Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

1761 results.

Alternate formats: Download search results as RIS  |  CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 49, results 1201 - 1225

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Water-quality assessment of part of the upper Mississippi River basin, Minnesota and Wisconsin— Ground-water quality in an urban part of the Twin Cities Metropolitan area, Minnesota, 1996
W. J. Andrews, A. L. Fong, Leigh Harrod, M. E. Dittes
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 97-4248
In the spring of 1996, the Upper Mississippi River Basin Study Unit of the National Water-Quality Assessment Program drilled 30 shallow monitoring wells in a study area characterized by urban residential and commercial land uses. The monitoring wells were installed in sandy river-terrace deposits adjacent to the Mississippi River in...
Water quality assessment of the Sacramento River Basin, California: Environmental setting and study design
Joseph L. Domagalski, Donna L. Knifong, Dorene E. MacCoy, Peter D. Dileanis, Barbara J. Dawson, Michael S. Majewski
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 97-4254
This report describes the environmental setting and investigative activities of the Sacramento River Basin study unit of the National Water-Quality Assessment Program. The Sacramento River Basin is one of 60 study units located throughout the United States that has been scheduled for study as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment...
Methods of analysis by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Laboratory-Determination of 86 volatile organic compounds in water by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, including detections less than reporting limits
Brooke F. Connor, Donna L. Rose, Mary C. Noriega, Lucinda K. Murtaugh, Sonja R. Abney
1998, Open-File Report 97-829
This report presents precision and accuracy data for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the nanogram-per-liter range, including aromatic hydrocarbons, reformulated fuel components, and halogenated hydrocarbons using purge and trap capillary-column gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. One-hundred-four VOCs were initially tested. Of these, 86 are suitable for determination by this method. Selected data are provided for the 18...
Methods for comparing water-quality conditions among National Water-Quality Assessment Study Units, 1992-1995
Robert J. Gilliom, David K. Mueller, Lisa H. Nowell
1998, Open-File Report 97-589
The National Water-Quality Assessment is based on intensive investigations of stream and ground-water quality in selected major hydrologic basins (study units) of the United States. One objective of the national assessment is to comparatively evaluate water-quality conditions within and among the different study units. Methods were developed to compare the...
Surface-water-quality assessment of the upper Illinois River Basin in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin: Pesticides and other synthetic organic compounds in water, sediment, and biota, 1975-90
Daniel J. Sullivan, Troy W. Stinson, J. Kent Crawford, Arthur R. Schmidt, John A. Colman
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4135
The distribution of pesticides and other synthetic organic compounds in water, sediment, and biota in the upper Illinois River Basin in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin was examined from 1987 through 1990 as part of the pilot National Water-Quality Assesssment Program conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey. Historical data for water...
Transport, behavior, and fate of volatile organic compounds in streams
R. E. Rathbun
1998, Professional Paper 1589
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are compounds with chemical and physical properties that allow the compounds to move freely between the water and air phases of the environment. VOCs are widespread in the environment because of this mobility. Many VOCs have properties making them suspected or known hazards to the health...
Could Mars be dark and altered?
Wendy M. Calvin
1998, Geophysical Research Letters (25) 1597-1600
There is a long known dichotomy in the martian albedo, with an associated, but mostly assumed, mineralogical split as well. The bright red regions are inferred to be weathered, oxidized dust and the dark grey regions unaltered volcanic material. A number of recent analyses suggest this division is...
Nonpoint sources of volatile organic compounds in urban areas - Relative importance of land surfaces and air
T. J. Lopes, D.A. Bender
1998, Environmental Pollution (101) 221-230
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) commonly detected in urban waters across the United States include gasoline-related compounds (e.g. toluene, xylene) and chlorinated compounds (e.g. chloroform, tetrachloroethane [PCE], trichloroethene [TCE]). Statistical analysis of observational data and results of modeling the partitioning of VOCs between air and water suggest that urban land surfaces...
