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Page 5, results 101 - 125

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Assessment of nonpoint-source contamination of the High Plains Aquifer in south-central Kansas, 1987
John O. Helgesen, Lloyd E. Stullken, A. T. Rutledge
1994, Water Supply Paper 2381-C
Ground-water quality was assessed in a 5,000-square-mile area of the High Plains aquifer in south-central Kansas that is susceptible to nonpoint-source contamination from agricultural and petroleum-production activities. Of particular interest was the presence of agricultural chemicals and petroleum-derived hydrocarbons that might have been associated with brines that formerly were disposed...
Membrane-micelle model for humus in soils and sediments and its relation to humification
Robert L. Wershaw
1994, Water Supply Paper 2410
Humification, the process whereby biomass consisting of dead plant and animal remains is converted into soil organic matter (humus), is one of the basic processes of the carbon cycle. The organic compounds that make up plant and animal tissue are thermodynamically unstable in the oxidizing atmosphere at the surface of...
Selected contributions to ground-water hydrology by C.V. Theis, and a review of his life and work
C. V. contributions by Theis, Charles A. Appel, Alfred Clebsch, Robert A. White
Alfred Clebsch, editor(s)
1994, Water Supply Paper 2415
This publication highlights two previously unpublished papers by C.V. Theis; each is augmented with a discussion that explains why he wrote the paper, attempts to discern why he did not publish the paper, and amplifies the information with reference material not included by Theis. 'A Primer on Anisotropy' was written...
Petrophysical analysis of geophysical logs of the National Drilling Company-U.S. Geological Survey ground-water research project for Abu Dhabi Emirate, United Arab Emirates
Donald G. Jorgensen, Mario Petricola
1994, Water Supply Paper 2417
A program of borehole-geophysical logging was implemented to supply geologic and geohydrologic information for a regional ground-water investigation of Abu Dhabi Emirate. Analysis of geophysical logs was essential to provide information on geohydrologic properties because drill cuttings were not always adequate to define lithologic boundaries. The standard suite of logs...
Effects of sediment depositional environment and ground-water flow on the quality and geochemistry of water in aquifers in sediments of Cretaceous age in the coastal plain of South Carolina
Gary K. Speiran, Walter R. Aucott
1994, Water Supply Paper 2416
The quality and geochemistry of ground water are significantly affected by the depositional environment of aquifer sediments. Cretaceous sediments in the Coastal Plain of South Carolina have been deposited in fluvial, delta-plain, marginal-marine, and marine environments. Depositional environments of sediments within a single aquifer may grade from nonmarine, fluvial, or...
Effects of land use on quality of water in stratified-drift aquifers in Connecticut
Stephen J. Grady
1994, Water Supply Paper 2381-B
Human activities associated with agricultural, residential, commercial, and industrial land uses have affected the quality of water in the four stratified-drift aquifers examined in Connecticut. A study to evaluate quantitatively the effects of human activities, expressed as land use, on regional ground-water quality was initiated in 1984 as part of...
National water summary 1990-91: Hydrologic events and stream water quality
1993, Water Supply Paper 2400
National Water Summary 1990-91 Hydrologic Events and Stream Water Quality was planned to complement existing Federal-State water-quality reporting to the U.S. Congress that is required by the Clean Water Act of 1972. This act, formally known as the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 (Public Law 92-500), and...
Delineation of recharge areas for selected wells in the St. Peter-Prairie du Chien-Jordan aquifer, Rochester, Minnesota
G. N. Delin, James Edward Almendinger
1993, Water Supply Paper 2397
Accurate delineation of recharge areas for wells is an important requisite to protecting ground-water quality. Zones of transport and zones of contribution are two types of recharge areas that can be delineated. Analytical-calculation, numerical-modeling, and hydrogeologic-mapping methods were used to delineate recharge areas for two high-capacity wells (greater than about...
