Effect of climate change on watershed runoff
D.M. Wolock, M. A. Ayers, L.E. Hay, G. J. McCabe Jr.
1989, Conference Paper
This paper examines forecasts of changes in watershed runoff in the Delaware River basin that result from a range of predicted effects of increased atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) on future precipitation, temperature, and stomatal resistance of plants. A deterministic hydrologic model, TOPMODEL, was driven with stochastic inputs of temperature and...
A comparison of aquatic macrophyte communities in regulated and non-regulated lakes, Voyageurs National Park and Boundary Waters Canoe Area, Minnesota
James E. Meeker, Douglas A. Wilcox
1989, Research/Resources Management MWR-16
The effects of water-level regulation on aquatic macrophyte communities, individual plant species, and potential faunal habitat were investigated in a study of two regulated lakes and an unregulated lake in northern Minnesota. Water levels in Rainy Lake and Namakan Reservoir in Voyageurs National Park are regulated by dams. Natural annual...
Reactive iron transport in an acidic mountain stream in Summit County, Colorado: A hydrologic perspective
Diane M. McKnight, K.E. Bencala
1989, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (53) 2225-2234
A pH perturbation experiment was conducted in an acidic, metal-enriched, mountain stream to identify relative rates of chemical and hydrologic processes as they influence iron transport. During the experiment the pH was lowered from 4.2 to 3.2 for three hours by injection of sulfuric acid. Amorphous iron oxides are abundant...
Appalachian Piedmont landscapes from the Permian to the Holocene
E.T. Cleaves
1989, Geomorphology (2) 159-179
Between the Potomac and Susquehanna Rivers and from the Blue Ridge to the Fall Zone, landscapes of the Piedmont are illustrated for times in the Holocene, Late Wisconsin, Early Miocene, Early Cretaceous, Late Triassic, and Permian. Landscape evolution took place in tectonic settings marked by major plate collisions (Permian), arching...
Removing volatile contaminants from the unsaturated zone by inducing advective air-phase transport
A. L. Baehr, G.E. Hoag, M.C. Marley
1989, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (4) 1-26
Organic liquids inadvertently spilled and then distributed in the unsaturated zone can pose a long-term threat to ground water. Many of these substances have significant volatility, and thereby establish a premise for contaminant removal from the unsaturated zone by inducing advective air-phase transport...
West Virginia Geological Survey's role in siting fluidized bed combustion facilities
C.J. Smith, Hobart M. King, K. C. Ashton, D.S. Kirstein, G.H. McColloch
1989, Conference Paper
A project is presented which demonstrates the role of geology in planning and siting a fluidized bed combustion facility. Whenever a project includes natural resource utilization, cooperation between geologists and design engineers will provide an input that could and should save costs, similar to the one stated in our initial...
Oxidation of aromatic contaminants coupled to microbial iron reduction
Derek R. Lovley, M.J. Baedecker, D.J. Lonergan, I.M. Cozzarelli, Elizabeth J.P. Phillips, D. I. Siegel
1989, Nature (339) 297-300
THE contamination of sub-surface water supplies with aromatic compounds is a significant environmental concern1,2. As these contaminated sub-surface environments are generally anaerobic, the microbial oxidation of aromatic compounds coupled to nitrate reduction, sulphate reduction and methane production has been studied intensively1-7. In addition, geochemical evidence suggests that Fe(III) can be...
Present-day biogeochemical activities of anaerobic bacteria and their relevance to future exobiological investigations
R.S. Oremland
1989, Advances in Space Research (9) 127-136
If the primordial atmosphere was reducing, then the first microbial ecosystem was probably composed of anaerobic bacteria. However, despite the presence of an oxygen-rich atmosphere, anaerobic habitats are important, commonplace components of the Earth's present biosphere. The geochemical activities displayed by these anaerobes impact the global cycling of certain elements...
Constraints from fluid inclusions on sulfide precipitation mechanisms and ore fluid migration in the Viburnum Trend lead district, Missouri
E. L. Rowan, D. L. Leach
1989, Economic Geology (84) 1948-1965
Measurements on fluid inclusions in hydrothermal dolomite cements place constraints on sulfide precipitation mechanisms and on the thermal-hydrologic processes which formed the Viburnum Trend Mississippi Valley-type lead district. Homogenization temperatures and freezing point depressions were determined for fluid inclusions in Bonneterre Dolomite-hosted dolomite cements in mine samples, as well as...
Criteria for a sediment data set
Douglas G. Glysson
1989, Conference Paper
The transport of sediment through a hydrologic system or basin is an extremely complex phenomenon. Many factors affect this movement. Criteria are established for an 'ultimate' or complete sediment data set, and guidelines are given for the collection of alluvial data. The paper describes what parameters need to be measured...
Selected ground-water data, Chester County, Pennsylvania
Ronald A. Sloto
1989, Open-File Report 87-217
Hydrologic data for Chester County, Pennsylvania are given for 3,010 wells and 32 springs. Water levels are given for 48 observation wells measured monthly during 1936-86. Chemical analyses of ground water are given for major ions, physical properties, nutrients, metals and other trace constituents, volatile organic compounds, acid organic compounds,...
