Lacustrine-humate model for primary uranium ore deposits, Grants uranium region, New Mexico
C. E. Turner-Peterson
1985, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (69) 1990-2020
Two generations of uranium ore, primary and redistributed, occur in fluvial sandstones of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation in the San Juan basin; the two stages of ore formation can be related to the hydrologic history of the basin. Primary ore formed soon after Morrison deposition, in the Late Jurassic...
QUALITY ASSURANCE OF U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY WATER-QUALITY FIELD MEASUREMENTS.
D. E. Erdmann, J.D. Thomas
1985, Conference Paper, ASTM Special Technical Publication
Reference samples are submitted semiannually to field analysts for measurement of these parameters with the same techniques and instruments used in the field. Both the personnel and the instruments involved in making the determinations are recorded. When the data are complete, a report defining the quality of the analytical results...
Culturing Selenastrum capricornutum (Chlorophyta) in a synthetic algal nutrient medium with defined mineral particulates
James S. Kuwabara, J.A. Davis, Cecily C.Y. Chang
1985, Hydrobiologia (124) 23-271
Algal nutrient studies in chemically-defined media typically employ a synthetic chelator to prevent iron hydroxide precipitation. Micronutrient-particulate interactions may, however, significantly affect chemical speciation and hence biovailability of these nutrients in natural waters. A technique is described by which Selenastrum capricornutum Printz (Chlorophyta) may be cultured in a medium where...
STREAMFLOW LOSSES, CONSEQUENT FLOW THROUGH A THICK UNSATURATED ZONE, AND RECHARGE TO AN UNCONFINED AQUIFER.
J.R. Marie
1985, Conference Paper
Two experiments were conducted in conjunction with a 23-day aquifer test made in south-central Arizona to determine (1) water loss from a natural channel and (2) flow through a 330-foot-thick unsaturated zone overlying an unconfined aquifer. The experiments provided control for the aquifer test plus results relative to arid land...
Mechanistic roles of soil humus and minerals in the sorption of nonionic organic compounds from aqueous and organic solutions
C. T. Chiou, T.D. Shoup, P.E. Porter
1985, Organic Geochemistry (8) 9-14
Mechanistic roles of soil humus and soil minerals and their contributions to soil sorption of nonionic organic compounds from aqueous and organic solutions are illustrated. Parathion and lindane are used as model solutes on two soils that differ greatly in their humic and mineral contents. In aqueous systems, observed sorptive...
Errors and parameter estimation in precipitation-runoff modeling: 2. Case study
Brent M. Troutman
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1214-1222
A case study is presented which illustrates some of the error analysis, sensitivity analysis, and parameter estimation procedures reviewed in the first part of this paper. It is shown that those procedures, most of which come from statistical nonlinear regression theory, are invaluable in interpreting errors in precipitation-runoff modeling and...
Geochemical investigations of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins in the subsurface environment at an abandoned wood-treatment facility
W. E. Pereira, C.E. Rostad, M.E. Sisak
1985, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (4) 629-639
The discharge of effluents containing creosote and pentachlorophenol into two unlined surface impoundments at a wood-treatment facility in Pensacola, Florida, resulted in contamination of the underlying sand and gravel aquifer. These wastes contained significant amounts of chlorinated dioxins, such as isomers of hexa- and heptachlorodibenzo-p-dioxins and octachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, probably derived from...
Modeling the rate-controlled sorption of hexavalent chromium
D.B. Grove, Kenneth G. Stollenwerk
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1703-1709
Sorption of chromium VI on the iron-oxide- and hydroxide-coated surface of alluvial material was numerically simulated with rate-controlled reactions. Reaction kinetics and diffusional processes, in the form of film, pore, and particle diffusion, were simulated and compared with experimental results. The use of empirically calculated rate coefficients for diffusion through...
Partition coefficients of organic compounds in lipid-water systems and correlations with fish bioconcentration factors
C. T. Chiou
1985, Environmental Science & Technology (19) 57-62
Triolein-water partition coefficients (KtW) have been determined for 38 slightly water-soluble organic compounds, and their magnitudes have been compared with the corresponding octanol-water partition coefficients (KOW). In the absence of major solvent-solute interaction effects in the organic solvent phase, the conventional treatment (based on Raoult's law) predicts sharply lower partition...
A quantitative analysis of the Lassen hydrothermal system, north central California
S. E. Ingebritsen, M.L. Sorey
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 853-868
Our conceptual model of the Lassen system is termed a liquid-dominated hydrothermal system with a parasitic vapor-dominated zone. The essential feature of this model is that steam and steam-heated discharge at relatively high altitudes in Lassen Volcanic National Park (LVNP) and liquid discharge with high chloride concentrations at relatively low...
Soil sorption of organic vapors and effects of humidity on sorptive mechanism and capacity
C. T. Chiou, T.D. Shoup
1985, Environmental Science & Technology (19) 1196-1200
No abstract available....
Stable Carbon Isotopes of HCO3 in the Aquia Aquifer, Maryland: Evidence for an Isotopically Heavy Source of CO2
Francis H. Chapelle, LeRoy L. Knobel
1985, Ground Water (23) 592-599
Concentrations of HCO3 and δ13C values of dissolved inorganic carbon change along the hydrologic gradient of the Aquia aquifer. In the outcrop area, meteoric recharge rapidly dissolves carbonate shell material (δ13C ∼ 0.0 per mil) in the presence of soil-gas CO2 (δ13C∼–26 per mil). HCO3 concentrations in this...
