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16502 results.

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Page 481, results 12001 - 12025

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A method for testing whether model predictions fall within a prescribed factor of true values, with an application to pesticide leaching
Rudolph S. Parrish, Charles N. Smith
1990, Ecological Modelling (51) 59-72
A quantitative method is described for testing whether model predictions fall within a specified factor of true values. The technique is based on classical theory for confidence regions on unknown population parameters and can be related to hypothesis testing in both univariate and multivariate situations. A capability index is defined...
The quantification of instream flow rights to water
Robert T. Milhous
1990, Book, Proceedings of the American Geophysical Union, Tenth Annual Hydrology Days
Energy development of all types continues to grow in the Rocky Mountain Region of the western United States. Federal resource managers increasingly need to balance energy demands, their effects on the natural and human landscape, and public perceptions towards these issues. The Western Energy Citation Clearinghouse (WECC v.1.0), part of...
Effects of benthic flora on arsenic transport
James S. Kuwabara, Cecily C.Y. Chang, Sofie P. Pasilis
1990, Journal of Environmental Engineering (116) 394-409
Chemical and biological interactions involving arsenic (As) and phosphorus (P) appear to affect significantly As transport and distribution in Whitewood Creek, South Dakota. Data (first‐order uptake rate constants, standing crop, and accumulation factors) that can be used to predict As transport have been determined using algae collected in the creek...
Problems and methods involved in relating land use to ground-water quality
Thomas Barringer, Dennis Dunn, William Battaglin, Eric Vowinkel
1990, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (26) 1-9
Efforts to relate shallow ground-water quality to the land use near a well lead to several statistical difficulties. These include potential uncertainty in land-use categorical data due to misclassification, data closure, distributional skewing, and spatial autocorrelation. Methods of addressing these problems are, respectively, the establishment of limits on minimum buffer...
Synthesis of soil-plant correspondence data from twelve wetland studies throughout the United States
C.A. Segelquist, W.L. Slauson, M. L. Scott, Gregor T. Auble
1990, Report
This report synthesizes the information collected for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in a series of 12 studies designed to describe the relation between soils and vegetation in wetlands located in 11 States throughout the United States. Results of the study demonstrated almost complete agreement between hydric soils and...
Hydrogeochemistry of rivers and lakes
John David Hem, Adrian Demayo, Richard A. Smith
R.G. Wolman, H. C. Riggs, editor(s)
1990, Book chapter, Surface water hydrology of North America
This chapter has three principal objectives: (1) to summarize the present chemical composition of North American surface waters and point out any discernible trends with time; (2) to review chemical and biochemical principles and processes that control natural water composition, and the ways in which these may be involved in...
Origin of solutes in saline lakes and springs on the Southern High Plains of Texas and New Mexico
W. Wood, B.F. Jones
Thomas C. Gustavson, editor(s)
1990, Book chapter, Geologic framework and regional hydrology: Upper Cenozoic Blackwater Draw and Ogallala Formations, Great Plains
Analysis of hydraulic heads, calculation of pore volume flushing, and analysis of solute and isotopic chemistry strongly suggest that the solutes originate from the concentration by evaporation of runoff and potable shallow ground water that discharges from the High Plains aquifer. Chloride/bromide solute ratios, which are thought to be unaffected...
Conducting field studies for testing pesticide leaching models
Charles N. Smith, Rudolph S. Parrish, David S. Brown
1990, International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry (39) 3-21
A variety of predictive models are being applied to evaluate the transport and transformation of pesticides in the environment. These include well known models such as the Pesticide Root Zone Model (PRZM), the Risk of Unsaturated-Saturated Transport and Transformation Interactions for Chemical Concentrations Model (RUSTIC) and the Groundwater Loading Effects...
Relative efficiency of four parameter-estimation methods in steady-state and transient ground-water flow models
M. C. Hill
Gambolati G.Rinaldo A.Brebbia C.A.Gray W.G.Pinder G.F., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Computational Methods in Subsurface Hydrology
Parameters in numerical ground-water flow models have been successfully estimated using nonlinear-optimization methods such as the modified Gauss-Newton (GN) method and conjugate-direction methods. This paper investigates the relative efficiency of GN and three conjugate-direction parameter-estimation methods on two-dimensional, steady-state and transient ground-water flow test cases. The steady-state test cases are...
