Development of a three-dimensional model of sedimentary texture in valley-fill deposits of Central Valley, California, USA
Claudia C. Faunt, Kenneth Belitz, Randall T. Hanson
2010, Hydrogeology Journal (18) 625-649
A three-dimensional (3D) texture model was developed to help characterize the aquifer system of Central Valley, California (USA), for a groundwater flow model. The 52,000-km2 Central Valley aquifer system consists of heterogeneous valley-fill deposits. The texture model was developed by compiling and analyzing approximately 8,500 drillers’ logs, describing lithologies up to...
Depth-dependent sampling to identify short-circuit pathways to public-supply wells in multiple aquifer settings in the United States
Matthew K. Landon, Bryant C. Jurgens, Brian G. Katz, Sandra M. Eberts, Karen R. Burow, Christy A. Crandall
2010, Hydrogeology Journal (18) 577-593
Depth-dependent water-quality and borehole flow data were used to determine where and how contamination enters public-supply wells (PSWs) at study sites in different principal aquifers of the United States. At each of three study sites, depth-dependent samples and wellbore flow data were collected from multiple depths in selected PSWs under...
Optimal pump and recharge management model for nitrate removal in the Warren groundwater basin, California
Yung-Chia Chiu, Tracy Nishikawa, William W.-G. Yeh
2010, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (136) 299-308
The town of Yucca Valley located in the southwest part of the Mojave Desert in southern California relies on groundwater pumping from the Warren groundwater basin as its sole source of water supply. This significant dependency has resulted in a large imbalance between groundwater pumpage and natural recharge, causing groundwater...
Evaluating the behavior of gadolinium and other rare earth elements through large metropolitan sewage treatment plants
Philip L. Verplanck, Edward T. Furlong, James L. Gray, Patrick J. Phillips, Ruth E. Wolf, Kathleen Esposito
2010, Environmental Science & Technology (44) 3876-3882
A primary pathway for emerging contaminants (pharmaceuticals, personal care products, steroids, and hormones) to enter aquatic ecosystems is effluent from sewage treatment plants (STP), and identifying technologies to minimize the amount of these contaminants released is important. Quantifying the flux of these contaminants through STPs is difficult. This study evaluates...
Evaluating remediation alternatives for mine drainage, Little Cottonwood Creek, Utah, USA
Briant A. Kimball, Robert L. Runkel
2010, Environmental Earth Sciences (60) 1021-1036
The vast occurrence of mine drainage worldwide, documented in descriptive studies, presents a staggering challenge for remediation. Any tool that can move beyond descriptive study and helps to evaluate options for remediation in a way that maximizes improvements to the water quality of streams and minimizes cost of remediation could...
Variability and trends in dry day frequency and dry event length in the southwestern United States
Gregory J. McCabe, David R. Legates, Harry F. Lins
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (115)
Daily precipitation from 22 National Weather Service first-order weather stations in the southwestern United States for water years 1951 through 2006 are used to examine variability and trends in the frequency of dry days and dry event length. Dry events with minimum thresholds of 10 and 20 consecutive days of...
Fluvial processes and vegetation - Glimpses of the past, the present, and perhaps the future.
Waite R. Osterkamp, Cliff R. Hupp
2010, Geomorphology (116) 274-285
"Most research before 1960 into interactions among fluvial processes, resulting landforms, and vegetation was descriptive. Since then, however, research has become more detailed and quantitative permitting numerical modeling and applications including agricultural-erosion abatement and rehabilitation of altered bottomlands. Although progress was largely observational, the empiricism increasingly yielded to objective recognition of...
A comparison of algal, macroinvertebrate, and fish assemblage indices for assessing low-level nutrient enrichment in wadeable Ozark streams
B. G. Justus, James C. Petersen, Suzanne R. Femmer, Jerri V. Davis, J. E. Wallace
2010, Ecological Indicators (10) 627-638
Biotic indices for algae, macroinvertebrates, and fish assemblages can be effective for monitoring stream enrichment, but little is known regarding the value of the three assemblages for detecting perturbance as a consequence of low-level nutrient enrichment. In the summer of 2006, we collected nutrient and biotic samples from 30 wadeable...