Estimation of hydraulic conductivity of a riverbed and aquifer system on the Susquehanna River in Broome County, New York
Richard M. Yager
1993, Water Supply Paper 2387
A three-dimensional finite-difference model of groundwater flow was used to estimate the hydraulic conductivity of riverbed and aquifer material in a 1-square-mile valley-fill aquifer system near a large river in which induced infiltration due to pumping cannot be measured directly. The aquifer consists of a 30- to 70-foot thickness of...
Sediment characteristics of North Carolina streams, 1970-79
Clyde E. Simmons
1993, Water Supply Paper 2364
Data collected at 152 sampling sites during 1970-79 were used to characterize fluvial sediment in North Carolina streams. On the basis of predominant land use in individual basins, sites were categorized into one of five groups: forested (7 sites), forested and affected by minor development (7 sites), rural affected by...
Water and tritium movement through the unsaturated zone at a low-level radioactive-waste disposal site near Sheffield, Illinois, 1981-85
P.C. Mills, Richard W. Healy
1993, Water Supply Paper 2386
The movement of water and tritium through the unsaturated zone was studied at a low-level radioactive-waste disposal site near Sheffield, Bureau County, Illinois, from 1981 to 1985. Water and tritium movement occurred in an annual, seasonally timed cycle; recharge to the saturated zone generally occurred in the spring and early...
Effects of advanced treatment of municipal wastewater on the White River near Indianapolis, Indiana: Trends in water quality, 1978-86
Charles G. Crawford, David J. Wangsness
1993, Water Supply Paper 2393
The City of Indianapolis has constructed state-of-the-art advanced municipal wastewater-treatment systems to enlarge and upgrade the existing secondary-treatment processes at its Belmont and Southport treatment plants. These new advanced-wastewater-treatment plants became operational in 1983. A nonparametric statistical procedure--a modified form of the Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney rank-sum test--was used to test for trends...
Discharge-measurement system using an acoustic Doppler current profiler with applications to large rivers and estuaries
Michael R. Simpson, Richard N. Oltmann
1993, Water Supply Paper 2395
Discharge measurement of large rivers and estuaries is difficult, time consuming, and sometimes dangerous. Frequently, discharge measurements cannot be made in tide-affected rivers and estuaries using conventional discharge-measurement techniques because of dynamic discharge conditions. The acoustic Doppler discharge-measurement system (ADDMS) was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey using a vessel-mounted...
Low-flow characteristics of streams in North Carolina
G. L. Giese, Mason Jr.
1993, Water Supply Paper 2403
Ten low-flow hydrologic areas were defined for North Carolina by relating topography, geology, mean annual runoff, and other features to low-flow frequency characteristics for 122 continuous-record streamflow stations and 396 partial-record streamflow stations. Regression equations relating low-flow characteristics to mean annual discharge were developed for five of the hydrologic areas...
Geohydrology and evaluation of water-resource potential of the upper Floridan Aquifer in the Albany area, southwestern Georgia
L.J. Torak, G. S. Davis, G.A. Strain, J.G. Herndon
1993, Water Supply Paper 2391
In the Albany area of southwestern Georgia, the Upper Floridan aquifer lies entirely within the Dougherty Plain district of the Coastal Plain physiographic province, and consists of the Ocala Limestone of late Eocene age. The aquifer is divided throughout most of the study area into an upper and a lower...
Factors affecting areas contributing recharge to wells in shallow aquifers
Thomas E. Reilly, David W. Pollock
1993, Water Supply Paper 2412
The source of water to wells is ultimately the location where the water flowing to a well enters the boundary surface of the ground-water system. In ground-water systems that receive most of their water from areal recharge, the location of the water entering the ground-water system is at the water...
Numerical simulation of ground-water flow in the central part of the western San Joaquin Valley, California
Kenneth Belitz, Steven P. Phillips, Jo Ann M. Gronberg
1993, Water Supply Paper 2396
The occurrence of selenium in agricultural drain water in the central part of the western San Joaquin Valley, California, has focused concern on strategies for managing shallow, saline ground water. To assess alternatives to agricultural drains, a three-dimensional, finite-difference numerical model of the regional groundwater flow system was developed. This...