development of methods to obtain organic matter that is associated with fractions of...
Manganese minerals and associated fine particulates in the streambed of Pinal Creek, Arizona, U.S.A.: a mining-related acid drainage problem
Carol J. Lind, J.D. Hem
1993, Applied Geochemistry (8) 67-80
The Pinal creek drainage basin in Arizona is a good example of the principal non-coal source of mining-related acid drainage in the U.S.A., namely copper mining. Infiltration of drainage waters from mining and ore refining has created an acid groundwater plume that has reacted with calcite during passage through the...
Seasonal relationships between planktonic microorganisms and dissolved organic material in an alpine stream
Diane M. McKnight, R. L. Smith, R.A. Harnish, C.L. Miller, K.E. Bencala
1993, Biogeochemistry (21) 39-59
The relationships between the abundance and activity of planktonic, heterotrophic microorganisms and the quantity and characteristics of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in a Rocky Mountain stream were evaluated. Peak values of glucose uptake, 2.1 nmol L−1 hr−1, and glucose concentration, 333 nM, occurred during spring snowmelt when the water temperature...
Characterizing the hydrogeologic framework of the Death Valley region, Southern Nevada and California
Claudia Faunt, Frank D'Agnese, Joe S. Downey, A. Keith Turner
1993, Conference Paper, High Level Radioactive Waste Management
Three-dimensional (3-D) hydrogeologic modeling of the complex geology of the Death Valley region requires the application of a number of Geoscientific Information System (GSIS) techniques. This study, funded by United States Department of Energy as a part of the Yucca Mountain Project, focuses on an area of approximately 100,000 square...
Flooding of Sinking Creek, Garretts Spring karst drainage basin, Jessamine and Woodford counties, Kentucky, USA
J.C. Currens, C.D.R. Graham
1993, Environmental Geology (22) 337-344
Tashamingo Subdivision in Sinking Creek karst valley, a tributary of the Garretts Spring drainage basin in Jessamine and Woodford counties, Kentucky, was flooded in February 1989. To determine the cause of flooding, the groundwater basin boundary was mapped, discharge data were measured to determine intake capacity of swallets, and hydrologic...
Calibrated models as management tools for stream-aquifer systems: The case of central Kansas, USA
M. Sophocleous, S.P. Perkins
1993, Journal of Hydrology (152) 31-56
We address the problem of declining streamflows in interconnected stream-aquifer systems and explore possible management options to address the problem for two areas of central Kansas: the Arkansas River valley from Kinsley to Great Bend and the lower Rattlesnake Creek-Quivira National Wildlife Refuge area. The approach we followed implements, calibrates,...
Sorption of N2 and EGME vapors on some soils, clays, and mineral oxides and determination of sample surface areas by use of sorption data
C. T. Chiou, D.W. Rutherford, M. Manes
1993, Environmental Science & Technology (27) 1587-1594
Vapor sorption isotherms of ethylene glycol monoethyl ether (EGME) at room temperature and isotherms of N2 gas at liquid nitrogen temperature were determined for various soils and minerals. The N2 monolayer capacities [Qm (N2)] were calculated from the BET equation and used to determine the surface areas. To examine whether...
Effect of treated-sewage contamination upon bacterial energy charge, adenine nucleotides, and DNA content in a sandy aquifer on Cape Cod
David W. Metge, Myron H. Brooks, Richard L. Smith, Ronald W. Harvey
1993, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (59) 2304-2310
Changes in adenylate energy charge (ECA) and in total adenine nucleotides (AT) and DNA content (both normalized to the abundance of free-living, groundwater bacteria) in response to carbon loading were determined for a laboratory-grown culture and for a contaminated aquifer. The latter study involved a 3-km-long transect through a contaminant...
The role of water exchange between a stream channel and its hyporheic zone in nitrogen cycling at the terrestrial-aquatic interface
F.J. Triska, J.H. Duff, R.J. Avanzino
1993, Hydrobiologia (251) 167-184
The subsurface riparian zone was examined as an ecotone with two interfaces. Inland is a terrestrial boundary, where transport of water and dissolved solutes is toward the channel and controlled by watershed hydrology. Streamside is an aquatic boundary, where exchange of surface water and dissolved solutes is bi-directional and flux...
Hydrology and chemistry of groundwater and seasonal ponds in the Atlantic Coastal Plain in Delaware, USA
P. J. Phillips, R. J. Shedlock
1993, Journal of Hydrology (141) 157-178
The hydrochemistry of small seasonal ponds was investigated by studying relations between ground-water and surface water in a forested Coastal Plain drainage basin. Observation of changes in the water table in a series of wells equipped with automatic water-level recorders showed that the relation between water-table configuration and basin topography...
Atrazine degradation in a small stream in Iowa
D.W. Kolpin, S. J. Kalkhoff
1993, Environmental Science & Technology (27) 134-139
A study was conducted during 1990 through an 11.2-km reach of Roberts Creek in northeastern Iowa to determine the fate of atrazine in a surface water environment Water samples were collected at ~1-month intervals from April through November during stable low to medium flow conditions and analyzed for atrazine and...