Purple loosestrife volunteers
Beth A. Middleton
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3040
Purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria) is a perennial plant native to Eurasia where it grows along streams, rivers, and wet seepage areas (fig. 1). Seeds were inadvertently brought to North American territories in the ballast water of ships. Purple loosestrife was also intentionally planted throughout North America for its ornamental flowers...
Farm Ponds as Wildlife Habitat in the Driftless Area Ecoregion
Melinda Knutson
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3041
Geographic Information Office, Information Policy and Services Office
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2004, Fact Sheet 120-03
The Geographic Information Office, Information Policy and Services Office (IPSO) oversees the bureau's policies and functions related to information services and delivery, i.e., Libraries, Enterprise Web, information centers (through the Natural Science Network), Information Resources Management, and Enterprise Publishing. For more infomiation about IPSO activities, contact: Hedy Rossmeissl: Senior Advisor, Donna Bums: Administrative Assistant...
Water quality in Big Cypress National Preserve and Everglades National Park, 1960 - 2000
Benjamin F. McPherson, Ronald L. Miller
2004, Fact Sheet 097-03
No abstract available. ...
Cattle grazing and its long-term effects on sedge meadows
Beth Middleton
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3027
Most people think that wetlands are temporary, that they fill in by natural processes, and eventually become dry land. Some of these outdated ideas have come from the way that this subject has been covered in introductory textbooks in schools (Gibson, 1996). From these texts, we learned incorrectly that over...
Floods on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, October and November 2002
Josh D. Eash, Ronald L. Rickman
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3023
Methods for Estimating Streamflow Statistics for Ungaged Streams in Maine
P.J. Lombard
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3001
Trends in Streamflow Characteristics in Hawaii, 1913-2002
Delwyn S. Oki
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3104
The surface-water resources of Hawaii have significant cultural, aesthetic, ecologic, and economic importance. In Hawaii, surface-water resources are developed for both offstream uses (for example, drinking water, agriculture, and industrial uses) and instream uses (for example, maintenance of habitat and ecosystems, recreational activities, aesthetic values, maintenance of water quality, conveyance...
Sheet-flow velocities and factors affecting sheet-flow behavior of importance to restoration of the Florida Everglades
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3123
The 1999-2002 Drought in Maine?How Bad Was It?
Pamela J. Lombard
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3021
Progress on the Across Trophic Level System Simulation (ATLSS) program
Donald L. DeAngelis
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3109
Modeling the effects of hydrology on fire, vegetation dynamics, and their interaction in the Florida Everglades
Donald L. DeAngelis, Scott M. Duke-Sylvester, Louis J. Gross
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3110
Development of coastal flow and transport models in support of everglades restoration
Christian D. Langevin, Eric D. Swain, John D. Wang, Melinda A. Wolfert, Raymond W. Schaffranek, Ami L. Riscassi
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3130
Restoring an urban river — Polychlorinated biphenyls and other contaminants in bottom sediment of the lower Neponset River, Massachusetts
Robert F. Breault, Matthew G. Cooke
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3083
No abstract available....
Pesticides in ground water - Teton County, Wyoming, 2001-02
Cheryl A. Eddy-Miller, Kendra J. Remley
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3080
Overview--Development of a geodatabase and conceptual model of the hydrogeologic units beneath Air Force Plant 4 and Naval Air Station-Joint Reserve Base Carswell Field, Fort Worth, Texas
Sachin D. Shah
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3063
Air Force Plant 4 (AFP4) and adjacent Naval Air Station-Joint Reserve Base Carswell Field (NAS–JRB) at Fort Worth, Tex., constitute a contractor-owned, government-operated facility that has been in operation since 1942. Contaminants from the 3,600-acre facility, primarily volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and metals, have entered the ground-water-flow system through leakage...
Is septic waste affecting drinking water from shallow domestic wells along the Platte River in eastern Nebraska?
Ingrid M. Verstraeten, Greg S. Fetterman, Sonja K. Sebree, Michael T. Meyer, Thomas D. Bullen
2004, Fact Sheet 072-03
No abstract available....
User interface for ATLSS models
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3111
Historic aerial photography of the greater everglades archive and geodatabase development
Ann Foster
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3139
Geographic Information Office
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2004, Fact Sheet 108-03
The Geographic Information Office (GIO) is the principal information office for U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), focused on: Information Policy and Services, Information Technology, Science Information, Information Security, and the Federal Geographic Data Committee/Geospatial One Stop....
Career Opportunities for Students
Randy Hines
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3052
The North Santiam River, Oregon, water-quality monitoring network
Heather M. Bragg, Mark A. Uhrich
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3069
Inventory of freshwater fish species within Big Cypress National Preserve: the basis for a long-term sampling program
William F. Loftus
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3131
GIO benefits the USGS
M.P. McDermott
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3034
The Geographic Information Office (GIO) benefits the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) by providing access to and delivery of USGS information and services, safety and security of USGS data and information, support for USGS science, and coordination of partnerships through Federal interagency data committees....
Tree Swallows: A Nationwide Sentinel Species for Assessing and Monitoring Aquatic Contamination
Christine Custer, Thomas Custer
2004, Fact Sheet 2004-3042