Studies of geology and hydrology in the Basin and Range Province, southwestern United States, for isolation of high-level radioactive waste: Characterization of the Death Valley region, Nevada and California
Marion S. Bedinger, K. A. Sargent, W. H. Langer
1989, Professional Paper 1370-F
No abstract available....
Hydrologic studies of wetlands in the northern prairie
Thomas C. Winter
1989, Book chapter, Northern prairie wetlands
No abstract available....
Spectroscopic evidence for organic diacid complexation with dissolved silica in aqueous systems—I. Oxalic acid
N.A. Marley, P. Bennett, D.R. Janecky, J.S. Gaffney
1989, Organic Geochemistry (14) 525-528
Increased solubility of quartz and mobilization in contaminated groundwater due to the complexation with dissolved organic acids has been recently proposed [Bennett and Siegel, Nature326, 684–686 (1987)]. Using laser Raman and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopies, we have examined mixed solutions of oxalic and silicic acids at near neutral pH in...
Mineral saturation states in natural waters and their sensitivity to thermodynamic and analytical errors
D. Kirk Nordstrom, James W. Ball
1989, Science Geological Bulletin (42) 269-280
Saturation indices computed with WATEQ4F chemical analyses from a groundwater in crystalline bedrock and a surface water receiving acid mine drainage are frequently at or above saturation with respect to calcite, fluorite, barite, gibbsite and ferrihydrite. Deep granitic groundwaters from Stripa, Sweden, are supersaturated with respect to calcite and fluorite....
Discussion of "Influence of temperature on oxygen transfer" by Allen C. Chao, David S. Chang, Charles Smallwood, Jr., and William S. Galler (August, 1987, Vol. 113, No. 4)
R.E. Rathburn
1989, Journal of Environmental Engineering (115) 868-869
No abstract available....
Solubility of jarosite solid solutions precipitated from acid mine waters, Iron Mountain, California
Charles N. Alpers, D. Kirk Nordstrom, J.W. Ball
1989, Science Geological Bulletin (42) 281-298
Because of the common occurrence of 15 to 25 mole percent hydronium substitution on the alkali site in jarosites, it is necessary to consider the hydronium content of jarosites in any attempt at rigorous evaluation of jarosite solubility or of the saturation state of natural waters with respect to jarosite....
Hydrologic effects on water level changes associated with episodic fault creep near Parkfield, California
E.A. Roeloffs, S.S. Burford, F. S. Riley, A.W. Records
1989, Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth (94) 12387-12402
As part of the Parkfield, California, earthquake prediction experiment, water level is monitored in a well 460 m from the main trace of the San Andreas fault on Middle Mountain, in the preparation zone of the anticipated Parkfield earthquake. The well configuration allows water level to be monitored in two...
Lognormal kriging for the assessment of reliability in groundwater quality control observation networks
L. Candela, Ricardo A. Olea, E. Custodio
1988, Journal of Hydrology (103) 67-84
Groundwater quality observation networks are examples of discontinuous sampling on variables presenting spatial continuity and highly skewed frequency distributions. Anywhere in the aquifer, lognormal kriging provides estimates of the variable being sampled and a standard error of the estimate. The average and the maximum standard error within the network can...
Experimental studies in stream-aquifer interaction along the Arkansas River in Central Kansas - Field testing and analysis
M. Sophocleous, M.A. Townsend, L.D. Vogler, T.J. McClain, E.T. Marks, G.R. Coble
1988, Journal of Hydrology (98) 249-273
During the last several years, streamflows of a number of Kansas streams have been reduced as a result of groundwater declines. In order to better understand and quantify stream-aquifer interrelationships, an eight-day comprehensive stream-aquifer pumping test, followed by recovery monitoring, was conducted along the Arkansas River near Great Bend, Kansas....
Pumping tests in nonuniform aquifers - The radially symmetric case
J.J. Butler Jr.
1988, Journal of Hydrology (101) 15-30
Traditionally, pumping-test-analysis methodology has been limited to applications involving aquifers whose properties are assumed uniform in space. This work attempts to assess the applicability of analytical methodology to a broader class of units with spatially varying properties. An examination of flow behavior in a simple configuration consisting of pumping from...
National water summary 1986: Hydrologic events and ground-water quality
United States Geological Survey
1988, Water Supply Paper 2325
Ground water is one of the most important natural resources of the United States and degradation of its quality could have a major effect on the welfare of the Nation. Currently (1985), ground water is the source of drinking water for 53 percent of the Nation's population and for more...
U.S. Geological Survey ground-water studies in Nevada
M. D. Dettinger, A. S. Van Denburgh
1988, Open-File Report 88-119
Groundwater is an important natural resource in Nevada. In 1985, groundwater provided 24% of the total water withdrawn, and supplied about 40% of the State 's population. Public supply and self-supplied domestic use accounted for about 12% of the groundwater withdrawn, and self-supplied industrial and mining use was about 3%....
Geohydrologic framework of the Gulf Coastal Plain
R. L. Hosman
1988, Hydrologic Atlas 695
Selected papers in the hydrologic sciences, 1987
Seymour Subitzky, editor(s)
1988, Water Supply Paper 2330
No abstract available....