A macroinvertebrate assessment of Ozark streams located in lead-zinc mining areas of the Viburnum Trend in southeastern Missouri, USA
Barry C. Poulton, Ann L. Allert, John M. Besser, Christopher J. Schmitt, William G. Brumbaugh, James F. Fairchild
2010, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (163) 619-641
The Viburnum Trend lead-zinc mining subdistrict is located in the southeast Missouri portion of the Ozark Plateau. In 2003 and 2004, we assessed the ecological effects of mining in several watersheds in the region. We included macroinvertebrate surveys, habitat assessments, and analysis of metals in sediment, pore water,...
Saltcedar (Tamarix spp.) and Russian Olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia) in the Western United States-A Report on the State of the Science
Patrick Shafroth
2010, Fact Sheet 2009-3110
The Salt Cedar and Russian Olive Control Demonstration Act of 2006 (Public Law 109-320) directs the Department of the Interior to submit a report to Congress that includes an assessment of several issues surrounding these two nonnative trees, now dominant components of the vegetation along many rivers in the Western...
Saltcedar and Russian Olive Control Demonstration Act Science Assessment
Patrick B. Shafroth, Curtis A. Brown, David M. Merritt
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5247
The primary intent of this document is to provide the science assessment called for under The Saltcedar and Russian Olive Control Demonstration Act of 2006 (Public Law 109-320; the Act). A secondary purpose is to provide a common background for applicants for prospective demonstration projects, should funds be appropriated for...
Flood of April and May 2008 in Northern Maine
Pamela J. Lombard
2010, Fact Sheet 2010-3003
Severe flooding occurred in Aroostook and Penobscot Counties in northern Maine between April 28 and May 1, 2008, and damage was extensive in the town of Fort Kent. Aroostook County was declared a Federal disaster area on May 9, and the declaration was expanded to include Penobscot County on May...
Techniques for Estimating the Magnitude and Frequency of Peak Flows on Small Streams in Minnesota Based on Data through Water Year 2005
David L. Lorenz, Christopher A. Sanocki, Matthew J. Kocian
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5250
Knowledge of the peak flow of floods of a given recurrence interval is essential for regulation and planning of water resources and for design of bridges, culverts, and dams along Minnesota's rivers and streams. Statistical techniques are needed to estimate peak flow at ungaged sites because long-term streamflow records are...
Flood of April and May 2008 in Northern Maine
Pamela J. Lombard
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5003
Severe flooding occurred in Aroostook and Penobscot Counties in northern Maine between April 28 and May 1, 2008, and was most extreme in the town of Fort Kent. Peak streamflows in northern Aroostook County were the result of a persistent heavy snowpack that caused high streamflows when it quickly melted...
Trends in groundwater levels in wells in the active management areas of Arizona, USA
Fred D. Tillman, Stanley A. Leake
2010, Hydrogeology Journal (18) 1515-1524
In 1980, the Arizona legislature passed the Groundwater Management Act (GMA), creating the active management areas (AMAs) to protect shared groundwater resources and to control severe overdrafts occurring in many parts of the state. With the 30-year anniversary of the GMA approaching, this article addresses the question: Have there been...
Seasonal H2O and CO2 ice cycles at the Mars Phoenix landing site: 1. Prelanding CRISM and HiRISE observations
Selby Cull, Raymond E. Arvidson, Michael T. Mellon, Sandra M. Wiseman, Roger N. Clark, Timothy N. Titus, Richard V. Morris, Patrick E. McGuire
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (115)
The condensation, evolution, and sublimation of seasonal water and carbon dioxide ices were characterized at the Mars Phoenix landing site from Martian northern midsummer to midspring (Ls ∼ 142° – Ls ∼ 60°) for the year prior to the Phoenix landing on 25 May 2008. Ice relative abundances and grain sizes were...
