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Page 523, results 13051 - 13075

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Texas stream-gaging program: an analysis of data uses and funding
Bernard C. Massey
1985, Open-File Report 85-84
This report presents an analysis of data uses and funding for the stream-gaging program operated by the U.S. Geological Survey in Texas. Presently (1984), 391 continuous surface water stations are operated in Texas. Selected hydrologic data, data uses, and funding sources are presented for each of the 391 stations. This study...
Effects of sanitary sewers on ground-water levels and streams in Nassau and Suffolk Counties, New York; part 2: Development and application of southwest Suffolk County model
H. T. Buxton, T. E. Reilly
1985, Water-Resources Investigations Report 83-4209
By 1990, sanitary sewers in Nassau County Sewage Disposal Districts 2 and 3 and Suffolk County Southwest Sewer District will discharge to the ocean 140 cu ft of water/sec that would otherwise be returned to the groundwater system through septic tanks and similar systems. To evaluate the effects of this...
Synopsis of saltwater intrusion in Dade County, Florida, through 1984
Howard Klein, Bradley G. Waller
1985, Water-Resources Investigations Report 85-4101
The inland position of saltwater at the base of the highly permeable limestone of the Biscayne aquifer in Dade County in 1984 is a consequence of: (1) years of adjustment to lowered water levels resulting from regional drainage for flood control and land reclamation; (2) increased freshwater withdrawals; and (3)...
Effect of adherent bacteria and bacterial extracellular polymers upon assimilation by Macoma balthica of sediment-bound Cd, Zn and Ag
Ronald W. Harvey, Samuel N. Luoma
1985, Marine Ecology Progress Series (22) 281-289
Effects of adherent bacteria and bacterial extracellular polymer (exopolymer) upon uptake of particle-bound Cd, Zn and Ag by the deposit-feeding clam Macoma balthica were studied in the laboratory. Amorphous iron oxyhydroxide and unaltered and alkaline-extracted sediments were used as model particulates in separate, controlled deposit-feeding experiments. In general, amounts of...
Ground-water and surface-water interactions in Minnesota and Wisconsin wetlands
R. G. Brown, J. R. Stark, G. L. Patterson
1985, Book chapter, The ecology and management of wetlands
The interaction between ground water and surface water in wetlands is complex and depends on the hydrologic setting of the particular wetland. Hydrologic characteristics have been used in Wisconsin to classify wetlands into four categories; surface-waterdepression wetlands, surface-water-slope wetlands, ground-waterdepression wetlands, and ground-water-slope wetlands, as described by Novitzki (1978). The...
Remote sensing of tidal chlorophyll-a variations in estuaries
Glenn P. Catts, Siamak Khorram, James E. Cloern, Allen W. Knight, Stephen D. Degloria
1985, International Journal of Remote Sensing (6) 1685-1706
Simultaneous acquisition of surface chlorophyll-a concentrations for 39 samples from boats and Daedalus 1260 Multispectral Scanner data from a U-2 aircraft was conducted in the northern reaches of San Francisco Bay on 28 August 1980. These data were used to develop regression models for predicting surface chlorophyll-a concentrations over the...
Automated derivation of hydrologic basin characteristics from digital elevation model data
Susan K. Jenson
1985, Conference Paper, Auto-Carto VII: Proceedings of the digital representations of spatial knowledge
Digital elevation model (DEM) data in a raster format can be used to automatically derive the drainage characteristics of an area. A procedure has been designed that is capable of operating on matrices of elevation data having no algorithmically imposed size limit, while performing within the resolution and accuracy tolerances...
Disturbance in a cypress-tupelo wetland: an interaction between thermal loading and hydrology
Michael L. Scott, Rebecca R. Sharitz, Lyndon C. Lee
1985, Wetlands (5) 53-68
The interaction between thermal loading and hydrology was examined in a forested wetland. As a result of flooding, portions of the wetland are periodically exposed to elevated water temperatures, resulting in progressive deterioration of the canopy. We chose three study sites along a gradient of canopy disturbance: most disturbed, intermediate...
Assessment of the instantaneous unit hydrograph derived from the theory of topologically random networks
M.R. Karlinger, B.M. Troutman
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1693-1702
An instantaneous unit hydrograph (iuh) based on the theory of topologically random networks (topological iuh) is evaluated in terms of sets of basin characteristics and hydraulic parameters. Hydrographs were computed using two linear routing methods for each of two drainage basins in the southeastern United States and are the basis...
