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Page 524, results 13076 - 13100

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Palmer Drought Severity Index as a Measure of Hydrologic Drought
William M. Alley
1985, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (21) 105-114
The Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI) for climatic divisions in New Jersey is compared to the occurrence within each climatic division of streamflows in their lower quartile for the month (streamflow index) and ground-water levels in their lower quartile for the month (ground-water index). These indices are found to have...
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....
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...
Partitioning studies of coal-tar constituents in a two-phase contaminated ground-water system
Colleen E. Rostad, W. E. Pereira, M. F. Hult
1985, Chemosphere (14) 1023-1036
Organic compounds derived from coal-tar wastes in a contaminated aquifer in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, were identified, and their partition coefficients between the tar phase and aqueous phase were determined and compared with the corresponding n-octanol/water partition coefficients. Coal tar contains numerous polycyclic aromatic compounds, many of which are suspected...
Temporal fluctuations in grain size, organic materials and iron concentrations in intertidal surface sediment of San Francisco Bay
E. A. Thomson-Becker, Samuel N. Luoma
1985, Hydrobiologia (129) 91-107
The physical and chemical characteristics of the oxidized surface sediment in an estuary fluctuate temporally in response to physical forces and apparently-fluctuating inputs. These characteristics, which include grain size and concentrations of organic materials and iron, will influence both trace-metal geochemistry and bioavailability. Temporal trends in the abundance of fine...
Reduction of hexavalent chromium in water samples acidified for preservation
Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, D.B. Grove
1985, Journal of Environmental Quality (14) 396-399
Reduction of hexavalent chromium, Cr(VI), in water samples, preserved by standard techniques, was investigated. The standard preservation technique for water samples that are to be analyzed for Cr(VI) consists of filtration through a 0.45‐µm membrane, acidification to a pH < 2, and storage in plastic bottles. Batch...
Water-level changes in the Ogallala aquifer, northwestern Oklahoma.
J.S. Havens
1985, Oklahoma Geology Notes (45) 205-210
The Ogallala aquifer, that part of the High Plains aquifer in Oklahoma, is part of a regional aquifer system that underlies parts of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming. In 1978 the US Geological Survey began a 5- year study of the High Plains regional...
Thermodynamic stability of CoOOH and its coprecipitation with manganese
J.D. Hem, C. E. Roberson, Carol J. Lind
1985, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (49) 801-810
A precipitate of cobalt oxyhydroxides formed by bubbling oxygen through a dilute solution of Co(NO3)2 held at pH 9.0 and 25°C was aged for 23 months in contact with the original solution, with access to atmospheric oxygen. Co3O4 and CoOOH were identified in the precipitate by X-ray diffraction. Chemical equilibria involving these...
Separation of solute and particulate vectors of heavy metal uptake in controlled suspension-feeding experiments with Macoma balthica
Ronald W. Harvey, Samuel N. Luoma
1985, Hydrobiologia (121) 97-102
Radioisotope labelling experiments with the estuarine clam, Macoma balthica, are described, in which a filter chamber device was used to separate solute metal uptake from uptake, of metals associated with suspended bacteria. Solute uptake contributed a majority of the 14-day total body burdens of 65Zn and 109Cd, whereas 57Co uptake...
Geohydrology of the aquifer in the Santa Fe Group, northern West Mesa of the Mesilla Basin near Las Cruces, New Mexico
R. G. Myers, B. R. Orr
1985, Water-Resources Investigations Report 84-4190
Because of the heterogeneity of the Santa Fe Group, New Mexico, the hydrologic characteristics of the aquifer vary substantially from place to place. Hydraulic conductivities of 12 and 30 feet per day were estimated from aquifer tests for two wells in the eastern one-half of the study area. Well yields...
Geochemistry of Great Salt Lake, Utah I: Hydrochemistry since 1850
R. J. Spencer, H.P. Eugster, B.F. Jones, S.L. Rettig
1985, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (49) 727-737
The hydrochemistry of Great Salt Lake, Utah, has been defined for the historic period, 1850 through 1982, from published data combined with new observations. The water balance depends largely on river inflow, atmospheric precipitation onto the lake surface and evaporation. Input of the major solutes can best be accounted for...
Migration of wood-preserving chemicals in contaminated groundwater in a sand aquifer at Pensacola, Florida
D.F. Goerlitz, D.E. Troutman, E.M. Godsy, B.J. Franks
1985, Environmental Science & Technology (19) 955-961
Operation of a wood-preserving facility for nearly 80 years at Pensacola, FL, contaminated the near-surface groundwater with creosote and pentachlorophenol. The major source of aquifer contamination was unlined surface impoundments that were in direct hydraulic contact with the groundwater. Episodes of overtopping the impoundments and overland flow of treatment liquor...
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...
The use of natural waters as U.S. Geological Survey reference samples
Victor J. Janzer
1985, Conference Paper, Quality Assurance for Environmental Measurements
The U.S. Geological Survey conducts research and collects hydrologic data relating to the Nation's water resources. Two water quality laboratories in Atlanta, Georgia, and Denver, Colorado, support the national research programs, and provide chemical analyses of natural waters for the data program. Additional chemical water quality data are provided by...
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...
Hydrologic and geochemical monitoring in Long Valley caldera, Mono County, California, 1982-1984
C. D. Farrar, M.L. Sorey, S. Rojstaczer, C. J. Janik, Robert H. Mariner, T. L. Winnett, M. D. Clark
1985, Water-Resources Investigations Report 85-4183
The Long Valley caldera is a potentially active volcanic area on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada in east-central California. Hydrologic and geochemical monitoring of surface and subsurface features began in July 1982 to determine if changes were occurring in response to processes causing earthquakes and crustal deformation. Differences...
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...
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...