Mountains and Calderas on Io: Possible Implications for Lithosphere Structure and Magma Generation
M. H. Carr, A. S. McEwen, K. A. Howard, F. C. Chuang, P. Thomas, Peter Schuster, J. Oberst, G. Neukum, G. Schubert
1998, Icarus (135) 146-165
The combination of Voyager images and newly acquired Galileo images with low illumination and resolutions ranging from 2 to 6 km/pixel now allows determination of the global distribution of mountains and volcanic centers on Io. The mountains generally do not have characteristics typical of terrestrial volcanic landforms, they are evenly...
Developmental geology of coalbed methane from shallow to deep in Rocky Mountain basins and in Cook Inlet-Matanuska Basin, Alaska, USA and Canada
R.C. Johnson, R. M. Flores
1998, International Journal of Coal Geology (35) 241-282
The Rocky Mountain basins of western North America contain vast deposits of coal of Cretaceous through early Tertiary age. Coalbed methane is produced in Rocky Mountain basins at depths ranging from 45 m (150 ft) to 1981 m (6500 ft) from coal of lignite to low-volatile bituminous rank. Although some...
Influence of an igneous intrusion on the inorganic geochemistry of a bituminous coal from Pitkin County, Colorado
R. B. Finkelman, N. H. Bostick, F.T. Dulong, F. E. Senftle, A. N. Thorpe
1998, International Journal of Coal Geology (36) 223-241
Although the effects of igneous dikes on the organic matter in coal have been observed at many localities there is virtually no information on the effects of the intrusions of the inorganic constituents in the coal. Such a study may help to elucidate the behavior of trace elements during in...
Speciation and isotopic composition of sedimentary sulfur in the Everglades, Florida, USA
A. L. Bates, E.C. Spiker, C. W. Holmes
1998, Chemical Geology (146) 155-170
We have studied the sulfur speciation and isotopic composition of two peat cores from Water Conservation Area 2A (WCA 2A) in the Florida Everglades. Core site E1 is affected by agricultural runoff from the Hillsboro Canal which drains the Everglades Agricultural Area; Core site U3 is distant from the canal...
Pre-eruptive volatile content, melt-inclusion chemistry, and microthermometry of interplinian Vesuvius lavas (pre-AD 1631)
H. E. Belkin, B. de Vivo, K. Torok, J.D. Webster
1998, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (82) 79-95
Silicate-melt inclusions from lavas and pyroclastics from a selected suite of pre-A.D. 1631 interplinian Mt. Somma-Vesuvius lavas and scoria have been experimentally homogeneized and studied by microthermometry, electron microprobe (EMPA) and secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) to examine pre-eruptive volatile content and magma evolution. The melt inclusions have a bubble about...
Geological setting and petrogenesis of symmetrically zoned, miarolitic granitic pegmatites at Stak Nala, Nanga Parbat - Haramosh Massif, northern Pakistan
B.M. Laurs, J.H. Dilles, Y. Wairrach, A.B. Kausar, L.W. Snee
1998, Canadian Mineralogist (36) 1-47
Miarolitic granitic pegmatites in the Stak valley in the northeast part of the Nanga Parbat - Haramosh Massif, in northern Pakistan, locally contain economic quantities of bi- and tricolored tourmaline. The pegmatites form flat-lying sills that range from less than 1 m to more than 3 m thick and show...
Predicting the toxicity of sediment-associated trace metals with simultaneously extracted trace metal: Acid-volatile sulfide concentrations and dry weight-normalized concentrations: A critical comparison
E.R. Long, D.D. MacDonald, J.C. Cubbage, C.G. Ingersoll
1998, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (17) 972-974
The relative abilities of sediment concentrations of simultaneously extracted trace metal: acid-volatile sulfide (SEM: AVS) and dry weight-normalized trace metals to correctly predict both toxicity and nontoxicity were compared by analysis of 77 field-collected samples. Relative to the SEM:AVS concentrations, sediment guidelines based upon dry weight-normalized concentrations were equally or...
