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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Natural attenuation of chlorinated hydrocarbons in a freshwater wetland
Michelle M. Lora, Lisa D. Olsen, Barrett L. Smith
Bruce C. Alleman, Andrea Leeson, editor(s)
1997, Conference Paper, In situ and on-site bioremediation: Papers from the Fourth International In Situ and On-Site Bioremediation Symposium
Natural attenuation of chlorinated volatile organic compounds (VOC's) occurs as ground water discharges from a sand aquifer to a freshwater wetland at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. Field and laboratory results indicate that biotransformation in the anaerobic wetland sediments is an important attenuation process. Relatively high concentrations of the parent compounds...
Evaluation of agricultural best-management practices in the Conestoga River headwaters, Pennsylvania: Hydrology of a small carbonate site near Ephrata, Pennsylvania, prior to implementation of nutrient management
E. H. Koerkle, D. W. Hall, D. W. Risser, P. L. Lietman, D. C. Chichester
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 93-4173
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, investigated the effects of agricultural best-management practices on water quality in the Conestoga River headwaters watershed. This report describes environmental factors and the surface-water and ground-water quality of one 47.5-acre field site,...
Preliminary assessment of the occurrence and possible sources of MTBE in groundwater in the United States, 1993-1994
P.T. Squillace, J.S. Zogorski, W. G. Wilber, C. V. Price
1997, ACS Division of Environmental Chemistry, Preprints (37) 372-374
The 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments require fuel oxygenates to be added to gasoline used in some metropolitan areas to reduce atmospheric concentrations of carbon monoxide or ozone. Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), is the most commonly used fuel oxygenate and is a relatively new gasoline additive. Nevertheless, out of 60...
Combined-sewer overflow data and methods of sample collection for selected sites, Detroit, Michigan
M.J. Sweat, J.R. Wolf
1997, Open-File Report 96-646
The discharge of untreated sewage is illegal in Michigan unless permitted under Act 245 due to public health concerns. In October, 1992, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (MDNR, now the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality) issued a discharge permit to Detroit authorizing discharge from the City's 78 combined-sewer overflows...
Comagmatic granophyric granite in the Fish Canyon Tuff, Colorado: Implications for magma-chamber processes during a large ash-flow eruption
P. Lipman, M. Dungan, Olivier Bachmann
1997, Geology (25) 915-918
The 27.8 Ma Fish Canyon Tuff, a vast ash-flow sheet (∼ 5000 km3) of uniform phenocryst-rich dacite, is representative of “monotonous intermediate” eruptions from a magma chamber that lacked compositional gradients. Sparse small fragments of comagmatic granophyre in late-erupted tuff and postcaldera lava,...
Occurrence of the gasoline oxygenate MTBE and BTEX compounds in municipal stormwater in the United States, 1991-95
G.C. Delzer, J.S. Zogorski, T. J. Lopes
1997, ACS Division of Environmental Chemistry, Preprints (37) 374-376
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) sampled stormwater in 16 cities and metropolitan areas that are required to obtain permits to discharge stormwater from their municipal storm-sewer system into surface water. Concentrations of 62 volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) and BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and total xylene)...
Pesticides and volatile organic compounds in shallow urban groundwater of the United States
Dana W. Kolpin, Paul J. Squillace, John S. Zogorski, Jack E. Barbash
1997, Book chapter, Groundwater in the urban environment
The widespread use of pesticides and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) over the past half century has led to their detection in many hydrologic systems in the United States. However, few systematic investigations of occurrences have been carried out over multistate regions using a consistent study design. Nine urban studies of...
The urban atmosphere as a non-point source for the transport of MTBE and other volatile organic compounds (VOCS) to shallow groundwater
J. F. Pankow, N.R. Thomson, Richard L. Johnson, A. L. Baehr, J.S. Zogorski
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 2821-2828
Infiltration and dispersion (including molecular diffusion) can transport volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from urban air into shallow groundwater. The gasoline additive methyl-tert-butyl ether (MTBE) is of special interest because of its (1) current levels in some urban air, (2) strong partitioning from air into water, (3) resistance to degradation, (4)...
Marine bacterial degradation of brominated methanes
K.D. Goodwin, M.E. Lidstrom, R.S. Oremland
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 3188-3192
Brominated methanes are ozone-depleting compounds whose natural sources include marine algae such as kelp. Brominated methane degradation by bacteria was investigated to address whether bacterial processes might effect net emission of these compounds to the atmosphere. Bacteria in seawater collected from California kelp beds degraded CH2Br2 but not CHBr3. Specific...
Error evaluation of methyl bromide aerodynamic flux measurements
Michael S. Majewski
1997, ACS Symposium Series (652) 135-153
Methyl bromide volatilization fluxes were calculated for a tarped and a nontarped field using 2 and 4 hour sampling periods. These field measurements were averaged in 8, 12, and 24 hour increments to simulate longer sampling periods. The daily flux profiles were progressively smoothed and the cumulative volatility losses increased...
Hydrocarbon source potential and maturation in eocene New Zealand vitrinite-rich coals: Insights from traditional coal analyses, and Rock-Eval and biomarker studies
J. Newman, L.C. Price, J.H. Johnston
1997, Journal of Petroleum Geology (20) 137-163
The results of traditional methods of coal characterisation (proximate, specific energy, and ultimate analyses) for 28 Eocene coal samples from the West Coast of New Zealand correspond well with biomarker ratios and Rock-Eval analyses. Isorank variations in vitrinite fluorescence and reflectance recorded for these samples are closely related to their...