Mg isotope constraints on soil pore-fluid chemistry: Evidence from Santa Cruz, California
Edward T. Tipper, Jerome Gaillardet, Pascale Louvat, Francoise Capmas, Arthur F. White
2010, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (74) 3883-3896
Mg isotope ratios (26Mg/24Mg) are reported in soil pore-fluids, rain and seawater, grass and smectite from a 90 kyr old soil, developed on an uplifted marine terrace from Santa Cruz, California. Rain water has an invariant 26Mg/24Mg ratio (expressed as δ26Mg>δ26Mg) at −0.79 ± 0.05‰, identical to seawater <span...
Quality of groundwater at and near an aquifer storage and recovery site, Bexar, Atascosa, and Wilson Counties, Texas, June 2004-August 2008
Cassi L. Otero, Brian L. Petri
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5061
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the San Antonio Water System, did a study during 2004–08 to characterize the quality of native groundwater from the Edwards aquifer and pre- and post-injection water from the Carrizo aquifer at and near an aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) site in Bexar, Atascosa,...
Field Surveys of Rare Plants on Santa Cruz Island, California, 2003-2006: Historical Records and Current Distributions
A. Kathryn McEachern, Katherine A. Chess, Ken Niessen
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5264
Santa Cruz Island is the largest of the northern Channel Islands located off the coast of California. It is owned and managed as a conservation reserve by The Nature Conservancy and the Channel Islands National Park. The island is home to nine plant taxa listed in 1997 as threatened or...
Regional Regression Equations to Estimate Flow-Duration Statistics at Ungaged Stream Sites in Connecticut
Elizabeth A. Ahearn
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5052
Multiple linear regression equations for determining flow-duration statistics were developed to estimate select flow exceedances ranging from 25- to 99-percent for six 'bioperiods'-Salmonid Spawning (November), Overwinter (December-February), Habitat Forming (March-April), Clupeid Spawning (May), Resident Spawning (June), and Rearing and Growth (July-October)-in Connecticut. Regression equations also were developed to estimate the...
Avian botulism: a case study in translocated endangered Laysan ducks (Anas laysanensis) on Midway Atoll
Thierry M. Work, John L. Klavitter, Michelle H. Reynolds, David S. Blehert
2010, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (46) 499-506
Laysan Ducks are endemic to the Hawaiian archipelago and are one of the world’s most endangered waterfowl. For 150 yr, Laysan Ducks were restricted to an estimated 4 km2 of land on Laysan Island in the northwestern Hawaiian Islands. In 2004 and 2005, 42 Laysan Ducks were translocated to Midway...
Nitrogen Loads in Groundwater Entering Back Bays and Ocean from Fire Island National Seashore, Long Island, New York
Christopher Schubert, M. Peter deVries, Anne J. Finch
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1081
Fire Island is a barrier island that lies south of central Long Island, N.Y. It is about 60 km (37 mi) long and 0.5 km (1/4 mi) wide and is bounded by the Great South Bay, Narrow Bay, and Moriches Bay estuaries to the north; by the Atlantic Ocean to...
Method for Estimating Annual Atrazine Use for Counties in the Conterminous United States, 1992-2007
Gail P. Thelin, Wesley W. Stone
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5034
A method was developed to estimate annual atrazine use during 1992 to 2007 on sixteen crops and four agricultural land uses. For each year, atrazine use was estimated for all counties in the conterminous United States (except California) by combining (1) proprietary data from the Doane Marketing Research-Kynetec (DMRK) AgroTrak...
Digital tabulation of geologic and hydrologic data from wells in the northern San Francisco Bay region, northern California
D. S. Sweetkind, E. M. Taylor
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1063
Downhole lithologic information and aquifer pumping test data are reported from 464 wells from a broad area of the northern part of the Coast Ranges in California. These data were originally published in paper form as numerous tables within three USGS Water-Supply Papers describing geology and groundwater conditions in Napa...
A Natural History Summary and Survey Protocol for the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher
Mark K. Sogge, Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey, Darrell Ahlers, Bureau of Reclamation, Susan J. Sferra, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
2010, Techniques and Methods 2-A10
The Southwestern Willow Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii extimus) has been the subject of substantial research, monitoring, and management activity since it was listed as an endangered species in 1995. When proposed for listing in 1993, relatively little was known about the flycatcher's natural history, and there were only 30 known breeding...