Micas from the Pikes Peak batholith and its cogenetic granitic pegmatites, Colorado: Optical properties, composition, and correlation with pegmatite evolution
D. E. Kile, E.E. Foord
1998, Canadian Mineralogist (36) 463-482
Optical properties are presented for 66 samples of mica covering the range from annite ??? biotite ??? zinnwaldite ??? ferroan lepidolite and ferroan muscovite from occurrences of granitic pegmatite (NYF type) throughout the Pikes Peak batholith (PPB) in Colorado. Chemical composition was determined for 34 of these samples. The optical...
Nitrogen transport and transformations in a shallow aquifer receiving wastewater discharge: A mass balance approach
Leslie A. DeSimone, Brian L. Howes
1998, Water Resources Research (34) 271-285
Nitrogen transport and transformations were followed over the initial 3 years of development of a plume of wastewater-contaminated groundwater in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Ammonification and nitrification in the unsaturated zone and ammonium sorption in the saturated zone were predominant, while loss of fixed nitrogen through denitrification was minor. The major...
Determination of a wide range of volatile organic compounds in ambient air using multisorbent adsorption/thermal desorption and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
J. F. Pankow, W. Luo, L.M. Isabelle, D.A. Bender, R.J. Baker
1998, Analytical Chemistry (70) 5213-5221
Adsorption/thermal desorption with multisorbent air-sampling cartridges was developed for the determination of 87 method analytes including halogenated alkanes, halogenated alkenes, ethers, alcohols, nitriles, esters, ketones, aromatics, a disulfide, and a furan. The volatilities of the compounds ranged from that of dichlorofluoromethane (CFC12) to that of 1,2,3- trichlorobenzene. The eight most...
Hydrothermal uranium deposits containing molybdenum and fluorite in the Marysvale volcanic field, west-central Utah
C. G. Cunningham, J.D. Rasmussen, T. A. Steven, R. O. Rye, P. D. Rowley, S.B. Romberger, J. Selverstone
1998, Mineralium Deposita (33) 477-494
Uranium deposits containing molybdenum and fluorite occur in the Central Mining Area, near Marysvale, Utah, and formed in an epithermal vein system that is part of a volcanic/hypabyssal complex. They represent a known, but uncommon, type of deposit; relative to other commonly described volcanic-related uranium deposits, they are young,...
Early views of the Martian surface from the Mars Orbiter Camera of Mars Global Surveyor
M. C. Malin, M. H. Carr, G. E. Danielson, M. E. Davies, W.K. Hartmann, A.P. Ingersoll, P.B. James, H. Masursky, A. S. McEwen, L.A. Soderblom, P. Thomas, J. Veverka, M.A. Caplinger, M.A. Ravine, T.A. Soulanille, J.L. Warren
1998, Science (279) 1681-1685
High-resolution images of the martian surface at scales of a few meters show ubiquitous erosional and depositional eolian landforms. Dunes, sandsheets, and drifts are prevalent and exhibit a range of morphology, composition (inferred from albedo), and age (as seen in occurrences of different dune orientations at the same location). Steep...
Geochemical surveillance of magmatic volatiles at Popocatepetl volcano, Mexico
F. Goff, C. J. Janik, H. Delgado, C. Werner, D. Counce, J.A. Stimac, C. Siebe, S.P. Love, S.N. Williams, T. Fischer, L. Johnson
1998, Geological Society of America Bulletin (110) 695-710
Surveillance of Popocatépetl volcanic plume geochemistry and SO2 flux began in early 1994 after fumarolic and seismic activity increased significantly during 1993. Volatile traps placed around the summit were collected at near-monthly intervals until the volcano erupted on December 21, 1994. Additional trap samples...
Geohydrology and distribution of volatile organic compounds in ground water in the Casey Village area, Bucks County, Pennsylvania
Ronald A. Sloto, Randall W. Conger, Kevin E. Grazul
1998, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4010
Casey Village and the adjoining part of the U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center (NAWC) are underlain by the Late Triassic-age Stockton Formation, which consists of a dipping series of siltstones and sandstones.The direction of vertical ground-water gradients in the Stockton Formation varies among well locations and sometimes with time. Vertical...