Field determination of the three-dimensional hydraulic conductivity tensor of anisotropic media: 1. Theory
Paul A. Hsieh, Shlomo P. Neuman
1985, Water Resources Research (21) 1655-1665
A field method is proposed for determining the three-dimensional hydraulic conductivity tensor and specific storage of an anisotropic porous or fractured medium. The method, known as cross-hole testing (to distinguish it from conventional single-hole packer tests), consists of injecting fluid into (or withdrawing fluid from) packed-off intervals in a number...
Biogeochemistry of aquatic humic substances in Thoreau's Bog, Concord, Massachusetts
Diane M. McKnight, E. Michael Thurman, Robert L. Wershaw, Herold Hemond
1985, Ecology (66)-1339
Thoreau's Bog is an ombrotrophic floating—mat Sphagnum bog developed in a glacial kettlehole and surrounded by a red maple swamp. Concentrations of dissolved organic carbon in the porewater of the bog average 36 mg/L and are greatest near the surface, especially during late summer. This distribution suggest that the upper...
Bottomland vegetation distribution along Passage Creek, Virginia, in relation to fluvial landforms
Cliff R. Hupp, W. R. Osterkamp
1985, Ecology (66) 670-681
Persistent distribution patterns of woody vegetation within the bottomland forest of Passage Creek, Virginia, were related to fluvial landforms, channel geometry, streamflow characteristics, and sediment—size characteristics. Vegetation patterns were determined from species presence as observed in transects and traverses on landforms developed along the stream. Distinct species distributional patterns were...
Evolution and application of instream flow methodologies to small hydropower developments: an overview of the issues
E. Woody Trihey, Clair B. Stalnaker
1985, Book, Symposium on Small Hydro/Fisheries Symposium
ethods for evaluating instream flow needs have evolved over the last 30 years resulting in two categories which are defined as “standard-setting” and “incremental”. Standard-setting methodologies refer to those measurement and interpretative techniques designed to generate a flow value(s) which is intended to maintain the fishery at some acceptable level....
Effects of copper on production of periphyton, nitrogen fixation and processing of leaf litter in a Sierra Nevada, California, stream
Harry V. Leland, James L. Carter
1985, Freshwater Biology (15) 155-173
1Production of periphyton, nitrogen fixation and processing of leaf litter were examined in an oligotrophic Sierra Nevada stream and the responses of these processes to copper (2.5, 5 and 10μg 1-1 CuT [total filtrable copper]; approximately 12, 25 and 50 ng 1-1 Cu2+) were determined.2Autotrophic and...
The aqueous photolysis of ethylene glycol adsorbed on geothite
Kirkwood M. Cunningham, Marvin C. Goldberg, E.R. Weiner
1985, Photochemistry and Photobiology (41) 409-416
Suspensions of goethite (α-FeOOH) were photolyzed in aerated ethylene glycol-water solutions at pH 6.5, with ultraviolet light in the wavelength range300–400 nm. Under these conditions, formaldehyde and glycolaldehyde were detected as photoproducts. Quantum yields of formaldehyde production ranged from 1.9 7times; 10-5 to 2.9 × 10-4 over the ethylene...
Uranium-series dating of sediments from Searles Lake: Differences between continental and marine climate records
James L. Bischoff, Robert J. Rosenbauer, George I. Smith
1985, Science (227) 1222-1224
One of the major unresolved questions in Pleistocene paleoclimatology has been whether continental climatic transitions are consistent with the glacial δ18O marine record. Searles Lake in California, now a dry salt pan, is underlain by sediment layers deposited in a succession of lakes whose levels and salinities have fluctuated in...
Effects of flood control alternatives on fish and wildlife resources of the Malheur-Harney lakes basin
David B. Hamilton, Gregor T. Auble, Richard A. Ellison, James E. Roelle
1985, Report
Malheur Lake is the largest freshwater marsh in the western contiguous United States and is one of the main management units of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in southeastern Oregon. The marsh provides excellent waterfowl production habitat as well as vital migration habitats for birds in the Pacific flyway. Water...
Sorption of lead onto two gram-negative marine bacteria in seawater
Ronald W. Harvey, James O. Leckie
1985, Marine Chemistry (15) 333-344
Laboratory adsorption experiments performed at environmentally significant lead (Pb) and cell concentrations indicate that the marine bacteria examined have significant binding capacities for Pb. However, the behavior governing Pb sorption onto gram-negative bacteria in seawater may be quite complex. The sorption kinetics appear to involve two distinct phases, i.e., a...