Potentiometric surface of the Edwards-Trinity aquifer system and contiguous hydraulically connected units, west-central Texas, winter, 1974-75
Eve L. Kuniansky
1990, Water-Resources Investigations Report 89-4208
The potentiometric surface of the Edwards-Trinity aquifer system and contiguous hydraulically connected units (from December 1974 through February 1975) was mapped as part of the Edwards-Trinity Regional Aquifer-System Analysis (RASA) project. A major goal of the Edwards-Trinity RASA project is to understand and describe the regional flow system (Bush, 1986)....
Hydrology of lakes and wetlands
Thomas C. Winter, Ming-Ko Woo
1990, Book chapter, Surface water hydrology
The existence of lakes and wetlands depends on the specific geologic setting that favors the ponding of water, and on the hydrologic processes that allow the body of water to persist at a given site. Lakes can occur only in topographic depressions, but wetlands occur in depressions, on flat areas,...
Organic contamination of ground water at Gas Works Park, Seattle, Washington
G. L. Turney, D.F. Goerlitz
1990, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (10) 187-198
Gas Works Park, in Seattle, Washington, is located on the site of a coal and oil gasification plant that ceased operation in 1956. During operation, many types of wastes, including coal, tar, and oil, accumulated on-site. The park soil is currently (1986) contaminated with compounds such as polynuclear aromatic...
Urban hydrology in the desert, Antelope Valley, California
James C. Blodgett, Iraj Nasseri, Ann L. Elliott
French Richard H., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulics/Hydrology of Arid Lands
A study of urban hydrology in Antelope Valley includes data collection, analysis of rainfall and runoff frequencies, and comparison of results from various rainfall-runoff models. This paper discusses only parts of the project that include data collection and frequency analyses....
Technical comments
B.M. Troutman, M.R. Karlinger
1990, Stochastic Hydrology and Hydraulics (4) 83-88
[No abstract available]...
Rheological analysis of fine-grained natural debris-flow material
Jon J. Major, Thomas C. Pierson
French Richard H., editor(s)
1990, Conference Paper, Hydraulics/Hydrology of Arid Lands
Experiments were conducted on large samples of fine-grained material (???2mm) from a natural debris flow using a wide-gap concentric-cylinder viscometer. The rheological behavior of this material is compatible with a Bingham model at shear rates in excess of 5 sec. At lesser shear rates, rheological behavior of the material deviates...
Nitrogen fixation dynamics of two diazotrophic communities in Mono Lake, California
R.S. Oremland
1990, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (56) 614-622
Two types of diazotrophic microbial communities were found in the littoral zone of alkaline hypersaline Mono Lake, California. One consisted of anaerobic bacteria inhabiting the flocculent surface layers of sediments. Nitrogen fixation (acetylene reduction) by flocculent surface layers occurred under anaerobic conditions, was not stimulated by light or by additions...
Anaerobic oxidation of toluene, phenol, and p-cresol by the dissimilatory iron-reducing organism, GS-15
Derek R. Lovley, D.J. Lonergan
1990, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (56) 1858-1864
The dissimilatory Fe(III) reducer, GS-15, is the first microorganism known to couple the oxidation of aromatic compounds to the reduction of Fe(III) and the first example of a pure culture of any kind known to anaerobically oxidize an aromatic hydrocarbon, toluene. In this study, the metabolism of toluene, phenol, and p-cresol...
Determination of trace levels of herbicides and their degradation products in surface and ground waters by gas chromatography/ion-trap mass spectrometry
W. E. Pereira, C.E. Rostad, T.J. Leiker
1990, Analytica Chimica Acta (228) 69-75
A rapid, specific and highly sensitive method is described for the determination of several commonly used herbicides and their degradation products in surface and ground waters by using gas chromatography/ion-trap mass spectrometry. The compounds included atrazine, and its degradation products desethylatrazine and desisopropylatrazine; Simazine; Cyanazine; Metolachlor; and alachlor and its...