Copper and silver accumulation in transplanted and resident clams (Macoma balthica) in South San Francisco Bay
D.J. Cain, Samuel N. Luoma
1985, Marine Environmental Research (15) 115-135
Accumulation of Cu and Ag by soft tissues of the deposit-feeding clam Macoma balthica was less than half in clams transplanted to a contaminated area than in clams native to that area. During a period of tissue growth, the transplants retained 50% and 90%, respectively, of the net Cu and...
Origin of caves and other solution openings in the unsaturated (vadose) zone of carbonate rocks: A model for CO2 generation
W.W. Wood
1985, Geology (13) 822-824
The enigma that caves and other solution openings form in carbonate rocks at great depths below land surface rather than forming from the surface downward can be explained by the generation of CO2 within the aquifer system. In the proposed model, CO2 is generated by the oxidation of particulate and/or...
Isolation of anaerobic oxalate-degrading bacteria from freshwater lake sediments
R. L. Smith, F.E. Strohmaier, Ronald S. Oremland
1985, Archives of Microbiology (141) 8-13
Enrichment cultures that anaerobically degraded oxalate were obtained from lake sediment inocula. From these, 5 pure cultures of anaerobic oxalate-degrading bacteria were isolated and partially characterized. The isolates were Gram-negative, non-sporeforming, non-motile, obligate anaerobes. Oxalate was required for growth and was stoichiometrically converted to formate; 14CO2 was also recovered when 14C-oxalate was added....
NATIONAL WATER INFORMATION SYSTEM OF THE U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY.
Melvin D. Edwards
1985, Conference Paper
National Water Information System (NWIS) has been designed as an interactive, distributed data system. It will integrate the existing, diverse data-processing systems into a common system. It will also provide easier, more flexible use as well as more convenient access and expanded computing, dissemination, and data-analysis capabilities. The NWIS is...
Nitrogen and phosphorus speciation and flux in a large Florida river wetland System
John F. Elder
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 724-732
Hydrologic measurements and analyses of various nitrogen and phosphorus species were made on the Apalachicola River system in northern Florida in 1979 and 1980. Annual outflows of total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) were not substantially different from annual inflows. However, there was significant net import of ammonia and...
Errors and parameter estimation in precipitation-runoff modeling: 1. Theory
Brent M. Troutman
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1195-1213
Errors in complex conceptual precipitation-runoff models may be analyzed by placing them into a statistical framework. This amounts to treating the errors as random variables and defining the probabilistic structure of the errors. By using such a framework, a large array of techniques, many of which have been presented in...
ANNIE - INTERACTIVE PROCESSING OF DATA BASES FOR HYDROLOGIC MODELS.
Alan M. Lumb, John L. Kittle
1985, Conference Paper
ANNIE is a data storage and retrieval system that was developed to reduce the time and effort required to calibrate, verify, and apply watershed models that continuously simulate water quantity and quality. Watershed models have three categories of input: parameters to describe segments of a drainage area, linkage of the...
Overview of hydrologic-data collection by the US Geological Survey in Oklahoma.
L.D. Hauth
1985, Oklahoma Geology Notes (45) 149-161
The US Geological Survey (USGS) collects hydrologic data from 1332 stream, lake, and ground-water sites in Oklahoma. Information on the quantity of water from a network of 123 streamflow stations, 30 lakes, 42 peak-flow stations, three low-flow stations, and on the quality of water from 40 stream locations is published...
Adsorption and desorption of hexavalent chromium in an alluvial aquifer near Telluride, Colorado
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, D.B. Grove
1985, Journal of Environmental Quality (14) 150-155
A laboratory investigation of reactions between hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] and alluvium was conducted to evaluate reactions of Cr(VI) contaminating an alluvial aquifer near Telluride, CO and to determine the mechanisms responsible for these reactions. Uncontaminated alluvium and groundwater (spiked with CrO42−) from the study site were used...
Field determination of the three-dimensional hydraulic conductivity tensor of anisotropic media: 2. Methodology and application to fractured rocks
Paul A. Hsieh, Shlomo P. Neuman, Gary K. Stiles, Eugene S. Simpson
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1667-1676
The analytical solutions developed in the first paper can be used to interpret the results of cross-hole tests conducted in anisotropic porous or fractured media. In the particular case where the injection and monitoring intervals are short relative to the distance between them, the test results can be analyzed graphically....
WATER RESOURCES ACTIVITIES OF THE U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY.
Dallas L. Peck
1985, Water Resources Bulletin (21) 901-907
The U. S. Geological Survey's (USGS) program of hydrologic data collection, investigations, and research provides information essential to water-resoures planning and management. The activities of the Water Resources Division (WRD) are in support of the Geological Survey's mission to provide geologic, topographic, and hydrologic information that contributes to the wise...
A policy evaluation tool: Management of a multiaquifer system using controlled stream recharge
Wesley R. Danskin, Steven M. Gorelick
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1731-1747
A model for the optimal allocation of water resources was developed for a multiaquifer groundwater and surface water system near Livermore, California. The complex groundwater system was analyzed using a transient, quasi-three-dimensional model that considers the nonlinear behavior of the unconfined aquifer. The surface water system consists of a reservoir...
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN HYDROLOGIC INSTRUMENTATION.
Vito J. Latkovich
1985, Conference Paper
The availability of space-age materials and implementation of state-of-the-art electronics is making possible the recent developments of hydrologic instrumentation. Material developments include: Synthetic-fiber sounding and tag lines; fiberglass wading rod; polymer (plastic) sheaves, pulleys and sampler components; and polymer (plastic) bucket wheels for current meters. These materials are very cost...