Fate and transport of metam spill in Sacramento River
P.-F. Wang, T. Mill, J.L. Martin, T.A. Wool
1997, Journal of Environmental Engineering (123) 704-712
A mass balance model was developed and applied to the Sacramento River in northern California during the July 1991 Sacramento River metam-sodium spill. The transport and reactions of metam-sodium, a soil fumigant, and the volatile and toxic methyl isothiocyanate (MITC) were simulated during the two-and-a-half days of movement along a...
Enhancement and inhibition of microbial activity in hydrocarbon- contaminated arctic soils: Implications for nutrient-amended bioremediation
J.F. Braddock, M.L. Ruth, P.H. Catterall, J.L. Walworth, K. A. McCarthy
1997, Environmental Science & Technology (31) 2078-2084
Bioremediation is being used or proposed as a treatment option at many hydrocarbon-contaminated sites. One such site is a former bulk-fuel storage facility near Barrow, AK, where contamination persists after approximately 380 m3 of JP-5 was spilled in 1970. The soil at the site is primarily coarse sand with low...
The Bishop Tuff: New insights from eruptive stratigraphy
C. J. N. Wilson, W. Hildreth
1997, Journal of Geology (105) 407-439
The 0.76 Ma Bishop Tuff, from Long Valley caldera in eastern California, consists of a widespread fall deposit and voluminous partly welded ignimbrite. The fall deposit (F), exposed over an easterly sector below and adjacent to the ignimbrite, is divided into nine units (F1‐F9), with no significant time breaks, except...
Transport and degradation of semivolatile hydrocarbons in a petroleum-contaminated aquifer, Bemidji, Minnesota
E. T. Furlong, J. C. Koleis, G. R. Aiken
1997, ACS Symposium Series (671) 398-412
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) were used as probes to identify the processes controlling the transport and fate of aqueous semivolatile hydrocarbons (SVHCs) in a petroleum-contaminated aquifer near Bemidji, Minnesota. PAH and other SVHCs were isolated from ground water by field solid-phase extraction and analyzed using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Close to...
Rock-stratigraphic nomenclature, lithology, and subcrop area of the Galena-Platteville bedrock unit in Illinois and Wisconsin
W. G. Batten, T.A. Brown, P. C. Mills, T. J. Sabin
1997, Water-Resources Investigations Report 97-4054-B
The Galena-Platteville bedrock unit is a dependable source of ground water for many private well owners and some municipal-water-supply systems in northern Illinois (Hackett, 1960) and in Wisconsin. The carbonate lithology of the unit contributes to the availability of ground water and also to the susceptibility of the unit to...
Water and bed-material quality of selected streams and reservoirs in the Research Triangle area of North Carolina, 1988-94
C. J. Oblinger, M.W. Treece Jr.
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4282
The Triangle Area Water Supply Monitoring Project was formed by a consortium of local governments and governmental agencies in cooperation with the U.S. Geological Survey to supplement existing data on conventional pollutants, nutrients, and metals to enable eventual determination of long-term trends; to examine spatial differences among water supplies within...
Ground-water quality in the western part of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer in the Western Lake Michigan Drainages, Wisconsin and Michigan
D. A. Saad
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4231
Ground-water samples were collected during the summer of 1995 from 29 wells in the western part of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer in the Western Lake Michigan Drainages study unit of the National-Water Quality Assessment Program. Analyses of ground-water samples from these wells were used to provide an indication of waterquality conditions...
Ground-water quality in the Calumet Region of northwestern Indiana and northeastern Illinois, June 1993
Richard F. Duwelius, Robert T. Kay, Scott T. Prinos
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 95-4244
Water samples were collected from 128 wells in a large industrial and urban area in northwestern Indiana and northeastern Illinois during June 1993. Samples were collected from wells completed in one of four geohydrologic units: surficial sand aquifer (Calumet aquifer), clay confining unit, confined sand aquifers, and a carbonate-bedrock aquifer...
Geohydrology of the Stockton Formation and cross-contamination through open boreholes, Hatboro Borough and Warminster Township, Pennsylvania
Ronald A. Sloto, Paola Macchiaroli, Michael T. Towle
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4047
The study area consists of a 9-square-mile area underlain by sedimentary rocks of the middle arkose member of the Stockton Formation of Upper Triassic age. In the Hatboro area, the Stockton Formation strikes approximately N. 65 degrees E. and dps approximately 9 degrees NW. The rocks are chiefly arkosic sandstone...
Effects of land use on water quality of the Fountain Creek alluvial aquifer, east-central Colorado
Daniel T. Chafin
1996, Water Supply Paper 2381-D
Water-quality data were collected from the Fountain Creek alluvial aquifer in 1988 and 1989 as part of the Toxic-Waste Ground-Water Contamination Program. These data indicate that dissolved solids, most major ions, fluoride, ammonium, boron, lithium, selenium, and strontium were more concentrated in the agricultural land-use area than in the upgradient...
Ground-water quality, water year 1995, and statistical analysis of ground-water-quality data, water years 1994-95, at the chromic acid pit site, U.S. Army Air Defense Artillery Center and Fort Bliss, El Paso, Texas
Cynthia G. Abeyta, R. G. Roybal
1996, Water-Resources Investigations Report 96-4211
The Chromic Acid Pit site is an inactive waste disposal site that is regulated by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976. The 2.2-cubic-yard cement-lined pit was operated from 1980 to 1983 by a contractor to the U.S. Army Air Defense Artillery Center and Fort Bliss. The pit, located...